Newspapers / The Weekly Raleigh Register … / June 25, 1838, edition 1 / Page 1
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"Oar are the plan of fair deliglitfnl peace, uuVvarp'a by party rage, to live like brothers." vot.. XXXIX MOKBAV, JUNE 25, ISSg. BTO, 34t i. i rll I, 1; m ity, te T, i IT OB S A N D PROP RIETOR S . get, annum--one ficiMcairtiox, three dollars talf in advance. s ,.. Persons residing wiiuout the Slate will be MhecriptKn in.auvtuice. . . .- - RATES OF ADVERTISING. For every 16 lines (this size type) first insertion ,ono dollar ; each subsequent Insertion, 25 cents. Court Orders and Judicial Advertisements will tfjargcrt io per cent. Mgner; ami a ueuucxion of 331 per cent, will be made from the regular prices, fr advertisers by the year, j j Lkttkbs to the Editors must be post-paid. ELOQUENT DEBATE. ; In thcHnuse of Representatives on the 12th May, when the Treasury ISore Dill was under discussion, Mr. Rhett, of S. C ipoke warmly in -favor of tlie bill and con cluded his speech as follows. Mr. liiiett said : Sir, neither the banks nor the capitalists of the country believe that any hostile de igns exist towards them on 'the part oi those who oppose their association with the Government, or refuse to bend before their ambition and selfish pretensions. We in tend to maintain the banking itititutioiis of the State in all their powers and privile ges, with as much fidelity and energy as they can evince. These arc mere tubs to the whale ; mere pretexts to divert the at tention of the people from their trpe de signs. mevKnow tne uans rest-in s curity beneath the protection of thelS$r Sovereignties .who created them, ajun fp whom alone they are responsible. II hey know that there are not twenty , inea on; this .floor, who would consent that tiiis Go vernment should touch, much less destrov them : and that those who are most stren- ous for the separation of the Government from all banks, oppose the re-e&tablihient of a United States Bank, (their p anacea for all the ills of the currency,) expressly upon the ground .that this Government has no right by the establishment of such an institution to crush them. Not, then. upon policy only, but upon constitutional principles, we arc necessarily the fast frieuds of the Banks. Sir, the captulists are in no delusion as to this matter. - The pre texts are but eiuts in the battle to dis ;guise.thetUue point of attack. If they can succeed .in making the People believe that they are the party wronged ; that the Gov ernment, and not their own imprudence and weakness, caused them to fait in jedeemiu4 their promises, arid that it is now seeking their destruction, why then the more confusion and distress to the People, the greater the odium of the Gov- eminent, and the more power they wdl possess ofaccomplishing their design of con trolling: its action and making it contribu tory to their credit and aggrandizement. Hence, the violent and sudden contrac tions and expansions in the. currency a few years since, by which thousands were injured or ruined. Hence the innumer able suits which crowd the courts of the country on the part of the banks, whilst refusing to meet their own promises to pay. Hence, the refusal lately to resume specie payments. Through the agitations of distress, and the uiiMs of tears, the People are to be confounded and blinded, and the Government is to be struck, down and throttled beneath the gripe of monopo lists and money changers. The last blow. itself to Banks, will not usurp a power, (establish ng a Uuited.States Batik,) ques tioned from the yery , first origin of the Guverirtrfent, it is to" be violently suspen ded and overthrown ? No one can doubt our control over the suplies." Tfc is abso lute, unlimited; bat to stop them, is a revolutionary measure,, ju-itifiibl only, when we are prepared to dissolve the Gov ernment, throw away the shield of the Constitution and the laws, and reconstruct, from the entangled elements of society, a a new political fabtic. I call upon jren- tlemcn to look to the consequences boldly, before they trifle with them. Neither your civil nor military dependants are bound to serve you' without bread or pay. Your army, your navy, your, judicial, and executive ofheers, alt over the land, will have a right to disband and leave your service. Suspend, for a single day, the laws and the Constitution of the country, and when and where may it , end ? Let the spirit of anarchy and lawlessness, at a time like the present, full of confusion and distress, of violent ami political agita tion, and fierce contention for power,-once lift its hydra head in our land, and who shall strangle it ? " Sir, I bid gentlemen beware. They may sow to the wind and reap a whirlwind. I am a , friend to the banks, althmi&h no anoioirist tor their a terrors of anarchy sir, it will not be. Th' People will come to the rescue. Although -urrpunded by mists and darkness and drujrged with distress,' they will ere lond awake and rising up in the majesty of truth and justice, they will snap asunder the chains which ambition and avarice have forgad for their ruiu, They will soon per ceive, from the principles and parties invol ved, that the disgrace of the Government in-this contest will be their infamy ; its fall, their overthrow: and that noble patriotism, which during the last war cn land and sea, rallied to its support.will once more come forth in all its majestic power, and march to victory. And in this mighty struggle where, sir, shall each? of us be found? My position at least shall be in the van. If this Administration had continued in its strength, approving as I do nearly all its measures, since I have been upon this floor, I should have been content to stand aloof, as I have heretofore done, and see it go on in its career of constitutional usefulness and duty : but the more it has fallen, the nearer I have found myself to its destinies ; and now,ifitis to fall in maintenance of the great financial measures upon which I believe. It has staked its existence, I am willing, I am ready to go down with it. Better to fall with those who fall in defence of the Con stitution and liberties of the country, than a responsibility not great only, but awful ; a responsibility resting, in my opinion, on undivided force, and solely on the Execu tive, and those who second his counsels. Sir, the Executive and these counsels already sustain a volume of popular reprobation which bends them almost to the earth Let ou3 advances imperceptible to the People; that up to this period it had never been tolerated in time of peace, but reserved, exclusively for the calamities of war, when the Government, unable to raise money by the constitutional means of "borrowing" vv 'A fnmnA t thft ettrpmitv if m rtl-i n cr It by the emission of paper, as is now con- them not, by a measure so. monstrous as that teraplated. For which, and other insur-' indicated, augment the pressure which i now mountable objections, they insist that the manner which the President reccommends of raising supplies should not be resorted to. In all which, if I do not agree, I cer tainly perceive great force, fully demanding the maturest deliberation of the House. A plain man, I think, would discover noth ing very objectionable in all this. But, sir, how does the gentleman from South Caro lina regard it ? Why, sir, that gentleman looks r w i i . i i .uuscs; uc "u -- j , , , , , " i triumph with those whose victory, m my I I mi hilh iin Ulf I i w. ilUf I -1111141 1II1L ii.i : - 11 I .1 w m ' J ' ' 4 T - - - accumulation is the nrcesary fruit and t m mm . ft me 'crownin!r mercv." may Deine meaJ sure alluded to by my honorable colleague 'stopping the supplies" to the -Govern ment $ destroying the bill upon your table. without any adequate substitute to meet the wants of the, Government. .''If, ever there was a time," he says, when this old method, common with our. English ancestors, of redressing the rights of 'the People against their Government, was justifiable, it was now." (Mr. Thompson rose and said that he didy not recommend such a measure, or say that he would vote for it ; oil the con trary, he had declared his willingness to vote for a loan or any other constitutional inode of supply.) J I have stated, Mr. Chairman, the words .of my colleague,- as I understood him to 4Uter them, and in y statement is not in compatible with what' be aysJTI know lhat he. d suggest a method ofaupply in - . i i wucjpn .wjui ins remarKs a loan in Europe, for wiiich he said 4ie would votev utjwhich he expretwly declared at 4he ame tune, he jshould not propose. This scheme 1 have already considered ; and mive shbui, I think, that it. will not an swer the emergency of tlve Treasury, -but rif adopted, would, in fact, be stopping -the SUDnl'iM " l.lt if Urn. sin tliar wend has merely hinted at this grand remedy. It is followed up by a proposi- OI Hie rentlman mm Vmrmii Vlr- UpKins.l for anothpr form rvf snntiltr. oeclares. at th timp. thf UM.oll r,,.. vote for his owii nronosition. Tlie jrpntlp- nan from Tennessee ( Mr. Bell ) nrnnsp nother form, hut tlnp'e nnr aaw ,K..r i.,. jvill vote for it. Mr. Chairman, I trust that I mistake. these intimations, and that iiUemen do not intend to carry them into effect. U it come to -this, that not l;IUrp Pwer r agsressing upon the "gfct of the citizeiistut because the overnent will not act, .will mtt unite reward of civilization itself ; but if they, in conjunction with the great Federal party U which they are allied, make this experi ment upon the patience and patriotism of the People their madness will be their ruin. Banks and capitalists are the natural allies lo'Governmentl They are the creations .of itw, and essentially depend on its steady auul certain administration for their sup port. Cieditis a delicate plant often of sh w gf-owth, and can only live in the sunshine if. .i.i i f r i .. oi peace, anu tne .cairn oi c(iMiueoce. Forgetful and r.egardies tf their true nature ad policy, for the first time in the history of the world, the banks of the country are arrayed against the Govern ment, and the path of reyoUjdion is painted Ut as the triumphant road in .which -they are to tread to power. Sir, let them enter it, and their ruin will be inevitable. The very first victims to lawless popular fury may be those who shall have created, ex cited, and dared it ; and even that marble palace with its splendid halls and lofty colonades, towering in all the pride and glory of classic architecture, may not be too high for the grasp of the People's lae. Over deeper, wider, foundations, planted, as they may have been, firmly in the af fections and interests of the People, the ploughshare of ruin has been ruthlessly driven. Mr. Chairman, this method of embar rassing the Government, by stopping the supplies, is not new, even in the history of this country. It was tried during' the last war, and we all know the result. The supplies were oppsed by a certain party in this country within these wails.; and out of this House, after the supplies were voted, the same party djdi all in their pow er to defeat the Government in negotiating iU loans to carry on the war. I did not intend, sir,, to indulge in indiscriminate condemnation of the motives, although I du jiot approve of the conduct of this party. Many of them, I have no doubt, believed that their course1 was justifiable,! upon the highest principles of policy. Their error wa in acting upon their fear of speculative evils,' instead of doing heir duty. At that time, England was bat tling, not only for herVexistence, but for the independence of all the- nations of the earth. We had undoubtedly the best and highest causes for war, but they jmight have supposed that success in &Mch a coutesti might have been our ruin," and that, if England was overthrown; our liber ties ami independence iwould perish with her. But they opposed their country in favor of a foreign enemy.- Instead of rallyr ing to the support of the Government at a time of great danger and difficulty, they endeavored to paralyze, embarrass, and overthrow it. sSir, what was their fate? The war rolled on triumphantly rolled on, Dome up &y the patriotism of the People, responding to that lofty sentiment of him whose bruw in life wore the laurel of the hero, and whose memory should live for ever embalmed in the lays of the minstrel "our country, right or wrong." Where are those who werefor .''stopping the- sup plies during the war.? Sunk for ever in to privacy, suspicion, and contempt. And so it will ever be. The Government might be weak or wrong, but the People will not stand passively by, and see it beaten dowrr by a foreign enemy, nor will they now permit it to be appropriated and pros trated by the bankjs and capitalist? of the country. Why, k we are to'have masters. let tnem oe those whom we can respect or fear,, et there be one battle field at leastr whieh caoJell to after times that one brave and mighty effort was made &C our liberties, but to be overcome, not by the power of the sword, but by4he in fluence of money to give up tlie Govern ment and Constitution of the country, by the base instrumentality of colored votes, or distress wrung from the poor, or the opinion, will do tneir prostration. Mr. Chairman, our duty, on the present occasion, appears to me to require us to pass the bill before the committee as soon us possible. The necessities of the Gov ernment cannot be postponed. Let those who agree in this opinion determine to oc casion as little as delay as possible, by dis cussing .the measure, and be ever ready to vote upon it, If those who oppose the bill think proper to consume time ia dis- cussion, ana mus postpone reiiei to tne Government, let them do it; on them be the responsibility. If they think proper to defeat the bill, without any efficient substitute, let them do it ; On them bo the responsibility. The momen,t Mr. Rhett took his scati Mr. Menefee rose and said he did not rise to debate then, the merits of the ques tion before the House, but to relieve it, on the fixst instant, simply and in few .words, from the false position in. which the gentle man from South Carolina (Mr. Rhett) had in the speech just delivered sought to place it. Sir, said he, that was a most surprising speech, greatly deviating, I ihtnk, from the style of discussion which should be cultivated her. What does the gentleman mean? Does he mean menace? He must have so meant, or he meant nothing. Sir, before resorting to that expedient on ; an occasion like this, he should have re membered thatt has been iiereoiore so freely and indiscrimately employed in the same quarter whence it'now proceeds, that, though clothed in its accustomed thun der, it no longer inspires terror ; scarce ly excites notice. It is at length become a regular exhibition which all expect, j&one regard. But, sir, whence the preserU volcanic eruption, whose flame and smoke so sub limely mingle with the thunder aud light ning of -this new menace? The cause that produces it, is about as potent a3 the effect. What is it! The Government, sir, by a series of fi- nanciai disasters, which popular opinion ascribes to a series ol nnancial enormities perpetrated by the Administration, has at length reached a poini requiring, in the opinion of the -President, that he should in form the House (what it knew before,) that the Ijreasury is in a deplorable exigency demanding the early adoption, by Con gres, of measures for its, relief, which he proceeds most pressingly to recommend. Well, sir, this House whose peculiar pro vince, under the Constitution, it is to orig inate measures of the kind, is satisfied that such exigency does exist; and without distinction of parties, proclaims a readiness and determination to furnish the requisite supplies and to proceed, at once, to the con not to these or any conceivable objections, deigns not to meet them, assumes by instinct that to liquidate a debt by note necessarily im plies a borrowing; scorns deliberation, oversteps all obstacles hearken to nothing, but leaps right at once, by inspiration, thunder-clad, to the conclusion, that any, party, or any man of any pany, that dares to oppose or question the precise manner !of raising supplies recommended by the President, or to hesitate one instant, upon 'Constitution, or expediency, or other grounds, are faithless to their trusts, de votees to fuction, and foes to the Govern tnent of their country J That to decline td pass this bill just as it is, and just now, would present an example of lawlessness by this House, unavoidably resulting in the immediate overthrow of the Crovernmentm anarchy ; in the extermination of all cor porations, and the demolition, by the hand of violence, of the edifices the marble palaces which they inhabit! And all this by the aroused loyalty of the nation ! Sir, is the dignity of this House best eon- State of JYortti Carolina, HALIFAX GOCNTY. . . Court of Picas and Quarter Session. . May Term, 183S1 ' E. II. Davis i Original Atfa$hrhent Kivied t. on a tract of Land adjoining tha Clay-tost Hats. J Lands of G.King fr others. IN (hid case, it appearing to the satisfaction of the Court, that the' Defendant is not an inhabi tant of tbb State : It U ordered by the Court that publication be made in the Raleigh Jtejister for aijf weeks, notifying the Defendant that bnleas he make his personal appearance at the next Court of Pleas ' and Quarter Sessions, to be held for the County of Halifax, at the Court-House in the toWn of Halifax, on the third Monday in August next, and thenand there plead or replevy. Judgment, pra eorifeSsdtvtH be taken as to him, and the land levied on be coa; deihncd, subject to Plaintiff's recovery. - Witness, J. H. Simmoks, Clerk of aid Court, at Office, in Halifax, the 3d Monday of May, 183S. J, H. SIMMONS. Pr. A,dv. $5 62 - 33-6t "ST A T'6'F NOR TH-CAROLI$&i JOHNSTON COUNTY, Conrt of Pleas and Quarter Sessions, May Term, A. D. 1838. James T. Leach, "I rs. Nathaniel G. Jones, V Peltipn to build MilL David Jones, Ashley SaunderSjGuard'n. J "I T appearing to the satisfaction of the Court, that c e -I- c i . 'it r uavia j ones, one ui uic wwuuauui, free from prjde, is a powerful party, rapidly xo lhis tateIt is tuereforet oriemt, that growing, talented in its composition ; in ts ; publication be made in the Raleigb Register for air principles, right. By whom is it to be pros- j successive we?ks, that he be and "appear at the next . trated? For what? Because, in this emer-i Term of tfiis Court, to be held at the Court-house gency, looking steadfastly to its duty and w Sitfxfield, on the 4th MondartTrAst nex. ?enonsibilitv to the Peoole it Dlants itself lhen and tIjere to P,ead' uiswer, or dfmutr 0 th re-ponsiDiiuy to tne rcopie, it plants itoeu , Jag T;Leach; otherwise, the same on the most impregnable ramparts of the ( wi taken coWffo and heard ex parte aa Constitution the supply granting power; ... him : and defying the Executive, firmly upholds j Witness, Wm. H. Watson, Clerk of our said Court, overwhelms them. They should be eontent to drag quietly to a close, now not distant, an Administration which promises no good to the country, and is top imbecile and crip pled to threaten further harm ; without kin dling, by fresh outrage, u fervor otreal loy alty, which, though not leadmg to thevio lent demolition or conflagration of corpora tion or other edifices jnight entail upon a prostrate and expiring Administration pangs! which might well be escaped. The fruits! of tht work so disastrously begun are. bitter enough already, as well to the actors as the I surferers. Sir, the successions of wrong by the Administration, and resulting distresses amongst the People, require no such 'crown ing mercy' as this. Your party will be prostrated1.7' threat ens the gentleman. Sir, that party, of my connexion with which I am not altogether and defends that power in its full vigor and dimensions. Because it will not surrender that power, on the first summons of the Exer cutive and his new confederates, at discre tion, and without a blow! It can be nothing else. That party, sirrstakesits existence on the suited by giving to such language a place Constitution and a sound and enlightened amongst the habitual ravings of gentlemen, heard and forgotten ? or by giving vent to th e vengeance which it seems to provoke? Sir, this language, proceeding from any cfuarter, would be inadmissible. But, sir, for that gentleman to speak, and so to speak of examples of lawlessness ; of at tachment to the Constitution and law3 ; of faction; of infide'.i'.y to theQovernment; of loyalty sir I Whose example ? Whose loyalty? Loyalty to what? Sir, within the memory of man we have had examples of the respect due, and, sir, the respect paid to the Constitution and laws ! We have had examples of loyalty ! They were memorable examples. The nation remem bers .them, and will remember. It re members, sir, the part which the gentle man took in setting those examples. Examples ! Loyalty ! W hy, sir, on a constitutional doubt incomparably weaker than that which exists ure, that gentleman, a i nfPo ;n SmithfiMtd thn 4th Mondav of Mav. A. D. 1838, and in tlie 62nd year of American Inde pendence. WM.H. WATSON. 33 pr. adv. 5 62$. : f STATE OF NORTH-CAfiPLINA, JOHNSTON COUNTY, Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions, May Term, A. D. 1838. Rebecca O'Neal, ) vs. Heirs of Isham O'Neal A T nmwarinir to the satisfaction of the Con I Samuel O'Neal, Heir of Ishain O Neal, decL, and William O'Neal, Defendants, are not resident of this State It is, therefore, ordered, that publica tion be made iu the Raleigh Register, for fix surces s've weeks, that thev be and appear at the next Term Petition for Dower. Court, that national policy, looking to the perpetuity of the Union. It means to stand upon them. ! But sir, it is prepared to fall, if it but fall in their embrace. Its possible prostration, except in that form, is never calculated when it is reauired to act. The gentleman for-! ffets of what nartv he sneaks. He anneals to sentiments which" belonged to another of this Court, to be held ai the Court-house Smiih- partv, notorious of late. The question, how jijaW, twthe 4th Monday m August next, then and " virtnrtt mill enurr " nr df fpnt is one ask- 1 Ulcre to plead, answer or demur to the said peUtion of victory wut enure, or deteat, is one abk- , i otherwise, the same will be takea eu uy mat party ociore n ; iioiuy mat i anJ heaTU parte a to them. . .... ... iv Ol I ".. . .iwl r'rvl'Ft Witneps, W n. n. vv aison, vsusi. u wu oi at Office in Smithfield, the 4th Monday of May, A. 1 1 1 he na the gen- whose prostration is denounced. tion will comprehend me ; I trust tleman does. Having thus, as I hoped, sir, restored the question to its true position, my object in rising is accomplished. against meas- At the late election in New England the man ufacturers, it is 6aid, compelled theft workmen in the factories to vote colored ticket. sideratiOn of the most eligible manner of raising them. That they must be raised, in some manner, is admitted on all sides : the most appropriate manner of doing it is the only question. Out of the boundless field of expedients a . choice must be made. The Executive, sir, as jt was his right to do, has recommended, as most appropriate, the contraction of a public debt o f .ten mil lions of of dollars. The House is likewise of opinion that a public debt is inevitable. The Executive, however, proposes what gentlemen please to denominate an indirect loan, in the form of ap exnissioh of Treas ury notes. Gentlemen in the Opposition suggest a direct loan, in the ordinary form. l ney resist tne measure wmcn tne Presi dent proposes, on the ground that, in the view-of the Constitution it is no lOan that the proposed notes are meant for circulation, are paper money, are bills of credit ; that in employing the credit of the Government to raise money, Congress is limited by the Constitution to borrowing, simply, no quality of which exists in the proposed issue,, which is but the eommon instance of a creditor applying , for payment and the debtor, for want of money, liquidating the debt on time ; that it is an expedient by which nations maybe overwhelmed with debt, and their credit subverted, by insidi- this few short years ago, showed himself not only willing that the Government should .suffer embarrass ment by an omission on his part to act, (the sin which he now imputes to others,) but ready, and willing, and striving, in open defiance of the laws and in wilful subversion of the Constitution, to dissolve, with an eternal dissolution, by violence and-in blood, this pricelsss Union itself! Are these the examples, is this the loyalty, whose intimation is invoked? I know of no others with which ihe gentleman is so closely identified. " The Uov.emment win stop : exclaims j the gentleman. Does he think so? I should be quite sorry if it did stop. Why should it stop? Who will stop it? Supplies, I understand, is all that is Wanting. The House, on all'sides, proposes to gran.t sup. plies to the full extent requirnd. Still the Government will stop I Perhaps sir, we are to understand from the Executive, by authority, through the gentleman whose pre sent loyalty to his new ally, the Executive, so far 7 exceeds his former Royalty to ihe Union, that the Government will stop unless the House shall not only grant the requisite supplies, but grant them m the precise form recommended ; that the President, when he recommends a farm, means to prescribe it; that he exhibits this measure as his ultima tum, on the rejection of which he will stop the Government. The gentleman, sir, in hisjspeech has freely employed the word darel It is bold and expressive j I have use for such a word, and will use that. Sir, let the Executive dare to stop this Govern ment for such a cause ! ' Let him dare to prescribe to the Representatives of the Peo ple aform of supply in which to thevexclu sion of all other forms, he shall persist a gainst their will, at. the hazard of stopping the Government ! Let him dare to trans cend his appropriate sphere to seize or at tempt to seize from this House the inesti mable right, and its undoubted prerogative, of raising supplies' in the form which it shall judge mpst agreeable to the people! The gentleman talks of issues. LeJJthe Execu tive dare to make this, issue ! If, under the impulse, of a new infatutibn, or of an auda city inspired by his late alliance, the Exe cutive shall dare to ston the Government, n & nn issnp.. ,1 am nrenared for itl Let it come I Ij3 decisio by the People will not be doubtful. That the nation, sir. may be spared the display by Ihe Executive of uch deeds of D. 1838, and in the 62nd year of American inoe pendenco. WM. H. WATSON. 33 Pr. Adv. $5.62 - - 1 IIILLSBOROUga. iJTHlE Fall Session of Mrs. Burwell's ScliooA 11 wll commence 6iMomUythe 16th of July. TERMS English Studies $17 50 French taugh by a nature 0 1? NEW RAIL-ROAD LINE Baltimore and Philadelphia, t nPHB Philadelnh'-a, Wlminpton and Buli- JL more Rail Road Qdmpany. hep leave to an- Music, Drawing & Painting, REFERENCES. V. N'tsto, " ii:ii,kn.nlti Rev. F. Nash, Lincoln N. C. c Rev. Wm. S. Plumer, Richmond, Va. M. Atkinson, Petersburg, Ya- 25 00 10 00 lion. Dr. J. Wtbb, Rev. W. June 14- .33-5 ' nouitce to the public, 'l ment for their Passe nj lftf ;er g followtntj arrange- ars ; The first Train leaves Hie Deoot in I'ratt Stree', daily, (except Sunys) at 6 o'clock. A. M., and arrives in Phi!ailphia before J o' clock, which allows Phs$elngers four or five liours in that City , be Tore tie ars start for N. York. The early arrival of this "rain at Philadel phia, (which is generally otifc and a half to two houis before any oilier Line,) -gives Pass-rr-jrer great advantages in secilrinjr accommoda liorrs at the principal IJo!es and ourding Houses, without suffering tlie nconvenienc of! en experienced, of looking boitt for lodg ings in contquece of laic afrival byothtr convevarrce. The second Traln.carrying.thVi Un'ted States Mail, leaves the Depot, Prait Sfrecff f f ertlic arrival of the Cars from Wnshinjlton City,) dai ly, at half past Nine o'clock, A.il., and pass ing through- Canton, Xiuupou-der, Uuah, Havre de Graee, North hst, Ktkron, Newark, Suun ton, Newport, WilHMjigton and. Chester, iirrives in Philadelphia also, always in tim'e o take the evening Cars to New York. $y tly this Train, passenger leiving Vash inirton C'ny in the morning, reach New York JSSillsborouh Academy. - TIHE .Fall Session wdl comroence on tne 5th of August. " ClWici.1 Dep irtmer.t ? W. J. umgnero. Tuition $21 per session. .Iohn A. Umgham. Knglish Department ? W. C Sutton. Tuition $.16 per sessiorr. John McAlleater. French Department i jean Odend'hal. Tuition S3 per month. J ' ' , The Students in the Classical department re ceive rerulr instruction inSiieUiitg, Reading Writing, Arithmetic, Effjflish Grammar, graph'y, Compdiition and Declamation extra charrge. June 14 ' 33--5w without Pat riclc M. Bryan daring," my loyalty leads me moat devout ly to hope. It would devolve, somewnere, i Ut. i This Train also affords Passengers arriving in the Boats from Charleston and Nkrfglk, tlie opportunity of reaching New York ItTVe same tveningr . j Fare by either Trajn, Four I)bljrs.0 (rj The regulation adopted by ihkonipany for trie car; of baggage, m-ets wiih universal approbation, as it reHeVes the passegrs of all trouble in relation to it. The Can for the accommodnticw of La dies and Children, are provided nTi retiring rooms and attended by female ervaiitai RETURNING raox PHILADELPHIA. The Trains leave Philadelphia at a Quarter after 6 o clock, A. M.,ria at 3, P. M. Ifassen gers leaving Philadelphia at a quarter MUer 6 o'clock, from lower end of Dock alreeti; will arrive ht Baltimore before, J. oclqgk, rhich gives them three to four hour to spare efore the Crs leave for Washington Ciy and the West, and a'so in full time for Ihe Steam-ttoats for Charleston and -Norfolk! Passenirers leavine New York bv the morn ing line, arrive Philadelphia in tme for Uie 2 o'ejpek Train, arvd proceed directly pn-tlaiejr arrive in Baltimore at 8 o'cloct tne sanne even- imr. two hours earlier than by any oiner con veyance. A. CRAWFORD, Agent. Bialtimore, June 11, 1338. 334t. STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, , Pitt County, Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions, May Term, A. D. ' ' vs. William I'.. Binu Patrick M. Bryan, vs. ' Same. John M. Bryan, vs. Same. Joseph L. Uryani vs. Same. n. J priglpal Attachment Levied n perianal &Real Estate. ' Original Attachment Levied on personal I V Real Estate. Original Attach cnenjt Levied on peraoual & Real Estate. Original Attachment Levied on povaonal It Real Estate. ' IT appenng to the saysuction of the Court, .that the Defendant in the above casea, doea not retide within thejimits of this SlateltJa therefore.ordered, that publication be made In the Raleigh Register, for six weeM, nomymg the said William L. Blount to appear at thf next Court of Pleas and .Quarter Sessions, to be held fjr ihe Cqunty aforesaid, at the Court tlouse in Greenville, on the first Monday in Au gust next, then anu mere to replevy or pi to isHue, or judgment will be entered against him, a ndf the property levied on .conaerouca subject to the Plaintifr recovery! Wiiniss, Archibald Parker, Cerk of our said Court, at OfBce in.Greenvdle, the Brat Mortday in 'May, 1W J A. PARKBK, Clerk. r Pr. Adv. $6 S &Y& YOUR COST V. - .h- Lt persons indebted to me, as Trustee for A. V T. Btai te-hereoy tiotilliBd (httJtr Note 4c. of his sale are dui and rauBt be paid $ by the SGdi of thi ijiatant, r"they vi9 paahe as no longer Indulgence can be given.'! " "K. PRICE, Tnttke, Jana 12, 1U38, &
The Weekly Raleigh Register (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 25, 1838, edition 1
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