The Macon advertiser and agricultural and mercantile intelligencer. (Macon, Ga.) 1831-1832, October 23, 1832, Image 2

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Miscellaneous. __ i KN’OIiKKSw&TKAV IiOAT iItAVELUNCJ.! BY PAUIOING. Has it never befalien tlie gentle reader to steep m a crowded hotel, in an apartment shared by sevi ral others; or a stage travelling ail night; or on board a steamboat ] It so haye suffered From a nuisance, we fear, beyond the reach oFsatire, viz:— snoring. Whether it is an Americanism, like whittling spitting, putting the feet on the mantle piece, and wearing hats with a long nap, we do not at tin time wish to discuss; nor whether it is one of tliofc general evils incident to the uni versal infirmities of human nature; but we do say, that your regular snorer, is an enemy to society, and ougiit either to cure his propen sity, or turn hermit. Our object in writing this is to solicit the attention of the learned on a subject intimately connected with hu man comfort, that some means may be adopt ed either to have the class of stiorers kept distinct from other people, in a different part of the town, and compelled to travel in a line of stages and steamboats constructed express ly for them; or else to check the propensity in early childhood, by a rigid course of edu cation. Our youth are taught to dance, sing, play the fiddle, sit straight, eat with their fork, and be virtuous; but not a word about snoring; not a hint of this faculty, growing up in the secrecy of night, like a rank, luxu riant weed, within their character, to break the peace of innocent families, and ruin, night after night, that precious balmy slum ber w hich lies so “starkley in the traveller’s bones.” Snorers! Why they are monsters. We avoid them in our rural peregrinations, and smile inwardly on finding their acquain tance cultivated ,v unwary strangers, who little think what a trap they are falling into. We are one of that extensive class of human creatures who enjoy a fair night’s rest. The day emphatically belongs to earth. We yield it without reluctance to care and labor. We toil, we drudge, we pant, we play the hack horse; we do thingssmilingly from which, in secret, wc recoil; we pass by sweet spots and rare faces, that our very heart yearns for, with out betraying the effort it costs; and thus we drag through the twelve long hours, disgust ed almost, hut gladdened withal, that the mask will have an end, and the tedious game be over, and our visor and our weapons be laid aside. But the night is tiie gift of heav en. It firings freedom and repose; its influ ence falls coolly and gratefully upon the mind as well a3tlie body;and when we drop the extinguisher upon the round untouched pillow, we at the same tune, put out a world of cares and perplexities. What then, must be our disappointment to find ourselves full length,side by side, with a professed, regu lar-bred, full-blooded snorer, when the spell of sleep is every few moments forming on us; and then broken by the anomalous, incongru ous, nasal vociferations, against which, at this particular moment, we are endoavoriiig to excite the indignation of the reader ? It is one of the advantages of authorship, however, that even evils, by yielding prolific subjects for the pen, may be made a source of amusement and profit Wc experienced this the other night, when returning from a day’s absence, the* traveller’s vicissitudes sent us to sleep on board a steamboat, plying between this citv and Albany. Fancy us, good reader, you know, (or, for wc have been band and glove with you for so long a time, you ought to know,) cur sly penchant for comfort—our harmless pieces of epicurean ism on a small scale—our enjoyment of a shady still corner—our horror of being push ed and thrust about “any how.” We have even, on occasions betrayed too many of our secret tastes and antipathies, and have been fated sometimes by anonymous correspond ents, (those familiar, invisible gentry,) for preferring a slant sunbeam through a heavy curtain to one that comesin like other beams. Imagine us, then in a “night boat” which evfeo the captain confessed was “slow” the wimiand tide against us, a hot night, numcr- ous passengers, the engine heavy and work-] ing laboriously, with a regular and heavy im pulse, that jarred through the massive vessel with j:ri;s and shocks like little earthquakes, and the subtle languor of slumber stealing through our limbs, and hanging on our eye lids. A hundred or two travellers had alrea dy “turned in,” and we were ushered below into the cabin, and directed by a clerk to a berth, where, our guide informed us, we were to slap. To sleep! He looked at the fe lon’s face. It was perfectly grave and res pectful. A glance satisfied us he had inten ded no insult. lie left us, and we paused to look round. Ah! the cabin of a steamboat is a melancholy tttfair to a sleepy gentleman, about o’clock at night. ' A dim lamp suspend J from the ceiling, shed a doleful light upon the long low, narrow apartment.— The curtains of the berths were mostly drawn Divers ooots, which, when enlivened by their respecti\e logs, had clambered mountains or paced over fields, now lay in groups here and there. Hats, valises, umbrellas, rested by their owners, being probably the only vesti ges of them we should ever encounter. One tat gentle nan had just lifted his umvieldly person into bed, and was tying a bandanna handkerchief around his head, preparatory to his launching off into glorious repose; while a cross-looking lean person opposite, having wound up bis watch and Rescued Ins feet from his hoots, with a prodigious deal of straining and ill humour; having with considerable dif ficulty discovered where he was to dispose of his cloak and other matters; bumpinghishcad! moreover, wli.io getting into his couch, and easing the pain with a smothered execration,' at length also disposed ofhimself to his satis- faction. We do not know of any thing which when a min is really out of humor, exhausts his philosophy more utterly than hitting his head sharply against any hard object. My lriend cursed the builder ol the steamboat, in a half-smothered growl,and tuen all was quiet. And now w e were floating off into a pleasant sleep, when a low and gradually increasing sound from the berth of the fat gentleman ar fested our attention. He listened, all was silent; and then again the same sound, mor mth' ‘hit* find * asr <fc vblrwk U was at a long breath, of the consistency ol a loun whisper. We turned over, stiil it w.rn on. We turned hack again, there it was yet. Wc roae on our elbow in a passion, and poked our head out between the red curtains. There was the fat gentleman’s berth. Wc could just detect glimpse of the bandanna hand kerchief, by a feeble glare of the lamp. Our sleepy eyes passed disconsolately over the boots and valises. We laid down again, hut, could not “with all the weary watching of our care-tired thoughts,” win the coy dame sleep to our bed. Wllat was to be done? Go up and hit the fat gentleman a blow? impossi ble. Complain to the captain? He would laugh at us—Never was man so weighed down, so oppressed with sleep, and never did man so suffer from a snorer.—The fat gen tleman, as if aware of our misery, and mock ing at it, went on, like an orator getting warm with the subject. He grew loud, vociferous, outrageous. We laid and listened. He in haled, he exhaled. Now the air rushed in through his extended jaws, now it burst fortli obstreperously through his sonorous nose.— He took it in with the tone of an octave flute he let it out.again with the profound depth of a troaibone. lie breathed short, he breath ed long; he gasped, whistled, groaned, gur gled. He quickened the time; became rapid agitated, and furious. Hitherto he had snored with the sound of a rusfiing, regular stream, hastening onward * a deep channel —now it was the brawl, h, dash, hurry, and discordant confusion in same tide, hurled down a cataract of broken rocks—at last lie gave an abrupt snort, and ceased altogether. We were i thanking heaven for this relief, when a tre ble voice from the berth directly beneath, an nounced new trouble. It was some one— whom, we knew not, nor do vve ever eovet his friendship, wiio belonged to a different class of snorers. He made a regular, quick, shark, hacking sound, like that of a man cut king wood. Hack, hack, hack—wc heard it at intervals all night. The lean gentleman, in the opposite part of the room, now put in his claim as a snorer. lie had four notes. It was a tune. It could be written and played any day. Wc laughed outright, and inward ly resolved to find the fellow out, and see what, he was like by day light. He played on sometime, and then finished with a sud den combination of sounds among the con stituent parts of which we could plainly dis tinguish a hiss and two sneezes. His exit reminded us of those pyrotechnic creations to be seen at Nihlo’s Castle garden, &c. which whirl round and round, and then ex plode with a phiz and a whiz, sure to be bounteously applauded by the enlightened audience. 'l'heie was something in this gen tleman’s snoring which touched our feelings A fine spirited fallow he was. we warrant.— Full of life and animation, and not in-lined to hide his light under a bushel. What be came of him, however, after the explosion, we cannot say. Ho left a dead silence, and his evaporation we almost lamented. We should like to know, however, whether any law can be put in requisition against these gentry, or why we have not the same right to practise on the trombone, on hoard the steam boat, that they possess of “piercing the night’s dull ear,” by such pompous displays of nasal ability ? ISUSASKI On the Political State of Agriculture. BY JOHN TAYLOR. The blessing of complete success in the plan of expelling foreign manufactures, by raising bounties upon agriculture, may be exhibited by figures upon data, however conjectural in amount, correct in principle. Suppose agriculture annually to bring home forty millions of dollars, she would be annu ally robbed of ten millions, by a protecting! duty of 25 per centum, for the benefit of capitalists. Suppose her share of the taxes, state and continental, to be 15 millions, and that out of the remaining fifteen, she has five millions to pay to bankers ; ten will re main, leaving her an annual income per poll,ol about $1,50 for building houses, pay ing expenses, and improving lauds. But if we take into the account, that foreign nations neither would nor could pay our agricultur ists with specie for their produce, that they wou'd countervail upon this preposterous pro ject, and that every countervailing act of theirs, would operate upon our agricultural products, even this $1,50 would become the victim of retaliation, and leave the farmer as fundless for purchasing manufactures, as for improving his land. This blessed scheme of shutting up its markets, for the encouragement of agricul ture, has been wonderfully overlooked as a means for encouraging manufactures. In the latter case, markets arc eagerly sought for, and barter universally allowed. England takes special care not to limit the sales of her man ufactures directly or indirectly to returns in specie, knowing that the attempt would des troy them. iShe endows them with the home monopoly, and freedom to make the best bargains in all the foreign markets they can get to. -Manufacturing is her staple; agri culture is ours. The United States hit exactly upon the same mode for the encouragement of our ag riculture after the revolution, that the English did before it, for the purpose of pillaging it. Every congress has adhered to their prede cessors in the same policy. The agricultur ists, to get rid of it, fought England, an* having evinced their power to control a great nation, are quietly submitting to tins spectre of patriotism. The Euglsh before the revolution, quartered upon our agriculture, a necessity of buying its manufactures at home, or within the empire, whilst it enjoyed the eqiivah nts of being free from their taxation, from paying any ot tiie interest of their paper systems, from contri butions for supporting their armies, navies, bishops and pensioners, from the frauds of their treasury system, and of sharing in the enhanc id prices, produced by tram! which lid not reach the provisions. The same sys tem inflicted l>v congress, is .attended w ith I ■tone of tlies ; equivalents. Agriculture pays I and must forever pay most of whatever is ss&aosr &srawttwaß®. collected by taxes, by cnarters, by protecting! duties, by paper systems of every kind, for armies, for navies, and though Lst, not the least of its losses, of whatever the nation is defrauded by a treasury system operating in darkness, if the taxes arc directly laid on property, agriculture pays nearly the whole of them; if on consumptions, an unequal share, because of the greater number of hands she employs than any other business, and the smaller profit derived from their labour. Had our policy instead of assailing agricul ture, with the English system of quartering upon her a legion of legal separate interests (to resist which she had spent lifer blood and treasure in a long war with that nation) been guided by these considerations, she whuld not have been subjected to the very evils, to avoid w hich, she had so recently and glo riously persevered through that war. The cSects of yoking agriculture to armies, ua L\', paper frauds, and piotecting duty frauds, since a revolution, which it laboured for, like the ox who tills the crop to be eaten by others, are visibly an increase of emigra tion, a decrease in the feriiality of land, sales of landed estates, n decay and impoverish ment bolii in mind and fortune of the landed gentry, and an exchange of that honest, virtuous, patriotic and bold class of men, for an order of stock-jobbers in loans, banks, manufactories, rivers, roads, houses, snips, lotteries, arid an infinite number of inferior tricks to get money, calculated to instil opposite principles. All the varieties of this order receive boun ties, and agriculture pays them. They gain from six to twenty per centum profit on their capitals; agriculture seldom or never gams six, except in a few* southern instances. In fact, it very rarely gains any thing, if an income, derived from an impoverishment of the land, ill deserves the name of profit. The injustice of superadding upon agri culture these unnecessary burdens to those which are necessary, is illustrated by suppo sing the duties upon foreign manufactures to he only five per centum, and nearly or quite all our duties are above the supposition. To such duties are still to be added the English and American merchants, through whose hands the goods pass, and the freight. These duties, profits and fieight, would alone constitute an encouragement to home man ufactures of at least twenty per centum; a sum quite adequate to any encouragement w hich honest policy would defend, or com mon justice suffer. And as all the occasion al calamities of commerce, are losses to agri culture, and prizes t.n manufactures, her fatuity in kneeling like the camel to receive burdens, under the notion that she is re ceiving bounties, can have no antithesis more perfect, than the species of dexterity which inflicts them, <u. •intlrew Jackson. HOMAGE TO TIIE “GREAT and GOOD.” LonsvitiK, Oct. 2,1832. Gen. Jackson reached Lexington on Satur day evening last, on his return to Washing ton. He was escorted into the city by about a thousand citizens, among whom were Gov ernors Breathitt, Adair and Desha. A cor respondent who witnessed his reception by the people, describes it as distinguished by every demonstration of the most enthusiastic attachment. The highway, along which he 1 passed, for miles was lined with multitudes, all anxious and pressing forward to greet their venerable and patriotic Chief Magis-j tratc. When the General arrived at iiisj lodgings, at Fostle thwaitV, the crowd assem bled, it is estimated, could not have fallen ! short of four thousand persons. The spectacle was most interesting. All i was gladness, and gratitude aval exultation. The patriotic “ fair” of the city, were seen crowding the doors and windows and waiv ing their white handkerchiefs in honor of the Hero, who, when “Beauty” was the watch word of a ruthless enemy, was willing to “perish in the last ditch” in its defence. Our correspondent remarks. “If a stranger, unacquainted with the state of party feeling here, had witnessed the General’s reception, he would have supposed! that there was not an indivduai in the citv or, neighborhood opjmsed to him. The display ol feeling in his favor was so overwhelming, that not a word was heard but in his praise, and scarce a countenance seen, that was not lighted up with the gladness and spirit that pervaded the multitude.” These proud and brilliant tokens of confi dence and unshrinking devotion to the Old Ilero were given in the city of Mr. Clay’s residence, and but seven days after the convention of the Bank lawyers had adjourn ed. Their “travails” have been “love’s la bor lost. ’ ’l'lie louder these feecd gentle men bellowed agarnst the President the bet ter the people seem to like him. Advertiser. Extracts from the Argus. On the way to the city, it was almost im possible to keep back the crowd who press ed up to the carriage window to take him bv the hand. He believe that no occurence pleased him more than the circumstance of a large number ol little boys, who had ran* ged themselves by the road side, just at tin point where he arrived in sight of Lexington, and having of their own accord, supplied themselves with hickory boughs, they greeted the President with the most animated shouts and waving of the boughs. We do not hesitate to assert, that the re ception which he met with on this occasion in Lexington, equalled that of La Fayette in 1823. Mor# hearty and overflowing it co dd not have been. The number of the people who accompanied him, could not have been less than from TWO to THREE THOUSAND- A great many interesting! incidents occurred after his arrival. The numhet of persons who pressed forward for; an iritrc * letion to him, of all ages and con-1 ditions, would have fatigued any other man J than the President. Vet he was animated ‘•nd cheerful the whole time, as if he did net feel it. The next day which was the Sabbath, he "pent in Lexington, and attended divine scr vjee at the Rev. Mr. Hall’s Ist Presbyterian Church. On Monday mottling at 9 ®clock, he departed on his route, intending to spend the night at Winchester. lit- was again escorted by Captain Postlethwait’s Light In fantry to the city limits where the President alighted and took a personal leave of each number on parade. A large concourse of cit izens on horse back and in carriages, accom panied him several miles out ofthe city, pre ceded by the same Marshall and Committee of arrangements. Before he left town, he found leasure to visit for a short time, several of his old friends, where the ladies had opportunities of being presented to him; and great numbers were desirous to enjoy the pleasure of his com pany. On the morning of his departure, also, a large number of hoys with hickory boughs, preceded by music, marched past mm in review, every one. of whom he took by the hand. He rode on horseback in leaving the city, and was again greeted by every mark of applause, by great numbers who had col lected to hid him farwell. Surely no man ever did or could have received more fervent exhibitions of attachment, than did this per secuted and slandered patriot, even in the “very halls of the Douglass.” Surely no man, whose mind is not filled with prejuduce and party rancour, couid have looked on his venerable countenance, and back on his past life, so full of disinter ested services to his country, in her times of danger and distress, without confessing reverence and affection for him. His man ners, too, were so kind, polished and agree able; —*so different from tiie pictures which have been drawn of him by coffin-handbill Editors and partizae and m e ogues, that many, very many of his political opponents, on that occasion, laid down their hostility to him, and will in future be his advocates and friends. We say this with perfect confidence in the trutn of tie assertion; and the result of the November election in Fayette county will prove that we are right. Kentucky is for Jackson, Veto or no Veto ! Wc are gratified to say that the Marshalls and Coinmjtce arranged matters so well, and the people conducted themselves so orderly, that not the slightest accident, disorder or incident, occurred, ivhicb could give pain to any person. It was an occasion, which like the visit of Lafayette, will be long remem bered by the inhabitants of Lexington and Fayette county, with delight and admira tion. Untied Stales Hank. From the Globe, of Oct. G. BANK BRIBERY. We hate received the following letter from Pittsburg: Pittsburg, Sept. 30. 1832. “Dear Sir: Another‘fair business trans action,’ to use the language of that poor crea ture Webb, occurred on Friday last. Mr. Wilson, a hatter in this city, went to the Post Office and enquired if there were any letters for him, one of the Clerks handed hiin a letter addressed to ‘James Wilson,’ that be ing the name of the applicant. On opening the letter, Mr. W. found a draft drawn by Nicholas Biddle, Esq. President of the Bank ofthe U. S. for 6580 on the Branch in this city. Mr. W. handed the letter back to the Clerk, observing, ‘this letter is not for me;’ the Clerk then read it aloud, and said, no, it is not for you, ‘it is for Mr. Jtunes Wilson, the editor of the Pennsylvania Advocate.’— The letter was (hen resealed and delivered to tiie Bank Editor. The letter having been read in the hearing of several individuals, we can pin the matter upon the Coffin Handbill Editor and his new master: he will not be able to swear himself out of this scrape. We will forward you, by next mail,the de position of one of the persons who was pre sent, heard the letter read, and saw the drafts. lie is a respectable mechanic of this city, and was, at that time, a member of their own party. “Very respectfully yours, DAVID LYNCH, 13. J. ROBERTS. “F. r. Blair, Esq.” This Wilson, if we remember rightly, is the in.ln who signalized hi in seif in Ohio re cently by some profligate electioneering falsehoods against Judge Irwin. We are not positive tiiat this is the same man, but, how ever that may be, he lias found means to re commend himself to Mr. Biddle’s and the Bank’s good graces, and has been set up as the Bank advocate in Pittsburg, and receives his supplies accordingly. This purchase of Editors and Presses with the money of the people, or the Government as a stock-holder, is but carrying oat the principle avowed by Mr. Walsh when he made his acknowledge , inent that he received about SIOOO for pub j lishing Extras to support the Bank against j the President. If Mr. Biddle can buy with | the public money, set apart as a contingent fund in the Bank, “Extras and Pamphlets” to put down the President, why may he not j go to the bottom, and buy the mem and the materials that make the Extras and | Pamphlets? It is certainly upon this princi ple, considering the corporation as identified with himself, that Mr. Biddle has ventured to use its money as his private funds, and to purchase up the Courier axd Enquirer— the Philadelphia Inquirer— to pension Walsh, Gales—Green, and the rest with regular per quisites. At this moment the Bank is throw ing out from the Philadelphia press, a review of the veto, written in all likelihood by Bid dle himself. Wlml would the nation think of it, if the President of the United States were to apply the secret service money en trusted to bis discretion to the publics ion and distribution of Ins Veto Message ? Would he not be justly execrated by "the whole country—impeached, and hurled from office, with the curses of every patriot upon his head? There is no man who would not mark the act as the most shameful robbery of the Treasury. The case of Mr. Biddle is I timch worse. The funds of the Bank arc not confided to bis “ discretion ,” but he holds them for the defined purposes of the charter. Was the Bank chartered that its vast powers and pecuniary resources should be brought to bear upon the elections ? Was it chartered to purchase ami circulate Extras and pamph-, lets, to operate on the suffrages of the people? Was it chartered to purchase Editors and j presses—to seduce by bribery, the sentinels of civil Liberty from their allegiance to the people ? That to these vile and treasonable uses the public money, entrusted to the cof fers of the ißank, has been applied, there is now not the slightest shadow of doubt. There has been the most profligate application of the nation's means, confided to the hands of the conclave of Directors in Philadelphia, to party purposes—to subvert the principles of the Government itself. Hundreds of thou sands have been poured into the pockets of venal Editors and Lawyers, to prepare the public iiiind fertile establishment 01 the pow er of the Bank oligarchy in this country, and with it the aristocratic domination, which was vanquished in the struggle of ’9B and ’99. The course which the Bank is now taking, in scattering its treasures among partizans, and applying them in every shape in which' money can be brought to bear upon the elec tions demands the greatest vigilance—the noblest exertions of all the patriots who can he animated with pride for the liberal insti tutions of our country—with enthusiasm for tlie rights of American citizens. But while patriots in every part of the Un ion will he roused to defend the principles of freedom, there arc patriots entrusted with the administration of public affairs, who will not fail to call to account the Bank Managers who have been guilty of such flagrant mal versation in their public trust. And, in an ticipation of the reckoning, we should not he surprised to see the public deposites with drawn from those, who, as they are evidently committing spoliation on the Slock of tiie Government in the Bank, for the worst pur poses, must certainly render it an unsafe de positary for the whole treasure of a people. From the same paper, (Jet. 7. BANK CORRUPTION. In our last we disclosed the startling fact, that a draft lor #SBO, from President Biddle himself to James Wilson an editor lately boughf up by the Bank, and removed from Steubenvilie to Pittsburg, had .accidentally been discovered in its transit. In the Cin cinnati! Republican, of the 19th ult. we find extracted ttoin the Steubenville Herald, some of this Mr. W ilson's vnbougk ' opinions in re lation to the Bank of the United States.— Let the people examine them, and they will duly appreciate the vaiuc of those venal ef fusions which arc now elicited by Mr. Bid dle’s draughts. From the Western Herald of 30 th January, ISI9. THE UNITED STATES BANK, dec. Tnc report of the committee appointed to examine into the affairs of the United States Bank, having been at length received, we de vote a considerable portion of this week’s pa por to its publication. We regret q,ur tnaml ity to publish it entire—the remainder, about four or five columns, shall appear m our next, v his report unlolds a scene of gam bling a.id speculation—of downright un blushing infamy, hocus pocusand imposture, which should till tlie mind of every honest American with shame and indignation— and should cause our representatives to tear from the statute bool, of the nation the license un der which sucii infamy and fraud have been engendered and practised. In other words, the violated charter of that iniquitous insti tution should at once he declared extinct, and its corrupting influence destroyed. But we invite the public to read the statements tor themselves—and after they have read it, let them console themselves if they can with the reflection, that it has enabled the Presi dent of th Bank to make his 53,009 and certain directors and their friends to riot in wealth, that they have been shaved and plun dered, and ground down almost to Just and ashes. People of the West— debtors to the government —have we not repeatedly told you that you were imposed upon—that you were preyed upon by sharpers and specula tors ? What say you now ? From the Western Herald of the 13 th March . 1819. We have this day to record the disagreea ble and unwelcome news, that the existence ol this bank is to lie prolonged for another year. In the House of Representatives of the United States, the resolution for the re peal of its charter, has been negatived, aves JO -nays lg.. I he* resolution for a scire facias was also rejected, 110 to 39. The bill regulating the manner of voting at elections for directors, was ordered to a third reading. Three of the members front this State, Mes srs. Harrison, Herrick and Barber, voted against the bank, the other three in its favor. It is stated in Nile's Register, that about for ty members are stockholders in said bank, all of whom it is presumed, exerted themselves with warmth and activity in its favor. As we before observed, the people have no other chance of shielding themselves from oppression and the aristocratic tendency of this vast paper machine, than through the State Governments. If the Governtnf at of the United States feel determined to foster and protecta swarm of speculators, brokers and Swindlers, let the State Governments throw their shield over the farmers, the man ufacturers, and the mechanics—if an insti tution, w,deli has disgraced itself, and dc graced the American name, is to receive the protection of the nation; let the States wash their hands of the indignity, by sending the mother of iniquity and her shameless brood, to thc“ ten miles square” in which tlicv were conceived and brought into life and being. !Ur. Wilson is now zealously employed in attempting to perpetuate this “downright un blushing infamy, hocus pocus and imposture” this “license under which such infamy and fraud have been engendered and pracitisml” this “swarm of speculators, brokers, and swindlers”—this “moth r of iniquity arid her shameless brood”—not “lor another ve-tr” only, but FOREVER! I lie ns'; which Mr. Wilson is now ma eng of Mr. Biddh’s kind remittances, may !>o perceived bv ttie following extract fro' j die Cincinnati Republican. Nobodv need ask lurlhcf, “who nays’’/ JAMES WlusoyP^ Who has not heard of James Wt .tor ol the Stem,, uvill 0 Herald moment, one of the most ileterm ’ thoiougli going Clay and Bank ~ J or pereaps in the United States? , a levy weeks since, he coalmenced 5 itcution of a paper in Pittsburg J" by what name, for the ostensible 1 supporting the Bank, and preventing election oi General Jackson. Thi we have learned, has been peddled •'date ot Ohio, like the Gazette e\‘ri°! the bushel! Every town and niS lias been deluged with them. Jt| nised the oi.l ladies of the counlj! wrappers lor their garden seeds, forfiZ to come. v The Bank is an excellent pavmasb buys up editors, and then prints and cirv their papers. 3lr. Wilson is one purchased -rticles—though it i, nnt Iff., he c ° st fifty-two tl^ douars, the amount given for Webb. tiie bank In thejfield [Extract to the editor, of the Alban, gus, dated New-York,Oct. 4.1 ' Mr. Biddle,the Philadelphia broker is iou know he is a relative of President ! A speculation was entered into on Tin to raise the mice ol U. 8. Bank stock ti purpose of political effect. Yest f )■ continued, and a further advance of a cent was realized by our brokers. 7, : speculation continues, at a further advai 1 per cent—which makes the quota;; that stock 121 . This is all very good, brokers are making money, and Waii people are well content. ' If the fi 3r sacrifice thousands and tons of thousai the hope of politiclal effect, it is no afi theirs—the President and Directors account, one day or other, to the stockh; for squandering so much money 111 su< unhallowed crusade. The nrokerwhois aging this speculation—this“fairbui transaction”—who is not a betting nan now offering to bet thousands that" Rt vaniu will give her vote against General son. i iiis is part of the same game, thcr speculations in stock, norolferiol will affect the minds of the honest demc; yeomanry of Pennsylvania. 1 assert deutly, that they will give their vet, Jackson—and a few vvi-cks will prove The London Times (the first of the al or Whig papers) makes the folUivi marks on our Presdetit’s Veto Mesangi “ 'Phe concerns of the Bank of the i States have hitherto been weii manai.*n prosperity is admitted, and the benefits it has conferred on the Union, by uniformity and stability to its cumin moneyed transactions, are not dispute notes in circulation do not exceed itsc and it affords more accommodation to y commerce, tlian the Bank ofEnglam its more extensive circulation and as g means.” “ It must seem difficult, therefore, so is unacquainted with the electioneer l jectsof the President, or with theptcul sition of American parties, to conside the extraordinary step of a veto should sorted to against the continued existe this establishment. Nor will they b factory informed by the Message to the i in which the President states his rea disagreeing with tiie two Houses. 7k sons arc much more numerous than c In the first place, the President thin! renewal of the charter premature, while and a half years of its term are still! To tiiis objection, it is well answeredl of the Senators, that his Excellency agamst all renewals, the time made r fsrence. Besides, as he expects to be ed President lor the next four year Charter would expire before ns policy be considered by another Chief Magi The President subsequently speaks a it as a monopoly, and what is c'jnous, as a reason for rejecting the jene its Charter, that the foreign possevou stock might use their pow'er, in war, against the interest of the Union need scarcely say that such an objr.v chimerical and absurd. The foreign! would in case of war have their fundsini can stock, would be rather more likely at the mercy of them than have Amerii theirs. Their stock would, in fad, kind of hostage in the enemy, and moans of influencing that enemy.” “The real fact probably is, that Pr< Jackson has been opposed by the dii ol the Bank in his administration; t dreaded their influence on his ensuinj tion ; that lie wished to gain the supp the local banker, who are hostile to the ral establishment: and that he iberclori his veto as one of the ways and niea occupying for auother term of four the elective sovereignly of a great cm The Times commits one mistake viz: the supposition that the Presidci been opposed in his administration b Directors of the Bank. lie has always aided by them in the proper department of the Treasury. They never tool against him, in their quality of direc in connexion with the affairs of theß He has been actuated by inveterate prej and deluded, moreover, by the scheu Treasury, hank or machine, which he' move at will— Nat. Gaz. A YOUNG MAN Vl/YIO can give satisfactory reference t * who may enquire, of his morals, a conduct, wishes to obtain a school of da ® scholars ; whom ho will instruct in t | IP J 1 language, Penmanship, and Arithmetic phyand the Art of drawing Maps. It r( he will (each the rudiments of the Latin w and several branches of the Mathem^ 1 * would prefer a school in one of the neiffp Cfiiiuiies. Any letter addressed to'*- Macon will he attended to. October 23, 1832. _ J s T BA! LEV. auGJ. A 1 MACON. GEO. ¥¥!*■* office i j the one lately < err; j" 5 n sr- Tracy & Butler, on Third -S October 23. !