Newspapers / The Weekly Raleigh Register … / May 6, 1834, edition 1 / Page 1
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AMD; pMrMEOLWA :&MEBBZSNm. - . , : ; . . : : ' : ,-j v M. l'l " TWT- kAE, . .tv THE PLANS OP FAIR DELIGHTFUL PEACE, SUJ"WARP'D BT 'PARTY TOUVE.LIKE BROTHERS ! i 1 . --T mm VOLUME XXXV. TUESDAY,-MAY 6, 1834. J 'fit 1" 26 i r'-. - ! . , . "OURS ARE Ilii ilasenh Gales & Son, TERMS. TowrT TW.t.ats rrr annum; one Half in atlvanm flWwho ilo not either at the rime of milntnihin. , r iiWimOTitlvJ eivc notice of their wish to hnve ,v. Pt h.acontrnnef! at the exniration of the venr. xvijl I -c presumed as desiring iU bontiuance tintil tauntermanufd - ' f . ot exceed'in!? "i.rteefi lines, will be mscrwd three jimr for a Doilnr; and twenty-live cems lor vara Kubndr.t nuhlieation: those of greater frnth, in ...JiAm' Tf -th mtmW of insertions ho nnt marked on, them, they will be continued until or lered out, and charged accordingly. THE PRESIDENT'S MANIFES TO. ' r OS the reception ot tljis document, Mr. t'otic "psxtkii movcl that it,be not received, and on this m ion jtprbtracted debate arose. To give oijr readers some idea of the arsnments .advanced, on both steles, . we subjoin severa extracts from th; Speeches delivered on the occasion : ; - ' .' ! ... 'MPsEotvDP.xtF.R- said: iNo such paper was ever presented to either House o IConTes ; none such is to b tounu on hp fburhals of our nrpceedinss as the one . i -f ?fnt this norninffi under tne euise 01 official authoritjv from the tounuation o the. Government down to the1 present mo Tiient Sir, . I will not dignify this ppr s 1 conMderinr it: in the light, of an Exe cutive Message 5 it is no such thing. J regard it. simply as a paper with the sig nature of Andrew Jackson ; and, shouh the Senate refuse to receive it, ifwill no be the first paper with the same signature which has been refused a hearing in rms body, on the ground of the abusive and vituoerative language it contained. It will be recollected that a protest, similar in it's character, couched in terms grossly disrespectful to the Senate, was present pd. somewhere about the vear 181 y, irom -------- - , j , tlie same indivi(lual& such was its exeep tionabfe character, that his own friend became ashamed of it. It was objected to reiected,- and Sent back for modification, so as to render it respectful to thai body to which it vyfts presented. The offensive passages were stricken out, and, thus mo dified it was presented and 'received at the next session of Congress. This effort to deniounce andverawe the deliberati ons of the Senate may properly be regard edas capping the climax of that systema tic plan ot operation wnicn - ior several years bast has been in progress, designed . . ' . i i - i i i " i - : to D ring uis oouy into uisrepuie amoug leclaration that the Senate has acted un- "conRtitutFonall?" ; and vet, although, the rresuient mar declare that we have vio- ated the Constitution in restraining his so often use hisi name and authority. power, the benate mar not presume to Ihe occasion jostihes, it it does! not re with violating my opinions and pledges and quoted half a paragraph to prove it- and thus have imitated the nra-an-t which express its opinions with regard to the President's seizing upon the money of the People, without being -charged with nav- rtg pronounced a judicial sentence with out trial. lake this verr document, this' protest itself ; is it not filled saturated, with the declarations that the Senate has violated the Constitution ? Is it not a!- quire meto: say, that the quotation trom my remarks, on the subject of instructions which has been "published, exhibits, in those who" mike it, a wiful purpose to de ceive the public. Sir, it is difficult to give credit' to the declaration, that the instructions, of three States were incorporated into this Execu- I most wholly denunciatory ? . And at the tive paper, solely as matter of history. an instant in the document, in which he is to develope tlie principles and interesti uttering these accusations and dehuhcia- involved in the proceedings of the Senate, tions against this bodv, he is making it a Why, as a matter of history, should they matter of grievous complaint that the Se- be placed there? How do they develope i . .i! t i I .i -! i i : "are nas expressed an opinion that ne nas i ine principles aim im.HrsLs uivvcu in trahscenled the limits f the Cbnstituti- the conduct of the Executive, or in the void any such exposition I feel the dig nity of the station which; I;occupy as a representative one of the independent Sovereignties, of this Uninnj' atd never will I do auglit ml 44 derogation" or that dignity, using th&. word inin 'sense rn which the draughtsman "6f the paper before us eems never to have understood it. With these sentiments, sjr, I hioVti that the Se nate do now adjourli. 10 on. lhere was a resolution introduced in the Senate some vears since, similar in its principle and effect to this; which is so much complained of, and vet l an not aware that the President, or-anv oi nis friends, have denounced it as an assump tion of unconstitutional .power. : Mr. Fhrlikohuysen said : Mr. Pre sident, while I retain any renect for my self, or just regard for the sacred trusts committed to our care, cannot consent to receive this document. It is a most extraordinarr proceeding, and will form an era in American history. Here, sir. while the country is groaning under th consequences of a rasli Executive experi inept while banks are breaking all a round us, the busy hum-of -cheerful indus trv silenced and labor in absolute want ofemrilovment all the bitteri fruits of Executive interference with public cre dit -when the cries for relief come up in daily supplication when the people had a right to expect some alleviation of their distresses, from this administration, what do we hear r A lecture ot an hour and a half, read to the Senate of the U. States, for daring lo question the authority under which tus blow at our prosperity has been inflicted J Sir, I am opposed to the re cep'tion of the paper under every aspect Instead of reserving harmony among the resolution which disapproves thatconductr Another purpose is muchmore apparent. Mr.' President1, I expressed anapprehen- sion, that the excitement, which this pa per has created, would endanger the tie liberation which it. demands. I feel that it is so.. "1 hope that some member, who has not taken part in tlie discussion, will move to lay the motion for its'. ejection on the table, to give time for reflection. It seems to me fraught with momentous consequences. We are engaged in dis cussing a subject of legislative power and duty; in deciding on measures proper to be taken upon a question which has agi tated the whole nation ; in seeking reliet from a distress which is universal and ap palling. We have to furnish an appro priate legislative remedy. Petitions have been poured in upon us from the people in every quarter, pointing out their views of this rcraedy. and urging its adoption. Wc have, as the hrst step, expressed our opinion of the cause of the public distress ; and, while the subject is still before us, while the petitions are daily reaching us, while a bill is actually upon our table, ready to be called up for consideration, we receive this papec.irom the Executive, which denounces ouri conduct, and pre sumes that we purpose no legislate ac tion, it is not, inuc-Hi, a peremptory command, in words, not to proceed. But co-ordinate departments of the Govern- ;t is a direct Dreach of our privileges as a ment,its direct, and immediate effect will be, to interrupt it. It cannot be other- wise. Mr. Bf.ston said: The great question which was to go before the American peo pie, and to claim from them that intense and profound consideration which the En glish people gave to the conduct of the House ot, Commons in regard to the Middlesex election, is the constituti pnality ot the aenate's conduct in a- the peple.-andthereby remove the only dopting the resolution which condemned cons existinibarrier to the apbitrary encroach: the President for a violation of the laws And ments and. usurpations of Executive pow- and qt the Constitution oi nis country.-- . i, ft o 1 It wia rrnflnrt that iiPftPrvprl An K( tripil- er. vesiroy pumic conndencein tne ae- - r; , ' $ . i 1-, i i anri a lur ns ir iinpniiiM iinnn nim.snnn (i ....v. .v.. -- , --I be tried, upon the facts of the case alone upon the facts which our own journal con tains upon the resolutions as offered and adopted here upon the authentic spee ches which the supporters of these reso- Legislative Assembly; an interference which, in other countries less free, would be resisted with firmness and Effect. It is an imitation of men whom the Chief Magistrate of a free country ought not to imitate, and which, if unchecked, may lead, at no distant day, to disastrous con sequences to our institutions. Charles insulted the Parliament by charges of se dition and turbulence,: Cromwell, of cor- ruption ; the Corsican, with-disregard oi titutional restraints. How tar does tew Jackson fall behind them ? or fail to join their merits into one ? If this In submittingctolhe Senate, a few days since, two Memorials, Mf:;JiSL.y embca ced the occasion to say. a ew words on the subject matter of fhesi; proceedings and memorial s,Jind on tf(; sfete of the countrv. iom his renar,, , we select the following phages : ; ; '.' "'When we first s-triet here, Sr President, we found the Executive in. the full possession of the public Treasury. AUits barriershaJ been broken down, and io the jJac-c of tike control of the law was substituted the uncontrolled U'lll of. Jhe Unief Mavjistratc. 1 say inrcohtroiled : w il idle to pre tend that the Executive has not ujifestrained access to the public Treasu-sy, Avheo eyerfi jjlncer connect ed with it is bound fo obey his puii2nuaiit will. It is not the form of kepin the acc4ihitj ; it i-s not the place alone where public moneyis .kept ; but it is the power the autjthwty, tile reji&hsibility of inde-1 pendent onicers, ciaiikj aiiid clicked by each o ther, that con-Jtituc public secujity for the safety of the public irrnJuN?. This na longer exists ; it is -gone, isanmlulatJtk . ' '. " ' - The Secretary settfeiis in a repyrt coninincr the reasons (if theyj can ie dignified with that appella tion) for the Exeni.iKc seizure of the public purse. Resolutions Were pr )'ftptly olTot?d in this body, de nouncifig the procedure a .unconstitutional ond dan gerous to liberty, and:3cclarjn!th total insurHqiency of the reasons. NtA thrde loonts were consumeJ in the discussion or tFtCia. Inlhisearly part' of this protracted dt-bate, bb-M - supporter of the Executive measure stoutly drilcd the exigence of distress, TrrtniinfOfl it n j-allil nrrtf fVr' jjiwiyi-intii. oflFt on1 affirmed that tlie co iiStrv was eniontii creat prosne- nty. " Instances owiijrrcd of mcoibws asserting that the places of tlieir o&ji residence : was in the full en joyment of enviable and unexampled prosperity, who, in tlie progress ot tne aepate, wepe compelled reluctantly to own?their mistake, and to admit the existence of deep j$hd intense distress. Memorial after Memorial pou red in, Comftntieo after Commit tee repaired to the Capitol to represent the sufferings of the People, untif jncredulity tielf stood rebuked and abashed. I hfi it was the Bank that had in flirted the calaauV upon tlie country the Bank which was to be bought under tie feet of the Exe cutive, and which ; was nece9arvy at all events, in the opinion of their resident, should proeeed forth with to wind up it affairs, S N And, during tW debate, it wjys again and again pronounced by thr? partisans of the Executive, that the sole question involved in te 'Resotutions.was Bank or no Bank;A- It wis in vain that we protest ed, solemnly proofed, that tha iwas not the ques tion; and that tits (rue question was. of immensely hijrher import : tht it comprehended the inviolabili ty of the Const! tu(3on, the supr?may of the Laws, and the union of-,ihe purse and the sword in. the hands of one margin vaiii di; inembors repeated ly rise in their places, and proclaim. Uieir intention to vote for the restoration of Ihe'depositen, and their m ,v- w ' '- -. . , your bosom.. I congr itulate the Senate, the County, the rityof Ne w.York, the friends of liberty every ijvhere. It was a g-eat victory. It must be so regarded in every aspect. . , From a majority of njore than six thousand, which the dominant.pdfey boasted a few months apo, if it retain any, itfis a raeagpeiand spurious majority. of less than tffo hundred., And tlie W'hjgir con- tendefl with uch odds against them. A triple alliance of Stte placerneh, Corporation placemen and Federallicemen, amountiner to about thir ty-five hundred, and deriving, in the form of sai;u-ies, eorrjpensations and allowances, 6rdmary and extra, flpm the Public chests, the enormous sum, annualfy, of near one million of dollars. Marshalled, grilled, disciplined, commanded. Tlie strug-eje was tremendous: but what can withstand tlj'e irresistible power of the votaries of truth', libertr, and their countrv ? It was an im mortal triumph a' triumph' of the Constitution and the Lays over usurpation' here, and over clubs and b5udeuas and violence there. Go on, njjbte city ! Go on, patriotic whigs ! fpllow up y;1)ur glorious commencement i perse vere, 'and njuise not until you hai'e regenerated and disenthralled your splendid city, and placed it at the heid of American cities devoted to eivil liberty, ast now stand pre eminently the first as the coMmercial emporium of our common country ! j - - SPECK OF MR. LACOCKi I Gineral, I'm gitlin a leeitle asjiamM onV myself, we Jave.got into a scrape. I should like to git out ori't, and git yntl oat on't too if I can at any rate says t tll jesj: pack up my ax aniLgt mytbuiv die ready, for as thing are going it wpnt : do to stay here. '.', - " " -' The Gineral got considerable riled this, and slatted round a spU; but he soon see that didn't do no good! for it on ly set ine whistlin yankee doodleand so to rights says he. Major, did t tell you, that rakoon story of mine and the bee tree., and the apple orchard--wefllgays I, liot as I knows on; but I should like to hear it and so the Gineral he sot down and . telll a' plagy long story about-his: goto nut once with a gang of his niggers a rac koonin it was jUt arter the lastHtngin war and fidks all about, the country began to think that Gineral Washington was A finl to him it wasn't Ion afore he tree'i) , a rackoon, arid he set the niggers to work to cut down the tree. This tree stood fright along side an old farmer's apple or cnani and aiore it was halt cut qtjwn,sA mao cum along and asked the Giuerai what he was arte r, and he telld him $ why, says he, Gineral,. you are barkin up ' the wrong tree this time , for I, jest seer Uiat rackoon jump to .that next -tree, ani t afore this he is a mile off there in the woids the Gineral tell'd him he was The Billowing is (savsthe Pittsburg Statesman) the conclusion of a speech de livered recently Gy Mr. Lacock, in the Legislaire of Pennsylvania. The lan guage iu forcible as tlje appeal is impres- mistaken, and jtfst then the old farmer sive a nate, j which now stands, thank God, un moved, between the .Chief Magistrate and the People, andTyranhy in its worst forms, would very snn overshadow the land, and rule with an iron hand the des tinies;of the American People. The Se nate, by its peculiar organization, is well calculated to preserve and perpetuate the great runamental principles ot public li berty (to the latest posterity. Removed from popolar impulses, which sometimes arise in the convulsions incident to free- oom.ot opinion tne discussions oi great politi?al questons, it may look with calm ness tin. the misguided multitude, misled by some popular demagogue, and thereby save the State from tlie deleterious con- i i - - - sequences of errors, which are the inevi table ; result of passion or precipitation lutions have given to the world, & which show the sense in which they understood the proceding which they carried on. 'The proceeding, he,Mr. B. held to be an 'im peachment without the forms of an im peachment, and without the formof a trial a sentence of condemnation for a high crime and misdemeanor, against the Chief Magistrate of the Republic, without hear ing, without defence, without the obser vance of a single form prescribed for the trial of, impeachments ; and this by the iVery tribunal which is bound to try the It is kin integral part of the Executive tonnal i mpeachment tor the same matter, power, and while' it remains fi privilege, permit its action to be arrested, halt in its duty, or be unsupported by the people, it only remains for the band of armed soldiery to enter our hall, and ex pel us from oar seats. j Mr. Kixch of Alabama, said : He had not been one of those who was disposed to justify every act of the Senate or of the other House, and was not in the habit of believing that men were not liable to err. He happened to be one of those who did not entirely approve of the course of the President. In saying so, he was merely doing; justice to his own feelings and he deemed it of little consequence what the Senate might be disposed to think of his course. But although he did not entirely approve of the act of the Ex ecutive he could not consent 4hat a high settled determination to vote agajhst theecharter of the Bank, and a;;Jainst the chapter of any Bank. body shall tamely yield to such breaches of Oentlemen.pereisl in asserting the identity of the XJanK qnesuon, aou tuai cuuutiuuHu uic icsuiuuuiis devotion to the Constitution and uncorrupted by the temptations of office and emolument, no Chief Magistrate. ivfiatever may be his reckless ambition, can successfully move heyond the bounds f liis legitunate powers, and ride over the liberties of the people. Hence the tintiniig and anxious solicitude so. often manifested to bring this body, thus coi stituted, into disgrace among the people. II there existed at this moment im such conservative body as the Senate power woufd march onward to the climax of des potjstn. I The Republic might indeed ex- st, nomiiraiiv, put, in practice,4we should he bound to the car of some Imperial Dic tator. funr.tinnarv should be tried and convicted rm in its l duly deinaniiedoyjne grand inquest oi ruponwkal? VYn gentleman pretend the Laws, ine nauon.in men oi ivepreseuia- to s that l j.' tm.: ... n Ua ...L'.U tll . lives. nils Avan me ijucaiiun .wmijf uic countrv would have to try, -and," in the trial of which, furious passion, reckless denunciation bold or even audacious as sertion, will stand for nothing. The re cord ! the record 1 will be the evidence which the country will demand. The faets ! the facts ! will be the data which they require ; lhe speeches il the spee delivered on this floor, will be the test of the spirit and intention with which these proceedings were pursued and con summated. Mr. Soutuaud said : Mr. President, not only does this paper inaccurately re present our resolution; ituiescends to a criticism on the conduct ?o'f individual Senators in voting for it. It recites at large. and4n words, the proceedings and instructions of the States, and those of one of them relating to other matters un- welj assunie that it was piracy, and, after connected with this question ; and he in caUing it by a false name, reason upon it forms us, that, if four.of theiSenators had from his own assumptions. Sir, the'ex- obeyed the instructions given to thein, the piessiuns ot opinion on the part jof the vote of disapprobation Would hare been Senate that the President had assumed but 22. 4, sir,;am one ofthe New-Jeraey powers nut granted by th Constitution, Senators to whom he refers, and must be is iaid to be a judicial sentence witrnut permitted to sav. that! regard his attack llOtlCe of trial, and without the nrPVimia i 9S 9 irriuil ami I.tmurfinanf- ;ntrL,n,.o Mr. Spsague said : Tlie President assumes that the declaration of the Senate is a criminal procedure against hi in, and 1lien- enters into an argument to prove that-it is junauthorized. He"miffhtas at ihey had not been actuated by party or political considerations ? Would Thelfl they upon their responsibility, as men of the suiricicncv -f tt honor, and before the American People assert, that it never entered into their contemplation, that by the adoption of the resolutions a deathblow would be struck at the present p-trty in power?! It hdn orable Senators believed that the;interests of the People were at stake, the course they had chosen to adopt, he conceived not to be at all calculated to extricate them from ihe difficulty. He had notal lowed such indignation to operate on his mind, as was manifested by the honorable Senator from Mississippi, (V1K Poin- DEXTfiR.) and he would tell that gentle- man, and every other senator, that teel; ings of indignation were not felt by every honorable Senator. Mr. Leigh rose and said that there was and thousands of ie People of; the country are, to thiJ moment, delt ded by the.ertjheous belief in that Identity. 7 v - ' ) ''- Mr. President, the arts of powe? and its, minions are the same in, .all countries gnu mall ages. It marks a victim; ;Routices it ;nd excites the pub lic odium and theptiblic hatred to conceal its own abuses and encrHhrnents. : , If avails itself of the prejudices,! and the 'passions of "ihe People, silently and secretly, to frge chains; to enslave the Peoplc. Well, sir, ddring- the continjifance ,of the debate, we have been tolaiover and over again, that, let the question of the Jehbsites te settled, let Cougress pass upon the report &( the Secretary,' arid the activity of business and the, prosperity ot tte country will again speedily revive. " Tbe Senate has passed upon the resolutions, 'and done its duty to the country, to the constitutih, fcrid to its conscience. And the reoori)f tho Secretarvhas been also nass- ed upon in the owier house ; bul'hq-w passed upon The official teJaiibns which exist between the two Houses, and thetfxpediency of preserving good feel inffs and liarmonS between them,, forbid all that I feel on this momentous subject. But I must say that the House, cry the Constitution, is deemed the It isjinow, Mr. Speaker, said Mr. La- cock, $mve than one-third of a century, since I was associated in political life with your sijfe and your grandsire. And the same itjay be said of your brother from Armstrong ; and with your father, and yours, mnd yours, I was long and honor ably associated. Here Mr, Lacock de signated six or eight young men. the ta? thers f f whom had been with him in the Legislature. It was from and with them I eared my political creed, and was tauglv; to love ami honor Pennsvlvania. Tliey!have gone, or most of them, from good Jjyorks, I trust in this, to high re ward!, in a better world. Will not you, the ipns of those venerated fathers, listen to thl warning voice of their old political frien, who now addresses you, and who has been permitted, in mercy, to linger behirfd his associates, and is here stand ing solitary and alone, upon this floor, conjuringand beseeching his young friends to redeem and save the country, its con stitution, and its laws. This can only be done by breaking the political fetters with which you are bound. Remember we have taken a solemn oath not Jo support party, but the constitution and laws of the country. These you have J x ' I 1 . J f . -mr . seen iiampiea unoer iooi. iou, nna a widespread ruin around you ; and where peace and plenty had lately smiled, you now find bitter strife and contention on the yne hand, aid penury and wanton the&ther 5 and in this State of misery and suhVring, the cries ot thousands from Phi ladelphia and Pittsburgh have, by their delegates, been presented at the foot of cum out and he ask'U the Gineral what on earth he was cuttin down that tree for that it was one of the best bee trees on. bis farm, and had supplied his family and the neighbors round with honey for-a good many seasons ) tfhd thaf the bees were jestwarinin agin in it. And with that the Gineral got wrathr and telled the Niggers to cut away, and down went the tree, right across the or chard fence : and says the I Gineral if the rackoon aint there go on and?cut down the apple orchard, till you.firid him : and the Niggers kept -at it, lut aTore they cut down -many trees the 0I6V farmer larnt wisdom : and he come to the Gineral and- tell'd him he was right arter all for the rackoon1, was itst where he-thought-he was, and he has iumoed from bne aonle tree to another, and was no win his cell lar; and with that the Gineral he calPd - off the Niggers, and; tell'd the farmer it was well he had found the. rackoon as soon as he did, for he'd a, cut down every trfi- 1 j . f t a 1 ' .. - in ni orcnara ana so 1 ceil 'u nifrf say tne irinerai, lie might Keep the rackoot Cur larnin wisdom. 4 1 Now, says I Gineral, what was root notion ? why sys he. Major, if I hadn't lone 11st so, it would agone all around the county that I know'd nothin about rackoonin 5 andits jist so witli the Bank if give up my notion nou folks will say I know nothin about bankin, and a fore I'll do that, I'll break every nan in trade, from one eend ot the country to the other. . I ll let talks know, aiore I am ' done, that Andrew Jackson knows a much of Ban kin, as he does nf Rackoonin Well, says I, Gineral, I don't see how 4 . -1: 4 the.thrope, from whence the suppliants you get sich notions. Nor I don't noth for taercy have heen driven back, loaded er, Major,says the Gineral, but it bas al wittj outrage, insult, and contempt. Let ways been my'way wheu I git a notion to ute isk you again, said Mr, Lacock, mv stick to it titl it dies a natural death vouiig friends, will you bear this ? If and the more folks talks agin my notions you Hvill, I will not. I feel a spark of ho- the more I stickftoein. ' Now says IGin- ly trre from the altar ot To, kindling to a. eral, that was a pretty good story you've blaaje in iny bosom, and while a pulsation been tellin, and I'd like to tellyim one ot tke blood ot 70 throbs in my heart, or f and the Ujnerai he tilled his. pipe, and I a... t t . 1 1. ' i . ' 11 : '1 i uowjs in my veiuft, x smaii raise my voice, i oegan: a speu ago says 4, my wa grand and'nervemy arm,. if possible, with youth- tol Vo"' to speak, and strike too, in de fences)! the liberty and freedn;n, the con stittion and laws of my county I 1 pO WRING'S CORRESPONDENCE. especial guard iaifcof the people's money in the public unw s,v.i Uu yj. aximci jrom tne tasi j, titer or Minor jactc the Secretary's rcssoife the go-by, 4 r)n,in evaded it, shunned it, or rather merged it, m the has not ventureCto approve the Secretary' reasons. says 1 Mineral Suppose you Was It cannot appro them; but,. avoiding the true and appointed to defend the country agin an original questioJias gone off upon . a subordinate energy that was coming here from abroad. and collateral point. .? , :4 '" Anu ..a. YTV ?c they wouldn't tell you wJiere they were Treasury? f fte.President, n"t satisfied with the .J;i , , . . J 1 i- 1 . .: v 1 - s ? . . muni) i t. inn niir trim ira nhliirad ovarV p nrP F it. rhoJ-e than two Imonths .before the ""t; " 9 J " " vwmiv.vii commencemen)f the sessifni appointed a sec vveel to tell them where your men was 1 1 i" il. ...i: i i t .1, 11 .... t,.i - .1 ona aecreiary? uici rcasuf suite uie ai,juurii-i wriy Miiys 111c vjiiiciai 1. u iiu risnw. uwii ment of the lsWt Congress. .Ve are now in the fifth month of ithe session and in dchance 01 the sense of tAcountirv, ana m etwfcmpt of the participation fWtis body in t ie appointing power, the PresKlenCJlSAS not yet deigned to "submit the iwmi nation otlm .S.ecretarji'to. the cousideratiou frlie SenateVSSh I hav3rtot looked into the recoixl, but, from the habitual practice of every previous President, from the deference and re- 9pect which tlicy all mamtainea towaras a co-or dinate branchiof the Government, I venture to nnm cpnrimPiiF uirpiPfi i.v inc.. .iei aiur wv itui a mii ni w vi. iuuuu u - - - . J X " I - . . ! from Missouri in which he perfectly con- . MPre;"r ithV ... . . r - , 1 . 1 importance what-is to be tl issue, what; the re- curreu : ami tuavwa m one;n wmcu we . tuut im .. .rWiia. A with tlieTieofile dnenlr. traaklv. sincerely. 1 lie .1 i" ..v . . - describes the solemnity and importance of the occasion. In the presence pi my God (continueil Mr. L.) I will declared my belief, that,, on the resultiot the ques- tinn now before us will depend the late 6f this country, and that Cojn9tution n- to Niv -Orleans and whip em jist as I did afore: but suppose. says 1 they won't go there;' agin, but kept uodgin.about along live Criast from one eend t the other how thenl says I then says the Ginerul lM call Hut every man in the country, and I'd hnve 10,000 men in every 'fort from NewOrleans to Downingville well says I, tb I suppose would be the only way. and rf it was harvest time it would be bad workjsfor the crops T couldn't help that say the Gineral, I'd defend the country thro' I thick, and thin well says T, that's '. J- I . . i . n n- Hi. ' Senate stands ready to do Whatever is incumbent preti? mucn wnai oquire niuaie is arier. upon it butfttmess tne ntjonty in toe uouse ne m't Know wnere we mieod io auack lormaiities required by the Constitution j between me and my constituents as an der whichlwe have the happihess to live, and yet this same President has hereto- unauthorized intrusion into the relations Entertaining this sentiment, I will so" fur- oefween us. What has, the rresident of the r. and say, that there is no question the UYiited states to do with the obedience settled so well as that question wntch is of-a Seoator lo the instructions which he I decided calmly and dispossionately ; and ure oenounced aa.act of the Qenate asTiefween us. uhr.ojistituUonal J Was that in hini au, diciaf sentence ? in an Kxpciii-'ivp M- ge of March. 1833. hut" lift 1 will relent : iihle? it will ttikclieed of and profit by recent erjsntsi there is r&;hope for the nation from the joj$t actionof thti tO Hoi-ies.of Con gress at this seisin. StiI woukt say to my countrymenitfo not dma i ouare a young-, brave, intelligent, as yet afree peole. A com plete remely lot? all that yim suffer, ami all that vou dread, is in your f-n . hands. And the . . . i -i.t: " i - i- f ..'Li. in. .a events, to wmen l nave lusiaimucu, iciuHiro.ir that those Sf iu. hsive not: been deceived wbo his liank, and we make him tell as every week! jest how the branches stand as to strength, - and we have tell'd him wee'd break him if we can, and so as he wouldn't be dolfi his duty if he didn't defend; his Bankl he is obliged to keep every point as sjtiaing as he can, and so a heap of mo- than a year since, he declared that a re- stituted him judge ofthe one or. guardian may receive from the people. Who con- that Ibis question in particular ought to have alwinw relied npoi viruie, the capacity, olption of the Senate is uncopslitutional. a inn, tnerelwrei he would make no more n..iaations to certain ofllce. Mr.1 S. then readme Message. Here, sir, U a or theonterr l mistake the temper ot the pen pi e of Ne w - Jcrs ey , 1 f they do n ot give a prompt rebuke to such insolence. lie might as well, sir, have charged m e ney ii idle, jest asra good many militia men you'd be idle in the war we've been talkihg on there aint one grain of dif and I hopelfnS.- nnt pvptv attack we make agin Rank on v makes tlung3 worse S the be dispassionatel y adopted, r I feel now anri the intelligence nne Keop e. that I am 4it nt a -comlitiort to discuss xu , . .4. '. . . 1 you wilt reotye $he conw-atuktion wit uie suiyvvn imiuuv heartfelt cmlfty With nyhich I tender it. upon!" fe ii k:, nntrv wfiiUnow. feejings, passions, which at! this moment the issue of ihe late Election in the City of New-f Pe0Pe a,u f,DOUl lHV ,,uu 9 l ...ts...' . . I -- . - .i ... ... - ".1 ilia hull mnnrrir ie nn?rin"n'JW !as are boiling m my boiom. l ucsireto a- York, l hope it wui erBits paxriouc g-.ov ja-nivi .u.. wmv . - I fere mu'her Dauforth by" my mother's side you know says I Gineral, my mother was a Dsiuforth and so I telled. the Gineral as far -as I could all about the hull Dan forth family, and gittin that straight I got back agin to my a old Gramlmother Danforth-weil, says It she owned an old hen that was one ot the curiesest critters that evert cluck'd." This old heo was never remarkable or laying egg-i-bu she was a master hand in hatchtn on ein my old? Grandmother Danforth used to keep this bid critter always busy, htl as ast as she hatched one hatch, she'd stick under her another it got so at last alt the.fowls about the place would come and slide themselves in ahmg side this old hen and lay their eggs in her nest sometimes lucks sometimes geese and sometimes . dunghill fowls and Bantums, it made no odds which ; this oldhen would hatch, em all out and was jist as tickled every morn' ng when the young ones woolu crawl out of theYiest as though she had laid the gg herself and was all tlie while ruffled and rumpled, and ready for a fight and to t, tell'd the Gineral a good long story about this "old hen and about her troubles - and how the other fowls used to impose upon her, and so forth The Gineral was a good deal taken .with". this story, and he has been tell ra on7 o MrVan Uuren, and -Amos Kindle ami the rest of the Cabinet sand one oti 'm came to know wbat bearin Unt story bad on T7ie Government aod mil I could sajr about it was that the Gineral telltd me hia rackoon story, to show how important it wa- torhimo suck to a nowon rigni or and i as he didn't knoW exactly how he tot his potions, I thought I'd tell him the story ot my oia ranuinoioar j1 ;i - i Danforth's hen, and see il lUat ;wal4 throw any light on't. ; ' - H Tlien they wanted to knoif I tnfend, d to enmnare the Gineral to that &Jd htti ' --and I tell'dem it want tt ihocU niia J A I 7- I -- W. 1 -s . v
The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 6, 1834, edition 1
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