Macon telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1826-1832, May 21, 1827, Image 2

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18 Jooks in vain for those which in the great sys tem of succession must neecssarijy somewhere «,r other bo sinking towards decay. They are mt last discoverer), but tlieir fate is not allowed •to disfigure tho cheerfulness Of the scene, and they,are seen enjoying fthat may. literally be termed a green old age. The extremities of their branches break off as they die, and when nothing is left but the hollow trunk, it is still covered with twigs and ( leaves, and at last' is gradually concealed from view by the young •shoots*, which, born under the shelter of its branches now rise rapidly above it, and con ceal its decay. A few places tire met with which have bean burnt by accident, and the black desolate spot, covered with the charred trunks of tres, resembles a sconorin the human world of pestilence or war. But.tho fire, is scarcely extinct, when the surrounding trees all seem to spread tlieir brunches towards each other, and yotuvr shrubs are "seen rising out of the mound, while the sapless trunks are evident- ly'mouldering into dust. The rivers all preserve their course, and the whole country is # in such beautiful order, that if cities and million* of inhabitants could suddenly be planted t>t proper intervals and situations, the people would have nothing to do but drive out their cattle to graze, and, without any previous preparttion, to plough whatever quantity oT- ground their wants nrglit require. FOREIGN. LATE FROM ENGLAND. Liverpool dates to the 2(ith of March have been received at New York. The revenue had fallen off tho last quarter, about five hundred thousand pounds sterling, compared with the same quarter of tho preced ing year. Tim price of Cotton at Liverpool had de clined a fraction. i An animated discussion took place in tho House of Commons on tho 12th March, on the propriety of abolishing corporal punish ment !u tho British army. Mr. llumc said, in Yv r orteuiburg, corporal punishment had been suppressed by tho present King. The soldier was corrected by confinement,, and sending to tho depot. Corporal punishment in tlio A- merican army had been suppressed for twelve years, although they continued the system in tlieir navy. In spite of this cessation of corpo ral punishment, tho American army had gal lantly competed with our best troops in the late ■war. Ho (Mr. Ilurne) would assert that not one in a hundred of the soldiers flogged ever -afterwards recovered his previous character. On another occasion Mr..Humo said—there appeared to bo n complete dissolution of gov- ■crumcnt business; lie supposed they were wait ing for some new minister to tell them what they were to do. A mechanic of Exinomb, (England) has con structed a model of King Solomon’s Temple, in shell-work and m numl, containing 985 wui- dows, ll lowers, 385 pinnacles, 188 pillars, formed of 150,000 English shells; The mo del is four feet ten inches in lcng.h and, three feet seven inches in breadth. Advices from Madrid to Paris, by express, are to March 11.—The Portuguese troops •having advanced in threo column*, the insur gent divisions of Migessi and Monte-Alojre penetrated into Spam by Altelia, Noso and St. Anne. They were not allowed to pass the frontiers till after they had laid down their arms on the Portuguese territory. The division of Telles Jardao was disarmed on the'Spanlsli territory, into which it had just penetrated towards the right, by a place named Constantine. Orders have been sent to General Mormet that the arms laid down on the Spanish territo ry are to be immediately delivered up to the Portuguese authorities on the frontiers, on ■their giving a receipt for them. • ' • London, March 17. Spain is far from pursuing tho only prudent policy now left open to her, in acknowledging tho independence of the new states, that reports have been current for some days, of prepara tions actually on foot for recovering the pos session of thorn; and it is given out that Gen. blondes, who served in Columbia, is in one of the Canary Islands, collecting a force fdr the invasion either of Colombia or Mexico. These reports however, we do not consider entitled to the smallest credit. The preparations alluded to, are supposed by well informed persons to be intended fur Cuba, tho complete protection of which island is probably all that is aimed at. The London Sun ef the 17th says: The Spapisli army of observation has fallen back a short distanco from the fruntior. Various caus es for this movement are assigned. The.real cause of the chango of position of tho Spanish troops is probably to be traced to the appro, hension of some act taking place, if they re mained close to the frontier, which might com mit the government of Spain before all its pre parations were complete. As soon as they aro, wo shall hear of no more rttrograde move ments. London, March 24. The Etoile has nn article from Trieste of the 10th inst. confirming the defeat of tlio Greeks upon Alliens. Bourbacki, and two hundred of the prisoners, were executed by order of Red' cliid Pacha. * Mr. Gordon is said, in a letter of late date, to be at the bead of five thousand men, better appointed and disciplined, than any that have yet taken the field in the cause of Greek liber- garb beforo the police of Liverpool, on tho in formation of Captain Duff, of brig Laura of Now York, with whom she had for abont a year sailed in tho capacity of cook, has been married to that yjullctn.ui in Liverpool. Her true name was Hamilton. She has resumed femalo attire, bat threatens, if affairs are not well conducted on board, she will turn Jack Tar'again, and take command. Colombia.—Tho late accounts from this' country represent it as being ia a most deplo rable condition. Bolivar, ar wo learn by a passenger in the brig Athenian, was at Cara cas—poor, almost pennyless, and in by no means en enviable situation. Santander, on the other hand, is stated as being farther in the interior, rolling in Wealth—havin': obtained the control of a considerable portion of the British loans. At Cartliagena, great distress prevail ed; the frigates had been dismantled, aud tlieir crews discharged in a starving condition. Tlio misery of these, added to that of others in the place, drove thorn to commit robberies at eve ry hazard—oven in tho open day. Our in formant was attacked in a street in that city, at an early hour in the evening, by a sturdy fellow, with a knife, who demanded his money —but the prompt anil unperturbed conduct of the person he assailed, and the weapon he dis played in return, compelled him to m ike a pre cipitate retreat. In a word, tho fortunes of Colombia appear to be at tho very lowest ebb. 0 ur next account from this unhappy country will be looked for with the deepest and most painful interest. A fearful crisis is evidently tit Imwl.—N'cw York Gazelle. DOMESTIC. MACON. Mondav, Ma>j 21, 1821. « Our Cou.M/jr—Our whole Country." The Editors of the Recorder, it seems, are not yet “done with tho Telegraph," notwith standing the bitter reflections it furnishes them, and the twinges of conscience it excites. Their contortions in arwlcavoring to remove tho hate ful images that crowd upon their alarmed ima- we|)t wa| faitI 'f ully executed; that Cousin filiations, ©vincc the terror with winch they be- Q e Qj.gr 0 ^as a captious assuming fool; that his annual messages to the'^Legislature might here after go to that body ina crude and indigested tween this State and Florida, would .throw jn- to that territory a narrow strip of hind winch has hitherto been considered as belonging to Georgia, his excellency the Sallow Dwarf of tho State House issued his mandate, directing the immediate suspension of the survey, which of course xvas instantly obeyed. It is added that he reproached his Cousin Tom of being so ignorant of geometry as not to be properly qua lified to distinguish a square from a circle, and to bo unfit for the running of a fence round a aornficld: that the latter retorted, that the place of departure at which the boundary line had been begun was the true one according to sun, chain and treaty; that the survey so far as it hold them. It is ever so with a guilty con. science—the imagination is always its worst tormentor. In the last number of that paper, we find nearly a‘column devoted to our attention, but so full of falsities and absurdities, that to notice them at all is almost unnecessary. With the Editors personally we have nothing to do—wo care nothing for their opinion, and have as lit tle regat d Tor their friendship as for their prin ciples. As we wish however to get along smoothly through the world, we are disposed to treat our cotemporaries with courtesy, when their deportment seems to demand it. Person al disputes are seldom interesting to the public, form; for he’d be hanged [jumping] if ho ever again would correct one of them, or give a dollar to pay the taxes of the poor devils about Fort Barrington for'tho purpose of getting him votes again at the election of Governor.—We hope the story is exaggerated—that little ot nothing has happened'beyond a friendly ex postulation, ending in a cordial shake of the hand—and ihat the country may continue to receive the benefit of Cousin Tommy’s lite rary labours through his assistance to Cousin George. Will the official Recorder illumine our ignorance? To the Editor op the Telegraph: The ill health of your correspondent, ‘‘A Demo-' * , , . , . . crat of 1818,” devolves on me the drudgery of noticing and wo have no desire to crowd ours upon tlieir ■ gome remarks, by the Senior Editor of tnc .Southern notice. The cpntroversy with Mr. Grantland 1 Recorder, on the article furnished by that writer, in „ , , . , ... , your paper of the 7th instant. My acquaintance with was not one of our seeking—and tf in the pros- I your author, together with my privity to His produc- if itnnnlonsRiir truths are hmuo-ht home tion and knowledge of the facts in substance which it contains,—with one exception,—converts my etten' hourly expected, operations. The Neapolitan General Church (an Englishman) and Mr. Lambton, the late member of Durham, have sailed from Naples to join tho Greeks. . ' • The discovery ship Ilccla, Capt. Parry, was ready to sail from Deptford, March 25, on a voyage to West Spitsbergen, and the North Pole, and was expected to take Iter final depar ture from Sltcerness, or tho Noro, the first weok in April. She has a complement of 64 men, and carries provisions for 19 months. William Brown, the Sailor.—The eccen tric young female, who was brought up ia a From the Port Gibson Correspondent. A tragical event happened in Greenville, Jefferson county, on last week, which displays a horrid jnsimico'of moral turpitude, to which a young m.tn, just entering into life with every promise fell a melanrholy victim. We shall give tho particulars as we heard them, and in doing so shall mention names. Tlto feur of wound ing the feelings of her felatives would withhold us from tlio disclosure, did wo not feel it a du ty to expose vice when it appears in such a horrible shape, and had wo not sufficient knowl edge of mankind to know, that the errings of individuals taint not, in the estimation of socie ty, the character of their relations. A Mrs. Cable who has for some lime kept tavern in Greenville, received into her house as a boarder, Mr. James Gray, who had lately taken up his abode in tho place, and had open ed a store and was appointed Post blaster.— Ho was a young man of nn amiaMc disposition, and of modest and retiring deportment—jus} such a character as is likely to bo decoyed from virtue by tho desiging. Mrs. C. frequently made advances, which he could not but under stand, and finally yielded to. He continued an illicit connection, till the admonitions of his friends induced, him.to break it off and change bis boarding. She had frequently urged him to marry her, Which he refused to do; and this last conduct of his raised her jealousy to the highest pitch, and she declared to her servant girls that if he did not yield toiler wishes, site would kill him the first opportunity. Accor dingly on his return from Now Orleans, whith er he had been on business, she sent for him, and with this dirpTul intent, prevailed on him to stay all night. Towards morning, and when lie was asleep,-she' appears to have got up, laid her burial drpss.proviously prepared on the ta ble, took One pistol and shut him in the back of tho head, and .httit deliberately laying down on the boil by bin), placed another to her forchond and blow off tlio whole of tho upper part of her head. They wore found in this condition the next morning, bv the neighbors, who had to croop through tho window to get into tho room. Hero was the working of jealuosy on a vindic tive hellish disposition. Here is an instance of viCo, risen to its acme, in its influence over human action; nnd should warn us to bo extremely cautious how we indulge tho ton- donees of our pdturc. Wo cannot look through the vista of /ears to flip end of life, but we can conjecture to what end such an indulgence may lead; if it wore possiblo it might be even worse than hers. Sho-muy once have been virtuous, amiable, loving and beloved; anifshe finally be came so cliaugcd aud callous as so be regard less even of self, and sacrificed herself to effect his destruction. Kaskaskia, (Illinois,) April 4, Tho celebrated. Prophet, brother of the no less celebrated Tccumsoh, is now at Col. Me nard’s, with a number of Slmwnees, on their way to select their country west of tho Missis sippi. This Proplict was tho master spirit that regulated and called into action the energies of tho Indians in the las. war; who, notwithstand ing, has since been taken into the favour, and lived undor the protection of our government. He has yet great influence oyer the minds of his tribe, and though ho has promised to behave himself, and be.true to this government,it may ho apprehended, in tlio new theatre on which ho is now placed, with all his faculties yet ap parently unimpaired, nnd feeling, as he must, tho same hostility to us ho formerly entertain ed, that with the materials ;here placed to his hand, ho will work out something, by tho assis tance ofwbuh ho can obtain his former un bounded influence, and when opportunity may offer, to give it tho snmo direction.) Chtrokttt and Osages.—Wo loarn, from several gentlemen, who passed down tho Ar kansas;'last week, from Fort Smith and Can- tonement Gibson, that all apprehensions of hostilities again breaking out between the Cherokee aqd Osage Indians have subsided; and the prospect of an amicable adjustment of tho difficulties which have for a long time ex isted between the two nations, is quite as gdod at present, os at any former period.—Arkansas Gazette. Tho frigate United States, Coro. Hull, ar* rived at Now York on the 22(1 tilt, from a three years’ cruise id the Pacific ocean, not having lost an officers since she left the United States. eculion of itunplensaut truths are brought home to his recollection, lie must lay the blame to his own improper interference in matters, he seems to know nothing about, or if he does, wishes to conceal the facts or give them an ini-' proper coloring. Having higher game in view than the editors of the Recorder, we did not think it necesia- ry ourselves, to reply to their remarks of the 30th, which were mostly personal, and but little connected with the subject under dispute, vifc: the inconsistency mid anti-republican ism of Berrien, Forsyth,&.c. Our not answer ing their abuse however is no proof of our be ing confuted by the sophistry of those gentle manly editors, Tlio charges stand as wo stat ed them, sud we believe can be substantiated by facts. Judging from their own words, one would suppose they were pretty near “confuting and confounding" themselves. According to them, Forsyth and Berrien not only have been fede ralists, but continue so yet. In the Recorder of tho date abovementioned they say: “As du ring tue war wo find Berrien and Forsyth now," &.c. And in their last paper they ad mit their former federalism in these words— hear them: “The truth we believe is, that Berrien [and Forsyth] DID NOT approve op the war at tho time it was made”!!! And as nobody disapproved of the war but federalists and Hartford Conventionists, the conclusion is irreslstiblo that Berrien & Co. must have been either the one or tho other if not both—and continue n6w as then! Mr. Grantland would have us to believe, that lie never solicited Gen.. Clark or any other Gov ernor for favors of any kind. It is in proof though, that ho has solicited favors, exclusive favors too, and has been refused. If not, why did he continue to heap abuse upon Clark for not giving to hitu the printing of a certain Di gest; after-it was known that another person of fered to' do it for something like a thousand dol lars cheaper? Why also did Governor Mitch ell o.dce “render himself obnoxious to this snmo Mr. Grantland, for not giving hint a similar job, in preference to others who did it for a smaller sum? 'i_ ■ ■ Mr. G. inquires very candidly, "can the character of a public journal be elevated, or the cause of any party be promoted by the total a- bandonment of Truth, and an open and sys tematic perseverance in propagating palse- nooD.” .We supposo he refers to his own de vious course; and as he has pursued it, accord ing to his'own statemeut for “eighteen years," he ought by, this time to be.able to judge of its expediency.' For our part we have over con sidered.dia political examplo of Mr. G. as one that ought to be avoided rather than follow ed. In the course we have marked out for ourselves,'we have endeavored to dovelopc Truth, os far as may be, and support and dis- seminato genuine republican principles, let it please or offend whom it may. And if in tho course of our remarks the feelings of those are sometimes touched who have prostituted Truth and Principle, and sacrificed Honor and Pa triotism for the soko of ambition—we cannot help it. W' : A severe Hailstorm from the North Wests passed over this place on Saturday afternoon, doing in its course, considerable injury to the growing crops. ‘ . ‘ Jphn Randolph of Roanoke, is said to be in such a state of health at present, as to preclude the hope ofhis.ever being able to take his seat in Congress. ' COMMUNICATED. UPROAR IN THE PALACE. It is rumoured, that, on learning the line, which tlie commissioners on the part of Geor gia and the United States were running be- deem, from imputation so serious, ohoIn chief leaders of his party, if truth would '’ rail him? But since your conversion t 0 "/ ern federalism,” you are, perhaps, sir, to trust to the word of any. of the old m, of Savannah who wore democrats durins war. I will remove tho objection; and’ 1 give you a referee of congenial feeling: 1 * rien himself, who dare not doty my statem Tho story related, by* “a Democrat of jg! of Berrien wearing homespun in his elect, coring journics succeeding the war, is, to knowledge, substantially correct; and 1' misinformed, if the low country Journdi sr t fore cited can be induced to express a dish of the fact, or even to sa^that ho does no, i it to he trite. You must now h'egia tof tl u the correspondents of the Telegraph fo, somo claim to credence; and it shall be * province to fix it firmly in your recoils^ though I had designed myself fora higher c test; but the serf shall not dash dirt at my p. when I push at the vitals of his lord. ... Towards your sections and angles od iJ chart of Crawford, you are afraid to look; n| breath's not a whisper concerning your tr®J from democracy to federalism: disunion sJ jts probable concomitant, a servile war, as cautiously shun, as if the angel of dual armed with lightning, stood over the sub : crt| to destroy every votary blasphemously ( s,1 voring to approach it: and 1 am disposed! respite you for a time. ] But on domestic manufactures ydni have t(4 impudence to quibble, admitting that in r j they ought to be protected; but in peace, t J And why not? Becnuse a tariff impoveraiiJ the Southron and enriches tho YnttkerJ What, sir!—does tho tariff inhibit tho fibrkJ tion of goods in the South any tnoro than d! growth of cotton? If the Yankee guitars from manufactures, why not tho South. J Is not labor, with tho except ion of a few tnjj cheaper in the South than tho North?—arei fuel and streams as plenty, the soil as proli the genius of the people as apt, ami the, materials as abundant and cheap? If “the pod farmer finds it difficult at the end of tho yearJ make the two ends meet," is it the wayfcl him, to obtain a mitigation of his hardships, J pay itpoh iiis staple article the' carriage of id thousand miles, four commissions tft least,as| a duty at tftn dodr of the work shop, to'kvil converted into a shir} or pair of breeches, wfed tlie same operation could bo, just as wpil aal much more Expeditiously, performed at tk] corner of his fence, and afford employment t his poor neighbors, instead of feeding afoiii population ami adding to tiie warlike resound of a foreign government?—If sfleh bo your w triptism and economy, may God keep the pw pie from your Visijprti and kiudueis. But, J should your policy prevail, how are wetoM poet manufactures to flourish in war? Willed -nvest capital to any ex:eut on the assume of protection during the precarious conti] ance of hostilities' with the - prospect of certd ruin on- the return of peace? Such howtwj is the consequence ef four Casuistry; and tk| I have no doubt that you recaivodiwwj from the Sallow Dwurfof the Capital,-U a| t ies with i: too thmy marks of its nativity* to lie traced to tlie mild and miasma of Sap Tho interest of die “poor-firmer” butt enters into deliberation there, as UtsS cy considers his hordes of Ourang OutaitjsVi badly qualified to become manufacturers, d England fully as able to furnish plains dud ch naburgs as the United States, aud as mbielfj serving of custom;—besides, the island is tclfj rably situated for smugglingshould war im happen. Such considerations may weigh sistj thing with persons abstracted from’thei by feelings and interests, but with me jtfl At ontrtme, you confess, that your voice us Tor manufactures,-but that was during the »r-| Let me ask you, sir, if since the war, to 18f5, 1816, 1817 and 1818, the time wN Berrien assuhied occasionally the fashiotalq homespun coat, you did nqt very fashion-!-: urge tho very fashionable doctrine of ceco:- aging domestic-manufactures, till the fcM able apothegm, “in the midst of peace, p -q pare for war," became so quaint in your tnosil that many of your now fashionable MM prayed 'fervently that yon rinight ipeedly H ceive.a fashionable apotheosis? Yes, sir;—J'*! have been, like tho Old Vicar, quite const'll in following the fashions of the.timos! D je | truth alter? Does it, liko you, have it* ph ssS | and changes? No. Than I shall steadily p^l sue it, and spare no changeling that crouejojl path. • • , I You tacitly pdmit, sir, having abujodwj slandered General Jackson, but deny ItatnSI ever DECLARED him to “he spotlc«»| blameless, tho only man in the United SB*I qualified to discharge the functions app« ttl> j ifig to the First Magistracy." The subsr.t>j tion of one word for another not synonimw*’ I meaning is worthy of your understanding, “I should savoyou, did your grey hairs leave^Jl hopes of reclaiming you from tho crooked 1 '* you of political inquity. Yon wen pot to accomplish an impossibility, “to prove n no- with tho DECLARATION, but the gStivC,” itminnluwl IVn. — . ,.v7 ktl l—W| bwiuaiiiR.—ivnu um. vAvvjniuii) vuuvviiw V tion to the subject into an obligation rendered imperi ous by friendship, truth, and a regard for the welfare of the country The exception in reference is the charge against Mr. Sen/on Orantlnnd's having solicited tn aidsliip under General John Clark. As tliisflllege- ment was solely founded upon positive assurance given in your preseuce to “A Democrat of 1812,” and which yon believed to be true, its proof belongs of right to the informant. It is almost superfluous to' acquit you of the uuthorship, as the idiom, arrange ment and spirit bear such evidence of another origin, that no man having any discrimination in language, will suppose the production to he your’s. Your sole agency iti the matter was the printing—I hold tiic manuscript, and find that you did not even exercise the Editorial Privilege, to niter a word, a point, or a letter. You will insert in your paper the enclosed ar ticle, not as a favor to me, but di yonr duty to tiie pub lic. PADDY CARR. To Seaton Grantland, Esquire, Senior Editor of the Southern Recorder. ... * - You wish, sir, that incidents of former years should not be admitted in testimony against your party; and contend covortly for the prin ciple, that the past has no connexion with the present. The establishment of such a point would evidently be of some importance to you, and charity might lead me to waive the sub ject were not involved in it matters of paia- mount' concern to Georgia in particular, and liberty in general; but^sir, as the dearest rights of man have been assailed by had'characters under insidious and 'treacherous pretens'ons, i- cannot be in justice termed illiberal in 'hose re solved to maintain immunities.founded in rea son ami nature, and sanctified by their fathets’ blood and their fathers’ wisdom. I shall there fore not accede to your wishes, by foregoing the benefit in politics of that which is considered the only sure guide in every science, the expe rience of other times, but shall use it with a con stancy not to be abandoned from fear, nor yielded to the effects of guile. It is iD vain, sir, that you confound Mr. Bart- let with his-correspondents, or chqrgo the lat ter with not having during the war done as much for tho country as Mr. Berrien. Both us- sertionsaro as absurd as they are false. The vari ety of stylo is sufficient evidencoofadifference in authors, and when a detail (if military services beepmes requisite, Berrien himself shall “boar witness.” Until they claim distinction from tho people for benefits rendered, such detuil would, however be superfluous, and closely al lied to egotism. All that can be expected from us are truth and reason; and before I let you go finally, your ojivn feelings shall advise you to wliat cxtnnt my pretensions t* those qualifications reach. ‘ •; In charging Berrien with having, in a pub lic harangue made at Savannah, denounced tho war as unjust and opposed the march ing’ of two volunteer companies from that place to Florida, for the security of our southern nnd western frontier, I purposely introduced the name of the gentleman then commanding tho Republican Blues, as a referee whose veracity could not he questioned, should your skepti cism or hardihood inclindyou to doubt my state ment, knowing well that his participation in that act of devotion to his country’s safety, as well as his efforts to effect a dry cultivation a* round Savannah with a view to diminish the de structiveness of life* had left upon his memory on' impressiou of die collateral incidents -too permament to bo erased by tlio flight of years. Though this reference could not euable you it supplied you with tho means to com* pass nn equivalent in reason, had my state ment contained evasion or implied falsehood; hut you have as cautiously eschewed the au thority, as if pollution lurked beneath It and certain extirpation preceded its approach.— Had this reference been however withheld, it would in you havo been prudence to have con sulted tho Savannah papers, which it is not to be supposed would pass over in silence any misrepresentation of o man that has of late been in their estimation so essential on tho floor of Congress to tho cause of Georgia. As toy charges in thc-Tclograph against Ber- ridn reached Millcdgevillo early in the morning Of the 30th of April, they must at the further most havo arrived in Savannah by tho 4tli cur rent, and yet the papers of that city, which ap pear daily, have not as late as the 10th, attemp ted to question them or extenuate them. Can this arise from ignorance of the facts advanced, or disinclination to do him justice? Did not the oldest Journalist in that placo go to East Florida as a volunteer officer? <3an it be pre sumed that lie either has forgotten the circum stances connected with so memorablo an epoch •f his own life, ox that he is indisposed to rc- ING;. and as deeds speak this most impre s,l f language, jt Is, tq establish the fact, W73 cessary to contrast Seaton Grantland ol M to Seaton Grantland of 1818. On ,,rj of August of that year, Seaton Grantland V 1 CLARES, that ,J “Tbft “hero of Orleans,” like Commodore J'l appears to be intoxicated with papular applet^vj seems to act upon the absurd belief, that“M**". j, wrong." tie lias taken upon himself to dccia\. field, matters which belong exclusively to the J and to Congress. Ho has repeatedly durtgtf**/L live orders, and lias more than qxicotrampU*a-ijj damental principles of our government has, in short, played the part ofa'miltoy exercised the powers of n DICTATOR, ,fl , .kjo-l Now, sir, as you havo never retracted M [ linion and yet pretend to bo a man of tm J over of tho country, it follows as a n ccf ^1 consequence, that a character so P ec£an dangerous would not receive •PjjjTj tion and sorvices for the Presidential y| if any other man in tho nation c 01 ^ 10 . j you believe, tho prerequisites to dsicWrgji duties—while, on the other hand, tho #^| with which you have, for tho last »>* collated and republished every thing 11 ' your judgment, cxculpatos him and frotn-(lie chargos circulated by b*s CB