Newspaper Page Text
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"FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE.
Every wive that washes ourshoresfrom
be E'i»t, scums to bear fru-b ■b'toMigein'e
upon iit bosom. For two or (hrOe d«y»
pan, nor column* Iiavo been occupied, to
the etclution of almost every thing olio,, by
intelligence from Europe. This moraine
ere have an additional ropoly by the srri-'
Val Df the packet ship Canada, Copt. Bril
ton, by winch we have date* from the Bril
ish metropolis to the evening of the 31st ot
July.
A brief but intereiling sketch of interme
diate events will be (bund in the following
letter.
FROM OUR CORRESPONDENT.
London, Wednesday Evening, July 31st.
Half past 7 o'clock.
Tlio Esrhnnge has been in A ferment
all the morning respecting intelligence from
Portugal, which having been confined for
the greater part of the day to one channel
only, wae necessarily subjected to much
doubt end anxious inquiry. Tho facta on
which alone perfect reliance can be placed
at present are, that Capt. Napier'* fleet was
teen oo tho 22nd, six miles from the en
trance of the Tagus, and that preparat'dns
were making at Lisbon to oppose him.
Miguel’s flag was still flying on the forta,
ami there were no indications, up to that
time, of any movements in favor of Don
Pedro. Tlio most important part of the
intelligence circulated to .day, however, it,
‘Li* ait nttacit was-othdefch Opori’c on tho
25th by the Migueltto troops under the
command of Marshal Boui mont, in which
he was repulsed with Brent loss, and had in
fact sustained a total defeat, Thi* if true
In she full extent, would leave little, if any,
doubt remaining, as tu the issue of tho con
test. But there are other accounts in town
Which rlpim the advantage in this case for
the Migueliles, or at least, thut there svss
no important advantage gained by 'he par
ty of Don Pedro, and affirm that the et-
tack was to he renewed on the following
day. It cannot he said, therefore, that du
ring the hours of business iu the cltv, anv
thing positive was ascertained on this verv
anxious und interesting subject. The
hope, however, pievnils, that n decisive
viclprv will turn out to huvo keen gulnod
by tbo constitutionalists at Oporto.
ENGLAND.
Hopes or C mmon*,- -Tho chancellor
of the Exchequer fin rettly to inquiry) said
t>* intended this evening, to move hit as
mondmem ... the Factories Bill, with the
view of putting it In the shape in which tlm
Ministers wish the Bill to proceed.
The Solicitor General said he feared he
could not prem’lm abolition of Imprison
ment for Debt Bill, this session, owing to
the lateness of the sesion and the mar.Uno-
ty of the Bill.
Colonial blattert/. -The House then,
On tho motion of Mr. Stanfov, ne „in res
olved into Cnmmittflfl, on the Colonial
Slaveiv Abolition. The fwontv-fifih aec-
flon, (nr 20,000.000 compensotlon) tv vs a.
pain oronosed.
Mr. ‘Flurries renewed "his objection to
ffce proposed mode of raising this sum ; and
inquired whether it was to he obtained hv
.loiin. nr otherwise.
The Chancellor of the Exchequer said
it was to he raised by loan, tho annroprln-
tion and repayment of which would be con
tingent on certain events.
Mr. Herrles and Mr. Boring compluined
of the proposed mode, and thought tho gov-
•riinii'.n ought not to have such power
Mr. Aglionby said, as to tho clause, bo
Content* prqgem
Proxies
Not-contont* present
fPr'oxlea
1*
65
—135
20
31-81
54
Majority for the third reading
On re-admisaion into the gallery
Earl Grey was moving a clause by way
of rider to the bill, which was agreed to,
and the bill Was then PASSED
Tho friends of humanity will regret to
leprn the death of the Hon. William Wilber
force, in the 74th year of his age: a ‘name,’
says a London paper, “with which there is-,
probably associated more of love and ven
oration than ever fell to the lot of any sin
gle individual throughout tho civilized
globe."
Important Discovery in Science. We
understand that Mr. Saxtou, who first pro
duced the electric spark from amagnot, and
thus proved the great nffinity, if not tho
identity, of electricity and magnetism, has
just had his labor* crowned with another
brilliant discovery, the decomposition ot
wator by magnetism.
PORTUGAL.
The repulso of the attack on Oporto,
made by the troops of Don Miguel on tho
5th of July, noticed some days ngo in this
paper, was more effective than we had sup
posed. The loss of the Migueliles was cal
culated at <5oO men. Count Saldenlin was
made a Lieutenant-General on the field of
battle. Pimonle! was also promoted
Xu mines, George Vanzeller, and others re
ceived the Decoration of the Tower mid
Sword. Tho Migueliles Imd continued to
bombard the town during the Inst two days;
but with less vi^or, it was supposed, from
want of ammunition.
Lisbon papers of tbo 22d wore rccoivad
in London on the 21st ult. by oxpross.
They contain tho Miguelite account of the
Constitutional forcos in the south of Por
tugal, which, as may be supposed, presents
n very different character from tlmt receiv
ed through the medium of Don Pedro’s a-
geat.
It is stated in these accounts that after
thoir first suecessos which are attributed to
tho troops not boing prepnord for an uttack,
’•the rebels" have been discomfited on all
directions' nnd Iiavo been obliged to fly front
thn places ihoy had taken. Numbers of
them are said to have deserted, and tho
country people nre described ns rising up
against tuent, nnd cutting off their rotrent.
No mention is made in these accounts ot the
capturo of Don Miguel’s sqadron.
Half-past one. It is still most confident
ly Hsieited that tho most favorable accounts
hnvo boon received from Oporto, that the
Miguelite army was moat signally defeated,
and that Marshall Bourmont had flod into
she interior, supposed on tho route\o Spam.
II i» also added that on the 22d, the Afri
can steamboat spoke tho *liole of Napier's
float, nhoit’ six miles from the mouth of the
Tagus',and learnt that he hndlnnded a body
oftroops m SlTIlml, for the purpose of join
ing those of Villa Flo.. Tho rise in the
Portuguese Socnrlries has continued.
From tit &. States Telegraph.
LETTER FROM MAJ. JACK
DOWNING.
To Uncle Jotky Downing— Doumingville
1 haint hardly time to say Dear Uncle.
I and tbl Gineral hud it hip and thigh, hard
and suft, lather night. We ergied tell lie
Hollered out youre Hayoe and I’m dan’l
.Vebstei. I' aim Hay no says I, I never
chet long, eight wide and sis deep, is for
med of zinc, having a false bottom at- hall
the depth; and a perforated zioe plate made
to it the vessel and lie upon the falsa bot
tom.—Pour the new milk iuto the upper
pan of the vessel, and let it stand iwjelve
hours ; then through an apperture or “ lip"
left for the purpose, pour a* much boiling
wnter into the lower part, and let it stand
writ a word of that lenter about iiayne’s' twelve hours longer. The cream will be
•treat speech agin Webster. Slap weal his to thick that il might be lifted off with the
ipe at me. But I never gives up, nor
advances backwards—so he turned kinder
like. Then we sot into smokin and think'
in. gays I' Gineral thiokiii it plagy hard
work this bat weather. I’d rather maul
rales says he. Well, says the Gineral,
Major, what’s your ibougiils; the same to
you, a:iy« 1. Says (be Oineral, Major, that
wild varmint’s got Into -Congress agio
Who’s he, says It Davy Crocket and hit
learnin will bother us for true—he’s up to
snuff, Major—he kilt a wild cat at a wink.
He’ll play hop with Van Bureu: tlieie aim
ono can hold a caudle to his talking. Then
Toni Shelton from Kalmuck: Major I’m
(reed at last. I’d rather lick Pnckinhani
six times, than have them fellows at me and
poor little Van. They kuow too much.
Ginornl, says 1, don’t be addled. You’re
worse scared than Isaac was whan old Ur-
phatn gin him bine Betty: I’ll row cm up
salt River: that’s flat Major, says lie,you’re
the man; take a drink of cii er: then go a
bead. I relied tho Gineral, says 1, ketch
wcen&zlle asleep. i knoud Crocket
would he lected, an I sot my trap, and
kotchcd him worse thin a whale with a
Bedford harpoon. How’s that Major, soys
the Gineral. -' Say* I, give mo a drink of
thumb and finger; but the better way is to
lift up the perforated plate by rings at the
ends, and tho creuns is completely (operated
without being at all mixed with milk, from
numerous experiments it appears that iu this
way, four gallons of milk will yield 4 1-2
pints of” clotted cream,” and 40 ounces
of butter, being an increase of 12 1-2 per
esnt of cream and 11 per cent of butter, o-
ver the common method
Evils of Rail.Hoarls. The New York
Gaze. ', it gives the following humorous which
it says, was used by a canal stockholder in
opposition to ruilwuys: —
“He saw what would bo the effect of it;
lhal it would set llie'whole world a gadding
—twenty miles an hour, sir!—Why, you
will not ho able to keep an apprentice boy
at his work; every Saturday evening he
must tuko a trip to Ohio, to spend the Sab
bath with his sweetheart. Grave plodding
citizens will he flying about like comets.
All local nitacb'nenls must he at an end.
It will encourage (lightness of intellect.—
Various people will turn into the most im
measurable liars; all their conceptions will
be exaggerated by'thnir munifichint noiiou
of distance—‘only a hundred miles off! Tut
to a suit at the instance of the first enemy he
meets, and to the payment of the huudrer
dollars, a sum sufficient todepiivu his wilt
and children of a bed to lio on or a cow
milk. The same course of reasoning Wi"
hold good throughout, und this law no mu’
ter how considered, notwithstanding it is th>-
bantling of the poor man's Governor, never
theless will be discovered to operate mos-
oppressively on that class, while it does noi
at all affect the rich, except in enabling
them when so disposed, to lake advantage
of, and speculate upon the necessities of the
former.
The people most affected by this meas
ure, will look to it, and say whether the
will ■give their support to a man who impos
es, himself upon them under the deceptive
character, assumed by Governor Lumpkin;
at least it is time that electioneering hob-
Greenfield Gas. j bies heretofore most relied on in his support,
should be dismounted, for by this act they
are “rode down.”
cyder, a chaw of tobackcr, a pincii of smift', j noncsense, I’ll step across, madam, and
nnd a fresh pipe—nnd tfi<*n)Uiner:il, don’t bring your fan!’ ‘Pray, sir, will you dine
breathe above your breath while I tell you. with me to'day,at my ljltlu box at Allcq-
Says I, Gineral, you know ihc Slates, Bunk j limy!’ ’Why* indeed I don’t know: I shall
where Squire Btddlfi lives. I sot right a- - ha in town until twelve. Well, I shall ho
bout to make the Squire bribery nnd ktr i ihero, bat you must let mo nflfin lime for the
rupshin Davy Crocket. The Gineral Thontre.’ And than, sir, there will he bur.
snickered. Wlteu I went onto son how | ids of pork, and cargoes ol flour and child
Fire Proof Cemknt The French
cement for the roofs of houses, to preserve
tho wood and protect it from fire, is made
in the following manner ••
Take as much lime as is usual iu mak
ing a pot full of wliite wash, and let it he
mixed in a pail of water, iu -.his put two
and a half pounds of brown sugar, and 3
pounds of fine salt ; mix them well togeth
er, and the commit is compioted. A little
lamp black, yelloiv ochre coloring commod
ity, may be introduced to change the color
of the cement, to please the fancy of those
who uso it. Il has been used with success,
und been recommended particularly as a
prolectioa against fire. Small sparks of
Republican Candidate
FOR GOVERNOR.
M A J. JOEL. CRAWFORD
The people ofthe Western part of Georgia, and
especially the people of AleWs.have bsen look
ing with much anxiety to tho President of the
United States, for information upon the subject ot
llio recent murder of Col. Hardiman Owens, com
muted in the Creak Nation by the Deputy Marshall
of Alabama, and a company of regulars who Jno
osed to act under orders from the War Depart
ment. The Globe (which is the organ of tho Ad-
miniilratiou) has taken up the subject and in a long
and laboured article, attempts to justify not only
this outrage upon the laws of God and mar., but at-
so the course of the udministration in regard to that
portion of the people of Alabama, who have set
tled within the limits oi the Creek Nation The
Globe has not hesitated, in its mode of defence, ei-
tiior to suppress the truth or to suggest falsehood,
and yet it finds no little difficulty in resting the de
fence upon any one particular ground.
YVe propose to demonstrate, that the course of
tho Administration is not warranted by any thing
contaiued in the late treaty with the Creek Indiana,
or in any act ol Congress.
The treaty provides that “all intruders upon the
country hereby ceded, shall bo removed therefrom
in the sume manner as intruders may be remoy^u
by law from other public land, until the ^obhlry is
Surveyed nnd the selections made/ 1 In the con
struction of this part of tho treaty, it becomes ne-
cessaiy to affix to the term “intruders" its appro
priate meaning. “To intrude" says Johnsons Die
tionay is “to come in unwelcome by a kind of vio
lence; to enter without Invitation or per mission.'*
Gov. Cass seems to have considered this term In the
tho same light, lor in liU letter of 8th December
firo that frequently lodge oil the roofs of] 1832 to the Hon. YVim R, King, C. C, Clay
burning tbo shingles. So cheap and valua
ble a precaution against ihc destructive ele.
ntent ought fiat to pass untried. Those
who wish io bo better satisfied of its utility
can easily make the experiment, by using it
on a small temporary building—or it may
says I, gtvo u sartiftcalc that you haint brib-
eii mo, und I’ll git you Dav Crocket
Done for a ducking says tho Squire. 1 got
tho paper—nnd hu‘s ilio slickest feller liven;
for says Biddle, Major, send those scraps
of huiider dollar notes to t our undo for sam
ples how to inakeern at Dotvnliigville B nil-,
with compliments iu full. Now says he.
Major write to Crockett: so down I sets in
the big cheer, and writes: viz: na follows....
the cm hupped in the bank, l knowed what | rons of coals, and oven lead and whisky, nnd be tried by shingles put together for the
people said. I says to Biddle, when I quit J such like sober things, that have alway. | pm peso, and then opposed to the fire—Hail
figerin on syfortn and hung up the slate— been used to soltqr travelling* whisking a- j Hoad Journal•
I,says ho—if Kendall had come.to me in-, way like n let of sky rockets. It will up-
stead of going to Clay he’d got 1500 in n | set all gtavity of the nation. If a couple
minute. You’re Oi l Nic for sitrtni, says of gentlemen have an affair of honour they
I, Squire. The Gineral snor ed. Now, have only to steal off to tho Rocky Moun
tains, and there no jurisdiction can touch
them. And then, sir, think of flying fo:
debt. A set of bailiffs, mounted on bomb
shells, would not overtake an abscond
debtor—only give linn a fair start,
thn whole, sir, it is a pestilential, topsy
vv, harum-scarum whirligig* Give mo the
old,’ solemn* straight forward, regular
Dutch caii'il: thieo miles an hour lor ex-,
presses and two for jog or trot jotirnios: with
The following cxlraordinasy statement is
taken from the Legrngtou intelligencer—
“ Most Disgraceful.— /e learn by a
gentleman from llurrodslm.'gb, that not
withstanding Mr. Letcher was elected
from the fifth Congressional District, by a
clear and indisputable majority of CO votes
Upon j over his opponent, Mr. Moore, the sher-
tv tur- ifls of tho District melon Wednesday last
Ettta Custom House Fees.—Wo are glad
to sen the Secretary of tho Tresnarv 1 ike
ii firm position Rgainst oxtrn (cos to tho cus
tom House Clerks. Tho thing has gono,
to say tho lonst,-quite fur nnongli. Tho
nmotims paid Have been mueli beyond an.v
thing thought of bv those not conversntit
with the farts. With some firms they have
reached thieo nnd four hundred dollars,
did not wish to emancipeto the slaves, with- We Ho not moan to altar'; great hliimo to
OUt fuit compensation---hut onlv snrh mm.. 1 tint Clerks or any body for what is past, but
ponsstinn as wmlhl tnko place between man iinq lustionably the evil ought to lie torn up,
«nd man :H-«thn cnmpmisation ought lobe : root aud branch. If peimilled to go on, it
for tho difference be'woen the cos' of slave would tiansfnrm the custom House from a
and free labour, and no more—(Honr.) place of facility and nccnmmodalion inton
The Right Honorable Secretary had by no placn of vexation and delays. Tho Clorks
means convinced him of the necessity of have salaries und should not be permitted
grunting so large a sum as £20 000 000, to lake fees for any services coming within
Utiles* loss wero proved, he ibuogbt them | thoir official duty, or tbo fair and proper
ought not to be eompenstrtinn; hui ut till e- j colirtnsy of rhpjr offices. I f they may take
£20,006.600 far too mes for wotk Jona 0'> l of oCico hours, the
tnuch, especially when he considered tnin ©nd of (htj matter will bo, that all their
(Ilia f.ouul i y was pressed In sinking by tax
ation.
Sir R. Peel reminded the House that
their resolution for £20,000,000 had been
passed—had been adopted hv the House
of Lords :—how, then, could they rescined
the resolution T He considered that they
were pledged to the sum. The argument
heretofore might be good ; but now he con
sidered it to he wholly unavailing. He
conceived that they were precluded from
efloring the sum.'Jnnd that the more deci
dedly, as he was no party to the resolution.
Sir E. Wilmot wished to ask the Rl.
lion. Barnuet if the maximum were fixed
at £f0,0<)0.000. whether il was uot in the
power of Parliament »o teduce tt l
Sir K. Peel repHcd that the power of
Parliament undoubtedly might suuction its
reduction—hm bespoke ngamt the propri
ety of what was urged.
Mr. O'Connell said many had resisted
the fixing of the sum si £20,000 000.
They ihorefo- e were not bound by (he res
olutions.
Mr. .Stanley again contended that justice
required compensation.
Mr. O’Connult lennrked that in tho
hriginal proposition nothing was said about
gift, whete was justice then!
Mr. Slanloy replied there was to have been
payment by (ho slave labour, which was
negatived by the House,
Me. Cobbett opposed the gram.
In the House ot Lords on Tuesday, thn
work will be done out of office hours.—N.
Y. Journal of Commerce.
Extrucl of :t latter from tho Secretary of
the Treasury, dated,
Washington, 7th Aug, 1833.
“tt is the daty of the Government to sec
that slUhoso who have business at the Cus
tom House, shall have the power nnd the
inclination to employ, and liberally compen
sate all agents necessary for the politic ser
vice; consequently, If those who h 'vo bu
siness at the Custom Houso me obliged to
give private pay to Custom House officeis
i Am ii st be because there are not Officers, ad
equate to the duty, or bocause, if numerous
enough; they do uot perform their duly. I
respectfully request you, therefore, to makn
known to every Officer and Clerk in tho
public employment in your Custom House,
that tho practice of receiving from mcrch-
Mdjor Downing to Kurncll Davy 1'ratktt. n yoke of oxen for a heavy load! I go for
Dear Dav: I hopp’d like ,iarch peas beasts of burilgn; it is more primitive and
when 1 heatd how you was lected. Come I scriptural, and suits a moral and religious
on quick: the Gineral forgives al), and says j people better. Nona of your Imp skip and
yon and 1 shall go on Convoys l’enitemia } jump whimsies for me.”
ry fiom him to the Bank. Bul.ilo -ays
bring Crockett....there aim that bunk living
thin can stand Crockett and Downing
Biddle says damn the expense....and lie’s
got eight dollars a day to give away, for two
years beside wliut St. Mntliew Clatke pays.
Nick's shumpain slips down like s-.vcoi oil--
hank notes eight dollars a day to the clever
est feller to be found....nud says you’re thn
man. The Statu hanks is fi'lin Amos’ wal
let. They gin him in now York enuff to
buy nil your niggars and lend too.
Now’s tho time dear Dave.
Yoers to command,
MAJOR JACK DOWNING.
Mi jor, says thu Gineral, slop a niinu'e
tell I'm done Inughin—depend upon it lie
giggled like yniikeu doodle. When lie was
clono luughin anJ cryin..«snya lie, Major
where’s tho answer. Present amts, says
1, aud shewed him.
Kurncll Crockett to Major Jack Downing.
Dear Down... I knows nribery and cur-
ruptitTn thereaint that man livin should do
Question for a Union Mart. Suppose
after the Members of the Legislature have
taken their oath tn\support'the Constitution
of the. United States, they should be called
upon to enforce un act of Congress which
tltnv saw and’A’iieto to bn a deliberate, pal
pable att-J tlangr.tous violation of that Con
stitution ; in tins case, should they keep
their oath und stand by the Constitution, or
should they go for the act and break the
Constitution! And, in such case, ought
it to make any difiVeneo whether ii ma
jority of thn Slates had already judged the
same act, or could not each for itself, even
the first that commenced judging, lie »l
lowed to refuse obedinence to such act ? j
Again if no Stuto is to commence judging l
until a majority have judged, as the Union
ists say, then, low cutt any Siu:e evnr'be
gin to judge! M. J.-
to compare dig*polls, and throe of thorn (a
majority,) have certified to the ejection of.
Moore. This is strange hows, and
would be includible had wo not received it
from tho most respectable sources.
“ The circumsiani'os as they have been
related to us, aro as follows ; The Slier-
ill's met al llarrodshiirgh on momlay but
did not come to any decision. Tlioy as
senibled again on Tuesday, und organized
with tho same result. On Wednesday, they
again mot, and the method of consumma
ting die most disgraceful design of return
ing Mr. Moore, notwithstanding his ack
nowledged defeat, having been, no doubt,
previously fixed upon, the Sheriff of Lin
coln comity, which gave, Mr. Letcher a
majority of 149 votes, REFUSED TO
EXHIBIT THE POLL BOOK OF
THE COUNTY, without which Mr. Let.
cltor was in a minority, which refused be
ing accepted by the Sheriff's of Anderson,
Jessamine, and thn Deputy Sheriff of Mer
cer, as a pretext for returning Mr. Moore,
they accoidingly cpi lifted to itis election!"
From the Ncu> York Standard
What a cupel 1), now, well fitting coat,
that man has on! Not a wrinkle, not <i slain
From the Western herald of the 31 st till. | ihu collar new* nnd uusoiled, the buttons
On ibis day the favorite project of Gov- | not worn, and the culls liesh as a tnorring
l1is pantaloons too are smooth well
fitting and undisturbed. Tbo lint is evidon-
ty now, but the fur is shaking and shiver
ing iu dm breeze like the jib of an Albouy
sloop in stays, iu onlv ono thing does lie
depart from good taste, and that is, iu wear
ing a Cameo breast pin, largo enough lor the
figure head to a Liverpool packet. Yet
forge’ that. Is he a well diessud man!
ofany kind, is utterly condemed; nnd, that
no person who shall excepi private compen
sation, shall be retained in service after
prool of the fact.
*■ I need not enumerate the evils likely
to result from a continuance of tho pr.tclice
<o which yon refer. If o merchant can
not gel hi* busineas transacted as it should
b», it muat he the fault of the Government:
If lie has to pay a public clerk, lie has a
just cause of complaint against the Govern
mem ; nnd a strong leinptuiion is held out
to public agents to creato delay and diffi
I" 'ho House ot Lords on Tuesday, the Iculty, in order to coerce a nierhunt into the
SO’h of July tho Marquis ut I.atsdowne ! pnymvut of private fees. One nbuse of
liut to mo. I’d d.trd daylight through him ernnr Lumpkin, of oxaluding hum ciicula
inagiflin. Did’nt I tell the penjqe at Bull j ti- ii, all Rills tinder thn dennminalio'n of
Creek what tvuiy.pestilence and famine was. | five Dollars, goes into operation. If nf-
I toll’d out. war. was fightin — pestilence was j ter this time either through nocesity orotli-
cholera—and famine was short drops. I’m j erwisr, anv one shall pass for any purpose
up to 01.1 Nick or Young Nic. But tho i whatsoever, a bill under tbo dtsnomina
hank must be consolidated—at’d I can’t tioa of five dollars, ho becomes subject by
jpdgo of the b mk up to-iu nullification, law to the payment of 100 dollars, and ns
without'I try liow some uf the money.pass inducement to its rigid enforcement, one
\>s every where. So say nothin Major, till half of this sum is given to iefot ntnrs fori No. He is a man with unexceptionable do-
1 git the- rise — aud then we’tl treat the prosecuting the suit, anil they made coinpe- j dies on, but he is only a newly dressed man;
j tent witnesses to fix die charge upon whom- i bis clothes do not sit easily on him ab a sea-
j soever they rttay think proper to accuse. | man would, say ol a suit of sails, ho wants
i We have called this the favorite project ol j a blow to stretch the holt ropes, before they
| Governor Lumpkin, bn. utiso the law was will be shipshape and moreover yon see on
enacted by the'Inst Legislature upon his evident, not ai-hnmish look, in die man
special recommendation, and surely he will j himself, ho is literal! yn “man in Buckram."
ho belli responsible for its consequences. He always walks on what is called the
It has b.-«n dm chief delight of the-Govern-! fashionable, or four shilling side of Broad-
01 mid bis “ aids” to electioneer upon the j way, and looks at ivory man be meets, ns
principle, that he was ** the poor mini’s j who should say, "why (bo dove) don’t you
Iriend ;" " the plain honest farmer “ the ! wear as good a coat’ ns 1 do!’’ of Iris coat
(armors Governor,” and nil such like low | lie seems pruud, of himself ashamed,
slang.—The question is - now submitted to ! Do you see that cool, calm’ composed,
those to whom these tales have been told,
bow this act comports with bis professions.
Does na operation affect most the jicb or
the poo*? —Does it manifest tltoso friendly
intentions, dint kind protecting care over
thn interest Ot tbo “ honest yeomanry” of
the country, professed by, and for tho Gov
ernor. These questions need not to be
Stop Mujoi, says the Gineral—l shall i answered, for that which is self evident
Jio—I’m done over lay lor—you beat j needs not the aid of proof,
snakes, Billy Lewis says ho, call the cab- j J| (i )0 aliluout, (and here ngain it is urged
inot. Nan says Billy....which ono, the i as an olcrtioncoriug hobby, that much tho
kitchen, or tho tolhor one! Both, Billy ! larger portion of them are against tho Gov-
but leave out Tany he’s such a feller fur ernor,) are by the law denied tbo privilege
Gineral.
Four's io snrvo.
■ DAVY CROCKETT.
House of lieps.
P- S. S. Thu people out hero: sajs A-
mos is more nave than foul.
Givo mo that letter, says the Gineral,
and with that bo sot to snorting anil snick-
erittg, hu half dancing, and singing the fun
niest thing, just like unto,
“ Pa-rum uji the gum tree.
Gal you Crockett, in iny pocket,
Yankee Doodle Damico."
Says 1, Gineral you’ll bo fevery, and
- , _ .. . i have thu buck ako, and the like ul that ;
ants or others, compensations for services 1 *
.. . , j. and don’t sing such prepery Ion like u that
in yoqr latter days. Major, says be, give
ntlivej thu order of the dnv for ihn third
reari ng e r dm frisk Temporalities Hill.
The Esrl OF Eli>on imposed us passage,
and attributed the measure, to thu bill lor
Catholic onntii:i|Mtibn. The Noble Earl
concluded by 6cl*ring that he would ra
ther sacrifice It 1 * existence than consent to
• bill which proceeded upon u principle
that would entirely destroy thn Protestant
established episcoj ul form of ecclesiastical
discipline in ibis country.
f.ord Ellenhorounh conrured will! Lord
E lun 'o his opposition 'o ilia bill, aud was
followed on tlm same side bi the Duke of
Ol urcster, Duke or Bu-kingham. Lord
"W.vnford, Earl Haddington and Lord Bnx*
lx; n. mi he opposite side by die Mar-
qni •.-.asdowim.
ps then divided on the
>ho bill *s now read a third
(itea, then theru appeared-•
private
this kind will lead to others; and al last
there will be a laxity of moral feeling, ut
terly inconsistani with the character of
the country, anil 'he honor of its Govern
ment. Il it altogether a mistake, thut (lie
receipt of a private compensation is, as
one ol your officers suppose, a private affair
between the officer and the merchant ; and
I consider it mv duty, the inn e strongly to
sav this, as th it gentleman is attached to
the custom House. As the head of the
most importaot established in the country,
I look to yen for all the aid that may be
requisite, to pul an end to a practice which
no time or authority, according to my no
tions, can sanction or justify.
“1 am, verv respectfully,
“Your obedient servant,
“W. J. DUANE, Sec’y, of Treasury.
> SAMBfeS W4»TW*BT, E*u, Collector, N/Y)>
us a stnnaey. So I sneezed, and singed
nut,
“ Hail Cudamhy happy land,
Blair and Kendall haven born band,
Who tit aa writ in Jorksun's cause.'
gentility....don't let him cum. Major, says
he, the like ofketrbing Davy Croclitl, beats
nullification, antimasonry, Mormo.iites, and
konkology, and all them tilings Johnny (J,
used to (each where they made ms 11. dee.
If Amos, says he, was only bore, you might
see a candle thtough his nose. Nevermind
Amos, say 1, them Suite Banks is paying
well for the bargains.
I remain-, Dear Uncle,
Youi Nefu to command,
MAJOR JACK DOWNING.
This to my undo by the States Tclo
graph, from the Rap Rips. ..dog days....
eighteen hundred and 33 Ef the Tele
graph won’t do it, lot him fold it up, and
start it off by tho first Steamboat to the
Portland iidverriser.
Cream.—G. Carter, Esq. of England
has published a new method of obtaining
cream from milk, by which more cream is
"blamed than io the common way. It is
•s lbllowt f a four aided vessel twelve is-
of passing small bills, they can offer fives,
tens, and huudreds, whilst generally, the
whole monied capital of Ota poor man,
(whose support is claimed almost exclusive
ly for the Governor,) consists of some two
or tli.ee bills, under the denomination of
livo dollars'
To make oursolves .understood by ovary
one on this subject, and to show as we con
ceive, unanswerably thu effect of this law
upou rite laboring and poorer class of (lie
community, let us suppose on this day, that
tho man of wealth had on hand a number of
small bills. He does not need them for
immediate use, and can without detriment
to himself, await a convenient opportunity
to send them to the Bank from whence they
issued, and effect an exchange for specie or
bills of larger denomination. Not so with
turn who is differently circumstanced, and
whose week’s labor b.is earned him a iluee
dollar bill.—From this himself and family
must be supported ib« ensuing week, and
yet bs cannot ad* it without sutyeqUng him
gentleman oil die opposite two-and six-pen
ny sido ot the way! There is nothing e.X:-
'luordinary about him. It is Iriiii the fit of
iiis coat could not be bettered, Ids panta
loons show a well turned leg neatly encased,
his hut has been brushed with the most
scrupulous care his boots bold up a mirror
to nature, and yet there is nothing about him
even new, the first man goes to a fashion
able tailor and says, now go <o work and
malto us a first rate tip top fashionable suit
of clothes and d n the expense.” The
latter gentleman employs no less than iluee
articles ono forhis coat another for his vest
and a third for tlioso articles, the erudite al
ways use a porip ran to mention his toys
Yon would say tho first time you saw him
that lie wus a gentleman, and after you had
met him, for a long time, you would say for
it must strike you at last, that is a d n
well dressed men, and I never saw any thing
new ou him." A man of -true talent nevor
attempts to astonish by flushes, he rises in
yuor estimation by degrees, lie avoids nil
public exhibitions. A mnu who drosses
well nevei comes out as if courting the nub
ile eye, he changes in darkness, lie eschews
a new coat lie does uot-
"Dos his bright skin yearly, like a snake.”
You must winter him und summer him to
find him out, and w hen you do mako his
acquaintance you will know that though a
sloven can be a man of talents nnd worth
an over dressed man perhaps may be, but a
well dressed man must bo.
If youmeet a man with e bine coat, anb
bright metal buttous avoid him asyou would
a dipt candle. SPURZHEIM
injury i... . . #
those persons who obtained peaceable possession of
tho Jundan which they live, and do not retain it to
the exclusion of any Indian justly entitled to it, to
occupy tlioso aactd, till the several locations are
made.” Apnin in his letter of the same da*o. to the
lion. Gabiiel Moore, he says, “under all tho cir
cumstances of the case, I do not sco, but that those
white persons residing upon the ceded territory,
may he permitted to remain there, without giving
the Indians any just cause of complaint, until tho
locutions are niade, with the exception of those who
have forcibly evicted tho Indiana, or who forcibly
withhold utiy tracts frorp the rightful possessor
And again, in his letter oftho same dato to 8. Will
iams and others, he say«, “i do not sec that it
would bo any injury to tho Indians to sutler you to
remain until ft is determined, whether the land upou
which you live, will become tho property ofany in*
dividual muon" the Creeks." Now can any man*
of common sense believe, that n porson coming in
to ah Indian improvement by lease, or even by bare
permission^ is to be regarded ns an intruder? And
if ho is not to be so regarded, how can the course pt
the HflininiHtration toward Owens nnd the other set
tlers upon the Indian lands ho defended? What
“p'irticulni Indian" allodjged tlmt Owens look or re-
tatried “forcible possession” of his or her field?—
What ‘’particular Indian” complained that Owens
was a tressjmsser when ho entered into possession or
when he planted his cropl Upon this Bubjccl thp
Globe aided by tho garbled ami untrue statement
oftho Doputy Marshall, gives us no information.
Owens as well ns many others who are now about
to be turned violently out of possession and to bo
stripped of thoir property without even the form
a trial, was not charged with being a tresspasser
when he planted his crop, and surely if he was per
mitted to plant in peace," he was entitled to “gath
er in peace.” It cannot be pretended tlmt any war
rant is to be found in tho treaty for the course of tho
administration; und the Globe distictly admits that
tho power is not to be fuuod in the intorcourso act .of
1802, but the power** claimed underthc act of 1807 lV
Tho Globe is unfortunuto in ruMting its defence
here, for the act of 1807 only authorises, nnd points
out the inode, of removing intruders upon “public
lauds,” but unfortunately for the defeucc, there cau
be no “public lands” under tho treaty in question
until all the Indian reservations shall have been
located. Until this shall huve boeiidone, itis in^
possible to know what portion of the (erritloryifi
tho private property of the Indians, or wbut portion
witZ be “public land?.” Persons who settled or
remained in the Creek Nation, after the date of
tho treaty, had a right to expect and demand,
of tho Government, to bo protected in all then'
rights secured by tho treaty; and those who set .,
tied or romined after the’ publication of GoyT
Cuss’ three /otters, had a right to expect protec
tion until the Indians should be “located,” or until
possession should be demanded by the rightful
owners of the premises. Under Ibis impression
they were permitted to plant and cultivate their
farms, and now after their crops me made, and
whop*thqy aro in tho act of gathering, they are,
without .being heard in their defence, to be turned
oat of possession, their crops to be delivered over,
not to the rightful owner of thn promisor, but to
tlm Indians generally, or to these who muy figure ns
complainants, and all tins too before the “location
ol tho Indians." This high hnuded course is pur\
sued in behalfof savages, to tho injury nnd ruin of
our otrn citizens, und tlmt loo within tho limits of a
sovereign state, and in perfect disregard of her
iuws and institution's. The Globe has much to soy
about the integrity of the Government its obit,
gation to enforce the treaty. What can bo said in
belnlfof tlio administration, or Us -integrity, when
it is remembered that tho treaty was ratified in
ATarch 1832, tlwU the Government was bound im
mediately to proceed to the suivey oftho Territory
nnd tho location of the Indians, and that the survey
hns not yot been coinpleted^tnd not a silicic loca
tion made. Will it be said that the hunine.s has
been retarded by the death of Gen. ColTeeJ Ifao
let it bo remembered that before that unfortunate
event, there had been ample time for any provision
in tho treaty to huve been executed. The Globe
dure not deny, thut there has boon the most culpa*
ble romissness on the pert of the administration in
the execution, of the treaty*, and its present cant u»
bout the “pledged faith" (if tho Government comes
with rutliFr poor grace,
~Th« foregoing roinurks have keen made more in
rolerot.ee to what i.pnde,stood to ho tho course a-
bout to be pursued towards mint of thu preeent on-
cttpanU of Italian kind*, than to tho particular case
of Owens. By far the greater portion of the pres.
ent occajaiats have net only ontered by “nertnia-
ston’ olth. Indians, hut have leased the nremisM
at full prices, built their own houses, m.Jo exte^
five clearings and III some instances actually »«"-
chased the sot at on extravagant price from the "u n-
pused rightful owners; bat if the ontruge upon Ow
eus was right, then those occopnnt.
to the in dune the fruits of their herd Up
without being heard in their dt/ouce or he hnirh*
eyed by tho Office,, and So!dfe« of U le ('^±
Government. 01 Ule General
In regard to the case of Owemi it lo .. ,
that the statement of tlio Deputy Marshall not
only partial but substantially untrue. But were it
ranTTi? 6 M l y lmn ’ lhe cuu ™ Pursued was ly!
jus. f?hi'4.e»7^'-’"uxUmextrcnm. How doe.ho
justtiy iii-nsell? In his leltor to Gov. Cass ho save
1 have to report one of the most unpleasant casea
that I,as oceured” Could he he vLi Jd with tho
punishment he most richly deserves, ho would in*
deed fed the case to be ‘‘unpleasant”—-but let
tu low him m his statement. “A number o' the
Chiefs complained of Hardiman Oweus, who lives
twenty miles from Fort Mitchell end he says has
been meantly appointed Post Mailer. 1 cante to
Ilia Uouso. two days sinoo, and informed him that
there were many charges against him—that of ta-
king Iheir fields from them, and killing their hoes
horses, and beatirg the Indians in a most ctuei
manner, nil ol which were urovnn bv tho Inritm.
and several White persons.”' Who were ihl
Cluefii? Wore then the rightful owner* oftho fields?
If not thep had no right to compfain; nor had they
the right to demand possession of him; for lire Jaws
of Alabama do not recognise the right of Indian
Chief, to govern that countrv. nor do they rccog
ntso them os otheers ot the Government, No Vm
had any right to complain or hi. possession, hut
thoK! who were forctbly c, rcteJ, o. kept out ofpos-
session; and the Deputy in ‘ Q
-h«u/d have disclosed ta„ facts, that the complain"
"J-Ik « B0 .V* ht "hatever to the posse,
of lit* holds; that Owens had nutted them