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18
THE FEDERAL, F.VIOA*
BY
Park * Rogers,
PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY AT
tiikee dollars per annum.
aii aDVF.RTICEMENTS published at the usual rates.
k b E u* r » Citation by the Clerks of the Courts nf Ordinary that
i.niior. has bean nude for letters of Administration, must be
inMlslied 1 m«TV DAYS at least.
P”.' v. rc by Exefutors and Administrators for Debtors and Credl-
* to render in their accounts, must be published SIX WEEKS.
l,r >iP«:of Nesrnes by Executors and Administrators must be ad*
’ SIX TY DAYS before the day of sale.
r sales of personal prope rty (except neerocs) of testate and intes-
t?te estates by Executnn and Administrators, must !»c advertised
« iji* Exerutotv. Administrators and Guardians to the
Court “t Ordinary for lcavcio sell Land, mustbe published FOLK
^r^/ications by Executors a\d Administrators for Letters Dis-
A * ' rV n1 ust be published SIXAIONTHS.
r ith ns for Foreclosure ot .M • rtsaires on real estate must
) „nce a month for FtVfjR MONTHS
rv
cites of Beal F.^’ate by Kxecntoig, Administrators and Guard i-
*' ..jus! be published SIXTY DAYS before the day of sale.—
*ns, tnu:
r 1 • t
hours
must be made at the ciMrt house door between the
j ter in the lnorninc ard four in the afternoon. No sale
day to day Is valid, unless so expressed in the advertisement,
i r'crsof the Court of Ordinary. Ocrompantcd with a copy of
’.“ml or agreement) to make lilies .o land, must be advertised
£hREE MONTHS at lent.
T -i *riftV Sales under executions regularly granted by the courts,
net he advertised THIRTY DAYS—und*r tnor*gage executions
*TvtY DAYS—Sales of Perishable Property under order of Court,
t be advertised, generally, TEN PAYS before the day of sale.
" Vll orders for Advertisements will be punctually attended to.
. All Letters directed to this Offict, or the Editors, must be
pnst-P 51
,i t to entitle them to attention.
federal union job office.
«rE have recently mnile large adjitiont to our JOB
W w OFFICE, and are now prepued to execute with
neatnet's and despatch,
ALL KINDS OF
Plain, Ornamcnlftl and Fancy
pflfc&srsssraa
SCC1I AS
HOOKS. Re CIRCULARS,
PAMPHLETS, HAND BILES,
CAROS, m LABELS,
&c. Ac. Ac.
,'Ve have now on land a larsc and extensive assortment ot
BRrmS! )
\;»ed by the different Legal Offieers of this State, of the
most approved forms.
persons wishing DEEDS or BLANKS of any kind, ran
hesnpplied hi - the Ream, Quire, or single ropy, by calling
at the FrdfAM. IVton Offics, in the Upper Tenement
of the hriek building, below Mason's Tavern, on Greene-
street formerly occupied try the Darien Bank.
PARK & ROGERS.
The extensive circulation of our paper in Georgia and Ala-
'iromn, and in other States, offers to our patrons and others,
having advertisements, nn opportunity of giving general pub-
lieity to their notices, &c.
T OOK AT THIS .—The undersigned offers for
J sah‘ one hundred shares of stock in the Monroe Rnil
Kuud Rank, for which 1 will take one. hundred and twenty
five dollars |ier share rash. I also offer lirr sale two thirds
of the MrDunongh Eaelory, situated two and a half miles
north west «f McDonough, in complete operation. I w ill
take a goes) price for the Facfory, sons to allow the purcha
ser a rhanev Idr to make a good interest on the money in
vested. Term* made known by applying to the subscriber
in McDonough, Georgia.
43-dtl JOHN DAILEY Jus.
jFcttcral
4-'.
mott.
VOL. fc.
—
M1LLEOGGV1LLE, (OA.) MAY 2%, im
MISCELLANEOUS.
Biieon! Bacon!!
J 'UST RECEIVED.—20 000 pounds prime Bfl-
tintora Middling llacon, and for sale hy
April 17, 13-if. NICHOLS & DEMING.
Bacon!! Bacon!!!
a LARGE quantity of Superior GEORGIA curpd
,\ BACON tor SALE in Mill.dgevilL,by
.jl-45 \\_1LLIAM A. MOTT,
GLOBE HOTEL.
M rs. n. J* GODWIN respectfully informs her
friends and the public, lliai she will continue to keep
open ibis establishment during the present year, for the ac
commodation of BOARDERS and TRANNIEN F
persons; every effort will he made to render comfortable
nil such as may patron ze the house—and U> give general
satisfaction. Mill -ilgevillc, January 1, 1838.-28
"I^TOTICE.-The connexion heretofore existing between
iMI us, in conducting the MANSION HOI SE, in
the town of Eatonton. »s hereby dissolved, hv Mutual t-on-
. ent NATH AM EL BIRNES,
J. E. ADAMS.
Eatonton, April 23,1838. 4t-46
A HOLY PACK OF CARDS.
One Richard Middleton, a soldier, attending
divine service with the rest of the Regiment in a
church at Glnscow, instead of pullinjr out a bible
to find lhe parson’s text spread a pack of Cards
before him. This behaviour was observed by
the clergyman and sergeant of the company to
which lie belonged. The latier ordered him to
put up the cards, and on his refusal conducted
him alter service before tlte mayor, and preferr
ed a formal complaint of Richard’s indecent
conduct. Well, soldier, said the Mayor, what
excuse have you to offer? If you can make an
apology it is well, it not, you shall he severely
punished. Since your honor has been so good
replied Richard, as to permit me to speak for
myself, an’l please your worship, I have been
eight days on the march with the bare allow-
ance of sixpence per day, consequently, could
not have a bible, or any other good book; on
saying this Richard drew out his pack of cards
and presenting one of the aces to the mayor,
continued his address to the magistrate as fol-
! lows. When I see an ace, may it please your
1 honor, it reminds me that there is only one God,
and when I look upon two or three, the former
puts me in mind of the Father and Son, and the
latier of lhe Father, Son, and Holy Ghost; a
four, of the four Evangelists, Mathew, Mark,
Luke and John; a five, the five wise virgins who
were ordered to trim their lamps, (there were
ten indeed, but five, your worship may remem
ber, were wise and five were foolish;) a six, that
in six days God created heaven and earth; a
seven, that on the 7lh day he rested from all
he had made; an eight, of the eight righteous
persons who were saved from the deluge, viz:—
Noah and ltis wife and three sons and their wives;
a nine, of the lepers cleansed by our Saviour,
(there were ten, hut only one offered his tribute
of thanks;) and a ten of the ten Command
ments.
Richard then took the knaves, placed it be
fore him, and passed on to the queen, on which
he observed as follows: the queen reminds me of
queen Sheba, who came from the uttermost parts
of the earth to hear the wisdom of Solomon, us
her companion the king does of the great King
of Heaven, and of King George the Second.
Well, returned the Mayor, you have given me
a good description of all the cards except the
knave. If your honor will not be angry with
me, returned Richard, l can give you the same
satisfaction on that as on any in the pack. No,
said the Mayor. Well, returned the soldier, the
greatest knave I know is the sergeant who
brought me before you. I don’t know, replied
the mayor, whether he bo the greatest knave or
not, but I iirnsure he is the greatest fool. The
soldier then continued as follows:—When I
count the number of dots in a [tack of cards there
are 365; so many dins there are in a year.—
The number of cards in a pack are 52; so
many weeks tire there in a year. When I reck
on how many tricks there are in a [tack, I find
there are 12; so many months are there in a
year. So that this pack of cards is both bible
almanac, and prayer book to me. The Mayor
called his servants, ordered them to entertain the
soldier well, gave him a piece of money, and
said he was the cleverest fellow he ever heard in
his life.
the name of things. There will be, moreover,
in relation to industry, freedom, co-operation,
the absence of all interference on the part of
government, either, to preserve individuals from
their own errors (which must be enlightened
by
soil, and flourish in immortal vigor, in perfect
and permanent felicity, is the sincere wish of
your affectionate friend.
A FBIEXD TO FEMALE MERIT.
by experience) or to secure to the public the STORY OF THE MEXICAN KING.
S»miT,i C rZ P Th (!,i '' C< ’ h " C al ? lh ! I A striking instance of t'les'irn and impartial
eveZmjT/ IZ „ >: i "t*"" 1 ";* “'" i I administration ofjtMictr, is afli.rdttd in thn his.
every monopoly every privilege, every corpo- , ,f m „ „„„
exceeeding 831,000. What will the shin-plas
ter currency advocate* say to this!—St. Louis
Argus.
.7/ A JVSIOJl* no USE,
GAINESVILLE, GEORGIA.
THIS comfurlnbln establishmentin re-opened
by ils former proprietor, ami will lie in a slate of
readiness tor the reception of familits and other
persons hy the middle of May. The proprietor‘has gone to
gnat expense in enlarging and refitting the whje establish
ment inside and out, all of which will be neat, elean ninl
comfortable. The Stables and Carriage Hoises, are ex
trusive, and in all respects well suited To the [imposes for
which they are designed. In short the propfetor thinks
he will hazard nothing, in pledging that this eitehlislwnerit
in the general, shall he inferior to none in the Soulhern
States, whatever Comforts that ran be in at)I way com
manded from the resources of the surrounding ijiiintry, will
bn afforded to h s guests in a manner he triads,that w ill !>e
entirely to their satisfaction. The estahlishulpnt will he
enlarged the present season, to upw ards of flirty rooms
_„nd charges the same as at the other public Luses in the
Village. , .
The proprietor flatters himself, that he is too veil known
to the public to render it necessary for him to < fer to them
testimonials of his abilities or desire, to rende those who
favor him with their rompany, in all respeds easy anti
comfortable. His pride and interest are hot! at stake in
sustaining the beautiful Village of Gainesville,- which pre
sents as manv advantages as a summer retreat, sauy ot her
spot North or South. If ilierelbre a liberal Si them pub
lic, will afford a sufficient patronage to justify I edevelopo-
t and concentration of the various resit roes of the
ding country, sons tit bring them into action for
',,.-1 and convenience, they may he ssured that
ns afforded the proprietor of tlii eslahlisli-
. 1,0-ally applied to its improver i*nt and the
On
••saerei
•their eoni.
'the means t
•sent, shah he ' r ,‘,mfort thev can reqtre. until it
proeuri iueut of » J'^oi-.parison with any direr of the
shall lose nothing h> West,—w ithout i liberal pot-
kind. North, .Soitlh, Easi Dll Nic expectalii t cannot be
ronage however, it is wid H , PX( ...ptionahler!iinate, su-
nm. II the advantages of ' V , rings, (pe of which
penor water, with several Medtcina. r <= ^ exr( ,|j_
>s acknowledged hy the most eompetei. J *v ,f pverv jj.
*d hy none in ,he Southern Stales) fi "V To^w-
rectum and good society, are mdureme uflf intelligent
tdv the reasonable expectation, that .*> •' f , , .
public Will give to their HOME ‘ “^s^fident
cnce over foreign ones—then lhe proprietor .£?•
chat till* appeal will noi he made in vain. mr
REUBEN THOif
April 29, 1833. fo" 46
NOTICE.
R an AWAY from the subscriber about the Dth ot let)-
rnarv last, a Negro man named BOBi aho«t five
feet eight inches high, thirty years ofage. rathl yelkrwusU
black; it is expected ho will aim to get to Millccevme, »a.
information of liita in Jail or otherwise W
and rewarded. M. M. EDl'ARDs.
Aear Wilsoncille, Shelby connly, Ahbama,
April 28, 1833. 46-tf j
SAJODEER V, J
Saddlery Hardware, Harness, Trunks, Hips, vV c *
SMITH A WRIGHT *
R ESPECTFULLY inform their old patrds and the
public generally, thnt they now have on Ifni 1
old establishment, at NEWARK, New Jersey^ splendid
assortment of SADDLERY, and all othertrucles in
that line, to which they would solicit the attoiitri of such
as may want, and who feel disposed to favor liter ivuh their
custom, being confident that they cun please in tality and
style better than they have heretofore been enab J to do.
Newark, New Jersey, February 17, 1839. 261-37
6 000 ACRES VALUABLE LAN • FOR
SALE Will he sold,at Public Auction n thefirsl
Tuesday in June next, in the town of tstarkville, ,ee eoun-
ty.'ifnot previously sold at private sate, the foils mg seitlo-
tnents of Land :
One settlement in linker county, containing 1 o acres of
the best Chickasahatchee Lands, with 350 or 41 acres un
der cultivation, in good repair, with comfortable g Mouses,
consistingo( lots Nos 06,07, 104, 105, 136, 1, and 145,
all adjoining, in the third District—Messrs. Joint lud Green
Wiggins, rear the premises, will show them to ty person
Wishing to purchase
One settlement of 606 arres, in the third Du tet of Lee
county,consisting of l"ts Nos. 107, 103 and 101
Lots Nos. 273 and 279, in the fourth Dislucl
containing 403 arres,
“ *• 87 and 106, “ “ 11th
taming 405 acre*,
“ “ 332 and 270, “ “ 4th
tairiing 105 acres,
“ *• 238 and 224, “ “ 4th
tairiing 500 acres,
“ •• 105, in the 3d District Ice. containing 2
“ “ 270, in the 3d District l-ce, containing 2
“ “ 196, in the 3d District Baker, containii
60 unproved,
“ “ 262 in the 3d District Baker, eontainin 2 )0 acres,
30 improved .—Mr. James L. Boss, living in its
of Randolph, will show any of the Lands ini,
dolph. l
The above Lands have all lieen carefully selepd. and are
•II of the first quality, and Will be sold on a Ion
Randolph,
irly, con-
1 2 arres,
1-2 arte*,
250 acres,
<(th district
and Ran-
ROBERT Ct.
GEO. B. WAI LAW.
Also, one other settlement, containing 12t>0 rres. heing
lots Nos. 113, 144,145, in the 3d District Lee, ' i 295, 296
and 297, in the 4lh district Randolph, all < fining nnd
choice Lauds, containing iietween 75 and 1
proved Lanu and a first rate Mill Seat, to be si on another
account and on the same terms.
GEO. B. wlDLAW.
April 17, 43—4t.
FOR PALE.
T HAT beautiful, healthy,and commodious I,on which
lhe subscriber now resides, at Mtdvva
from Milledgeville, and a half mile from the
thorpe University. It contains ten acres, am tas on it
large,convenient, and pleasant DWELLINt IOD8B
with out houses, a well of exelient water, ant
•ides many other advantage*.
Hines, Esq.
©etoberath, ]837.-16-tf JOHN A. CU
For terras aj y to R. K
J 4BERT-
redit
EM AN,
spring tie-
BENJAMIN CONSTANT.
Benj amin Constant is a man nfier our own
heart, lie not only wrote upon politics, philo
sophy and religion, as a few men have written,
but he lived and acted all he wrote. He wrote
wcli because he wrote from experience. Ilis
reflections were valuable, because they bad
facts for their basis. All the elements of hu
manity are not to be (bund in the closet of
the scholar. The world, to be known, mustbe
seen and felt. Experience and reflection must
go hand in hand—the one without the other is
valueless: We think with Mr. Emerson, that
“drudgery, calamity, exasperation, want, are
instructors in eloquence and wisdom.” The
following interesting anecdote, related by Mr.
Ripley in I is introductory notice; explains the
manner of Mr. Constant’s conversion from scep
ticism to Christianity.
“The change which Benjamin Constant pas
sed through from scepticism to fit it h seems to
have been the fruit of extensive studies, no less
than of the revival of the natural human in
stincts. It appears that his great work on re
ligion was commenced with a very different
purpose from that to which it is actually devoted.
He originally intende I it as a contribution to
infidelity. He supposed ihat he should be able
to show hv an appeal to history, that the reli
gious sentiment in man was always the product
of a delusive superstition. It was his design to
trace out this element in all its manifestations,
in all its influences, in all its disguises, in order
to [trove that it was pernicious to society and at
war with human progress. He found, howev
er, upon a more thorough invesligation, that
this view was incapable of being maintained.—
The very researches in which he had engaged
•o demonstate the hollowness of religion led
him ‘0 tus P ecl ff ,at was a universal and inde-
structible *>i , inciple in the nature of man. From
that moment, M was forced to regard it in a
different light. TV whole course of h,s en
quiries took another ditT cll0 - n J ani * ll,c “ n;i ! re ‘
suit was the production of a work, which is just
ly d ented one of the most reiTiarkable testi
monies to the truth of religion which is to he
found among the writings of the present day.
On the subject of politics, the translator' tn-^
troduces the following extracts from some ot
Mr. Constant’s miscellaneous writings:
“For forty years I have maintained the same
principle—freedom in evert/ thing, in religion, in
philosophy, in literature, in industry, in politics;
and by freedom I understand lhe triumph of in
dividuals, as well over the authority which as
pires to govern by despotism, as over the mas
ses which claim the right of subjecting the mi
nority io the will of the majority. Despotism
has no right whatever. The majority has that
of compelling the minority to respect public or-
der; and that is all; but every thing which does
not interfere with order, every thing which be
longs to the in-xard nature of matt, like opinion;
everything, which in the manifestation efopin
ion, does not injure another, either by ptovok-
ing physical violence, or by opposing a contrary
manifestation: every thing, which in regard to
industry, permits the free exercise of rival in
dustry—ts individual und cannot legitimately
be subjected to the [tower of society.
In respect to government, the most absolute
equality of rights, as they are shared among
the collective individuals of the nation, ought to
be, and soon will be, in all civilized countries, the
first condition ot the existtnceof all govern
ment. They who possess these rights will be
authorised to contribute to their defence, that is
to *ay, to participate, in some form in the crea
tion of the laws which determine the action of
government. In respect to political economy,
there will be regard and proh-ction for proper
ty §mce property, is a legal convention, essential
to this epoch; but the disposition, the division, the
ci citation ofproperty will have no restriction, no
shackels, because the .nhrnited freedomofpreser-
ving, alienating, changing, or parcelling out
property in our present social state, is the inher
ent right, the essential want of all who possess
,l * All Jcinds of property will be equally sacred
in the eves of the law; but each will hold the
rank and enjoy the influence assigned to it by
corpo
ration protected to the detriment of individual
enterprise and activity will disappear without
remedy. In respect to opinious and ideas, go
vernment will preserve the most perfect neu
trality, for, as it is composed of men of the same
nature with the governed, it can no more claim
infallibility of opinion, or certainty of ideas,
than they. Such in my opinion, is the social
state, to which the human race is advancing.
To arrive at this stale, is the need and will con
sequently be the destiny of the present epoch.
The wish to remain on this side of it would be
unwise, to go beyond it would be premature.
ON THE MARRIED STATE.
To Miss ■ ■. Knowing that you are
shortly to enter a garden, enclosed, and that you
are, at present, a stranger to this garden, permit
an old friend to give you some account of it. I
have travelled every part and every path; know
every production of every kind it can possiblv
yield; and, as my information can do you no
harm, it may do you some good
\ ou know there is but one way of entrance.
I need hardly tell you that it is extremely gay
and glittering—strewed with flowers of every
hue and every fragrance, with ali that art or im-
agination can invent. You may fondly hope
this scene of rapture will never alter, as you will
never see the end of the path when you enter
it. To some it proves a short one—and to you
it may appear very different in the retrospect.
Here, my dear girl, let me caulion you not to
dream of perfect or perpetual bliss; if you do, ex
perience will show you that it never existed on
earth, save in visions, or visionary heads.
You will meet with many productions in this
garden; which are charming to the eye and
pleasant to the taste; but they are not ail so.—
Let me just remark, that you are carrying into
this garden one of the most delicious and deli
cate plants in nature—1 mean good humor.—
Don’t drop it or lose it, as many have done soon
after they entered, who seldom if ever, found it
again. It is a treasure which nothing can make
up to you.
When you get lo the end of the first walk,
which lasts about thirty s:eps, comnn>nly called
honev-moon path, you will seethe garden open
in ti vast variety of views—and here I must
caution you against some productions which are
nauseous and noxious, and even fatal in their
tendency to the unwary and ignorant.
There is a low, small plant, which may be
seen in almost every path, called indifference,
though not perceived at the entrance. You
will always know when near this plant, though
you do not see it, by a certain coldness in the air
which surrounds it. Contrary to all others, it
thrives in cold and dies in warmth. Whenever
you perceive this, change your situation as soon
as you can.
In the same path is often found that ugly, yel
low flower, called Jealousy, which I wish you
never look at. Turn from it as fast as possible
—lor it has the strange quality of lingeing the
eye that holds it with a stain which it seldom gets
rid of.
As you go in, you will meet with many little
crooked paths—hut do not go into them. I ad
vise you, as a friend, never to attempt it; for
though, at the entrance of each, is written, in
large letters, “In the right,” when you get in, in
nine cases out of ten, you will find the true
name to be Perversem-ss, and that you are in the
wrong, and will not acknowledge it. This of-
ten occasions endless disputes here—is a source
of perpetual difference, and sometimes of a final
separation in the garden.
Near this spot, you will meet with a sturdy,
knotty plant, called obstinacy, bearing a hard,
bitter fruit, which becomes fatal when taken in
large quantities. Turn from it—avoid it as you
would the plague.
Just opposite to this grows that lowly lovely
shrub, Compliance; which though not pleasant
to the palate, is salutary nnd sweet, and pro
duces the most delicious fruit in the garden.—
Never be without a sprig of it in your hand—it
will often bn wanted as you go along; if you do
not, you will surely rej>ent tlte want of it.
All over the garden you may find a useful
plant, called Economy. Itisa thriving quality:
take a good stock of it as you go in. It adorns
and enriches at the same time. Many entirely
overlook it: some despise it, and others think they
want it. It is generally forgotten in the hurry
and gaiety with which people enter this place;
but the total want of it is comm'inly paid for
with bitter repentance. I must tell you unless
both partake of it, it will answer little end to eith
er. You may if you please, carry some with
you into the garden; but, it isn hundred to one,
if you do not lose it in going in. This is more
useful than what you will find there—for it is of
anothersort. Provide yourselfund partner with
a pro[>er quantity of it, as soon as you can, when
in the place.
You observe, as you pass, two or three paths,
which run much into one another—1 mean those
of Regularity, Exactness and Neatness. Do
not think, as many do, that when once you are
in, you may be careless of your person and dress.
Re ember, your companion will see some that
are not so—this indifference will strike his eye,
if not offend it. Enter those paths almost as
soon as you enter the garden; and, take my
word for it, if you do, you will never get out «f
them; once fairly in. you are in (or life—nnd the
worst of it is that if you do not find them soon,
you will never find them afterwards.
Near this walk is found that invaluable shrub,
Humility. This, though of no worth in itself,
yet joined to other good qualities, is worth them
all put together. It is never seen without being
admired; a fid is most amiable when not visible.
They »ay, “virtue is its own reward”—1 am cer
tain pride is its own punishment. Flee from it
as from a contagion, which it strongly resem
bles. It infects nnd corrupts. Cultivate, with
all your care, the humble plant now mentioned,
as the best antidote, against this poisonous weed.
Allow me here to drop a hint on the subject
of cultivation, jsthat most probably will be your
employment. Should you be entrusted with tlte
rearing of a flower, remember this; first that,
it is but a flower, however fair—frail in ils na
ture, and fading at every blast; and, secondly,
that it is a fl iwer in trust, for the cultivation of
which you are accountable to the owner of the
garden.
Should yon be a witness to a blast on its
drawing beauties, oh, how your fluttering heart
will bleed with tenderness. Let affection sym
pathise. Y«ur feeling may be conceived, but
they cannot be described. The young shoot
wili naturally and insensibly twiqe around tlte
fibres of your frame. Should it live and thrive,
spare no pains to teach the young production
how to rise. Weed it, wu erit, prune it—it will
need them all. Without this, many weeds will
grow up and poison the very soil on which it
grows.
Remember this is a trust tor which you are
accountable to Him who gave it. That you may
be blest with the sweetest productions of this gar
den—that they may be the delight of your eyes,
and that you and they, when the summer of this
life is over, may ba transplanted to some happier
tory of one of the kings of Aealhtican, a pro
vince which composed a part of the Mexican em
pire. There was a law which forbid, on pain
of death, the speaking of indecent words in the
royal palace. One of the sons of this king, for
whom he had felt a more particular attachment
than for any of the rest, on account of his disposi-
tion and virtues, violated this law. The words
made use of by the young prince were rather the
effect of youthful indiscretion, than of any bad
intention. The king was informed ol it, and un
derstanding that tlte word had been spoken by
the prince in the presence of his tutors, he sent
to examine them. They, being afraid of expe.
riencingsome punishment if they concealed the
truth, confessed it openly, but at the same time
eideavored to exculpate the prince by saying
that he did not know the person to whom he
spoke, nor that the language was improper.—
Notwithstanding all this, he ordered the young
prince to be arrested immediately, and the very
same day pronounced sentence of death upon
him. Tlte whole court was astonished at the
rigor of the king, nnd interfered with their pray,
ers and tears in behalf of the prince; but no re
monstrances could move the inflexible mind of
the king. “My son,” said he “has violated the
law. If I pardon him, it will be said the laws
are not binding on every one. I will iet my
subjects know, that no one will be pardoned a
transgression, as I do not even pardon the son
whom I dearly love.” The punishment was tie-
cordingly executed. The king shut himself up
for forty days in a hall, without letting himself
be seen by any one. He vented his grief in se-
cret; and to conceal from his sight every thing
that might recall his sorrow, he caused the door
of his son’s apartment to be closed up by a wall.
He showed his subjects that although he was in-
capable of 'repressing the feelings of a father,
and sealing up tlte fountains of his grief, yet he
would never permit the:n to overcome his zeal
for the laws, and the iiost rigid impartially in
their execution.
FUNFRAL OF THB LATE MR. OLLLEY.
On Thursday last, in company with a num
ber of our citizens, ve visited Thomaston for
the purpose of paying our last sad tribute to
the remains of the beloved and lamented Hon.
Jonathan Cilley.
At about oneo’clock, tlte relatives, and a num
ber of tlte friends o' the deceased, assembled
at his late dwelling, and proceeded thence to
the Rev. Mr. Woodhull’s Meeting House,
where the appropriate funeral services were
performed. The sermon was delivered by the
Rev. Job Washburn, and was an effort which
reflected much credit upon him. He reverted
to the stand which Mr. Cilley had occupied in
his town, in the Slate, and in the nation—and
the loss that each had sustained by the hand of
violence, thus depriving the public and society
of so valuable and useful a member. He then,
in a feeling and impressive manner, addressed
the widow and relatives of the deceased; and
as he portrajed the kind and indulgent husband,
the affectionate father, and worthy and dutiful
son, there were not a few who shed a sympa-
thisng tear to his memory. And could the
murderers of the nutfie, high-minded Cilley,
have been present on that touching occasion,
and seen the heart-stricken widow of his bosom
bowed down with grief, the woe worn counten
ance of her aged father, the sorrow of each of
his relatives and immediate friends, and the deep
feeling manifested by ali on that truly melan
choly occasion, a scene, would have been pre
sented to them which would haunt their recol.
lection as long as memory did its office.
After the sermon and prayer, Mr. Washburn
announced the 528th hymn, from Winchell’s
Watts, of the selection; and, before reading,
he said there was a singular circumstance at
tending tlte selection of this hymn, which he
would relate. It was in substance as follows:
On tlte Sunday succeeding the Saturday on
which Mr. Cilley was shot, Mrs. Cilley took
her Hymn Book nnd accidentally opened to
this place; as she read this hymn, her sensations
were peculia , so much so, as to induce her to
take her pencil and mark the hymn. At the
time she did not know that Mr. Cilley ln\ dead,
or had the most distant thought that his life was
in jeopardy—so far from it, she did not suppose,
from h r feelings, that any thing was about to
happen to him, but more par ieuiarly to herself.
For weeks after she had learned the melancho
ly fate of her husband, she did not think of the
circumstances attendant upon the reading of
this hymn; and it was not until the same pecu
liar sensations came over her which she expe
rienced at the time she rend it, that the thought
of it again recurred to her mind. She then
turned to it, anrl to enable the reader to see how
truly it pictured her case, how appropriate the
sentiments contained in it, we have subjoined it:
Far, far o’er hill and dale, on the wind* stealing,
List to the tolling hell, mournfullj pealing:
Dark! hark! it seem* lo say,
As melt those «ound* away,
So life's best joys deear,
Whilst new their feeling.
Now through the charmed air slowfo ascending,
List to the mourner's prayer solemnly bending:
Hark! hark! it seem* to say,
Turn from those joys nway
To those which ne’er decay,
For life is ending.
O’er a father's dismal tomb, see the orphan bending.
From the solemn church yard's gloom hear the dirge as
p-ending,
Hark! hark! it seems to say,
How short ambit ion’s sway.
Life’s joys nnd friendship’s ray
In the dark grave ending.
So when our moral ties, death shall dissever,
Lard, may we reach the skies, where care ctmei naTer;
And in eternal day,
Joining the angel's lay,
To our Creator pay
Homage forever.
After the services, the procession was again
formed, and proceeded lo the “Elm Grove Ce-
metry,” where the remains of the lamented Cil
ley were deposited in a tomb, prepared for him
by the citizens of Thomaston, over which it is
intended to erect a suitable monument to Ins
memory.
The meeting-house was crowded, there being
about seven hundred people present, and had
not the day been unpleasant, and the roads al
most impassible, it was judged that the concourse
would have been immense.
[Lincoln (Me.) Patriot.
A Curiosity.—We were shown, a few days
ago, the first chair ever made in Kentucky. If
is well known that Daniel Boone was the first
white man who had sufficient courage and brave
ry to locate himself in the midst of the Indians.
He made the chair; and the marks w here he
had been in the habit of fixing his gun-lock
when it got out oforder, are indellibly inscribed
on either arm. It is of the old fashion kind, the
seat being of split ash. It is row in the posses
sion of Maj. Lewis, of this place, and is to be
sent to the Nashville museum. It will attract
the attention of the curious, and of those who
have often read of many hair-breadth escapes of
that remarkable man—Jeffersonville Cour.
AN UNHAPPY MARRIED MAN.
The subjoined outpourings of a married man,
are from the ‘ Charcoal Sketches” of Neai.—
Courting has been aptly termed a paradise, and
matrimony the way from that happy region to
earth again. The following, if true, is a pretty
good illustration:
“What made you get married if you don’t
like it?”
“Why I was deluded into it—fairly deluded.
I had nothing to do of evenings, so I went court
ing. Now, coutting’s fun enough; I have’ntgot
a word to say again courting. It’s a‘out ns
good a way of killing an evening as I know of
Wash your face, put on a clean dicky, and go
and talk as sweet as nugey of molasses candy for
an hour or two—to say nothing of a few kisses
behind the door, as your sweetheart goes to the
step with you.”
“When 1 was a single man, the world wagged
along well enough. It was just like an omnibus;
I was a passenger, paid my levy, and hud’nt
nothing more to do with it but sit down and not
care a button for any thing. S’posing the om
nibus got upsot—well I walks oft', and leaves
the man lo pick up the pieces. But then I must
i take a wife and be hanged to me. It’s all very
well for a while; but afterwhile, its plaguy like
owning an upsot omnibus.”
“Nan?” queried Montezuma—“what’s all
that about omnibusses?”
“What did I get by it?” continued Gamaliel,
regardless of the interruption. “How much
fun? why a jawing old woman and three squal-
lers. Mighty different from courting that is.—
What’s the fun of buying things to cat and things
to wear for them, and wasting good spreeing
money on such nonsense for other people? And
then, as for doing what you like, there’s no such
thing. You can’t clear out when people’s ow
ing you so much money you can’t stay conve
nient. No—the nabbers must have you. You
can’t go on a spree; for when you come home,
missus kicks up the devil’s delight. You can’t
teach her better manners—for constables are as
thick as blackberries. In short, you can’t do
nothing. Instead of ‘Y r es, my duck,’ and ‘No
my dear,’—‘As you please, honey,’ and ‘When
you like, lovely,’ like it was courting times, ils a
riglar row at all hours. Sour looks and cold
potatoes; children and table-cloths bad off for
soap—always darning and mending, and noth
ing ever darned and mended. If it was’nt that
I’tr partickelarly sober, I’d be inclined to drink
—it’s excuse enough. It’s heart-breaking, and
it’s all owing to that I’ve such a pain in my giz
zard of mornings. I’m so miserable I must stop
and sit on the steps.”
“What’s the matter now?”
“I’m getting aggravated. My wile’s a savin’
critter—a sword of sharpness—she cuts the
throat of my felicity, stabs my happiness, chops
up my comforts, and snips up all my Suriday-go-
to-meetings to make jackets for the boys—she
gives all the whittels to the children, to make me
spry and jump about like a lamp lighter, I can’t
stand it—my troubles is overpowering 1 come
to add ’em up.”
“Oh, nonsense! behave nice—don’t make a
noise in the street—be a man.”
“How can I be a man, when I belong to some
body else? My hours an’t my own—my mo-
ney a’n’t my own—l belong to four people be
sides myself—the old woman and them three
children. I’m a partnership concern, and so
many has gut there fingers in the till that 1 must
bust up. I’ll break and sign over the stock in
trado to you.”
A merchant of this city authorizes us to say
that he w ill exchange gold and silver for Uni
ted States Treasury Notes to any amount not
“Destroy the hud, the tree will yield no fruit
So youth neglected, man becomes a brute.’*
Let us look over the community, a moment,
and see who are the most honorable, useful and
virtuous members, nnd who make the greatest
exertions and sacrifices for the good of the
whole. I think it will be found on an impartial
examination, as a general rule, that those who
have been best educated in their childhood and
youth, and have been taught habits of industry
and honesty, and have also been instructed in
the leading principles and doctrines nf the Bible,
have ever been, and still are, the most useful and
Itonorab e members of society, and the most
worthy of confidence and esteem. It will be
found almost invariably tlte case, that the per
petrators of the most outrageous crimes, such
as mobs, murder, robbery, bribery, piracy,
fraud and corruption, are persons whose early
education lias been neglected, who have been
indulged in their youth, and left, without res
traint to gratify all the evil passions, and pro-
pensitiesof their hearts. Hence, if such men are
vested with [tower and authority in state or na
tion, how can we reasonably expect to have our
affairs managed faithfully and impartially, and
our country to flourish in wealth and peace and
virtue? Is it not an interesting fact established
both by experience and the unerring word of
God, that righteousness exalted a nation, but sin
is a reproach to any people.—Chris. Mirror.
Delay.--Say not to thyself, “To-morrow I
will repent;” for it is thy duty to do it daily.—
Bunyan.
Avarice.—Other vices decay with our age,
but avarice renews its youth.—St. Ambrose.
Impossibilities.—The shortest and the surest
way to prove a work possible, is strenuously to
set about it.—Dr. South.
Public Spirit.—W? want public souls, we
want them. I speak it with compassion: there
is no sin and abuse in lhe world that effects my
thoughts so much. Every man thifiks that lie
is a whole commonwealth in his private family.
All seek their own.—Bishop Hackett.
Pronouns.—The sweetness of the Gospel lies
mainly in the pronouns; as me, my. thy, and the
like: Thus; “Who loved me, and gave him
self for me;” “Christ Jesus, my Lord;” “Son,
be of good cheer, thy sins are forgiven thee.”—
Luther.
Self.—I have read mntry wicked Popes; but
the worst Pope I ever met with is Po-pe Self.—
John Milton.
THE FARMER.
It does one’s heart good to see a merry, round-
faced farmer—so independent, and yet so free
from vanity & pride, so rich and yet so industri
ous—so patient & persevering in his calling, and
yet so kind, social, and obliging. There are
a thousand traits which light up on his noble
character. He is hospitable—eat and drink
with him, and he won’t set a mark on you and
sweat it out of you with a double compound in
terest, as some that 1 have known will. He
will do you a kindness without expecting a re.
turn by way of compensation—it is not so wi h
every bodv. He is generally more honest and
sincere—less disposed to deal in low underhand
cunning, than many I could name. He gives
to society ils best support—is tlte firm pillar that
supports the edifice of Government—he is lord
of nature. Look at him in his home-spun and
gray black, and laugh at him if you will; but,
believe me, he can laugh back if he pleases.
False Teeth.—“I dreamed last night that I
lost two of my front teeth,” said one friend to
the other.
“Ah?” was the reply, “that’s a sign you’ll lose
two friends,”
“It ’ll be no great matter, then,” rejoined the
fi rst speaker, “if they are like the teeth for they
were false!”
liO. 4H.
«©irG R ESSIOfV A L.
SPEECH OF
Thomas h. Benton, of Missouri.
IN SENATE,
May 2, 1S-38.
On the resolution of Mr. Clay of Kentucky,
for the receipt and disbursement of' Bank
Koles in the revenues and expenditures of
the Government—the question being on its
reference to the Committee on Finance.
Mr. BENTON rose to make some remarks
on tlte distress which had just been resuscitated
for the o casion, and made to plav its part again
in discussions on this floor. He knew of no
distress, except at New York, where they had
more gold and silver than thev knew what to do
with, and Irom which nobody would relieve
them hy coming and taking a part; and except
among the advocates ol a National Bank, whose
distress is :.gonizing at seeing specie payments
resumed without the creation of a National
Bank. These were the only cases ol distress
now visi le; and they were real and afflicting
cases, especially the latter. The advocates f >r
u National Bank saw all their predictions defeat
ed by the event; their thousand millions of as
severations that there never could be a resump
tion until a National Bank was rechartered,
were all blown sky high! Resumptiion had be
gun, and, they could not defeat it, and their dis
tress was not only great, but without sympathy;
for it was sorrow in the midst of universal joy.
This resolution of the Senator from Kentucky,
(Mr. Clay,) is to aid the batiks to resume—to
aid, encourage, and enable them to resume.—
1 his is its object, as declared by its mover, and
it is offered here after the leading banks have
resumed, and, when no power can even prevent
the remaining solvent banks from resuming.—
Doubtless, immortal glory will be acquired by
this resolution! It can be heralded to all cor
ners of the country, and celebrated in all man
ner ol speeches and editorials, as the miraculous
cause of an event which had already occutred!
Yes, sir, already occurred! for the solvent banks
have resumed, are resuming,& will resume. Ev-
ery solvent bank in the U. S. will have resumed
in a few months, & no efforts of the insolvents &
their political confederates can prevent it. In
New York the resumption is getietal; in Mas
sachusetts, Rhode Island, Maine, and New Jer
sey, it is partial; and every where the solvent
banks are preparing lo redeem the pledge which
they gave when they stopped—that of resuming
whenever New York did. The insolvent and
political banks wili not resume at all, or, except
for a few weeks to fail again, make n panic and
a new run upon the resuming banks, stop them
if possible, then charge it upon lhe Administra
tion and recommence their lugubrious cry fora
National Bank.
The resumption will take place. The mas
ses of gold and silver pouring into the country
under the benificent effects of General Jackson’s
hard money policy, will enab'e every solvent
bank to resume; a moral sense, and a fear of
consequences, will compel them to do it. The
importations of specie are now enormous, and
equaling every demand, if it was not suppressed.
There can be no doubt but that the quantity of
specie in the country is equal to the amount of
bank notes in circulation—that they are dollar
for dollar—that the Country is better off for mo
ney at this day than it ever was before, though
shamefully deprived of the use of gold and sil
ver by the political and iusolvent part of the
banks and their confederate politicians. On
this point a doreiment would soon be forthcom
ing to establish its truth. Tlte document called
for this morning in relation to the local banks,
and which the Treasury will furnish, will show
the amount of the bank circulation; and that
amount will not exceetl the quantity of gold
and silver now in the country, or known to be
coming into it. A hundred millions of specie
may be assumed to be the rmount in the coun
try before the rise of the present Congress; arid
out of that amount every solvent bank in the
Uuion can supply its wan’s. None admitted
they had ar.y wants when they stopped except
the New York banks; all the rest stopped with
out standing a run or admitting a want. They
slopped upon example, and not upon necessity,
and pledged themselves to resume when New
York did. New York has resumed, and they
are bound to redectn their pledge, or admit its
falsity. More than that, New York offers sup
plies of specie to ail other banks. She has no
need for the quantity site has received; she
cannot use it; she is offering it to all other banks,
especially to the non-resuming Bank nf the U.
S:ates. She is calling upon all solvent banks
tocome and get supplied; and if she cannot gei
it taken off her hands in the United States, slit-
will be forced to reship it to Europe; for the
quantity is too great to be used in her own bu
siness. There is specie enough then in the
country to enable every bank to resume, nnd
tiie moral sense of some, and the fear of conse
quences in others, will induce a resumption hv
all except the insolvent and the political ones.—
Many are the banks which have resumed and
will resume from a sense ol what is right—from
a feeling of honesty—from a determination to pay
what they owe; many others will resume from the
fear of consequences, &: because they know that
pro:meted suspension must end in the total de
struction of the whole banking system. The sol
vent banks will resume, and Congresscannot pre
vent them if it tried. They have received the aid
which they need in the §100,000,000 of go'd and
silver which now relieves the country, and dis
tresses the politicians who predicted no relief,
until a National Bank was created. Of the
nine hundred banks in the country, there are
many which never can resume, and which
should not attempt it, except to wind tip their
affairs. Many of these are rotten to the core,
and will full to pieces lhe instant they are put
to the specie test. Some of thorn even fail now
for rugs; several have so failed in Massachu
setts and Ohio, to say nothing of those culled
wild cats—the progeny of a general banking
law in Michigan. We want a resumption to
discriminate between banks, and lo save the
community from impositions. The renowned
Sancho Panza has told us that all cats are of
one color in the dark; so of lhe banks: they
are all alike during the suspension. Resump,
tion will discriminate them, and that resumption
is at hand. It has began where the suspension
began—in New York. It has bpgan where
the main cause for the stoppage existed—in that
city where the public moneys were accumula
ted, and where they were suddenly called for
in masses, at short intervals, to be distributed
among the States. The banks had lent that
money under our sanction; to call for it sud
denly, was to reduce them to the alternative of
breaking their customers, or breaking them
selves. I was one of half a dozen who oppos
ed lhat law: I then said in my place that it must
be fatal to large deposite banks; that they woukl
have to choose between ruin to themselves, or
to their customers. These banks had cause
for slopping; they are the only ones, according
to all the declarations, which had a cause for it.
The rest stopped or professed to stop, upon ex-
exatnple; and pledged themselves to follow the
example of resumption as promptly as they had
followed that of suspension. Some redee m this
pledge; others violate it, and at the head of
these violators, is the Bank of the Unite4States.
But New York has not merely sat the example
of resuinption; >t also offers the means of re
sumption to all others. The insolvent and po
litical banks alone refuse the mean*; and, cov
ering their conduct with false pretexts, exert y
themselves to perpetuate the reign of shin-plas-
tersand irredeemable paper money.
Distress! to relieve the distress! this isdeda*-
rsd to be the object of the resolution! and the
mover seems to be in furious haste to gefit
through quick, lest the distress wili be all gone,
and the glory of relieving it will be lost. This
resolution is now to do what nothing but the
creation of a- National Bank could do—-it is to
relieve the distress! Sir, the distress is gone;
it has gone off like the panic distress of 1833
went off; it has fled before an avalanche of gold
and silver. An arrival of twenty millions of
specie frightened off distress in 1834; an arri
val of twenty-five or thiity millions has chased
it off again. The only real distress is thai of
the New York banks, which have more specie
than they can use; and that of politicians, who
see that General Jackson’s policy is victorious
—that the gold bill and hard money policy are
filling the country with specie, and drawing ttte
line between the solvent banks on one hnnd, and
the insolvent and political ones on the other.
We have gone through a similar scene to
that o( the panic session of 1833-34. Thew
there was a ditty inconsistently sung upon thia
floor, taken up & sung again all over the ccun.
try. It ran in these words: "That the removal
of the deposdes made the distress; and nothing
r.ould relieve the distress but the restoration of
the deposites, or the recharter of the bank.”——
This was the musical ditty with which the ear*
of a continent were entertained for six months^
vet the deposites were not restored, the bank
was not rechartered, and the distress did cense*
Even while this pretty little ditty was still ill
thecourscof rehearsal here, the Bank, as if in
contempt of all its votaries wheeled about, stop-
ped its pressure, commenced relief, nnd ran out
in six months an expansion of twenty millions
of loans nnd ten millions of circulation. See*,
ing that the arrival of the specie had put an end
to the distress, the Bank changed her tactics;
nnd having failed to crush the local banks by
compression, the next stop was to burst them by
distension. So of this resolution. Since Mar
last, we have had the incessant ery, “That the
Treasury order made the suspension, and noth
ing could produce a resumption but a repeal of
the. order and the recharler of the Bank of the U.
Statesf' Tiiis song has had its day. It ha*
been sung to death; it is dead. It has shared
the fate of lhe sweet little dittv about the remo
val of the deposites. The Treasury order is
not repealed, the Bank of the United Stales is
not rechartered, nnd the solvent banks have re
sumed, or will do it. Tlte river Pactolus ha*
poured its golden flood into the country. Eve
ry body sees and feels that the country is relie
ved; and now this resolution, like a Harlequin
leaping upon the stage, jumps np before us to
claim the honor of accomplishing that which
already exists. The professed object of this
resolution is to aid the banks—to aid banks
which are already full of specie, and offering
it to others! This isJhe professed object. Its
effect will be to do what was done in 1834—to
run out another expansion—create another sea
son of delusive prosperity—followed by another
catastrophe, to be charged again upon tb#
Administration. It is found that the coun
try cannot be depressed for more than one year
at a time—that the export of a single crop re
lieves it. The mode of operating must then be -
changed. Another expansion, followed by an
other catastrophe, to be accomplished in tha
summer of 1840, may turn the scale of the Pres
idential election at that time; and two years ar*
enough to organize an expansion and explosion.
The last expansion and explosion was common-
ced and completed in two years. It began iot
June. 1835, and finished iu May, 1837. Ano
ther one can be accomplished mi tlte same urne.
Begin it now, and it can be consummated in that
summer of 1840, in the exact time for the Pre
sidential election of that year. Pass this reso
lution, or any thing like it, and a grand expan
sion will immediately ensue, to be followed by
a grand explosion—to be laid of course, upon
the Administration. What is this resolution?
It is to make ali the notes of all the banks in
the United Stales a legal tender to tlte U. Slate*
in payment of hind* nod customs, and all debts*
and dues, and a forced tender from the Federal)
Government to al! ii3 creditors. It is a PAPER
MONEY and SHIN PLASTER RESOLU
TION! the adoptien of which would surrender
the public hinds to nine hundred bunks lor a-
fund to redeem their notes—would fill the Trea
sury with notes which could never be redeem
ed—would dispense with the use of gold and)
silver at home—would occasion the exportation!
of the one hundred millions which the Jackso
nian policy has collected in the country—would
reduce the country to broken bank notes and
shin-plasters in two years, and raise anothes
cry for the establishment of a National BWnk.
Tnese would be the consequences of the adop
tion of the resolution; and I announce them in
advance, that I for one, may warn the country
of the impending mischief, and exhibit this’pro*
position at once in ils hideous and revolting co
lors.
We wanted specie, and we have got it. Five
years ago—at the veto session of 1832—there'
were but twenty millions in the country. So’
said the Senator from Massachuselts who has
just resumed his seat, (Mr. Webster.) We
have now, or will have in a few weeks, one
hundred millions. This is the Siilvation of th*
country. It compels resumption, und has de
feated all the attempts to scourge the country
into a submission to a National Bank. While
that one hundred millions remains, the country'
Can place at defiance the machinations of the
Bank of the United States, and its confederate
politicians; to perpetuate the suspension, and to'
continue the reign of rags and shin-plasters.
Their first object is to get rid of these hundred
millions, and all schemes yet tried havrf
failed to counteract the Jacksonian policy.—
Ridicule^was tlte first; deportation of specie was
tried next; a forced suspension has been con
tinued for a year; the State Governments and
the people wore vanquished; still the specie*
came in, because the Federal Government e're-
ated a demand for it. This fata! demt.lid has
frustrated all tlte schemes to drive off specie,
and to deliver up the country to the dominion of
the paper money pmty. This demand has beonr
the surmbhng block of that pmty; & this resolti.
tion now comes to remove that stumbling block.-
It is the most revolting proposition ever made tft
this Cotigress. It isa flagrant- violation of the con-
stitution, by making paper money a tender both
to nnd from the Government. It is- fraught with
ruin and destruction to tl»e public property, rlt#
public Treasury, and the public creditors. The
notes of nine hundred hanks are to be received
into the Treasury, and disbursed front the Treas
ury. They are to bo paid out ns well as paid
in. The ridiculous proviso of willingness to
receive them on the part of the public creditor
is an insult to him; for there is no choice; if is
that or nothing. The disbursing officer doe*
not offer hard money with one hand, and paper
with the o'her, and tell the creditor to take his-
cho'ce. No! he offers paper or nothing! To
■talk of willingness, when there is no choice, iff
insult, mockery and outiage. Great is the loss-
of popularity which this Administration has
sustained from paying out depreciated paper;
great the deception ivhich has been practised*
upon the Government in representing thispapeF
as being willingly received. Necessity arid
not good will, ruled the creditor;, indignatihriy
resentment, and execrations on the Administra
tion, were the thanks with which he received it.
This has disgraced nnd injured the Administra
tion more than all- other causes [iut' together;
it has lost it tens of thousands'of true friends.
It is now getting into a ednditidn to pay hard!
money: and this resolution' comes' to prevent:
such payment, and to continue^and to perpctii*
ate the ruinous paper money payments. De-
feat the resolution, nnd the Government will’
quickly pay all demands upon it in gold and
silver, and will recover its popularity; puss it,,
and paper money will continue to he paid out v
and the- Administration, will continue ta kmc
ground.