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COLUMBUS SENTINEL AND HERALD.
VOL. X.]
ri'BLlfilf KD £VRV SATURDAY MOKSIM BY
JOSEPH STURGIS.
ON BROAD feTREKT, OVER ALLEN AND VOCHO’s,
u'lNToSli ROW.
1 KRMS—Subscription, three dollars per an
niin payable m advance, or rouA dollars, (in all
case , exacted) where payment is not made before the
expiration of the year. No subscription received for
less than twelve months, without payment inadvance,
and no paper discontinued, except at. the option oi
the Editors, until all arrearages are paid.
ADVERTISEMENTS conspicuously inserted at
one dollar per one hundred words, or less, for
the first insertion, and fifty cents for every subse
quent continuance. Those sent without a specifica
tion of tlio number of insertions, will be published
until ord ;red out, and charged accordingly.
2d. Yearly advertisements.— For over 24, and
not exceeding 36 lines, Jtfty doMars per annum ; for
ovr 12, and not exceeding 24 lines, thirty-five dollar*
per annum ; for less than 12 lines, twenty dollar*
per annum.
t'l. All rule and figure work double the above prices.
Legal Advertisements published at the usual
rates, and with strict attention to the requisitions ol
the law.
All Sales regulated by law, most be made before
the Court House door, between the hours of 10 in the
morning and 4 in the evening—those of I.and in
flic county where it ts situate; those of Personal
Property, where the ietters testamentary, of admin
istration or of guardianship were obtained—and are
required to be preciously advertised in some public
Gazette, as follows :
Sheriffs’ Sales under regular executions for thir
tv i) a vs. under mortgage fi fas sixty days, before
the day of sale.
Sales of Land an 1 Negroes, by Executor*, Ad
ministrators or Guardians, for sixty days before
the dav of sale.
Sales of Personal Property (except Negroes) forty
da vs.
Citations by Clerks of the Courts of Ordinary, upon
application for letters of administration, must
be published for thirty days.
Citations upon application for dismission, by
Executors, Administrators or Guardians, monthly
for six MONTHS.
Orders of Courts of Ordinary, (accompanied with a
copy ol the bond or agreement) to make titles
to i, and, must be published three months.
Notices by Executors, Administrators or Guardians,
of application to the Court of Ordinary for leave
to sell the Land or Negroes of an Estate, four
MONTHS.
Notices by Executors or Administrators, to the Debt
or and Credi.ors .( an Estate, for six weeks.
Sheriffs, Clerks of Court, &C., will be allowed
the usual deduction.
ft Letters on business, must be post paid,
to entitle them to attention.
41 I. HUUiIRS, Attorney at Law, Cuthbcrt
J.m-9 Georgia.
Jan, 2. 1819. 51 ts
MANSION HOUSE.
.7 ACO If 13 AIIIiO YV ,
RESPECTFULLY informs the public that lie
has opened a HOUSE in the business part ol
Hioad Street for the accommodation of Travellers,
and has built new stables on lus o.vn lot by the solici
tation of his customers.
March2l. & ts
LAW.
f IB2HE subscribers having connected themselves!
jSL the practice of LAW, will attend all the
< .unity Courts of the Chattahoochee Circuit, and the
id| tilling counties of Alabama. Office in Mclntosh
How, iiutnojialelv over Allen & Voting’s Store.
ALFRED IVERSON,
Ju,. 14. 19if JL M. GUF.RRY,
COLUMBUS HOTEL, 1840.
fWNHe subscriber respectfully informs bis friends and
Si th ■ public generally, that he still continues to
occupy the above establishment, where he promises
rest esiinieni and comfort to the traveller and border.
Ills o.vn personal attention will be given to his busi-
Itess, in which he hopes to give general satisfaction,
an I share a liberal patronage amongst his brother
chips. JESSE B. REEVES.
Columbus, Ga., Jin. 21, IS4O. S1 11
C tiUIJIATHU Olt SODA WATKII.
rOR IE subscribers are now prepared to furni h their
CT custom .-rs and the public with ,Carbonated oi
So in ‘Vater.
t‘ i •!, apparatus is constructed in such a manner,
an ! of such materials as to prevent the possibility of
any m calie or d.derious impregnations.
TAYLOR & WALKER,
Sign of the Golden Mortar, Broad st. Columbus.
Ate.l2l. 10 f
FORT & HAMILTON,
ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT I.AU,
Luun'un, Sunv.irt county, Georgia*
WILLIAM A. FORT,
JOHN C. HAMILTON.
S'-nth . i 8, H 40. 90 f
NOTICE.
SCHLEY will coiuinne the practice of Me
■ J dit'ane,Surgery. &c. Office at the old stand of
C In,th- v & Sonic v, on Broad St net.
July'23, 1840.’ 24 ts
YAl.l VIILE I’IiANTATIOS FOR SALE
C 4 INI'AIN-ING Two Hundied Two and a Hal
/ Acres of Land,mixed with oak and pine. There
are eighty acres cleared. Also, a comfortable dwel
ling. with all necessary out offices, a good gin house
and packinsr screw, a peach and apple orchard. The
eutir. under good fence, li is situated within 4 miles
of Columbus, joining the plania’iow formerly owned
hv Thomas C. Evans, Esq. Persons wishing to pur- 1
chase cannot find a more desirable location than the
one offered for sale by the subscribers.
JOHN CODE,
Dec. 6 44'f JOHN Q.ITIN
THOMPSON’S UTEKINE TRUSS. !
Ail effectual and radical cure for polapsus
uteri .
rSTVAF subscribers have* taken the agency for the
H above valuable instrument, and have now on
hand and ill constantly keep a variety of patterns,
which they will sell at Manufacturers’ prices. These
Trusses are superior to any instrument of the kind
ever invented, and are now extensively employed by
som of the most eminent practitioners in the United
States.
We annex the certificateofthe late Professor Etude
who used them with great success in his own practice.
‘ Cincinxatti, Ohio, May 11th, 1819.
‘I have carefully examined the Uterine Truss in
vented bv Dr. Thompson of this State, and I can con
fidently declare, that tt is unquestion .bly the most
perfect and useful instrument of the kind that lias evt t
bee.i ollered to the public. It differs essentially in
construction from the Utero Abdominal Supporter
constructed by Dr. Hull, and is in all respects a far
superior instrument.’
The subscribers have also received the agency for
])r. Chase’s Improved Surgical Truss, w Inch is uni
versally admitted to I>e the most certain and lasting
-ure ever discovered for Hernia or Rupture.
TAYLOR fi; W.MvER. Druggists,
of the Golden Mortar, Broad-st.
Columbus. June 20.1839. 26tf |
WAIIK IIUVSE
AXH COMMISSION BUSINESS.
un lersijiueJ would inform his frieiids and
JS. the |>ub!ic generally, that he will continue the
above business at his 01 j Stand in Front street, oppo
site the new brick building of James 11. Shorter, Esq.
and that his personal attention will be exclusively devo
ted to the same. By strict attention thereto.he hopes
have a continuance of the liberal patronage hereto
fore bestowed upon him. He will as usual attend to
the sale of Cotton, from wagons or in store; and from
a general acquaintance with” the purchasers and true
situation of the market, he believes he can generally
in .re than save the commission in the sale of cotton.
\VM. P. YONGE,
Columbus, Sept. 19, 1839. S3y
He has in store for sale,
Liverpool and Blown Salt in sacks,
Chewing Tobacco and Scgars,
Chatnpaigne AVine, in baskets and boxes,
Bagging and Bale Rope
look at this.
RUNAWAY from the subscribers, about ihe tirst
March last, a negro mail by name Presley,
about fort-, years of age, somewhat grey hair, very
thin, or perhaps no hair on the top of the head quite
black, eves small and deeply sunk in the h ad, wide
between the teeth,'broad shoulders, and stoops, he is
rather intelligent, though unprepossessing in appear
ance, makes great profession of religion, and prays in
public, every opportunity. He was in the ncighboih ( *oo
of Greenville, Meriwether county, some hf.een days
after leaving this place; where he .est on the ‘29th ult.
taking his wife with him, who belongs to freeman
McClendon, living near Greenville; she is by the
name of Julia, twenty years of age, common size, a
bright copp r color, and ver. likely. It is believed
that they were taken o!f by a white man, and probably
travelling west in a gig, as such nforiiiation reached
Mr. McClendon.
A suitable reward will be given for the apprehen
sion of said negroes and thief who cairicdthein away,
and information given to either of the subscribers.
FREEMAN McCLENDON,
JOHN O. MANGHAM.
April 10, 1810. ?lf
FACTORAGE
cot „
COIYIPniSSION BUSINESS,
CHARLESTON. SOUTH CAROLINA.
THE subscribers continue their business at their
old stand, on Bayee & Cos. whirs, Charleston,
and are prepared to make liberal advances on Cotton ,
consigned to their care.
COLLINS & CLEVELAND.
September 5, 1840. 29 2m
WAREHOUSE AND
COMMISSION BUSINESS.
<v- 1,. THE undersigned having associa
ed themselves under the firm of Hall,
1jg.,.. pH Ruse & Cos. for the purpose oftrans
acting a general Commission and
1 1 1 >H|I [Warehouse business; would inform
their friends and the public, that they are now prepar
ed to attend to any business entrusted to their charge.
Their Warehouse being constructed of Brick and
detached from all other buildings, may l e considered
in all respects as entire Fire-proof. Planters will
therefore find it for their interest to store with them on
account ol the great saving in the premium of Insur
ance, and the additional safety to those who do not
insure.
They are prepared to advance liberally upon cotton
and other merchandize stored with them, and their
rates es storage and commissions, and all other char
ges will be as low as those charged by other houses in
the same line of business.
J. A. DEBLOIS,
II T. HALL,
F. N. RUSE.
THEY HAVE NOW IN STORE FOR SALE,
600 bags prime Havana Coffee,
300 pieces best Kentucky Bagging,
150 coils best Kentucky Rope,
23 bales domestic Goods received direct from
the manufacturers.
August 29, 1840. 28tf
DISSOLUTION.
THE copartnership heretofore existing tinder the
firm of Wilson & Cravey is dissolved this day
hy mutual consent of both.
SANFORD T. WILSON.
OWEN W. CRAVEY.
Gillion, July 14, IS4O 23—ts
COMMISSION BUSINESS.
THE subset iuers have this day farmed a connec
tion, under the firm of ROWLAND & BAR
STOVV, for the purpose of transacting a GEXEII”
AL,COMMISSION BUSINESS in SAVAN
NAH. Particular attention will be paid to receiving
and forwarding Produce and Merchandise. They
are not interested in any of the Transportation Lines,
and assure their friends, that, in all cases, such con
veyances shall be selected as to promote their intei
est. WILLIAM P ROWLAND,
ELIAS B. BARS I’OW.
Savannah. 26:h June. 1840.-fm6t—22
TAVERN FOR SALK.
IF n it previously disposed of, will be sold on Tues
day. the 15th day of September next, by the sub
scriber, at public auction, that well known Tavern and
furniture, known as the TALBOTTON HOTEL.
This house is well established an 1 in good repair, with
all nocess iry outhouses convenient. Persons desiring
to purchase such properly are requested to c 11 and I
examine the premises; tciins v>ill be made liberal, and
indisputable titles given. B. WHITHURST.
Tulbotton. Ga., August 11, 1840. 26- tds.
PHOENIX HOTEL,
IjUiUpkin, Stewart County, Georgia.
/ S|NUE subscriber having taken the above bouse,
A situated on the North East corner oft he court
house squat e, formerly occupied by Mr. Ileacham,
takes pleasure in informing his friends and the public
generally, that this new and commodious establish
ment is now completed, and in every way fitted up
for the accommodation of boarders ami travellers : the
subscriber w ill give his personal attention to the super
vision of the bouse, and no pains nr expense w ill be
spared to render all comfortable who may favor him
with a call.
N-. I>. His stables are excellent and wilt at all times
be bounti’tilly supplied with provender, and attended
by a steady industrious and trusty ostler, who will at
all times be in his place and subject to the commands
of the visitor. GIDEON 11. CROXTON.
Jan 25—51 -ts
DISSOLUTION.
THE copartnership heretofore existing uniter firm
ofDrs. CHIPLEY& SCHLEY, is this day
dissolved by mutual consent. Tire books and accounts
are in ihe hands of Hr. Schley, who is authorized to
settle them. Persons indebted to the firm are respect
fully requested to call as earlv as possible ar.d settle.
\V.-S. CHJPLEY,
WM. K. SCHLEY.
July ‘23,18-10. 24 ts
LAW NOTICE.
rSYHE undersigned will attend toth.- PRACTICE
P OF LAW. in the name of JONES & PEN
NING, in most of ihe counties of this Circuit, and a
few of the adjoining counties of Alabama. Their
Office will be found near the Oglethorpe House.
SEABORN JONES,
HENRY L. BENNINQ.
Sept 16,1839. 33 ts
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES-
W'HEREAS, a bill has passed both branches of
the General Assembly, ( hanging the times <d
ho ding the sessions of the Legislature, from annual to
biennial; but whereas, it is proper on all occasions to
ascertain (he ill of die people, whenixp-t it can be
done without interfering with the ordinary course of
legislation: Therefore
Be it resolved by the Senate and House of Represen
tatives of the State of Georgia in General Assembly
met, and it is hereby enacted by the authority of the
state, That on the tirst Monday in October, 1840. the
voters of this State be requested to endoise on their
tickets, the words ‘•Annual” or “Biennial” as they
may favor the meeting of the Legislature every year,
or once in two years; and that the resolution he pub- j
fished in the newspapers in this Slate for three uionihs j
before the first Monday in October aforesaid.
JOSEPH DAY.
Speaker of the House of Representatives.
Attest —Joseph Stuhgis, Clerk.
In Senate, concurred in. 2Tst December. 1839.
ROBERT M. ECHOLS,
President of the Senate.
Attest—Davih J. Bailey, Secretary.
Approved December 24ih. 1839.
CHARLES J. M'DONALD, Governor.
July 11 21
POlt SALK
rjTVIE tract of land, known as the Broken Arrow
A Bend, on the Chattahoochee river, seven miles
below Columbus, on the Alabama side of the river,
containing fourteen hundred and forty-two acres, nine
hun red of which are eq.al.if not superior, to any land
on the river; with five hundred acres of cleared land
under good fence and in a high state of cultivation;
the balance of the tract is thin oak anti hickory, and
pine lands, with good water and healthy situations for
residence, on which part is a good house for an over
seer and negro houses for lift y negroes. Persons wish
ing to purchase a river plantation w ould do well to ex
amine it while the crop i* growing.
JOHN CROWELL. Sen.
Fort Mitchell, August 12,1540 26—ts
BArfAWAY
IN ROM the su iscriber, livulg in the Hal’oca settle
, merit, Muscogee county, Ga. on the 26th ult. a
mulatto fellow, named DICK, a out twenty-eight years
old, about five feet 6 oi 7 inches high, rather round
shouldered, well built, weighing about oiiehimdrcd and
tbrlv pounds, has a scar from the cut of a knife under
one of his shoulders,light complected, with hair almost
straight, shrewd, and quick spoken, but when address
ed, has a down look and is apt to smile. He is well
known in Columbus, having been partly- raised in that
city bv the late Dr. Sullivan, from whose estate the
undersigned bought hi:n. Reason exists for supposing
that he has gone off with a white man. Twenty dol
lars together with t easonable expenses will be given
for the restoration of the negro, or for his being lodged
in jail so that the undersigned get him and. if stoien,
two hundred dollars w ill be given for proof toconviction
of the thief. CHARLES KING.
August 15, 1840. 26tf
The Montgomery Advertiser is requested to insert
the obove three times, and forward the account to
Charles King, Aalloca Post Office, Muscogee county,
Georgia.
fifty dollars reward.
RAN AWAY from the subscriber about the 23d
of December last, a NEGRO MAN by the
name of Ellice, about 5 feet 6 or 8 inches high, has a
scar on one side of his mouth, chunky built, and quite
bow legged, walks with his toes out. Ellice was
brought ‘from Tuskaloosa, Ala , some ittne in last
year he perhaps lias gone back as he had a wife in
that neighborhood. It is however believed lhat he is
in rHe vicinity of Columbus, Ga., and in all ptobability
harbored bv some person. I will give a reward of
Ffftv Dollars for his apprehension or delivery to ihe
Jailor of Muscogee county, or any other safe jail so
•hit I e->n ect him, and all reasonable expenses paid.
EDMUND t. WILLIAMS.
September 5 ISIO. Mtf
* WE HOLD THESE TRUTHS TO BE SELF-EVIDENT, THAT ALL MEN ARE BORN EUUAL.’
COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 24, 1840.
| BOARDING,
i TfcWTRS. LUCAS having taken that large and cmn
| ITJL mod ioiis two-story house on Front street, direct
ly opposite Mr. Win. P. Yonge’s residence, would be
willing to accommodate a few respectable Boarders.
None but those of strictly moral habits need apply.—
Terms to suit the times. June 11,1840. 17 ts
NOTICE.
THE partnership existing in Muscogee, was dis
solved the Ist of March, 1838. lam responsi
ble for no contracts entered into since that date.
March 14, 1840. 4tf JOHN L. HARP.
GEORGIA STATE LOTTERY.
CLASS No. 35.
To be dr*w-| on Saturday, September 5.16*10.
Capitals, $40,000. $15,000', ‘55,000. $3,000, $2,500,
2,297, and 50 of SI,OOO. 59 of SSOO, Sic. Tickets
$lO, shares in proportion.
CLASS No. 36.
To be drawn on Saturday, September 12.
Capitals $20,000, SIO,OOO, $5 000, $3,000, $2 000,
and 100 of SI,OOO, *l6 of SSOO, Sic. Tickets $lO,
shares in proportion.
CLASS No. 37.
To be drawn on Saturday. September 19.
Capitals S3O,(KX, $lO 000, $5,000. $3 000, $2,000.
and 100 of sl.olo, 50 ol SSOO, file. Tickets $lO,
shares in proportion.
CLASS No. 38.
To be drawn on Saturday, September 26.
Capitals $40,000, sl2 000, SB,OOO. $5,(00. $3,000
$2 500, $2,000, and 20 of SI,OOO, 50 of SSOO, 50 of
S4OO, file. Tickets $lO, shares in proportion.
For sale either bv the package or single Ticket by
‘J. H. ANDREWS, Ap,ent.
Columbus , Georgia.
Where all Orders far Tickets should be sent.
August 29. 28
i O THE TICKET HOLDERS OF THE N. O’
MAMMOTH LOTTERY.
P■ AHE following letter from Sylvester & Cos. will
i put the public in possession of the facts in rela
tion to my connexion with ibis Lottery.
136 Broadway New York, August 21, 1840.
J. 11. Andrews, Esq. Columbus, Ga.
Dear Sir—ln reply to your questions we do not hes
itate to acknowledge ourselves liable (if any body ts)
to return the money paid ny such persons to vou, as our
agen', who purchased tickets in the New Orleans
Mammoth Lottery. All the money you received,
(less a t riling commission) was immediately forward
ed to us and disposed of according to the directions
(by contract) of our principal. Louis Schmidt, of New
Orleans, who was die sole aci'ng manager of ihe said
Lottery. Yours verv respectfully,
SYLVESTER & CO.
By this it will be seen the money received has been
remitted promptly, aceoiding to my instruction (for
which we had given bond and security ) to Messrs,
j Sylvester fit Cos., of New York, and by them to Mr.
Louis Schmidt, the acting manager, together with the
trustees appointed for that purpose. According to the
best information I can get on the subject, there is now
a large amount of money deposited in bat.k in New
Orleans, to the credit of this Lottery, and a distribu
tion of said funds will be made to the creditors as soon
as it can be done, according to the laws of that State,
which will probably be some lime during the coming
winter. The holders of Tickets purchased in this
place can send them to me for collection, and a receipt
; will be returned for the same.
J. H. ANDREWS, Agent
for Sylvester & Cos.
Columbus, August 28,1843. 28
WESTERN RANK OF GEORGIA.
THIS institution will resume business on the
FIRST OF OCTOBER NEXT, and until
a general resumption of specie payments, will continue
to pay her liabilities in such funds as are passing at
par, either in the Western part ol Georgia, North
Alabama, or East Tenutssee. When a gtnerai re- j
sumption lak s place in this State, the Western Bank 1
will be lound behind no ether Bank in redeeming her
notes with specie.
This Bank, like many others, had done a liberal
business in accomodation notes, or vvha’ ihe Banks
call state paper, and which w as found too “slow” to be
made uv a.table when the great pressure taraa—a
pressure that compelled the soundest and best manag
ed banks to shi c their colors. It is not surprising,
then, ti.at *n mstiiution, whose managers deserved
more credit for plain ho testy than Jinuncial skill,
>lio ,kl have stopped . t such a crisis, while other hanks,
with large embarrassments and larger credit, should
have cominued to b .• mol ing “things of life.”
With a capital as little impaired as any Bank that
has lost any thnro, the W'estern Bank has now in suit
and in judgment, s-verity-live or eighty thousand
dollars of good claims, which during ihe present year
she (ms b en pressing to art i>sue, with a view to dis
charge fully her obligations to the public. With these
means, and her cash in hand, she cannot fad to pay
by the Ist of October her whole circulation (now lit
ile over thirty-live thousand dollars) with all her other
indebtedness, wli.tli is merely nominal.
Thus circumstanced, ihe W'estern Bank of Geor
gia will in resuming her stadon arnoug the Georgia
Banks, seek no more credit than she deserves, and
can fairly nr intain in a legitimate couase of business.
Knowing her condition to be sound, I pledge whatever
reputation I may have, that no business will be done,
during my connection with the hank, that may endan
ger the rights of those who confide in the goodness of
her bills.
An Agency of the Bank will be fixed at Columbus,
Ga., which is designed as a convenience to the Banks
and people of ihe interior having settlements to
make with her. All notes payable at the Agency,
will be redeemed with specie, on demand new and
forever. Letters to the Cashier will be addressed to
Columbus, Georgia.
R. A. GREENE, Cashier.
Rome, 22d August, IS-43. 29—3 l
The Georgian, at Rome, Constitutionalist, Augus
ta Journal and Standard, Milledgevillj, Messengei
and Teh graph, Macon, Jeffersonian, West Point,
and all the Columbus papers will insert three times
l and forward accounts for payment.
GERMAN, INDIAN AND I’IIOMSONIAN
OR,
PRIMITIVE, PRACTICAL, BOTANICO
IYSESJCCAX. SCHOOL,
| Bocated seven miles Past of JMarion , near Hamburg
IN uniting these several Medical Systems or modes
ol practice, Dr. B. R. THOMAS, the Principal
of the School, begs leave to state, for the information
of the afflicted and public generally, that he has been
many years engaged m the practice of Medicine, and
has di voted much of his time, labor and practice, with
many of the most intelligent and successful German
and Indian Doctors, boih in the United States and
Canada, to the treatment of acute and chronic dts
ea es of every name, stage and type, and of the most
malignant character ; and iias, by practicing with them,
acquired a thorough knowledge of al! their valuable
secret Recipes and manner of treatment, which is far
superior to any thing known or taught m the Medical
Schools, and which ha3 been successful, by the bles
sings of the Almighty, in restoring to health, hundreds
and thousands of persons that had been treated for a
number of years by many of the most learned and
s ientific Physicians of the day, and pronounced to be
entirely beyond the reach of rernedv, and given over
•tike. Yet by thesimple,efficacious Vegetable Medi
tcines, not poisons, they were snatched from the jaws of
the giim monster, death, and restored to health, the
greatest of all earthly blessings; for what is riches
and elegant dwellings, without health to enjoy them.
Health is the poor man’s wealth, and the rich man’s
bliss. To a man laboring under disease, the world is
little better than a dreary solitude, a cheerless waste
enlivened by no variety, a joyless scene cheered by
n i social sweets ; for the soul in a diseased body, like
a martyr m his dungeon, may retain its value, but it
lias lost its usefulness.
Will be added to this institution, as soon as the ne
c issaty arrangements can be made, an infirmary—the
old, Trot, tepid, shower, sulphur and ihe German, Rus
sian and I'homsonian Medicated Vapor Baths; and
every thing that can possibly be of any advantage in
i estorieg the sick to health, or relieving suffering hu
manity, will be promptly and constantly attended to;
and where the student will learn by practical experi
ence, (i lie best kind of logic,) the true principles of
the heaing art. Price of tuition will be §2OO, payable
in advn -ce.
All persons afflicted with lingering and chron
ic disea ts, (of any name, state, stage or type, for we
have b*‘ tied disease in a thousand forms.) who cannot
couveni ntly apply in person, will send the symptoms
ol their lisea<es in writing to Dr. B. R. Thomas,
llambii , Ala , where Medicines will be prepared in
the besi manner to snit each case. Although they
may hav : b-**n of nunv years standing, and treated
bv a doz n different D ictor . it is no good reason whv
they can ot be cured by the subscriber. Persons liv
ing at a ostance must expect to pav for their Medi
cine? wh l they get them, as no Medicines will b •
sent fro-v -ho - ffico on a credit.
iCA* .etters addressed to the subscriber will not
he taken om the office, unless post-vaid.
Nov. 1 i39 45:f B. R. THOMAS.
CAUTION.
“S’ OST on Saturday, the o-h instant, at or rear
S A the mills of Messrs William & James Biair.
in the tenth district of Muscogee county. Georgia, a
NOTE of HAND for one lundvcd ard fifty dollars,
made bv the undersigned, a-’d pavable to Wifiam
Blair, dated September 4, 1840. and payable three
days after date. An parsons are hereby cautioned
against trading fir said note, as it was never deliver- j
id to the said Blair, nor an v ronside-aiion given font, t
AMOS SCHUMPERT. 1
September 7, 18-10. 3 !| 3t
From the Nashville Union.
‘EVERY HUE OF OPINION.’
A Tippecanoe Text-Book.
There is not a man in the Republic so ad
mirably qualified to be a candidate for the
party ‘composed of fractions ot every hue of
opinion,’ from Hie red hot tedetaust to the
run-m.n abolitionist, as General Harrison.
Their motto is ‘change’ i every sense ot the
word —and the facts show that they have the
most unprincipled changeling lor a candidate
that walks the earth’s surface. Thelike was
never known before—never will he equalled
in the future. We rely not so mucl ou the
true assertions and reliable certificates of
others to prove this, as upon Harrison’s own
writings and speeches, which neither himself
nor friends dare deny. Look, fellow-citizens,
look lor yourselves, and wonder what can be
the condition of a party that is compelled
to resort to such a man for a candidate!
Ilurrison says he believes candi
dates are bound to avow their prin
ciples. Hear him.
Extract fiom Gen. Harrison’s letter, dated
Cincinnati, Sept. 17,1822.
Sir; In your last letter you recommended
to the candidates at the ensuing election, to
publish their political creeds, that ihe electors
may have a lair opportunity of choosing
those whose sentiments best iccord with
their own. I have ever believed that every
elector has a right to make ths call upon
those who offei their set vices to the people,
and that the candidates are bound to answer
it.
Harrison says candidates are not
bound to avow their principles.
Hear him again.
Extract from Gen. Harrison’s speech at Fort Meigs
m 1840, as reported in the Letroit (whig) Adver
tiser.
I will now, feiiovv-ci iztns, give you my
reasons for having refused to give pledges
and opinions more freely than I have done
since my nomination to the Presidency. Ma
ny of the statements published upon this sub
ject are by no means correct, but it is true
that it is my opinion that no pledges should
be made by an individual when in nomina
tion lor anv office in the gilt of the people.
Mar rison says he is not and nev
er was a black cockade federalist.
Hs own declarations follow:
However, to prove the reverse of this, I
ha ve been called a federalist. Well, what is
a federalist? 1 recollect what Ihe word for
merly signified, and there are many others
present who recollect its former signification
also. They know that Ihe federal party
were accused of a design to strengthen the
hands of the General Government at the ex
pense of the separate States. That accu
sation could not nor cannot apply to me. I
was brought up after the strictest manner of
Virginia anti-Federalism. St. Paul himself
was not a greater devotee to the doctrines of
the Pharisees, than was I, hy inclination and
a lather’s precepts and example, to anli-Fed
} eralism.— Fort Meigs speech.
lie alluded to the evidence upon which
the Enquirer sought to fasten the accusation
that lie was a black cockade Federalist — i. e.
—the remarks of Mr. Randolph in the Con
gress of the United Spates. He said that
the attack of Mr. Randolph was met at the
moment it was made and effectually disprov
ed.— lb.—as reported in the Ohio (Whig)
Confederate.
Harrison says that the head of
the Black Cockade Administration
was a pure patriot.
Hear him!
For Mr. Adams, (old J din) said Mr. 11.,
I entertained at the lime, (1799-ISOO) and
have ever since entertained, the greatest re
spect. I believe him to be an honest man
and a pure patriot, and his conduct during
that session proved him to be such. — Harri
son's own speech in reply to Randolph , March
29, 1826.
Indisputable proof that Harrison
was a Black Cockade Federalist.
Examine the f.llowing extract of Mr. Pe
ter Mill’s speech:
Mr. Piesidenl, Gen. Harrison and myself,
sir, are old and iniin.ate acquaintances. 1
have known him personally and intimately
tor more than forty years. L know him, to
use a familiar adage, ‘like a book’--and per
mit me to say, that he has never been any
thing else than a zealous and avowed Fed
eralist. I have this from personal observation.
I was in Cincinnaii when Gen. Harrisor. re
turned from Congress, at one time during the
administration of ihe elder Adams, with a
black cockade on his hat. All the Federalists
in the city followed his example, ind hoisted
the odious badge of Toryism. I know it, be
cause I saw it with my own eves —Extract
from a speech of Mr. Peter Mills , an aged
citizen of high respectability , of Jefferson
County, Indiana.
Captain Fowler, extensively known as a dis
tinguished member of Congress from Ken
tu ky, replies to a letter from Hon. Henry
Daniel as fu lows:
Lexington, June 27,1840.
Dear Sir: In answer to your letter of this
date, I will say that 1 was in Congress, as a
member, during the great struggle between
Jefferson and Adams, and know the fact,
that William Henry Harrison was upon the
side of Mr. Adams. He was a Federalist,
and wore the black cockade. Ido not recol
lect his speech upon the reduction of the
United States Army, though I have a file of
the Aurora in which his speech appeared
against reducing the army. My health will
not enab e me to answer more fully with re
gard to the exciting scenes of that eventful
period of our history:
Respectfully, vour humble servant,
JOHN FOWLER.
Capt. Henry Daniel.
The following is the affidavit of Judge Price,
a venerable and highly respectable citißen
of Ohio:
Erie County, ss. Before me, Frederick P■
Siephens, one of the Judges of the Court of
Common Pleas, of the county of Erie, per
sonally appeared Robert Price, who, being
duly qualified, sa th, that he was personally
acquainted with William H. Harrison, the
present whig candidate for the office ol Pre
sident of the United States, at the time of the
great po.itical excitement when the Federal
paity wore the black cockade as r badge of
distinction. That he frequently s*w him and
heard him converse on political matters at
that time, and lhat he knows nim to have
been a member of the Ftderal party at that
time —has frequently seen him wear the black
cockade badge of Federalism attached to his
hat—and that he distinctly remembers hear
ing him observe, its argument in favor of the
sedition law, in presence of Charles Pember
ton and others, that he thought it was pro
per for the President, the heads of the de
partments. and members of Congress, to have
a shield thr cron round them, that they should
not be in the month of every blackguard that
icalked the streets.
And further the deponent saith not.
ROBERT PRICE.
Affirmed to and subscribed before me this
•20th day of June, in the year of our Lord,
; 1840.
FREDERICK P. STEPHENS.
Harrison claims membership of
an Abolition Society.
In his letter to Thurston and others dated
on the 2d June last, Harrison endorses the
contents of one of his lives, published ‘by
Cos). C. S. Todd and Benjamin Drake, Esq.’
In that pamphlet, (page 182,) is an address
of his when a candidate for (Jougress, in ISS2
of which the following is an extract:
TO THE PUBLIC,
Fellow Citizens: Being called suddenly home to
attend my sick family. I have but a few moments 10
answer a few of the calumnies which are in circula
tion concerning me.
lam accnstd of being friendly to slavery. Prom
my earliest youth to the present moment, I have been
the ardent friend of human libeity. At the age of
EIGHTEEN I became a MEMBER of an ABO
LITION SOCIETY, established at Richmond, the
object of which was to amt liorate the condition of
slaves, and PROCURE their FREEDOM by EV
ERY LEGAL MEANS. My venerable friend,
ofClermont county, was alsoa member
of this society, and has lately given me a certificate
that I was one. The oblioations which I then came
under I have fcathfully performed.
WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON.
If Gen. Harrison then avowed that he fell
all the weight of the obligations under which
he came as a member of the Abolition Soc e
ty, he was of course in good fellowship with
abolitionists.
The following affidavit of a gentleman of
Cincinnati, Ohio, said by the Cincinnati Ad
verliser to he a druggist of that city, and
one of the most respectable citizens of Cin
cinnati, is, no doubt, entitled to credit:
The State of Ohio, ?
Hamilton county, y SB ’
Before me, the subscriber, a Justice of the
Peace, in and for said county, personally ap
peared Isreal Brown, jr., and being duly
sworn, says that about three months ago he
was on the Ben Franklin steamboat, in com
pany with Gen. W. H. Harrhon, and heard
him say that he was an abolitionist, and that
he was certain of getting the Slate of New
York, because they knew him to be an abo
litionist.
ISRAEL BROWN, Jr.
Sworn to and subsciibed before me on the
first day of June, A. D 1840.
J. H. GE TZENDANNER,
Justice o! the Peace.
This is to certify, that we, the undersigned,
heard Israel Brown, Jr. stale at the lime
(say three months ago) of General Harrison’s
saying he was an abolitionist, and was cer
tain of getting- the state of New York be
cause they know him to be an abolitionist;
and we should further state that we have
repeatedly heard him state the same—and as
to Mr. Brown’s character, we should take
his word, and oath, as soon as General Har
rison’s, or any other man’s.
FRANCIS N. CARY,
J. C. M'LUNE,
J. C. MILLER,
MALCOLM MURRAY*,
G. W. RIDDLE.
June 5, 1840.
Lieutenant Davis, of Frederick county,
Virginia, heard Gen. Harrison made the dec
laration that he was au Abol.tionist, on
board the steamboat, and shortly afterwards
this fact was stated on his authority, in the
Warrenton paper, and in tfie Richmond En
quirer.
He says lie never was a member
of an Abolition Society.
Can it be possible? It is even so. Hear
him: In the Wilmington N. C. Advertiser is
Harrison’s answer to to a letter from Gover
nor Owen. In reply to the question, ‘are
you now, or have you ever been a member
of an abolition society?’ Harrison vvriles:
Cincinnati. Feb. 16, 1840.
Dear Sir: Your letter of the 31st ult. reach
ed my residence at North Bend, by the mail
yesterday, from whence it was sent to me at
this place.
You ask me whether f now am, or ever
have been a member of an Abolition Sociely.
I answer decidedly NO!—So far from be
ing a member of such a society, I did not
know, but as you knew it, viz:‘by common
fame, that there was, or ever had been a so
ciety of that description in any of tfie North
western States until three weeks ago!
Harrison equivocates about the
word ‘Abolition’ when speaking to
the South.
In his letter dated ‘North Bend, June 1,
1840,’ to Air. Lyons, of Virginia, (where tiie
word Abolition is in rather bad odour,) he
writes as follows, though with an .injunction
at the end in these words, ‘I do not wish
what I have said above to be published!’
‘ln answer to the inquiry why I used the
word ‘abolition’ in designating a society of
which I was a member in Richmond, in the
year 179!, instead of the word ‘humane,’
which is known to be the only one by which
the Society was really distinguished, all that
I can say upon the subject is, that if I did
really term it an Abolition society, a fact
which I can hardly believe, (for I have not
been able to see tfie paper containing my
address to the people of the district in 1822,
ii must have been from forgeltulness, which
might easily happen after a lapse of thirty
one years.’
Harrison does not equivocate
about the word Abolition when
speaking to the North.
Dr. Bailey, editor of the Philanthropist, an
abolition paper printed at Cincinnati, in his
paper of the 30th of June last, sa vs:
‘ln two interviews we had with Gen. Har
rison on this subject, about four months since,
he was at pains to assure us, that he fad
himself belonged loan ‘abolition society’ at;
Richmond, Va. He did not hesitate about ,
the phrase; he did not use any other. ‘Ab- j
olition society’ seemed the only name which
he knew or cared to know. Besides, we j
know iliat he has been in the habit of using|
tlie term ‘abolition’ as the distinctive title of j
the society at Richmond.’
Harrison is not tampering with
the abolitionists—
Say his friends; while public speeches are
made, and the columns of the federal news
papers are filled to prove that he is not tam
pering with them.
Harrison is tampering witli the
Abolitionists —
Says the evidence. In addition to Dr. Bai
ley’s statement above given, read the follow*
ing letter from Mr. Calhoun, a leading whig
member of Congress, to his friend and con
stituent, Judge Morris:
Washington. Ftb. 4, 1840,
Sir: I observed in the doings of the anti
slaverv convention at Springfield, a resolu
tion denouncing Gen. Harrison. I think
this premature, to say the least of it. I have
seen a letter from the general, in which he
pronounces the story circulating in the press
or West, (not certain which,) that he, while
Governor of Indiana, for ten years, did
every thing in his power to spread slavery, a
foul slander, and speaks of it with great in
dignation, and says that it would be impossi
ble for him to do any thing of the kind, either
privately or publicly, for the reason, he says,
that while only eighteen years of age, in \ ir
ginia, he joined an abolition society, and,
*iih the Qlber members of the same, pledge!
1 himself to do every thing in his power to ef
fect the emancipation of slaves—that he was
to inherit a large property of slaves, and sub
sequently not only emancipated his own, but
purchased others for the purpose ot emanci
pating them. This is what the General him
self says. I write you this lor such use as
you may think proper, except putting it in
the newspapers.
WILLIAM B. CALHOUN.
Hon. Judge Morris.
This letter was used privately among tlie
abolitionists, as we shall see. On the 21th of
May there was an abolition Convention at
Boston. Mr. Abel Brown, a delegate from
Mr. Calhoun’s District, made a speech, of
wh'ch the following is an extract. He said ;
‘Mr. W. B, Calhoun has written home let
ters from Washington to convince the aboli
tionists that they were wrong in opposing
Harrison. Copies were privately handed
round among the abolitionists by the whigs,
and he (Mr. Brown) had seen some of them,
m which Mr Calhoun stated that General
Harrison was with us (the abolitionists) and
would go all lengths, and he (Mr. Calhoun)
had this from authority which vvjs understood
to mean General Harrison himself.’
Harrison has supported abolition
ism, according to his own showing.
In his all sided speech at Chevoit, he said:
‘Should I be asked, if there is no way by
which the General Government can aid the
cause of Emancipation, I answer, that it has
long been an object near my heart to see the
whole surplus revenue appropriated to that
object. With the sanction of the States
holding the slaves, there appears to me no
constitutional objection to its being thus ap
plied, embracing not only the colonization of
those that may be otherwise freed, but the
purchase of the freedom of others.’
Again:
‘I was the first person to introduce into
Congress ihe proposition that all the country
above Missouri, which having no inhabitants,
was free from the objection made to Missouri
and Arkansas should never have slavery ad
mitted into it;’
In addition to this, as a member of the
Ohio Legislature, he voted instructions to ihe
members of C,ingress from that State to op
pose the admission of any Territory into the
Union with the privilege ol holding slaves.
The journals show it.
Harrison has opposed abolition
ism—
Say his friends, because he once cast a vole
in favor of the admission of Missouri with
slave privilege—and because he says in his
late letter to Lyons, that no man south of
Mason and Dixon’s line lias suffered more
than himself ou account of supporting south
ern interest.
Harrison pretends to be the poor
man’s friend.
In a letter to J. H. Pleasants, dated at
Richmond, Sept 15, 1836, Harrison said:
‘So lar from being willing to sell men for
debt which they were unwilling to discharge,
I am, and ever have been, opposed to all im
prisonment lor debt. Fortunately I have it in
my power to show that such has been my
established opinion, and that in a public ca
pacity, I avowed and acted upon it.”
And in his letter to the editor of the Cincin
nati Adveiliser, in 1821, Harrison said:
‘So lor from advocating the abominable
principles attributed to me by your cot respon
dent, 1 think that imprisonment for debt un
der any circumstances but that where fraud
is alleged, is at war with tlie best principles
of our constitution, and ought to be abolish
ed.’
Harrison approved of a law to
prevent poor men from voting.
A copy of the law which he approved, and
which if he had not approved, would never
have been a law, while he was Governor of
Indiana Territory, is before us, certified by
the Secretary as a true copy from the manu
script records in his office, and under the
broad seal of the State. Congress gave him
the power to veto this Jaw, and lie not only
refused to kill it, but signed and approved it.
Hear the law itself.
‘lt is therefore enacted, That every free
male inhabitant of the age of 21 years, resi
dent in the Territory, and who hath been a
citizen in any Stale in the Union, or who has
been two years resident in this Territory, and
holds a freehold in fifty acres of land within
any county of the same, or any less quantity
in the county in which he shall reside, which,
with the improvements made thereon, shall be
of the value of one hundred dollars, or has
paid for and in virtue of a deed of convey
ance for further assurances from a person
vested with the fee, is in actual possession of
five acres of land subject to taxation m the
counly wherein lie shall be resident, shall be
and are hereby declared to he duly qualified
electors of represeniatives for the counties in
which they are respectively resident’
* * ’* #
JESSE B. THOMAS,
Speaker of the House of Representatives.
B CHAMBERS,
President of the Council.
Approved—September 17lh, ISO 7.
Wm. Henry Harrison.
Under the same circumstances lie
approved a law to sell and whip
white m€n and women unable to
pay court fees.
The following is from the law under the
Broad Seal of the State of Indianan
Sec. 11. H anv person shall unlawfully as
sault or threaten another in a menacing man
ner, or shall strike or wound another, he shall,
upon conviction thereof, be fined in a sum
not exceeding one hundred dollars, and the
; court betbre whom such conviction shall be
! had, may, in their discretion, cause the offen
-1 der to enter into his recognizance with sure
ty for tlie peace and good behaviour, tor a
term not exceeding one year.
See. 80. When any person or persons shall,
on conviction of any crime or breach of any
penal law be sentenced to pay a fine or fines,
with or without the costs of prosecution, it
shall and may be lawful for the court before
whom such conviction shall be had, to order
the sheriff to sell or hire the person or per
sons so convicted, to service to any persons
who will pay ttie said fine and costs for such
term of time as the said court shall ueem rea
sonable; and if’ such person or persons, so
sentenced and hired or sold, shall abscond
from the serv.ceol liisor HER master or mis
tress, before the term of such servitude shall
be expired, be or SHE so absconding shall on
conviction before a justice of the peace, be
whipped with thirty nine stripes, anil moreo
ver serve two days for every one so lost.
Sec. 31 The judges of the several courts
of record in this Territory shall give this act
in charge to the grand jury at each and every
court in which a grand jury shall be sworn.
JESSE’B. TAOMAS,
Speaker of the House of Representatives.
B. CHAMBERS.
President of the Council
Approved, 17th Sept. 1907.
WM. HENRY HARRISON.
Under the same circumstances lie
approved a law to whip such white
\N OMEN and men For trading with
servants as were too pool to pay the
penalty.
1 he tenth section of an act concerning ser
vants approved by him, is as follows:
‘Sec. 10. No person whatsoever shall buy,
sell, or receive of, to or from any servant any 1
coin or commodity whatsoever; without the
leave or consent ol the master or owner of
such servant, and ifany person shall presume
to deal with any servant without sueh leave
or consent, he or she so offending, shall for
feit and pay to the master or owner of such
servant, four times the value of the thing so
bought, sold, or received, to be recovered
with costs by an action upon the case,in any
court of Common Pleas of this Territory; and
shad also forleit and pay the further sum of
twenty dollars to any person who will sre for
tire same, or receive on his or HER bare bach
thirty-mue Isshes well laid on, at tfie public
whipping post, but shaft nevertheless be li.b'e
to pay the costs of such suit.
The 4th section of an act concerning pri
sons, and prison bounds, approved by Harri
son, is as inflows:
‘Sec. 4. Ifanv person or persons shall di
rectly or indirectly, by any way or means how
soever, without the knowledge or privity oi
the keeper, convey any instrument or tool,
or other thing whatsoever, to any prisoner,
or into any prison, whereby any prisoner
might break the prison, or work himself or
heieelf unlawfully out of the same, eve
ry person so offending shall forfeit and pay
such fine, as by the direction of the court shall
be imposed, not exceeding one hundred dol
lars, according to the nature of the cause of
the prisoner’s commitment, or suffer such cor
poreal punishment, not exceeding FORTY
STRIPES, as the court shall inflict; and if
it shall so happen that the prisoner shall make
his or her escape, by meansofany instrument,
tool, or other things so conveyed, without the
knowledge and privity of the keeper, the per
son so conveying the same shall he liable to
pay all such sums of money as the prisoner
stood committed for, if on civil process, and
shall also have inflicted on him or HER all
such punishment as the prisoner would be liable
to, if a criminal, and had been convicted of
the charge lor which he or she had been com
mitted, unless such prisoner would be liable
to capital punishment, in which case the per
son assisting in such escape shall be punished
by fine, imprisonment, WHIPPING, PILLO
RY or sitting on the gallows icith a rope a
buut his or her neck , or any one or more ol
said punishments, as the conn having cogni
zance thereof shall think proper to inflet.’
It was light (reasonable)’ to punish these
offences, but it was wrong, tyrannical, barba
rous, to punish women so ignominiously. It
has been truly said, ‘should a distracted wife
attempt, by the means described, to place in
an unfortunate husband’s hands the means of
an escape from the gallows, the law provid
ed that she might be FINED. WHIPPED,
PL ACED IN THE PILLORY, or be con
fined on the gallon's ivith a rope around HER
neck! Even for conveying tools into a jail,
by the use of which a debtor husband might
make his escape, the Court was authorized
to fine the fond and faithful wife one hundred
dollars, and urder her to receive FORTY
STRIPES.’
Harrison assented to, signed, anti
approved, these barbarous laws.
Had he refused his assent, as Congress had
given him the power to do, they would not
have and sgraced the Territorial Statutes, i o
p r event imposition on this point, we qu-'t
from the ordinance of 1787 for the G.\. .
merit of the Territory Northwest of the G....
the following extract —see pages 5-6 of the
Ordinance, Revised Laws of Indiana, publish
ed in 1808:
“And the Governor, Legislative f Uouncil :
and House of Representatives, shall have au
thority to make laws, in all cases, lor the goo
government of the district, not repugnant to
the principles and articles in this ordinance
established and declared. And all bills having
passed by a majority in the House, and by a
majority in the Council, shall be referred to the
Governor for his assent; but no bill or legis-
la live act whatever shall be of any force with
out his name.” 0
So much for the “Poor man’s friend,” that
the independent residents of log cabins are in
vited bv the Federal leaders to suppoit.
llu ri isoti in favor of and opposed
to a United States Bank.
In a letter to the Cincinnati Inquisitor dat
ed Sept. 19, 1822, and signed by Gentr..-
Harrison, is the following clause. 1
‘I believe that the charter given to the
Bank of the United Stales Was tt nconstitution
al— it being not one of those measures neces
sary to carry any of the expressly granted
powers into effect; and, whilst my votes a.
Congress will show that I will take any con
stitutional means to revoke the charter, my
votes in the State Legislature will equally
show that I am opposed to those which are
unconstitutional and violent and which will
bring us in collision with the General Govern
ment.’
Well, if a United States Bank be r.ot neces
sary to carry into effect the powers expiessly
delegated to Congress by the Constitution, of
course it is unconstitutional, for upon no other
spot of the Constitution do the friends of the
Bank place their claim. If, then, it be uncon
stitutional, Gen. Harrison could not sign its
charter, if he were President, without violat
ing his oath of office, and yet in his letter to
Snerrod Williams he Mys?
‘ The question then for the to answer is,
whether under the c'ircums'ances you state,
if elected to the office of President. I would
si_Mi an act to charter another bank. I rn
swer, I would, if it were clearly trsce ta: t
that the public interest, in relation so the <
ieeiton and disbursement of the revenue w
mnterallv suffer without one, and the.e \v
unequivocal manifestations of public o, u.
in its favor.’
Gen. Harrisotf will and will net
exercise the veto power.
The Clcaveland correspondent of the Nr - .
York Evening P.ist declares that in a speech
ai that place Gen. Harrisott said he would
approve any law that Congress Plight pass* if
elected. In his letter 1o Verplanck and others
of New York republished in the Banner of
the 13th. Gen. Harrison says, ‘I ao not consi
der the President a constituent branch of the
Legislature.’ Now, tlie Legislature is the
aw making power, and no act, under the
Constitution, can become a taw without the
President’s signature. Is it not absurd then’
for a candidate for the Presidency to take the
ground that the Executive has no voice in
making the laws? ‘Phis policy might, to some
extent have a half-way tendency to sh tld
Hairison from the odium incurred by signing
these monstrous Indiana laws-—but even this
policy he has adopted within a verv short
period, for .n his fetter to Harmnr ’Denny,
dated Dec 2, ISu9, he speaks ol the principles
wlii.-h should govern the Executive, as fol
lows: *
k I hat in the exercise of the veto power, he*
should iin.il his rejection of bills to, Ist. Such
as are unconstitutional; 2 Such as lend to
ei croachon th? rights of Stales or individuate
1 3 1. Such, as involv'.rg deep interests, may^
[NO. 32