Newspaper Page Text
tii tii l»Olll hei
l’itzjintrirk liucl ' ° n din bar. *
From tkt London Court Journal.
THE CROAKINGS OF A DOWAGER
BEAUTY.
*• My May of life i» fallen into the tear and yellow leaf."
"So,” said tl»e Dowager Countess of Mntloii to
her toady, Mi*-Gelatine, ns her ancient hays and
aittediliit inn coach waddled and jolted round the ring
in Hid* park, between dinner and tea, a few tnorn-
inr*»»£o—* So I find that my grand-daughter Lady
Warrtiter’* picture lias been engraved, and that Hie
is railed »i» pi iut#]iop» ‘the beauty of the bom»« « I
Matton!”
" A very lovely young ererAure, indeed my lady,
quite the belle of the day.”
** Humph !—all nonsenee ! mere stall! I remem
ber that wat what they used to my «1 me fifty years
•• No one has forgotten it, my lady «H the world is
•truck by |)ie resemblance between Lady Wnrcis
ter at five and twenty nnil \ "tir lad) ►hip at eighteen.
The same eye-brows to a hair!—just whnt your
friend the Reverend Dr. I urlmr, called the twin re
flections of Diana’s hiow.”
"That was very prettily said of the Doctor ;—nl-
moit equal to the sonnet punned hy Jurninghain on
my first appearance at court.”
•‘And Merry, if I recollect, struck out some very
elegant stanzas on the same interesting snhjerl.’
•Alt. Gelatine! few of the Delia Cruscnm* hut
•aid something about me. They used to rail me
Alcibella in their verses. Hut Heaven knows. I
thought very little of their praises in those dn\ s! lor
after all, it was only the to itfering of span on
Itr the song of the nifflilingnt
alreadv pruned in my honor those elinrmiug I
“ Where she but f«dra«homi» when they wait,
Burk-eyed and soft, ut the iinmoi tn I gat*'.”
Bless my soul! nobody wiites in that style now-a-
days.
•• And vonr ladyship forgets Sheridan’s epigram 7”
" And Haro’s hnn-mot.”
"Ah: my dear Lady Matton: nobody tillIs in
that style now-a days. Nothing hut political r-qiiih*
and lampoon* are the order < I the day!”
•* In fart, my dear Gelatine, there is so much of
•very thing Hi Hio*u* times that nothing makes so
much sensation ns it formerly did ; — heautv, vv i*. ta
lent. luxury, taste.—on every side the million press
ao closely upon us—the little world has foreed its
pretentions so strangely upon the acceptance of the
great world—that it is very dillioult for any poison
to become really distinguished.”
•' Very true my lady.”
" Whereas in my day, half n »h»7.en henutic-. half
A (Listen hfifttu esprit*, and lialfadozeu giver.* < ( / trl'-t*
regulated the ton of London.”
"The influence of the court was then so cnn«id-
•rfthle, thnt. like (ittlliver in Lilliput, it impelled n
ebarncterofpigmyisin toibe restofsoeiety. Among
such minnows, it was less di flic tilt to he a I i mm.
"After all. to what amounts my grand daughter
Warcister's fume as a belle 7 Wiiet fashion, wliut
carriage, what whim of the day was ever called a
Wnrcislerf The utmost praise she receives run-
sists of 4 Lmly “Wareister looked \crv well at lh»‘ j
Inst drawing room,* or, 4 Lady Wan isfer i* on** of
tho prettiest women in the circle of the Opera,—on
ly she dresses too modi hi the extreme of the French
fashionor, 4 Lndv W. did not look amiss at Al
macks—hilt she should not waltz in a hat and leath
ers. ' Now, my dear Gelatine, in those madcap days
xvhan the Prince look oil* my white satin slippe r,
filled it with Burgundy. and drank it off in rnv hon
or,—there were .Matton phaetons, and Matton Hy-
enps,—.Mutton ponies, and Matton negliges.—.Mat-
ton footstools and Matton liamiuercloths.—Honk*,
songs, operas, sermons, sonnets were dedicated to
the divine Lady Matton. Wlionei
equipage appeared in the ring, the
flush as on the occasion of me I)
gallop round llvde Park :—Town
• idered it his duty to allow me a
dun to the drawing room;—and Taylor of the Ope- | j"
ih was obliged to take precautions for tin* disper- >r
sioti of the crowd that used to assemble in Fop’s j
Alley under my box. O40 never hears of so many
ns two or three gathered together in honor of any
fashionable beauty imw-n-dnys.”
44 No Ladv Coventry, to compare with Isabella
Ducliess'of Rutland, Georgiana Duchess of Devon-
•hire, or Lady William Gordon, or
Pardon mo my good Gelatine, pardon tne !—For
tlift Duchess of Rutland, we have Imt lovely grand-
’daughters, Lady Chesterfield mid Mrs. Anson; and
my friend tii® Duchess of Devonshire, wlinseluri-
nntions depended but little on tho beauty of her face,
Is fully rivalled by Lady Gower and Lady G'u.rgi-
huit. I admit that there may be n« many handsome
fae.es in the days of William IV. as in those of
George 111. but they do not produce half the sensa
tion.
44 Where none ndmiro, his in-dcss toexcell:
Where none are beaux,’tis vain to be a belle.'*
" TI10 utmost tribute be.itownd on these said Indies
of Hi® new country is to njt’hie n d«*g or a yacht in
their honor. When Count St. Antonio first visited
Yorkshire, lie found n Imrse e uteri I for the St. Lr-
ger as 44 La San Catnldn,”—the name of his own
beautiful Histur,-—and was about to resent the nflVont.
xvlion the Sicilian noble wns Informed that such n
mark of favour was intended ns ns a signal proof of
homage hy the English noble to whose amd the racer
belonged.” .
"Ah! Gelatine!—Imw difl’. rent were the proofs
•if devotion tendered to m\self!—If 1 hiidbut a cold,
Arlington street wan crowded with inqnines, to the
imminent danger of every pannel in every fashiona
ble equipage in London ; and once, when m> vis a
ril wan overturned in coming from Pnr.ehicrotti's
concert* for full ten days I was oblige.I to have bul-
Ittins issued hv old Warren and Sir Waller Fnrqu-
bnr.”
44 There i« not a hr nifty in Hu* year 1631, Imt might
break every bone in her skin, w itlimit any sneli ne
cessity.”
" A id again, when 1 accidentally burnt off my
side curls on one temple and appealed at St. Jamer’
with a bouquet of pearls to supply their place. Cmi-
stablo, the jeweller, was employed to make two
hundred and ninciy-three ornament* exactly similar. |
in the course of the following week: ami In fine the 1
•efAon every woman in Loudon had cut short the |
ringlets over her left eye brow ! .4/*! cis beam jours
do fete sonl passes.”
" Your ladyship does not consider that your lady
ship’s influence ”
44 Would not suffice to introduce a new collar for
pappy-dogs ! Alt! Gelatine! It was a hard trial
when the first symptoms of tin* crows-foot revealed
hy o.iy of tho*e clear bright mornings in June, which
no blemish C in escape, told me tin* frightful tale
.that my kingdom was taken <10:11 me/ 1 was going
to the draw ing-i00111; no friendly bourn t:—no kind
ly frill, w a* there to o\ orsh idow tin* fatal (act; it de
er she was tiek or sorry; and she is ns much an ob
ject of interest now. m her old grey bonnet and
mode clonk, as during the riots 01 eighty; while I
—oh! Gelatine! Gelatine! why was l ever born u
beauty 7”
44 Coachman !—drive home ! Her Sad) ship is in n
sw non 1”
TEXAS AND MEXICO.
From the Acte Orleans T.vlUtm of July 25.
LATEST FROM MEXICO.
The brig Carroll arrived this morning in eight
days tiom Tampico, brings late .Mexican letters,
from which it appears that u revolution wns'inevitn-
hie, ns w til he set ti tiom an extrm 1 below ,lui ni-ln d
us hy a highly respet tuhlecommercial house <>l this
city.
The Wanen mid Grampus hadonived atToinpi-
CO.
The Mexican Government had tent an np"lo,»y to
our Go\ ernrnent for tho insult offered our any. m the
case of the J cfieison. (iouie? tliu coinnmndant o!
the port, had, in consequence,been r» moved.
All was quiet at Tampico: no troops had been
raised there, nor wax it expected there would In*.
The Hchr. Corn, for this port win to sail about the
20th inst. with $200,000 in specie.
The ('uiroll sailed in company w ith the brig Zea
land, for this port.
'I he French brig Gnstn vn, of •lid from Bordeaux ;
li« to its inhabitants. Know that th® General Con- be made to bring about a return of the lonnsd depo-
grese has decreed as follow*: j site money to tJit general treasury—that the Heads
Kt. The Government it authorised toexact a fore* | of Departments, with the exception of Me*»rs. For
ce! loan throughout the republic to the amount of | syth and Wnodbtuy, should be away ft uni their dti-
twn million* of dollars, for ilie purpose of meeting ties, is too bud to hu endured. ’1 he cry of peisecu-
iu part the deficit in the national revenue. 1 lion will he raised At this. Tin* Simon Pures will
yd. Tim maximum amount exacted from each in- 4 say, Why, would \on deprive them ot recreation I
had shrunk from his usual 14 responsibility,' _ ^
put hit unwilling signatur® to the hill. can derhook. The Ticket it c omplete "ocT'hklT*
! X* ■ L iUu. I) Talmuiliro mill OtllCt’S tl' 0 l«,rtLr nn i ■ • *
Ci
nlc, (’apt.
The -
and in i
merit v
inc.o of I’m I
1 lit tlie'ie |rot
11*I party, pi
ivor of the »•
ntliing Imt "
e as it it w ei
»n*idt
• anx of
Schneider; sclir. Ataloti
•tln is linknown, Jiad been I
| Can tier nf Saturday
v of M exico, June iy!l(>
11 K(>«ion,— tlie treaty hetvvi
eral Houston has airived, fi
‘at ion ; what will he done w
ith
rtanung.
Tampico, July l r >, 18150.
runntry is now in a state nl’ronviilsion,
slioit tune, the former frdc nil goveru-
proehiimed again, in im aliijr.ru,
I ml several other places, 1 c \ oliitionai v
id already taken place, but with aup-
militai v. In Mexico, a •' (trim” was
t expected to he given. Ill the |
da, a " (irilo” has been given, w hi
is of some imporinnce. Th
II Mexico to operate against
'onotinced tlicmselveH on tin
time. In slmrUrmn allside*,
Federaliou.” and the whole 1
e a matter iilmtdy settled.
di\ tdiial shall not exceed one thousand d» lla*
3d. The certificntes given for thi» loan slittll he I
received bv the government after the lapse ol one
yeas, in payment of uny tax thnt may be imposed.
[A r . Y. Covr. Enij.
From the Richmond Compiler of A U"V*t 2.
GEN. GAINES ACROSS THE SABINE.
The accounts of fj« n. Gaines having crossed the
» Sabine, into Texas, are confirmed. It is stated that
lie had been engaged for several days in forwarding
’ provisions and military stores, previous to passing
the river, after V'hichhe marched ilirectly on Nacuadach-
jot, having previously called nut the troops in garri*
i •om at Forts Tow son and Gibson, w ith directions to
, join him ns soon as possible.
We find in the Globe of yesterday the following
1 letter from Gen. Gaines to (ion. Bradford of the
I Tennessee volunteers.
11 kat) Quarter*. Wester* Dkp’t, {
1 Camp H.ibine, June ‘JS, 1830. )
* My ttrnr General—The chivalry of Mexico are
living to the 1 esc. ue of their President. A letter re-
1 reived hv express from Gen. T. J. Husk, dated
" Head Quarters, Army of 'Texas, Gundalmipo \ ic-
torin, |s*ih June. 183(5, T ’ informs me that the. enemy
! were then rapidly advancing towards his position
: from Metnnmras—thnt their motto was, •* extermi
nation In the Sabine, or Death ” and that the motto of
the Texas army was, " Liberty or Death” These
I mottoes, taken in connection with the bloody scones
j of the Alamo, Goliad, ami San Jacinto, indicate hard
fighting. I * nt the above intelligence was preceded
hv an account of Indian hostilities on the Nnvisoto,
1*20 miles west of Nacogdoches. These facta, add
ed to others hitherto published, of decided indica-
linrs of hostility on the party of the many tril
Indians near nnd upon the disputed Territory,
prompted mo to request of our excellent Governor
Cannon, a regiment of mounted gunmen to join me
as speedily as possible, hv companies, or in 0 body,
as may hi* deemed mo«i convenient. I
inform them Ihnl Rivet, Talnmdgc, and other*
«lm voted for it, arc al this moment under ihe
Iran of the empire, and that too with very little
likelihood of ever Retting hack te the Presidential
and Vice Presidential favor. However, it were
a very idle w aste of effort to Argue with a peo
ple gullible enough to believe that they ow e any
gratitude to Van Burenism fur the benefits of
the distribution hill. Such a people would
charge the removal of the depo.ites upon the
Whigs.—[X. Y. Courier, (,■ Enq,
THE OPPOSITION.
Every day otl'ords new evidence, that the op
position throughout the country isnototdy
con-
itie public iuiere.t—when the lives of
our brave citizens—when Ilia lands of the pour set
tler— when the homes of the whole people arc in
danger and require attention, we would bind our of-
fici rs down to their posts. They have entered into
an aiMt' fuei.: with the country to serve her, and
thev .-iiould notdetert their posts. We are in the
um .-I of fearful and portentous times, and the man*
iigenient is left to the bands of such creatures as
Kendall nnd Blair. A war may break nut between
Mexico nnd the Uniteu States in ten days, and where
are those who should receive the intelligence 7— , .. ......
Anins or Blair would have to write a note to the j rentraung their energies, but increasing m num-
President, umi lie would hardly leave the election* | hers. Let it be constantly borne in wind* as we
eering field to return here to save his country Irom | have often taken occasion to remark, than N an
blood. General Jnek.oo will never leave thin Go- Durenism is not en-extensive with Jaeksonisili.
verrmierit as lie found it i and Van Boren will lake j ^ |( j lnl „ e i„ e proportion of the real Jnckson-iiien
i». possibly, and administer it upon the same negh-1 ( . , he countr y ( are decidedly opposed to the el-
wasting policy. The ycople »m>ul, re- vntjonofl|le vice |. rt sideot. nnd for the aim-
in Xir-okt; . pie reason, among others, that he is « notorious
and Bile their duties through ihe hot and ex- 1 political intriguer, nnd a trading pol.trinn. fie
i.misting hours of this Southern rlirnate, killing I imsever regareed politic* and the spoilsol ottice,
themselves, and nenmnplishing no very great good 1 ns merchants rcgnrd their wares,—as inero sub-
to the public : ami the heads of these men, those 1 ju C t s f ()1 . n-allic and linrter. The real tlemoera-
lin should sol diem an «*ato|ile, are eapm ing over | f() f || ]e rom)t |.y | ln ve no idea of supporting
| such a man for the highest office in tlt£ir gift.
the whole eounfrv
inlnrics of *ix thousand dollar* !
per annum. *ft is slinmeful.—[/*. *S'. Telegraph.
It.
troop«
1 road in
x\ e hear
i’i.tract af a I.rV■
Dear Sir—Your «>f»
came to hand hy t|i«>
prntilvini*.—U 7 ** arc:
blindfolded m regard
dated,
ki:a ( 'it/, Jill)
ed favor i f ill*- i
ifillen, nnd wiih
.ui* country c
••* nflail h of Texi
* il i • govcrimu i
ci \ thin); that i«
Thr nrr
us nutlic
i m.
ill June,
men.cly
nplebdy
It up-
to keep
(' Mi
I all
’.ilnr corps from the <i
i' r from the < lovernor
i Governor.^While of I.•
quickly: nnd sn v so i
you. I am resolved, in ca
inns employ the I ml in us ngn
«i.!c of fJii* imn: r ionrv line,
^ siimmat v nnd severe pnni
E. P. «
rot Ken-
ippi. nnd
imt the pc
o inflict <
I,ndv Mtutou'i
was ns urent i
Coiant k a fit
ml always eon
pears In he the policy
tin* people i; 1 nor-utit o(
CJini to tin* western rnm/aiign. ’/’if* 1 nrriv nl of the
Amnltea was the first tlm
since the Gnb b (.’oodw in.
’The present milirary thnoernex appear to lie itioi
firmly seated than I find nnlieipnied. They dis
vow all Santa Amin’s acts as illegal. &e. and will
not ralily tin* anni.-tiee or treaty he has celebrated
with the Texifins. I think the latter have acted ve
ry prudent in detaining him. liis notorious had
faith. I think, li'nvex room for little hopes that ho
wmthl, even if lie could, cause the treaty to he rati
fied.
’This government has ordered I’ilisola to give up
the command of the army, nnd have ordered a court
martial to try him; this you w ill no doubt have
heard. ’They m their u*>util bombastic style talk of
opening another campaign, nml promise the Mexi-
ii nation that ihe honor «'l their anus shall soon
restored, nml tin* Texfniis annihilated.
A stroll" revolution has broken out in the State of
Oaxaca, and the capital of that State is already hc-
•iced hv a very largo numerical force of the sove
reign people. The* gani-oti um/er (iniutofrinr is
shut up in tha convents of St. Domingo anti others,
nml I think they will soon he reduced to rnpitulato
for want of provisions. ’The actual President ml
interim has resigned, ami it is said that tlx* present
intrusive < .’ongress w ill elect I). L. A la man to fill the
station. I think tin* present order ol things will
soon change. The people in all parts are arousing
from the lethargy in which they have been plunged
for the last two years, ami appear determined to
achieve their sovereignty hy shaking otf the shack-
|p* of slavery woven around them by tho military
and priesthood.
An express arrive I here n few days since, giv ing
the information that (’oidnva, distant from tin- place
about fifty miles, had pronounced for tlie f. deration
in consonance with those already pronounced in
the mate of Oaxaca. Wo may expect every day
will teem vv ith new events favorable to liberty.
I believe that the present parly in power are desir
ous that the T' xians should execute Santa Anna.
1 Impe that they will not do so, hut hold him in tor-
‘rorem over (Item. I u nuid advise them to make him
give them possession of the Castle of l ’Ilea until lie
can have tin* treat) ratified, and deliver them the
mortie* promised ; he is capable of doing so. and I
doubt not Hint tho Commandant of this place and
Cl Imt would cheerfully agree to the measure. If no
other advantage results from his detention, ho can
pay a couple of millions for his liberty, having rob
bed very largely for the la t year or two, would he
willing doubtless to give up his ill-gotten gains. I
will witte you hy every opportunity* and cumimini-
erttt* the political news.
Our commerce is pmnlvRcd entirely, and the go
vernment me about making us pay a forced loan.
Aliens are resisting it; nml I hope that tin* reins of
government will tail into more vv iso nml honest
hands before the) vorif) the unjust exaction.
| Unlit I in of the. *2'M July.
•nun..
lion vv ith the party,
idenf, at fitM, delcr-
.er, was a popular
11 majority
, steps in.
eplinnahle
A letter from a highly respectable source, dated at
Matatmu as the *2!Uh lilt. sfT\ s, “ It is ail undoubted
fact that thi- Government (the Mexican) 'tlvo made,
or are mak iog n treaty to engage eight tln.n*nm! I u-
dinnrtojoin them. Tin Cherohect are nln cdy ag
ed. There are fourteen or fifteen Chielb of difli t-
eut tribes v* ithin a few miles of here, vv ho hrfVe dai
ly eonimiltiiciitioiis vv ith the officers'. Tho eoifini,* -
siom i s vve»e this morning turned into the common
prison with criminals. It is not improbable we
slnll he inv in d to take Ftei.rh h ave of this country
•noil.”—[ Bulletin of the 27th Juhj.
tsie: r>e:ro^iT£ kill
Tram the Moron M<etrtiffer.
Since Martin Van Burcn’.- aseemlency il
has been such a hone of eon'i
as the hepatite Hill. 'I lie Fn
milled t" re.ln it—the hill, how
one. and in all probability, n <*t
would have passed il, nillr. cilh
nntmed friend,” as the play-
tacks on to tlm hill an nmcmln
to its supporters, and which r
seruph s of the President—the hill is passed hv a
large majority—approved hy the President—and he
roines the law of the laud.
But—here Is the rub—although passed hy nil Ad
ministration Congress, and sanctioned hv the Presi
dent, it is an Auli-V’an Huron Bill; it has, at one
fell sweep, (h'lapi(lat>*d the structure which, lor the
last seven years, lie has been hiiihlin
vv hu h moved the complicated inaehim
ed bv the w isdom of the Albany Regency,has been
removed ; Money, the all powerful agent, which
has bought and kept together the bodies and souls
of the hctcrogcnoiiR mass, w ho constitute the party,
has dwindled nwav • m n word, to use his own me
morable expression, Martin Van Burenism it ‘‘hail
box’.” ’The party press. Inking their run from the
President's sanction, eulogises the hill, ami some go
vo far as to adopt it jis their own,—hut the total
poarkers,—the genuine Van Ilmen men, albeit it
In's a name nttnebed to it. " more potential than the
Duke’s.” Andrew Jackson—denounee it.
We take the Globe for example ; that print being
lheoflieialorgan.it is oracular—nnd ail the rest,
Tray, Blanche, Sweet-heart and all, curs of high
nml km degree, sooner or Inter, will chime in, and
sound the same notes.
For a long time, the Globe was at a stand off.
There wav something so overwhelming in the pre
sence of Majesty, that w hile the President was at
the Sent of Government, it would he nothing less
than rank treason for such a parasite ns the " King’s
prin'er” to ('enounce n law henringthe sign-mamial
ol Andrew Jnrksnn. But no sooner has the Presi
dent left W ashington, than the Globe comes out, nnd
openly denounces the hill. First, the puteruity of
the hill is denied—it was all the getting up of the
Whigs—say they ; they originated the idea, and by
fraud and misrepresentations had the measure con-
1 ■niininnted. To use the wordsoftlie Globe, "When
j the Whigs cannot succeed by numbers, they resort
| to fraud to carry their point.” nnd in enny’.ng this
point, they have succeeded in "deceiving tho re
presentative'! of the people.” Again it has been
discovered Hint this hill is not w Imt it purports to be.
Although the President calls it a Deposile Hill, and
till the Party call it a Drpnsifr Bill, yet it is discov
ered thru it is virtually what the Whigs say it i«—a
Distribution Hill. Now. here are most precious con
fessions. They acknowledge that the minority have
eveiTCncbed them—in a word, thnt tl.ry are too
smart for them. ’The representative*; of ihe people,
they snv, hnVC been "deceived,” and cajoled in
ousVieg a bill which is not acceptable to the people.
Tin* (»lobe Bn vs :
"The people a-k no change; nudlnstof all, such
• linage as tho whigs claim the credit of being about
• > give them. ’They do not ask to have money col-
I fted from them, to he divided again aiming them.
They ask <•> he made srenra in their persons nn i
property. 'They ask to he freed from taxation,
w hether direct or iudiic t. 'They ask to have Hu
honor of the country to w hu h they belong, and are
■iiterestod in supporting, sustained and respected at
home mid abroad ; nml if taxation i< necessary lor
that object, thev cheei full v
'I lie Richmond Kiiqiurcr is industriously cn- !
ged in trying to Bullion the impression that |
| Judge White has been "dropped” in this State, j
j and thnt his friends no longer either entertain j
I hopes of his election or are disposed to make i
j exetlions to support and advance his cause.
Our venerable Contemporary makes the "wish !
, j father to the thought.” He fears the moral in- ,
fluence of that character and those republican ,
principles which hut n few years since ho so j
warmly eulogized. Ho knows that Mr. \an
I’urcn has no solid claim to the confidence or
support of tho people,—lie knows that on every
important question when the interest of the
South w ere at stake, lie has been their secret
and active if not open opponent—he knows that
on the Missouri question betook part with our
bittetipst and most determined enemies. The
Knquircr cannot have forgotten the earned and
frequent appeals xvhiid* -it then made to tho
friends of the Union, to the Republicans of the
Country, to all w hose patroiLm would enable
them to merge party in the I L iter considera
tions of respect for the solemn obligations ofottr
(’oostitational Compact. During the discussion ]
of the Missouri Question, our Contemporary,
w ith a boldness ami ability which won for hint
the confidence and regard of the South, exerted
himself to prove the pernicious tendency of that j
measure pressed and advocated hy Mr. King !
and his party. He had sagacity enough to see,
and virtue and boldness enough to denounce j
the insidious attempt to attack the dearest rights
of the South.—"A Missouri restrictionist” was
then nn " abomination” in his eyes,—he justly
regarded him ns an enemy to the vested rights
of the South—hut now, notwithstanding his for
mer just denunciations of Air. King and his as
sociates, In* is zealously laboring to advance the
interests of Mr. Van Hurep, who was not only
tho political friend of Mr. King, hut. his active
assistant in canning out his Missouri restric
tions.
'File friends of Judge White in Virginia con
tinue with confidence to urge his claims to the
popular suffrage. They respect his character,
acknowledge his solid and useful talents, ap
preciate his political integrity. and admire the
firmness and independence which have marked
his public career. They know, (to use the lan
guage of Mr. Ritchie some four years since) that
he is a " Jeffersonian Republican” that lie
" honest, faithful, capable,” 44 above fear
above reproach.” lie has been nominated and
recommended hy a meeting of tho members of
the Suite Legislature, as a Candidate! w orthy of
the suffrages of the people of Virginia. lie was
nominated in pood faith—let it not he said that
Hie State Rights parly finitely desert him. They
owe it to themselves and to their own honor to
stand hy hint. Proper exertion only is necessa
ry to secure the vote of this State, and the w hole
South and Southwest w ill go with us. If we
he hut true to tho great cause of resistance to
Presidential dictation as to the succession, “all
w ill he well.”—[Petersburg hit.
The consequence will be, that at the next elec
tion, when Mr. Van Bureti will have to rest on
his own merits disconnected with Gen. Jack-
son,—w hen the question comes up directly as to
electing Martin Van Bureu to the Presidency,
there will he a general falling off of the Jackson
party similar to the breaking up ol the ice in the
spring. 'There will scarcely he lolt eumigh of
the old hickory party to carry the electoral tick
et, in a single State. New York and New
Hampshire have been, till along, with great liber
ality conceded to the New York politician.
But he will he fortuncate if, under existing cir
cumstances, he receives the vote of his own
State, f ii t lie plenitude of Gen. Jackson’s pow
er, that great Suite has been curried hy si few
thousand majority only. Take away the per
sonal friends and supporters of Gen. Jackson,
j and throw Harrison, Granger, and Gael in ihe
otherscnle, atid the probability is that even New
, York, the very camp of the Albany Regency,
. w ill be fothid opposed to a candidate whose w hole
course has been opposed to the best interests of
the people. Such prospects are indeed encour
aging* to the opposition, and they have every
inducement to preserve unto the end of^jjiu con
test.— [Ihston Com. Gar. 4 ' - • *
sacrifice* to the ambition of the little god of Ki«~ "\
derhook. The Ticket is complete and hkfcfy
respectable. We look up to our old mothtrfcr
a thorough triumphant nnd glorious vindications
of her old republican Jeffersoniau principles.
In South Carolina, the pea pie are In ke- warm .
hut wc aie inclined to believe thnt when the*
time for action comes they will give their vote
in favor of the South principles agtj Constitution* \
al government. w *
Georgia has taken a wise and judicious coarse*
the Klee tori a I Ticket has been formed of tho
first men in the State, without regard to local
parties.
lu Tenncsee no one douhts White** triumph
over the direction of the Glohe ami the 44 Party.**
Mississippi akd Louisiana have completed
their Tickets and they calcualte on a Warterloo
victory.
'There is a strong party in Missouri in favor
of White and in the event of the withdrawal 0 f
Gen. Harrisou, White will get the entire \Vet«
tern vote.
These being tho facts, let not the people ef
Alabama, who were the first to nominate him,
despair of his success. Let every true hearted
republican, in principle not in name, make a
manly, a determined and vigorous effort to da-
feat the amalgamation pseudo republican, tau
nts dictation 44 spoils party.”
From the Washington Sun.
JUDGE WHITE IN ARKANSAS.
44 Thf. Times,” a well conducted and spirit-
ed paper, published at Little Rock Arkansas,
comes out in earnest nnd and vigorous advoca
cy of Judge White, as 44 the Western Democra
tic* candidate for the Presidency, and one whose
feelings and interests are interwoven with tho
welfare of the Western and Southern States.**
The Time* remarks that 4 *it is generally
thought there is a large majority of the People
of Arkansas in favor of any one before Vau
Burcn," and makes an animated appeal to the
People ot unite on the man whose whole politi
cal course proves him to he firm and fixed friend
of Southern and Western interests.
44 Voritc Sans Pcur** affects to he shocked at
the idea of the friends of General Harrison uni
ting on the White Electorial'Tickpt. I It* denoun
ces it ns " a Janus-laced” procedure, &c. Wc
marvel nt the effrontery of this political turn
coat. If his conscience were not entirely sear
ed, if shame had not ceased to crimson his check,
he would scarcely undertake in deliver a lecture
lou political consistency. 'The man who dc-
I uottticed Cicncrfll Jackson’s election as a curse
to the Country, and afterw ards became one of
his humblest and most cringing followers—lie
w ho published Thomas 11. Benton’s false state
ment about the 44 East Room” nnd yet eulogi
ses the 44 liar,’* must place a poor estimate both
upon thcinteHigcncc and correct feeling of the
| people, if he believes that his slang (borrowed
I Limi (he Globe) can influence their votes.
I ILLUSTRATIONS OE VAN BURENISM.
The Carlislile Repvblian, which lifts been
hitherto one of the most highly accredited and
influential organs of the New A ork candidate
in Pennsylvania, thus declares its succcsiou from
from the party:
" Wc have thrown off the collar of dgrading
party vassalage. We have happily emerged
from a state of worse than Egyptian darkness;
nnd, although w e still profess to he a democrat,
we swear never again to he a slave !”
The same paper hears the following testimo
ny to the nature of the relation in which the
train hands stand to their leaders. They are
regularly marshnlled, and led on to perform the
duties assigned, with the regularity; mil implicit
obedience demanded hy a petty German despot
of his troops of morcinaties. Nothing will do
but the most unscrupulous, imimjuiring, un
thinking compliances with all that their chieis
require:
44 Tho people and the press have too long
been in a state of vassalage to party leaders—to
dishonest demagotiges—who profess to love,
t merely to dupe and deceive them. They have
ati'd I Io ° iniicli consequence to nanus, and
too little to yrinciplts; they have, in their sub
serviency to men, regarded too little their ov n
dignity, the honor of their native State, ami the
substantial interests of their beloved country.—
lie have had our mouths muzzhd and our
ton rues tied; tec have been obliged logo with
what is called the. * the party J right or wrong; to
swallow the most factious measures, and support,
from time to time, for office, the most corrupt and
imbecile creatures, selected months beforehand by
party leaders, and laid before our conventions far
their concurrence; which, it is worthy of remark,
is seldom, in such cases, withheld.*’
Such has been 44 the system” pursued hy the
Van Bureu managers in every part of the coun
try.
v land—pearl pow d<
reimiYfll ! For u
id iVuitle
find (»
♦dvaplos* liv tin? •
of rest, nnd tVeiti
past, only tended
mature old age.
Harrogate. Bn*m
Pyrmont, Barege
Carlsbad waters,
novating magic, Imt all
metir was advoitiaed, but I put it
apt
1 tried Bath;
i. C’lieltenlian
Magnetos l'iou
hopes of exp
mere powder
gins I was !s
>vi»ryt and w
'opining over the
progress of pre-
-1 attempted the
Malvern, Fpu.
ieres. Emms and
iencing some re*
pom! Not a cos- I
toll.
The Mi
*r Hie c
r. tract of a I.rttcr, dated,
T vmcico, July IT 1'
venn arrow ala*n 1^4.000 i
Go
rhf Jo-e l r.cn, ul„
f» as tin afcmud in cn
Moras, but it is in mi
it it will not lu* able
untlis, to pegiii Hie n
aecompnnie?
mble.l in Mata
flelirdncs-, tl
two ortla. e n
linst the 'I exit'
[ UaHctln of (he 2July.
proof;
n fa-liionnlde quack assisted the depopulation of til
wrst’end, but I gave a fair trial to Ifis nostrums.
Every rear was signalized by sonic further misfor-
tone; by nn increase of hoary hairs, ora decrease
of pearly teeth ;—mv lucks grew while—my emi-
in-!s black ! I tried siireedaneiu,— I attempted vege
table dye,—wrote plumpers ; or somi-hiilinrd ball#,
in mv chocks,—slept with plantain leaves on my
nose to koop it white, and n haUamie poultice to mv
face to render it fresh and humming. At the opera,
1 turned my white shoulders t » the audience, and
mv withering visage towards the shadow y side of
the box, and no longer ventured to encounter the
stare o| the ling, unless through t!i«* qualifying me-
dium of a blotHj vei(! \h ! (TJlfttine ! 1 soon din-
covered that had inv ris a ns been shipwrecked a
second time, and mv neck broken, a bulletin would
have been wholly superfluous!”
44 Your ladyship’s! My ,|e
compose yourself.”
\ car after year 1 changei
season after season threw m
some new milliner. I thick*
the holland blinds of mv di
the tint of my enmnge.|iiiing-«
l rui: sr.cm Tabv or war to <a:\n;.u.
nusoL
Frrcltcxt Sir—l l,avc known I" IIW l
lencv the Fro -ulent ail interim, tin* contents of) our
IL-spatchof dated at the Tamp mi the light hunk of
the liver Nueces mi the olst tilt, and l am directed
to say hv supreme order, that the w hole nfihciu have
excited tin* most piofoiinil iiidiguniioii.
War, your Excellency will
t for not Inning maintained
Thi Dtposilthnra Van Harm measure'.—TIio
't inngi« we have lau ly heard of lioni the
derhook lahorntor
up in Ni
aide.
<ahla
Th
lllimn
a »uipl
n the Slate treasi
s (ifany there i»e)I
i tlii.^ he ? We i>i
mjwhv imaaetHird
: the
iMtnhuri
«■ of tie
“trl'i
■ he.
loo
1.11 lltat i
» e have the
eoinprehcni
of firoinesa
eoa.|.i isiue
lion arefol amt etTie
have lieen >n •• dec
paiwing a hill that »
ihe interest of the e
either fahlde. s a: i va
■o iirndigally hn-ialie
Hal Im.v is it nossil.h
of the Fe
strv. noil
a led to he-
he talents -
.lelegatio i.
on, that “ it
trdent aial scieune.
f ardent patriolisin.
id On
,• of eni haiittnents, is some
it li Carolinn. lie hope
’lit/, nor Adrien will ever think of vi.-it-
u;; tint state : for Mrirtrirks, ingeniotis as they
ire, « ill never pass muster ill a place \\ here sueli
tecromaiicy as tliis has heeu eshihiteil. Tlu
'avetteville Observer says tl aPthe Vau II
■iiDilidates are artually electioneering in tint
.art of the “ North Slate" on the strength of ill
leposito mid distrihution hill! 'I'll
From the New York Courier and Knnnirer.
Creat cart of the U. Stales' Mail iwiler Hit Ken
dall Regime—The editors of Raleigh, N.
Star have received n letter from Mississippi on
the subject of the great irregularities of the mail
in that part of country, and mentions a circum
stance which we should think pretty fully ac
counted for them. Tho writer «ay»:
•*|n , (iO or 70 miles below this plr.ee, a
negro woman has been known, in the absence
of the regular Postmaster, to receive the mail
hags, and take from them indiscriminately the
amount of packages she conceived to he tine
the suffice, who, when asked what she was do
ing, replied that she was only receiving her part
of the mail—that she hail taken about the usual
quautity of bundles received hy her master."
Amos Kendall, hanging between linn k and
buzzard as to the confirmation of his appoint
ment to the office of Post Master General of the
United Slates; and while it was necessary for
his purpose to conciliate the members ol the
Senate from the slave-holding states, nllected
great solitude for the safety of the Southern
peoole, and uncommon horror at the conduct of
n j the incendiaries w ho would disturb it hy the dis-
,l | semination of abolition pamphlets through the
medium of tho mails. He is firmly suited in i
his situation now and so far from caring wlmt 1
becomes of “our southern brethren;" he pe
lailiratinns o f Additional '/’roubles.
The following nrticles is from the Uloko of
yeetmlay, and may he received as official:—
Official despatches from General Gaines, da
ted Camp Sabine, June 2d, lrfiKS, communicate
the intelligence that the Mexican tinny at Mnt-
timoras, under General Pitch, had been reinfor
ced to the number of 7,000 men, and was, on
j lie I Hi h of June, on its march, and rapidly ad
vancing inword Guudnloupe-Yictorn, and the
bead quarters of tne Tcxinu army. The osutto
to which the Mexican army were sworn, wa,
“ extermination to I he hmbinc, or death.”
Before receiving this intelligence, Major Ster
ling C. Robertson had reported to Gcacral
Gaines, that two men hail been recently killed,
and another wounded, on the w aters of the Na-
vasnta, iii Robertson's colony, about tv cute
miles wost of Nacogdoches, hy the Indians of
several difi'erent tribes, (Caddoes, Ritchies, and
others,) w ho had taken ami carried away se
veral women and children of the families of tho
turn killed.
General Gaines, considering that these recent
acts of hostility eu the pari ol the Indians were
. rumpled hy llo ir having heeu advised of the
large force approaching Matamoras, and hy the
expectation that theTexinns would he driven
oll'and the country given up to them, has culled
upon the governors of Kentucky. Tennessee.
Mississippi, and f.ouisiana. each for a regiment
of mounted gnu-mew, to cooperate with the reg
ular force under his command, including the
four companies of drnguous from Fort I.eaven
worth,
It w as his intention, if he did not in tho inte
rim receive satisfactory assurances that the In
dians upon our borders had no hand in the late
murders on the Nnvasota, to march to Nacog
doches as soon as he obtained the immediate co-
opciatiou of'the three companies of dragoons
nnd six companies of the 7ih iuluutry nt Fori
Towsou.— [N. V". Spectator.
A Mr. Cyrel Thornton oilers himself to tho
voters of tho State of Missouri as the Van Burcn
candidate far Governor. The Boonville Her
ald, an administration print, says .of him :—" lie
is a high-pressure Democrat, for Van Bureu in
all things—nod against him in none. If elected
ho will go teeth and toe-nails, neck, and heels,
head and ears, shoulder and hack-hone, body
j mid soul, for Ills party.” -Hitaha lel'ow would
he capitally qualified for an office in Amos Ken-
I dull’s department. Were lie a galley-slave, he
j could not manifest n more degrading degree of
subserviency.— [Roston Atlas.
TMF, GLOBE AND THE DEPOSIT RILL.
It is amazing to see the rancor of tho Gloho
against the deposit hill. There is no epithet
deemed too had to he applied to it. The Globe
seems to have forgotten that the President, bjr
signging the hill, comes in for his share of till
the obloquy attached to it.
I Fredericksburg A rena.
The Arena will not he snpiprised at the ** ran
cor" of the Glohe &, Co., w lien it calls to mind
that the hill cut the comb of a beautiful specula
tion ! It knocked Blair out of a few thous
ands—inailo Kendall shiver, nod it is said, sha
red down Mr. Attorney Butler from a giant to a
pigmy, in comparison of w hat lie expected to
he. “ Rancor,” " venom." If the parties should
l.ite each other, who knows what would he the
consequence ?—[(/. .S', Telegraph.
II.
.oM
dele:
ululating the good people of the state upon I -
benefits thev w ill derive from that j '"its 1"“ deputies to turn over their office to the
j! * 4 o|u>rnto fl»*lrinif*iitallv
immunity.” 'They liavo Im
ts, ni* not entitled to Hie |trai
upon f/iem hv tlie party pn .*
iI.m G<*
. Jar
mid lui
, that tin*
i nt ordtM
*2. 'l itIt
i Inch tlu
ot Hu*
ommand
.-nil continued
t ol’ the Re.
uties of that
■ lml) Matton, pray
tia-ninker—
id.i l.<
at the I
ning fri
id of
ed h\
II on Hie merry ot
I Hie BiiltBtanre of
inir room,—varied
peued the
‘ the
lould have come to
reject!*, and w liicli,
shade of mv rouge. I migrated fimn the pit circle
t« the third tier at the opera,—cIiom? » |,ox in dis
creet equidistance between the rhnnd'dieo; hut all
in vain!—Ugliness pursued me like a shadow,—old
«"c e.ronked nftcr me like an echo. DramjhtB of
air and open doors drove rnv rheumatic joint*, tmm
tiie hall room,—an indigestive red’ nose tiom the
dinner table,—wrinkles and white lend from day.
light,—-somnolency nnd decrepitude from candle-
light!—And In! I ain here! I, the once* worshipped
beauty of ilie park, am liuindrutmning my afternoon
airing with n companion and a lnpdog ”
"Your lady’s pocket hnndkerehief! My dearest
Ladv Matton, pray compose yourself!”
41 Look at Lndv Wyeomhe!” muttered the weep*
ing dowager from behind the folds of rnmhrir miu-
istered to her live by Mrs. Gelatine : “ Look at Ladv
Wycombe that waa her chariot which just rolled
by ! VV hut ban sbe to render her <li«rnnteuted
the Progress of time. She whs u fright f» ..n
birth.—litr minuet neecrga\e ris«* to nnnde
marriage to a fdu-dt-ht \ubud)
duty
II title*
•ipiir«
and alio
with
her |
ode,—her \
ed wheile
Before a (’out.ril
he colled upon to nn-v\cr lV
the positions the Supreme (
lo preserve to the last, and
the serious cliarje will rest
beyed tlu* rule laid down ii
At iiiv Regulations, accoi(in
of the army devolved on y<
had no right \vhnteM»r to «
in the ocm*ral in chief aftoi
iimeli less that he could act
loddie, for heing unable to e
office, lie rnuld no longer he
of it, and besides w Ik*i \ it
the exeeutixe power, no
should he olieyed, v ith.ml
the appropriate minister o
tonishing that \ our L.veellei
com*.lusions w liicli e«>miiioii
f w hut miiitii
all, of tin* circumstai ces
tie Ii the exeruti\e power of u lepuhlic is
exercised, nod particularly ours.
|u consequence, His I veclleiiey, the President ml
interim disanprox es the rouvolition com*laded at Ve-
In-ei*. on tin* loth Ma\. I “h i, tlu* General who sign
ed it not being at liber.\ nor povsessiug the nutbori-
ty to do it, and lie expressly disapproves ns nil at
tack mi Hie riglns of the nation, that tho title of Re
public has been given to an insurgent put of one of
tho departments nf the Mexican nation, and thnt nl
President, to the head of tho rebels. Therefore.,
the last order «.f His r.\cclb*n<!y the President ad
i uteri in, is, that if yon h a \ o not a Lead v done if. von
l ive up tlu* • oinimind <.| tlu* annv to Ilis Exet lh*n-
i v. (ieneral i». Jose Urn a, that von repair to this
hereby ordered, to answer be-
r ronducl.
17e.xico, June 2o t H3C.
TOR NT. L.
DECREE.
nt a I intarim ot’ ih« Mexican Keptib-
been decrirr ! * TLd Ii
whnt his partisan Blair has di
was oik* detrimental to the public interest; or had
lie not influence enough to control his "shippers
in,” and hat e the hill rejected. 'The old griitlciiiaii’s
saga city is either beg inning to fail, or he is oh«finate
enough to kick against the pricks, and refuse to sa
crifice entirely ihe people to please his protege nuieli
ns he may dote upon him.
The party is placed in a strange predicament:
some are lauding the measure, others are condemn
ing it—a part assuming the credit of passing it —
another part renouncing it. 'The Globe stigmatises
it ns » detrimental.Ton I, corrupt i
passed hy an Admitiistrnirnn Congress, a
ed hy General J u ksnn. L it possible th
Bmon men ha\e the temciii v to rest the
their candidate upon his own popular!!)
deni ol .1 .act;son's ? 'True ii i*-, that hv their whole
sale (h*nnm*iatio:i of this hid. which is in truth nnd
sj'U .». a hill lor the benefit of tip' / toph , I itt prejudi
cial, perhaps ruinous to the inten >t of Van B iren,
they me in fact denouncing tin* Jackson men who
nasst'd the hill, and General Jackson, who signed
the iiiiuuMtnw ww.. v ...« ...wj ..... — j . •
j measure, : m,l upon the active exertions of the Mi|>eriiitemliinee of a negresses.
1 Van Bureu |mrtj' ill procuriiig for Nin th Carolina j creature wool,I this hlack I ost .
| herslinre of a million of dollars! This, now, is!
, legenleinnin worth talking nhmit. There never |
was anv thing equal to it on the lane of the enrili ,
or tho ' waters omlorneatlt it. Van Burenism j
gulling people out mtlioir votes upon the the j
-trength of a measure, which Van Ruretiisni
made n dentil struggle to defeat. Is it possible
; that the North Carolinians ilont know that the i
oassago of the deposite hill was considered hy j
Mr. Van Burcn mid his “men at arms” as the | derons mis--.ilie_8 sent to Iter Post Office for ill
ileaillie
A lien tit i (it 1
Mistress—her
self a slave, wc daresay—he to prevent the cir
culation of Tnppan Pamphlets! A female slave
ilisirihutilig w hatever comes in the Fniteil !*tales
mail to the slaves of the neighborhood. VI lieu
the anti-slavery mint ni murder ami sedition in
Nassau street become acquainted w ith this sal.le
Post Mistress in Mississippi, (which they un
doubtedly have before now if she can w rite,)
there w ill nf course he cartloads of their mnr-
. Slid ll w
1.1 nppr,
lltlie V.
And!'!,'
'St blow they ever received ! Are they | triluitioii. If Kendal! really has not heard of
nt of the palpable fact, that tile passageor' 'he lamp black deputy-ess, he ought to write
• * heron official letters as soon as lie sees this no
tice, ordering her to work ten hous a day with
out iutetitiissioit of labor than what isitulispen-
hilile to—— . What nobody but a brute and a
blackguard would repeat—though it was a por
tion of ti late circular issued hy Amos Kendall, i
hy the grace of kitehenism and the r/tVgracc ol
the country.—Postmaster General of the l mini j
Statis.
Gturnsl Scott has arrived nnd departed. Who
was here to receive him ? Did Kendall, as acting
TfCsident of Hi** Fniled States overlook his notes
upon Florida and Alabama ? CYrtnin it is we urea
deserted Government. 'The President electioneer
ing in'Tennessee—Gass gone home to settle his pi i-
v.ite affairs ere lu* tiips it to France—Dickerson of
the Navy Department off too—Van Burcn courting
; that act did more to dishearten and Ineak down
i the hopes of the Vice Presiileut and his iiclher- i
eats than any event that has taken place since
1 he was a candidate for tho Chief Magistracy of ;
ihe iiRtion !—ilint he, nml those who are ndmit-
; led lo his secrels, did all that it was in tho pow-
I er of demagogues to ilo, in preventing the bill
j irnin becoming a law !—that Geo. Jackson :
| signed it with gnashing teeth, ami only because j
ilie Kitchen Cabinet told him that two-thirds of j
' both houses would lie sure to make it a law of]
1 the land, ninugre his veto /—that the Glohe, the ,
! official speaking trumpet of the Executive, and South mol ing.—The people in most
1 the elio-en “ loot horn 1 of the basement story of [ States seem to feel tho weighty responsibility j n 8°
the Government, has been grumbling eversince— ; thnt rests upon them, anil are preparing to dis-
inulteriiig all that its masters dared to let it mot- charge the great elective privilege in a manner
ter against those of tho President’s friends who
hail independence enough lo vote for the inter
ests of their constituents, notwithstanding the
! denunciations of their party compatriots 1 H
| the North-Carolinians are really in any doubt
as to whose votes they nreitttehtcd for their mil-
1 lion nfilnllars, let them look at the \ea«nnd nays
THE EXPRESS MAIL.
From Ilie Savannah Georgian.
I’nstinosier General has issued proposals
in (li e Washington Globe of I he ^.filh inst. for
irrviog an express Mail lielw orn New N ork
and New Orleans, us null nrizeil hy a late net of
congress. The lime proposed to he occupied is
sir dai/s and ii half. 'I lu Glebe say s “ it is ue-
sireil of the Post 'Master General to extend ihe
In in fils of ibis mail to other sections of the
country ; hut he thinks not safe to attempt it un
til he is more fully apprised nf ihv menus which
he will he able to devote to tiiese object.” 'J ho
following islhat porliunof the law miller whose
authority the Post Master (ieneral is acting:—
“Incase the Post Master General shall ileetn
it expedent to establish an express mail Im ad
dition to the ordinary mail, on any of the post
mails of the United States, for the purpose of
conveying slips from newspapers, to letters,oth
er than such as contain money, not exceeding
half an ounce in w eight marked ■ express mail,’
ami public despatches, he shall he authorized to
charge all letters and packets, not free, may ho
bylaw subject when carried hy the ordinary
_ I mails."
From Ilie Charleston Patriot.
STEAM PACKETS TO ENGLAND,
j The follow ing extract (says the N. V . Jottr-
_ uni of Commerce.) is from the letter of a very
SUMTER COUNTY, ALABAMA. ! wealthy house in Bristol,England, to their cor-
Judge ll'hite's jirospecls hrightning—the whole ! respondents in this city . '1 he letter nns
fouth mariner.—The people in most of tho slave j the ship Bristol, which arrived some day*
Bristol, May 20th, 183ff»
Our senior partner is cluiL mnn ol a joint stock
...I s» pm...».1.0 i s ,: “Msra
aspousi*.
In Virginia* the While party, though in the !
minority in the Legislature, claim a majority of i ” 4, . , '. 1,, " 4S ^tahlUhed in
r T j )e jt hiteantl I thinking thnt il a company were e*»tai>nsncu m
packets, and the first object L .
nr arrangements are now made, and we shall
omtnencebuilding in a few weeks- He are
the
gO i.« at
\\’.i«hingt*»o—an
\\ liicli w ay to tin
lay his grievutict
administer tit
a It a I
atu
('npitalas y«*n ;.
fore tin* laws tor \
(iod anJ lihertv
The
liumhng to roi
•jj)i»n»!>Ji» roniliani
profrarinl
to the NVusi
our relation * with 'Texas
—w !iou the whole of tin*
11 j mi ii the public' land* are
Mi-
ti.« i
tfulu//iw engagements i
recalled officer, nut knowing
r Ih’Ioic which Department tu
Blair'it ltd Kendall of the Globe
* of the Government in their
Imr after circular i* issued t.»
n.realtyneiy. We me truly
rVheii the country is
ir I** the Swuth, nnd irun-
nmoiiff the Indians, and
issinniog a delicate form
npcculaliooH nod frauds
ho eroshefl, according t
I ho aggregate vote of the State.
Tyler Electoral Ticket is complete and before
tile people; nod the talent, the purity nnd ole
in both Houses on the final passage of the hill, j vntion of the names oil it, defy even the breath
Let them examine the editorial growlitigs of the j of calumny itself; one Van Buren editor in the
(ilohe, and those of all thesniuller orbs that take
their secondary light from it. They will find
that the measure was forced upon the President
and Vice President, shockingly against their
w ill. ami that all the papers friendly to Mr. \ an
Huron were so confident of General Jackson’s
I State says he would lie proud to see such talents
and moral worth engaged in a hotter cause !
In North Carolina, the people are thoroughly
alive to the great question that they arc called
upon to decide—a question involving the first
principles of republican government. The peo-
I <1 lOllipiUI) *■“'
your city, one or two packets to ho owned by
each company, and the compnnicslo correspono
for their mutual benefit, such a plan and under*
rtauding would he feasible, nnd no doubt prove
mutually beneficial— Please take this suggestion
into your consideration, and favor us with jour
sentiments thereon as a guide in opr procee
dings.
re so confident of General .tacKson s t priuciples ot repu
refusal to sign the hill, that they actually alms- I pic of that Stale, understand, the imposition of
*d it in the coarsest terms, in advance; and se- J the stemnm Humbug Baltimore Convention,
Mnj Gates, lately stricken from the roll of th®
Army, wlm arriv nl ill W'.iDiiiigto" s few ilnjsstnee.
|,ll, m-oerrried nn t« nhlnin nn intnrvirw with the
Presiih'iit in tho Ilninilsgo. His object to, »« « n -
derstnod. to solicit lii*» restoration |<» his rank, to
it« iouf Gl*»b» -when preustatifins too should
veral of them are yet under the blind staggers and will show to those who have trido to lead 1IfTII . wllMI , . . .
brought upon them hv the disappointment, when I them blindfolded lo th® alter of their own des- the purpose nf staudiug n trial, lor Ins s ege mi
thev found that lit® " hero of three or four wars” ' tntetion, that they will noth® thus offered ns conduct, hy n Court Martial.^—\Metropo «