Newspaper Page Text
late church wardens, in their enoviting
career, have had its worm eaten aides
thickly covered yritha coating of paint,
to make it harmonize with their othei
beautifications inside the church. A no*
ble tree too, upon which from time im
memorial the bacon was wont to be
suspended, has, in asimuiar outrage upon
annqu.'y, been lately cut down! Whether
it was, * thrift! thrift!’ that prompted thin
downwl, or an i nprenaion that the f.ic*
*IW PyJL bearing another crop of thi-.
quairifir nt of tha older we know not. I’
may be added, that of the few ancient*-
who have witnessed the custom, we know
there is still living an old lady, who real*
•tnberg the giving of the last ditch, and
who partook of the bacon: this was 70
yean* ago—has Dunmow, forfeited t>
charter? or were Thomas and Ann Shak
erhaft the last couple m the county of K*
iex, who have been able to substantiate
the conditions n r tho
CABINET.
tVARR ENTON. MAY 31, 1828.
The first number ol the Rural Ca
binkt ia now presented to its pa
tron*. It is not such as the publisher
could desire either in appearance or
an regards the articles which fill its
Columns —the numerous inconvcnicn
cies necessarily attendant on the issu
ing of the first number of a periodi
cal, (known only to the craft,) must
plead in extenuation. The publisher
however, flatters himself, when the
mechanical apparatus get properly
under way, and tho expected supply
of the periodicals of the day are re- 1
ceivrti, that the CABtWKT, both in itr
appearance and contents, will bo such i
as to meet the wishes ami expecta
tions of its friends and patrons. The
Prospectus will be found on our first
page.
LIGHT EVEN IN GEORGIA ”
The Alexandria Phoenix Gazette,
Some time since ventured to announce
that there was light even in Georgia.
Was this discovery made through
their gift of second-sight.—and thro’
tin* medium, did they behold the em
bryo Olive Branch expanding itN Imvoa
for the healing of this nation—Or was
it the cheering prospect of the con
templated administration convention
at Wriglitsborougli, Columbia coun
ty, whose eradiations are to illumine
our political horizon, after (lie 7tli
proximo. Quere. Can the Phoenix
Gazette give us any light, as to wheth
er the Mishael Smith, author of ti
geographical view of the British pos
sessions in North America,* * His
tory of the late war,* &c. &c. (who is
to be the dispenser of the light which
we in Georgia are to receive through
the medium of hia Olive Branch ) is or
is not the identical M. Smith of
whom such distinguished mention is
made in the following resolution, co
pied from the Minutes of the Georgia
Association, held at Clark’s Station
Meeting House, Wilkes county, Oc
tober 15th. 14th, 15th and I6lh, 1821,
signed by Jesse Mercer, Moderator,
gild Jabez P Marshall, Clerk.
• Resolved, That we disclaim any
connexion with tho character or
< conduct of a certain M. Smith, who
calls himself a preacher in our
denomination. Said Smith has
be n travelling with his family in
<* this and other states, to the great
* discredit of us as a religious body.”
By the last mail, we received the
speech of our faithful and vigilent rep
resentative Gen. Thompson, on tin
proposed alteration of the Tariff, de
livered in the House of Representa
tives of the United Slates, on the
2lst April, 1828. Its length pre
cludes its publication in our present
number. His spirit and sentiments,
we hesitate not to say, are such as
his constituents will approve and
duly appreciate when again called
upon to mtke their selection of Con
ge ssion&t Representatives.
It is confidently reported that Gov.
B.Arbour is to be nominated as minis-
ter to Great Britain—and Gen. Peter
B. Porter as se retary of war. Vir
ginia and New-York will not even be
amused with such tubs, much less can
they “pull uu t Leviathan with [such]
a hook**
CONGRESS.
The nose committee have at length
node their reports—yes their reports
—one from tho bare majority and the
other from the full minority. The
irst, closes with resolutions which
nay Mr. Jarvis* assault on Mr. Ad
ams in the Ritundo of tho capitol,
vas a violation of the privilege which
oerits tho censure of the House; and
‘bat it is not expedient to have any
further proceedings in the case.—•
The second closes with a resolution
that it is not competent to the House
f Representatives to punish Russell
Jarvis for the assault upon the pri
vate Secretary of tho President, or
for a contempt Ui the House, lloth
reports were ordered to lie on the
tabic. There may they rest in peace
and so may Mr. Adams* nose. So
ends the Congressional chapter on
noses.
The Senate on the 15th inst. proreed
ed to the election of president pro tern.
The choice devolved in the first in
stance, almost unanimously, upon the
venerable Mr. Macon, who rose (evi
dently laboring under the most pain
ful sensations) to thank the Senate for
the honor which it had conferred upon
him, in elevating him to so high and
dignified a station. Past experience
! warned him that ois voire was too
feeble now, and Ins hearing ton inar
ticulate, to enable him to fill the sta
tion with usefulness to the Senate;
convinced, as he was, of those infir
mities, the natural attendants upon
did age, he thought it would be im-J
proper in him to accept. He consid
ered it one of the greatest honors that
could be conferred, and indeed lie
was proud of it, though he was sen
sible it was rather the result of kind-*
ly feeling, in a body of gentlwen with
whom he had been so long associated,
than fi mil any merit which he could
lay claim to. That would be U*
last time that ho would ever have
it in his power to make such an
acknowledgment. There wero occa
sions, where the human mind would
bo fraught with emotion, where feel
ing was too powerful to be resisted,
and where words could not give vent
to them. His heart, was too full to
reed—he, therefore, could only im
press his grateful sense of the kiid?
ness of the Senate, and pray to be ox*
cuscd from serving. Which wislfwts
acquiesced in.
The strong excitement under which
that venerable gentleman labored,
extended itself to the Senate; ami in>
deed it was an event of no common
interest to behold one, who, a9 had
been eloquently said of him, had
been for more than fifty years a
(entitl'd upon the watch-tower of
liberty, declining those honors which
his countrymen were proud to bestow,
from tho consciousness that the infir
mities of age were hastening on him.
On the second ballot, Gen Smith
was chosen, am) was conducted to the
Chair in due form.
The bill from the House of Repre
sentatives to abolish the office of Ma
jor General in the Army ot the Unit
ed States, was read twice, and alter a
short discussion, referred to the Com
mittee on Military Affairs.
In the House, on the 15th, the bdi to
nbolish the office of Major General in
the military peace establishment of
the United States, was read a third
time and passed by a large majority.
All the amendments of the Senate to
the Tariff bill were concurred in
Committee of the Whole, and were
afterwards agreed to by the House,
so the bill is passed by both bodies.
Mr. Hamilton presented a report from
the Select Committee on Retrench-1
merit, and Mr. Sergeant presented a
report from the minority of the same
1 Committee both of which were refer-
I red to a Committee of tbo Whole
ion the State of the Union, and 60 (ht
copies of both were ordered to be
printed*
FOREIGN.
Tho intelligence from Europe, by
the latest arrivals, 19 neither desci
sivc or satisfactory. In Portugal,
it seems, that Don Miguel is deter
mined to subvert the Constitution,
and to cause himself to be proclaimed
absolute king—Ac although it appears
the British troops have been with
drawn, yet a naval force is still
kept in the Tagus, and forts com
manding the entrance of that River
have also been garrisoned by marines
—As to the relations between Rus
sia and Turkey, while the informa
tion from various sources give them
a more pacific aspect, recent a< -
counts from Odessa state that. Russia
had declared war against Turkey.
Mr. CLAY,
lias arrived in Baltimore. While at
Philadelphia, he received a letter, signed
by 22 of the Citizens of Baltimore, invit
ing him to sojourn a few days with them,
on his return for the purpose ot enabling
their fellow citizens to exchange saluta
(ions with him, and in some acceptable
form, to testify, through him, their entire
confidence in the Administration. —Mr
Clay acknowledged their civility by a
note from Philadelphia—and promised,
in compliance with his original intention,
(to which their kind invitation formed an
additional motive,) t remain one day
with them. Ho thanked them for the
friendly interest they took in the re-C3-
tablishinent of his health—and says he
has the satisfaction to tell them, that tJi.
gentleman ot the faculty whom he had
come to Philadelphia to consult, a-sure
him, that a temporary abstraction from
business, and exercise, will accomplish
that object.
Tlv’ steamboat in which he came
fioin Philadelphia was met on Monday
evening by a number of the citizens ot
Baltimore in the Steamboat Patuxent
He was received by a selute of cheers,
both by the citizens in tho boat and by a
crowd when he landed at the wharf.
lie declined a public dinner, but recei
ved the salutations of the citizens from
11 to 2, &7to 9on Tuesday—lie was in
duced to accede to the request of a fen
friends to dine with them at an early
hour —and ‘though evidently labouring
under debility from indisposition,’ &c.
he contrived to muster up strength enough
to make them a speech!—in the course wf
which lie discharged a few hot shot a
gainst the present opposition—and con
cluded by invoking the visit ation of ‘any
scourge other than military rule, or blind
and heedless enthusiasm for mere milita
ry renown.’
Rich. Enq.
Federal and Jlepubliccm Stales in 1800.
It is amusing to look back about a quarter
of a century and discover the resemblance
between the politics of that period and
the present. Os the States then in exis
tence every one now claimed with any
confidence by the present administration
voted for the elder Adams and was then
federal\ while those, now strongly oppos
ed to the present administration, voted
for Mr. Jefferson and were republican.
New Hampshire then, as now, was under
federal control; though then, as now, she
had one Senator in Congress, namelr,
the venerable Languor, who resisted
the anti-republican measures of the ad
ministration. We subjoin, as a useful
memento of olden times, and as a remark
able‘coincidence’ with the present state
of things, the vote for President in 1800
JEFFERSOX. A ETA MS.
New-llampshire 0 0
Massachusetts 0 1G
Rhode-bland 0 4
Connecticut 0 9
Vermont 0 4
New York * 12 0
New-Jersey 0 7
Pennsylvania 8 7
Delaw are-* 0 3
Maryland 5 5
Virginia 21 0
Kentucky*** 4 0
North-Carolina 8 4
i south-Carolina 8 O
Georgia 4 0
73 65
C vV. U, Patriot.) j
■jJr SCRAP-MONGER, No. I.
f
f To the Publisher of the Cabinet.
On reading the prospectus of ynur
intended paper, I determined to cast ia
! my offering and essay to fill up (occasion
ally) a column or so, with such things,
old and new—rare and curious—selected
or original, as my limited resources and
moderate capacity may enable me. I
9)1.3!! make no distinction in the scraps
with which I may furnish you, between
what may be selected and what original.
I am not induced to pursue this course,
from a disposition to pirate up
on the labours of others, or to foist any
thin r jr of my own on them—far from
it—The truth is, I read a little
and I write much less—it in the course,
of my reading, l find what I would call
a good thing , l shall be willing to spread
the dainty before others, that they nay
partake of the repasture; and if, at times,
I should get in the humor to drive the quill
a little, and tax the folks with
the cogitations, .whims and oddities of
my own brain, this plan will enabie me
now and then to slip in a portion of niy
own small wares, without the dread of
exposing myself to severer criticism than
may justly fall to my share as an humble
gleaner in the field of literature. For
sooth, why need your readers trouble
themselves with any enquiry a3 to the
authorship of my excerptions —are they
amused or instructed, “therewith let
them be content,” and if, purchance, they
should find in the group a posy tint sa
vors of Parnassus, let them bear in mind,
l claim (avowedly) nothing but the thread
which binds it together.
IF I HAD MONEY,
I would pay ofi’all my bills. I would not
let the industrious man suffer. 1 wou! i
net he annoyed myself by having a hi:4
thrsut into my face every other hour:
nor would I annoy the diffident feelings of
t worthy fnan, by compelling him to im -
portune me for money he wanted, and
which he ought to have.
If I bad Money, I would relieve tho
w ants of the poor in my own neighbor
hood. 1 would endeavor to reconcile the.
unfortunate to the lot of the sick aid
aged. The depressed, the dejected, tho’
niserable, should find a friend, an i if I
c< ul I not prevent their misfit times or
dleviate their distresses, 1 would at ica?t
encourage them to the practice of virtue,
by -uch assistance as I could render
them, wore it nothing more than good a-V
v ce and kind treatment.
It I had money I would deliver tiro
‘orphan, the widow, and the oppressed
f> om the fangs of the cruel, the mercen
ary and unprincipled. I would hear tha
story of their wrongs and they should 1
find redress.
H 1 had money I would not rpend it
in vain ostentation. I would not spend
it in theatres, or horse race-; taverns
or b lliard tables, trainings or routs: bu s
after paying my just debts, I would de
vote what I thought I ought to afford, to
the real practical purposes ofcharity and
mercy; to the afflicted; to the smitten;
to the poor in heart; the good and unfor
tunate of the human family; apart from
all motives of interest, all pride of
play and bigotry of opinion.
Isl had money, I would not spend it in
dissipation making myself the object for
SCORN, to point its ‘Unmoving finger*
at. I would not spend it in dress; irr
gambling or lottery tickets; ncr would f
hazard the whole in a single speculation*
however flattering the prospect might aps
pear. Rut, I would remember, that a
;virtuous and temperate life, is the true
happiness and glory ofa rational being
and that all enterprizes, though they be
planned with the utmost skill, aie subject
in common with all other things, to
change.
If 1 had money, I would not give it to-.
Foreign Missionary Societies so long as
our countrymen at home and in our owr*
state too, were debarred by poverty from
the priviledge of hearing the gospel
preached to them and their children
• But 1 would assist in enlightening the
minds of my own countrymen, and in
promoting their temporal and moral in
terests. and of course the interests of
nay country, before I would give my
money to benefit any other nation on
earth;—though my name with the a
mount of my donations should not be pub
lished in the reports of Bible Societies,
&c. &c.
Isl had Money, I would give a little
■ 1° g ome poor child of my neighbor’- to
whom it would be move necessary ir* its
education, than it would be to a Hindoo.