EDITORS AND PROPpEio.. TERMS. fertfflnii"r three dollars per annum ne Persons riitlinsr without the- Slate will le w-,i;rl lo py the WHOtK amount oi tu vcara ulwcriptirtii in advance. BATES OF ADVERTISING, For every J 6 lines Size type) first iiwertibn one dollar ; each sulwequent insertion, .25 cents. Court Onterj and Judicial Advertisements will be charpod .percent, higher; and a "deduction of per cent, will he made from tha regular prices, fr advertisers by the year. Cj I,KTTni to the. Editors must be not-piiJ. MR. CLAtS SPEECH CONCLUDED. Another conclusive evidence of the hostil- ltv to the state DanKs, on tne pan at mr. Van Buren, is to be found in that extraordi nary recommendation of a bankrupt law con tained in his message at the extra session. According to;all the principles of any -bankrupt system with which I an Acquainted, the banks, by the stoppage of specie pay ment, had rendered themselves' liable to its operation. If the recommended law had been passed, commissions of bankruptcy could have been immediately sited out against all the suspended banks, their assets seized, .and the administration of them transferred from-the several corporations to which it is now intrusted to commissioners appointed by the President himself. 1 hus, by one! blow, would the whole of the Statelbanks have been completely prostrated, and the way cleared for the introduction of tha fa vorite Treasury bauk; and is ft not in the aame spirit of unfriendlinessi to those banks, and with the same view of removing all ob stacles to the establishment of a Government bank, that the bill was presented la-the Se nate a Tew days ago by the senator trom Tennessee Mr. Grundy against the circu lation of the notes of the old Bank jof the United States ? " At a time when there is too much want of confidence, and when every thing that can be done should tie done to revive and strengthen it, we are; called upon to pass ajaw denouncing the heaviest penalty and ignominious punishment against all who shall reissue the notes of the old Bank of the United Statesof which we are told that about seven millions of dollars are in circulation ; and they constitute the best portion of the paper medium of the country; the: only portion of it which has a credit everywhere, and which serves the purpose of a general circulation ; the only portion with which a man can travel from one end of the continent to the other; and I do not doubt that the Senator who has fulminated these severe ipains and penalties against that beat part of our paper mediu m provides himself with a sufficient amount of it, when ever he leaves Nashville, to take Jum to Washington. . Here Mr. Grundy rose and remarked: No, sir always travel on specie. Ah! continued Mr. Clay, my old friend is always gpecieovs, I am quite sure that members from a distance in the interior generally find- it indispensable to isupply themselves, on commencing their journey, with an adequate amount of these identical notes to defray their expenses. 'Why, sir, will any man in his senses deny that these notes are far better than those which have been issued by that Government banker, Mr. Levi Woodbury, aided though hp be by the chancellor of the exchequer, (I beg his pardon, I mean the exchancellor,) the Sen ator from New York, Mr. WrighIt ?j I anv not going to stop here to inquire into the strict legality of the reissue of these notes; tha question, together with the pow er of the Government to" pass the proposed bill, will be taken up when it is considered. 1 am looking into the motive. of such; a mea sure. Nobody doubts the perfect safety of the notes ;no'one can believe that thley will not be fairly and fully paid. What, then, is the design of the "bill 1'' It is to assail the onlysure geneiI e'diniri "which the- people possess. It is becai0e4 may comb in com petition with Treasury notes or other Gov ernment paper j Sir, if the bill had not been proposed by my bid friend from Tennessee, I would say its author better deserved a penitentiary punishment than those against whom it is directed. I . remember to have heard of an illustrious individual, now in re tirement, having, on some occasion, burst out into the most patriotic indignation, be- ausc ui a watrcrisn trir.K t aven on unon him, by putting a note ,of the late Bank of .1 . O - 7 - . . - me united Stales into his silk purse with 3 gOlU. . ; But it is unnecessary to dwell longer on the innumerable proofs ofhe hostility a gamstthe State Bank, and the deliberate purpose of those in . power to overthrow tnem. We hearand see daily, throughout the count- t,- -t:o. es, ; I uiuuug men pii usaua ainu jtcoa- uenunciatiftns aorainst IinnlrR- hnrnnrati. ns, rag barons, the spirit of monopoly, &e; uuwi ior goia, nam money, and the constitutional currency; and no one lean lis- w me speeches of honorable members, mends of the administration, in this House arm e othef, without being impressed with pertect conviction that the destruction of e Mate banks is meditated. dem fulfilled my promise-, Mr. Presi m sustain the first four propositions with which t sat out. I now proceed to the fifth proposition : , ; s- 5.-That the bill under consideration is intended to execute Mr. Van Buren's pledge, J to complete and. perfect the-principleSrplans, and policy , of the . past administration, by establishing, upon: the ruinsofthe late Bank of the United States and the State banks, a Government bank, to be" managed and con trolled by the Treasury-Department, acting under the commands of the President of the United States. The first impression made by the perusal of the 'bill is the prodigal ; and boundless discretion which it grants tp the Secretary I of the Treasury, irreconcileable with the genius of our free institutions, and contrary j to the former cautious practice of the Gov-; eminent. As originally reported, he was authorized by the bill to allow any number of clerks he thought proper to the various receivers general,' and to fix their salaries. It wilK be borne in mind, that this is . the mere commencement of a system ; and it cannot be doubted that, if put into operati on, the number of receivers general and o ther depositaries of the public money would be indefinitely multiplied, i He is allowed to appoint as many examiners of the public money, and to fix their salaries as he pleas-, es : he is allowed to erect at pleasure costly buildings ; there is noestimate for any thing; and all who are conversant; with the opera tions of the executive branch of the Gov ernment know the value and importance of previous estimates. I here is no other check upon wasteful expenditure but previous es timates ; and that was a point always par ticularly insisted upon by Mr. Jefferson. The Senate will recollect that, a few days ago, when the salary of the receiver general at New York was fixed, the chairman of he Committee of Finance rose in his place and stated that it was suggested by the Se cretary of the Treasury that it should be placed at $3,000 ; and the blank was accor dingly so filled. There was no statement of the nature or extent of the duties to be performed, of the time that be would beoc cupied, of the extent of his responsibility, or the expense of living at the several points where they were to be located ; nothing but the suggestion of the .Secretary of the 0 i ' W Treasury, and that was deemed all-suffici ent by a majority. There is no limit upon the appropriation which is, made to carry into effect the bill, contrary- to all former usage, which invariably prescribed a sum riot to be transcended. A most remarkable feature in the bill is that to which I have already called the at tention of the Senate, and of which no sa tisfactory explanation has been given. It is that which proceeds upon the idea that the treasury is a thing distinct from the trea sure of the United States, and ffives to the Treasury a local habitation and a name, in the new building which is being erected for the Treasury Department in the city of Washington. In the Treasury, so consti tuted, iso be placed that pittance of the public revenue which is gleaned from the District of Columbia. - AH else, that is to say, nine hundred & ninety-nine hundredths ; of the public revenue of the United States, j is to be placed in the hands of the receivers j general, and the other depositaries beyond the District of Columbia. Nov, the con stitution of the United States provides that no money shall be drawn from the public Treasury but in virtue of a previous appro priation by law. That trifling portion of it, therefore, within the District of Colum bia, will be under the safeguard of the con stitution, and all else will be at the arbitrary disposal of the Secretary of the Treasury. It was deemed necessary,; no doubt, to vest in the Secretary of the I Treasury this vast and alarming discretionary power. A new and immense Government bank is a bout to beerected. How it would work in all its parts could not be : anticipated with certainty ; and it was thought proper, there fore, to bestow a discretion ! commensurate with its novelty and complexity, and adapt ed to any exigencies which might arise.- It is short, and I will read it to the Senate : Sec. 10. , And be it furOitr enacted, That jt shall be lawful for the'Secretary of the Treasury to transfer the moneys in the hands of any depo sitary hereby constituted, to the Treasury of the United States y to the Mint at Philadelphia , to the Branch Mint at New Orleans ; or to the offices of either of the receivers-general of public moneys,' by this act directed to be appointed f 'to be there safely kept, according to the provisions of this act ; and. also transfer money in the hands of any one depositary constituted by this act to any other de positary constituted by the same, at his nrscttr. Tioir, and as the safety of the public moneys, and the convenience of the public service, shall seem-to him to require. -And. for the purpose of payments on the public account it shall be lawful for the said Secretary to-draw upon any of the said deposita ries, as he may think most conaucive to tacpuoue interests, or to the convenience of the public credi tors, or both." if. j It will be seen that it grant a power, per fectly undefined, to the Secretary , of the Treasury, to shift and transfer the public money, from depositary to depositary, as ! he pleases. lie is expressly authorized to transier moneys in the nanus oi . any one depositary, constituted by mis act, to any other depositary-constituted by- it, at M discretion, and as the safety of the public moneys, and the convenience of the public service, 'shall .eern to him to require. There is no specification of.-'any contingency or contingencfe on which ne W to, act. All is left to his discretion.' He is; to judge when the public service (and more indefinite terms could not have been employed) i shall seem to him to require it. Ii has been saidTthat this is nothing more-thari the customary power of transfer, exercised by ifie Trea sury Department from the origin of the Go vernment. - I deny it: utterly (Jeriy it. . It is a totally different power from that which was exercised by the cautious Gallatin, and other Secretaries of the Treasury a power, by the bye, which, on more than one oc casion, has been controverted,1 and which is infinitely more questionable than the power-to establish a Bank of the United States. The transfer was made by them rarely, in large sums, and were left tp the banks to remit. When payments were made, they were effected in the notes of banks with which the public money .was deposited, or to which it was transferred- Therates of exchange were regulated by the state of the j market, and under the responsibility of the banks. But here is a' power given to transfer the public moneys without limit, as wu duui, juace, or iime, leaving every inmg to the discretion of the Secretary of the Treasury, the receivers general, and other depositaries. What a jscope is allowed in the fixation of the rates of exchange, whe ther of premium or discount, to regulate the whole domestic exchanges of the country, to exercise favoritism ? These former trans fers were not made far disbursement, but as preparatory to disbursement ; and when disbursed, it was "generally in bank notes. The transfers of this bill are immediate pay ments, and payments made not in bank notes, but specie. L The last paragraph in the section provides that, for the purpose of payments on the public account, it shall be lawful for the Secretary to draw upon any cf the said de positaries, as he may think most conducive to the public interest, ox to the convenience of the public creditors, or both. It will be seen that no limit whatever is imposed up on the amount or form of the draft, or as to the depositary upon which it is drawn. He is made the exclusive judge of what is 44 most conducive td the public interests." Nowr .et us pause a moment, and trace the operation of the powers thus vested. The Government has a revenue of from twenty to thirty millions. The Secretary may draw it to any one or more points, as he pleases. More than a moiety of the revenue arising from customs is receivable ,at New Yok, to which point the Secretary may draw all portions of it, if he thinks it conducive to the public interest. A man has to receive under an appropriation law, $10,000, and applies to Mr. Secretary for payment. Where will you receive it ? he is asked. On New York. How ? . In drafts from $5 to $500. Mr. Secretary will give him these drafts accordingly, upou bank note paper, impressed like and simulating bank notes, having all suitable emblazonry, signed by my friend the Treasuer, (whose excellent practical sense, and solid sound judgment, if he fiad been at the bead of the Treasury, instead of Mr. Levi Woodbury, when the suspension of specie payments took place would have relieved or mitigated the pecu niary embarrassments of the Government and the people) countersigned by the Comp troller, and filled up in the usual way of bank notes. Here is one of them said Mr. Clay. Re here held up, to the gaze of the beriate, a Treasury note, having all the appearance of a bank note, colored, engrav ed, and executed like any other bank note, for $50.3 This, continued, Mr. Clay, is a Government post note, put" into circulation, paid out as money, and prepared and sent forth, gradually to accustom the people of this country to Government paper. I have supposed $10,000 to be received in the mode stated, by a person entitled to receive it under an appropriation law. Now let us suppose, what Tie will do with it. Anywhere to the south or West it will com mand a premium of from two to five per cent. Nowhere in the United States will it be un der par. Do you suppose that the holder of these drafts would be foolenough to con vert them into specie, to be carried and transported at his risk ?. Do you think that he would not prefer that his money should be in the responsible custody of the Gov ernment,rather than in his own insecure kee ping ? Do you think he will deny to him self the opportunity of realizing the premi um of which he may be perfectly sure 2 The greatest want of the country is a me dium of general circulation, and of uniform value everywhere. That, especially, is our want in the .western and interior States. Now, here is exactly such a medium ; and supposing the Government bank to be ho nestly and faithfully administered, it will, during such an administration, be the best convertible paper money in the world, for two reasons. s The first is, that every dol lar of paper out will be the representative of a dollar of specie in the hands ' of the recei Yer3 general, or other depositaries ; and, se condly, if the receivers gerieral should em bezzle the public money, the responsibility of the Government to pay the drafts issued upon the basi? of that money would remain unimpaired. The paper therefore, would; be as far superior, to the paper of any pri vate corporations as.the ability and resour ces of the Government.of the United States are superior to those of such corporations. . The banking capacity may be divided into- three faculties ; deposites, -Miscount of bills of exchange, and promissory notes, or eitheY, and circulation. . This Government bank would combine them all, except that it will not discount private notes, nor jeceive private depo3ites. In payments for the pub lic lands, indeed, individuals are allowed to make deposites, and to receive - Certificates of their amount. To guard! against their negotiability, a clause hag beten introduced to render them unassignable. - But how will it be possible to maintain such an inconve nient restriction, in a country where every description of paper importing an obligation to pay money or deliver property is assign able, at law or in equity, from the commer cial nature and trading, character of our peo ple ? Of the faculties which I have stated of a bank, that which creates a circulation is the most important to the community -at large. It is that in which thousands mav be inie- rested, who never obtained a discount, or made, a deposite with a bank. Whatever a Government agrees to receive in payment of the public dues is a medium of circula tion, is money, current money, no. matter what its form may be, Treasury notes, drafts drawn at Washington, by the Treasurer, on the receiver general of New York, or, to use the language employed in various parts of this , bill, 4 such notes, bills, or paper issued under the authority of ths U. States." These various provisions were probably in serted, not only to cover the case of Treas ury .notes, but that of these drafts in due season. But if there were no express pro vision of law, that these drafts should be receivable in payment of public dues, they would, necessarily be so employed, from their own intrinsic value. The want of the community of a general circulation, of uniform value everywhere in the United States, would occasion vast a mounts of the speciesof draft which I have described to remain in circulation. The appropriations this year will probably fall not much short of thirty millions. Thirty millions of Treasury drafts on receivers general, of every denomination, and to any amount, may be issued by the Secretary of the Treasury. What amount would re main in circulation cannot be determined a priori; I suppose not less than ten or fif teen millions ; at the end of another year, some ten or fifteen millions more ; they would fill all the channels of circulation,. The war between the Government and State banks continuing, and this mammoth Government bank being in the market, constantly demanding specie for its varied and ramified operations, confidence would be lost in the notes of the local banks, their paper would gradually cease to circulate, and the banks themselves would be crip pled and broken. The paper of the Gov ernment bank would ultimately fill the va cuum, as it would instantly occupy the place of the notes of the late Bank of theTJnited States. 1 am aware, Mr. President, that by the 25th section of the bill, in Order to disguise the purpose of the vast machinery which we are about constructing, it is provided that it shall be the duty of the Secretary of the Treasury to issue and publish regula tions to enforce the speedy presentation of all Government drafts for payment at the place where payable, fec. Now, what a tremendous power is here vested in the Secretary! ! He is to prescribe rules and regulations to. enforce speedy presentation of all Government drafts for payment at the place where payable. The speedy pre sentation ! In the case I have supposed, a man has his $10,000 in drafts on the re ceiver general at New York. The Secre tary is empowered to enact regulations re quiring him speedily to present them, and if he does not, the Secretary may order them to be paid at St. Louis. At New York they may be worth a premium of five, per cent. ; on St. Louis they may be liable to a dis count of five per cent. Now, in a free Government, who would ever think of sub jecting the property or money of a citizen to theexercise of such a power by any Secretary of the Treasury ? What oppor tunity does it not afford to reward a parti san, or punish an opponent ? It will be impossible to maintain .such an odious and useless restriction for any length of timel- Why should the debtor (as the Government would be in the case of sueh drafts as I have supposed) require his creditor (as the holder of the draft would be) to apply with in a prescribed time for his payment ? No, ! sir 1 the system would control you you could not control the system. But if such a ridiculous restriction could be continued j the drafts would, nevertheless, whilst they were out, be the timelong or short, perform the office :of circulation and- money. Let us trace a little further the operation of this Government bank, and follow it out to its final explosion. I have supposed the appropriation of some thirty millions of dollars annually by the Govemriient, to be disbursed in the form of drafts, issued at Washington by the Treasury Department, upottthe depositaries. Ui that amount, some ten or fifteeen million would remain ther:first year, in circulation ; at the end of another year, a similar amount would con tinue in circulation ; and so on, from year to year, until, at the endy a series of some fiveoftsix years; there would be in circula- fiout snpblv the indispensable wants of commerce and of a general medium ounir form-value, noteless than some sixty or eigbjy millions ofdrafts issued by the Gov- ernment. -The.se drafts would be generally upon the receiver general at New York, because, on that point, thev would he- nre. ferred over all others, as they would com mand a premium, or be at par, throughout tlje whole extent of the United States ; and we have seen that the Secretary of th Treasury is invested, with, ample authority I to concentrate at that point the whole reven ue of the United States. All experienee'lias demonstrated that in banking operations a much: larger amount iol of paper can be. kept out in circulation than tne specie which it is necessary to retain in; of it, every consideration of safety and se the vaults to meet it "when presented for j curity recommends the agency-of responai payment. The proportions which die same ble corporations, rather than theiemploy experieoce has ascertained to be entirely! meut of particular individuals. It has been safe are one of the specie to three of paper.' shown, during the course of- this debate, If, therefore, the Executive Government1 that the amount which has been lost by the had sixty millions of dollars accumulated at' defalcation! of individuals has exceeded tne port ot rsew York, m the hands of the receiver general, represented by sixty mil- lions ol Government drafLs in cirnlilattnn. w?u a "e known that twenty of that sixty 1 minions wouia be sumcientto retain to meet any amount of drafts whiclv in ordiary timesK would be presented for payment There would then remain forty" millions in the vaults, idle and unproductive, and of. which no practical use could be made Well : a great election, is at hand in the btateafNew York, the result of which' will seal the fate of an existing administra tion.' If the application of ten millions of that dormant capital could save, at some futureday, a. corrupt Executive from over throw, can it be doubted that the ten mil- lions would be , applied to preserve it in tu'te in their place the receivers general. power ? Again : let us suppose some great The new system requires, 1 think I have exigency to arise, a season of war, creat- ' heard it stated, something like 100,000 em ing severe financial pressure and embarrass-' players to have it executed. And notwith. ment. Would not an issue of paper, found- standing the modesty cf theinfant promises ed upon and exceeding the specie in the ! of this new. project, I. have no donbt that vaults, in some proportions as experience ! ultimately we shall have to employ a numb had demonstrated might be safely emitted, er of persons approximating to that which be autborized? Finally, the whole amount; is retained in France. That will undoubt of specie might be exhausted, and then, as edly be the case whenever we shall revive it is easier to engrave and issue bank notes 'the system of internal taxation. In France than to perform the unpopular office of im- j what reconciled them to the system was, posing taxes and-burdens, the discovery that Napoleon first, and then the Bourbons would be made that the credit of the Gov- j afterwards, was pleased , with the immense eminent was a sufficient basis whereupon 1 paironage vhch it gave them. .They liked to make emissions of paper money, to be j to have 100,000 dependants to add strength redeemed when peace and prosperity re-' to the throne, which had been recently con turned. Then we. should have the days structed or reascended. I thought, how of continental money,- and of assignats, ejrer, that the learned chairman of the Corn restored ! Then we should have that Gov- i initteee of Finance must have had aom. ernment paper medium which the Senator : other besides the French model for hisre from South Carolina (Mr. Calhoun) consid- ! ceivers general ; and, accordingly, upon the most perfect of all currency ! looking into Smith's history" of his' own Meantime, and during the progress of , State, I found that, when ii was yet a cblo this vast Government machine , the State i ny, some century and half ago, and when banks would all be prostrated. Working j its present noble capital still retained the well, as it may, if honestly administered, ! name of New Amstel'dam, the Jiistdrian in the first period of its existence, it will be i says : "Among the principal laws enacted utterly impossible for them to maintain the 'at this session, we may mention that lor ) unequal competition. IThey could not main- tain it, even if the Government were actua - ted by no unfriendly feelings towards them. But when we know the spirit which ani- mates the present Executive towards them, who can doubt that they must fall in the unequal contest? Their issues will be dis- credited and discountenanced; and that system of bankruptcy, which the President would even now put into operation against them, will in the sequel, be passed and en forced without difficulty. Assuming the downfall of the local banks, the inevitable consequene of the operations of this great Government bank ; assuming, as I have shown would be the case, that the Government would monopolize the paper issues of the country, and obtain the possession , of a great portion of the specie of the country, we should then behold a combined and concentrated moneyed power equal to that of all Ahe existing banks of the United States, with that of the Tate Bank of the United -States superadded. This tremendous power would be wielded by the Secretary of the Treasury, uctiug under the immediate commands of the President of " the. United States. Here would be a perfect union of the sword and the purse ; here would be no imaginary, but an "actual,, visible, tangible, consolida tion of the moneyed power. Who or what could withstand ft ? The States themselves would become suppliants jat the-feet of the Executive for. a portion of those paper emissions, of the power to issue which they had been stripped, and which he ex clusively possessed. Mr. President, my observation and ex perience have" satisfied me that the safety of liberty and prosperity consists - in the division of power, whether political or pe cuniary. In our federal system, our se curity is to be found in that happy distri bution of power which exists between the Federal Government and the State Govern ments. In onr monetary system, as it , 0 m lately existed, its excellence resulted from that beautiful . arrangement, by which the States had their institutions for local pur poses, and the General Government its in stitution for the more general purposes of the whole Union . There existed the great est congeniality between all the parts of this admirable system." 4ul Was! JuFmoge neous. Theire was" no - separation of the Federal Governmeni from the States or from the people There was no attempt to execute practiqally that absurdity ofus talnihg, among the same people two dif ferent currencies of unequal value. . And how admirably did the 'whole system, dur ing the forty years of its existence, move two unfortunatf. tdcCasionS of its ceasing to exist, how' quick ly ud the busiuess. and transactions of the. country tun into' wild disorder and utter confusion! . v . , Hitherto, I 'have considered- this neW project a4 it is, according to its true naturd andcharacter, arid what it (must inevitably become. I have not examined it as it is notA but as its friends would represent it to be. They hold out the idea that it is q simple cdntrivance to collect, to keep, and to. dis- burse, the public revenue. In that view three or four times the amount of- all that has been lost by the local banks, although the sums confided to'theeare of individuals nave not been probably one?tenth, part, of. the amount that has been in the custody of the local banks. And we; all know that, during the forty years of existence of the two Hanks of the United States, not one cent, was lost of the public" revenue. -VI . i nave been curious. Mr.- President, to know whence this idea of receivers general was derived. It has been supposed to have been borrowed from France It required all the power of that most extraofdiiiar'y man that ever lived, Napoleon Bonaparte, when he was in his meridian greatness, to displace the farmers ffeneral, and to substi- i establishing the revenue, which was drawn : into precedent. The sums raised by it ' were, payable into the bauds of receivenr j general, and issued by the Governor's var 'rant. By this means the Governor became, i for a season, independent of the people,and j hence we find frequent instauces of tha j. Assemblies contending with him for the. I discharge of debts to private persons, con tracted on. the faith of the Government; The then Governor of the colony waa a man of great violence of temper, and.arbi-, tary in his conduct. How the Sub-Treaa-i ury system of that day operated, the same historian informs us in a subsequent, part of His work. "The revenue' he cays, ; "established the last year, was at this ses sion continued" five years longer than was originally intended. This was rend' -ering the Governor independent of the, ' people. For,at,that.day, the Assembly had no treasure,but the amount of all taxes went, of course, into the hands of "the receiver general, who. was appointed by the Crown Out of this fund, moneys were only issu able by the governor's warrant, so; that every officer in the Government, from Mr. Blaiihwaith, who drew annually five per cent, out of the revenue, as auditor gen eral, down to the:meanst servant of the public, became dependent, solely on the. Governor. And hence we find the House at the close of every session, humbly- ad-' dressing his Excellency, fpr the trifling' wages of their own clerki" And, Mr President, if this measure.should unhappily" pass, the day may come when the Senate of the United States will have-humbly tol implore some future President ofthe Uni ted States to grant it jnoney to pay the " wages of its own sergeaat-at-arhir?and doorkeeper., : "''t , -. - . Who." Mr. President, are live most con spicuous of thoe, who -pefseveringly press this bill ,upon" Congress and the Ameri can people!- It drawer is the distinguish ed geftdeman-in the white house not far offj i its endorse, ia the distinguished genato froin South! CJStolina, Here pxesentJvVhai; the drawer thinks-of tfie endorser, his au Uons reserve, and stifled enmity, prevent us fjbrh knowing But the frankness of tha" endorser has not;efts"iahe same iga6 rancetSvith reispect .'tif ht opinion of tbgj' drawer.! He has 'often expressed ttvypoa? the floor of the Senate. VOn au.-oSeasioai -not veryjlistant nlenyingi-tohiniil any- of the nobler qualities of . theT rdyaBeasrf of thfiforest, he .attribnted to1iiiilp'f4cH. tthg to the mostiafiy;md$luslkgit , and one of the meanest jtof, tSe' quadruped trH6. - Air. PresMeati.ts'.i?! Vi to sav that I do not altogether iKare with." and work 1 And on the