Connersville Watchman (Newspaper) - August 1, 1835, Connersville, Indiana L MA sr VV A S. W. Sii 9 IN 'A HE AFTER can dwell with a People who their and ATO u 62. 1" FROM MAJOR Downino of ilic 27th 53 hit at the mania ofM The present speculation in in 73 years of has created six I in 1 in got from my tower up in 2 in the U. and 2 ' the ana have a bond ' about one half of E W A T C H M A 1" FROM MAJOR Catholic church at present Downino of ilic 27th 53 hit at the mania ofM The present speculation in in 73 years of has created six I in 1 in got from my tower up in 2 in the U. and 2 ' the ana have a bond ' about one half of E W A T C H M A in ] ' and now any body that wants The net income of of Great Britain 1, 1835. We have made below a lengthy extract from the Report made by Mr. during the of on let ern come to and for the year ending on u out with a good Ten - of January 1835,was forty-six subject of Executive pine to the and ' and a half pounds more spruce and hemlock hove in than expenditure for the same period was 1 YOU can and the trees so thick leaving a surplus of | there room for a to fly million and a I never was so struck During the first five months of in my life was when I got present the number of to see how they was | at New from foreign has j all going ahead They've been been 810, being 15 more than in the i swapping farms with one and i; corresponding months of 1834. The | buying and selling bonds of timber number of passengers 9,653less lands all over they've 6,293 than that of last to be rich as They've a new school and got it and they've got a meetin house pretty well under body is as there as quantity and hey begin It has been estimated thai the an consumption of coffee in the Uni- j I ted is not less than 80,000,000 supposing that the average | in a ' j i n is 12'c. per lb. this quantity of having incorpora ted into a They say they Of 96 robbers lately confined in a tainly shall if the Quebec Railroad prison in 29 were through as they expect and right along in front of Uncle Jewish of 1 hey had a meeting while is estimated at 30,000,of which and appointed a 20,000 live in rm i see it intimated is a powerful of the greatest efforts of its author's great We recommend the extract which we have made to the peculiar consideration of our We are of the opinion that there are very few persons in this Republic who have the most distant conception of the actual extent of Executive It is so great that the wisest men of the Nation confidently predict the speedy overthrow of Liberty unless it be speedily The approaching election for the Presidency will have a if not a decisive bearing upon this The election of the Office holder's Van will long fasten the People down under the corrupting and despotic would next claim the reflection to your but as or manner it contributes to a greater part of are I urease so vastly the extent of of recent they will properly fall under the next to which the So long as offices were considered directs the attention of youi to be conferred on the and which they will now the and for proceed to and not for the the circumstances which or gain of the or his have contributed to the great increase and so long as it was the executive patronage of the ji of the government to continue in most are the those who faithfully performed great increase of the expenditure of its in point within the last eight to has risen from to not j including payments on account of the | public a corresponding increase of contractors and dependent on the I the vast quantity of land to which the 1 Indian title in the same I been and has been suddenly thrown into the accompanied with the patronage holding Indian and removing the Indians to the was limited to the mere power of nominating to accidental or to newly created and of exercise but a moderate either over the body of the or of the office holders But when this practice was when instead of being considered as public trusts to be conferred on the were regarded as the spoils of to be bestowed as rewards for partisan without respect to when it became to be that the and also a great in- j who hold hold by the tenure of the number and influence ot of this it do 1 r I registers and them down 1 he People u u r ji j those who do not look to go oat and examine the help the Engineer up along through It is thought if the Railroad goes through it wont be but a few years before will be the largest place any where down f had a very agreeable time in they were all so glad to sec me I know but they would eat me Keziah put me into the same bed that she fixed up for the Gineral when he She's kept the bed room ever since jest as she fixed it for the and whenever she lias any visiters she takes em all into the bed and shows em how was goin to entertain the and tells cm over the whole and she always sheds tears when she gets along where he turned about and went back to Washington without coming to She allowed any body to sleep in that bed till I went she always calls it the she said she thought 1 was so near akin to the that i should do most as well as the Gineral and so I should sleep in it whether or no. It's a capital good bed only it's a little too soft for this warm When 1 got into it seemed to be like jumping into a hay mow of And it made me sleep so sound 1 was as much as two hours in waking up next Fve got to see about putting my paper to sol haven't time to-day to tell about the rest of the folks that Colonel Crockett stands some j chance of being run down in his the Tennessee who i competes with him for We j wont believe a word of Davy can i dive deeper than any of and | comc up to We take it i I he can skin all the huntsmen in that i by way of giving I appetite for Huntsman is himself a decided White is said now contain 15,000 I teen years it was owned by a few and probably could not have I mustered of fifty learn by a ter from a gentleman in Litchfield in | that a panther of a size was killed in that town in the 3d j inst. by a couple of It was first j j discovered by Mr. Jacob Parker and ' his The panther measured | feet in the opinion of says our i this animal has been lurking ' about our town for a number of for June | mentions several cases in which about j 100 slaves have been by | if agreeing to go to the General Government for their daily bread have a stake of incalculable price in the coming Presidential Let the irue lover of his Country divest himself of all party prejudices and and give this matter that serious reflection which its magnitude ascertain the extent of executive the first subject to the resolution directs the attention of the it becomes necessary to ascertain previously the of the revenue and the and the number of persons in the employment of the or who receive from the public all of taken constitute the elements of patronage is mainly the returns of the and for the year 1834,are not yet your have selected the year 1833, as being the last of which and certain returns can be result of their investigation on all these will be found in a table herewith which contains a statement of the amount of the Detroit Journal says Buying selling is the order of the Our city is filled with j in or about the jaunts tors who are on tip Several through the and so but 1 must do that another Lion's this noble two varieties the brown or exist in South retreating before the European the dark colored is the strongest and their strength is Well authenticated under employed in the branch of the connected with the pubic all of which have greatly the influence of executive tronage over an extensive and | that the most growing and I portions of the In this the recent practice of the must be taken into reserving to individual Indians a portion of the best land of the to which the title of the nation is to be disposed of under sanction of the on the of agents appointed solely by and which has prevailed to so great an extent of lyin the southwest section of is tc imagine a device better to augment the patronage of the with to give a rise to I to deprave and corrupt the without benefit to the But as greatly as causes have added to the force of patronage of there are others of a which i have contributed lo give it a far greater and more dangerous At the head of these should be the so greatly of from ten to twenty sand have already been made Governor Cass has disposed of front of his as far back as i Lamed street for one hundred thousand Extensive improvements i are rapidly making in our ty authorities are authorised to obtain 1 a loan of one hundred thousand and ourselves think seriously of I I advertising sale a number of bad i that a lion will carry an ox or a horse with nearly as great ease as ji The legislature of at its a fox would a A young lion ij the last made liberal been known to carry a good sized horse a mile from the spot where he killed it and an instance occurred in the where a lion carried ofT a two year old and when his tract or was followed by the hunters for five hours on throughout the whole distance the carcase only once or twice was in all to to 3 literary institutions in that to the for the ment of the debts of the the erection of the annually to the same i ito enable them to pay the salaries of 1 their and to lower the rates of boarding and and have touched the to the Franklin The said man gays he saw a lion at the Cape sums to be paid out of the treasury take a heifer in his the legs trailed on the he carried it a cat would a and leaped a without the least Like all the feline the lion in for the grass and reeds VAN best we have ever post and for the year 1833; the expenditures for the same arranged under the various heads of the number of and persons in the employ ofthe or who receive money from the public From this table it appears that the aggregate amount of the revenue for the was and ofthe disbursements that the number of and persons in the employment of the government is 60,-294, of which there belongs to the civil including persons in civil employ attached to the army and 12,144; to the military and Indian 6,643; to the including marine 0,499; to the post 31,917; all of whom hold their places or from the with the exception of the judicial are liable to be dismissed at his If to the there be added 39,549 we shall have a grand total of 100,179 who are in the employ of the or dependent directly on the public as great as is this it gives a very imperfect conception of the sum total of those are furnishing or otherwise are connected and more or less dependent on the and of liable to be influenced by its the number of with their even be If to these be the almost less host of who are Van is his toast to to displace those in or to heads of for the first time of Wolf celebration in It was The Slate of and ui fountains or in narrow the Key and our political arch is he will spring from nine lo yards at a and can re- That God's peat for a short secure Pennsylvania to me. If I ' tiie of the | lose I am a done over tailor or the by a few quick j. 1 no more lo amazing can. seize even the or in England this the | on the of of the prisoner's Instances have been known of to a strange and their thus carrying a lion twenty gravely answered the before sinking under the attacks question by if he will of Us leave the they become of whom some conception may he formed of the immense subject to the influence of executive to ascertain the full extent of this and the prodigious it exerts over public opinion and the movements of the we in addition to the amount revenue and and the number of persons dependent upon the or in iis take into the estimate a variety circumstances which contribute to add to the force and extent of In the regular of the from office persons well and who had faithfully performed their in order to fill their places with those who are recommended on the ground that they belonged to the party in committee feel that they are touching ground which may be considered of a party and were it consistently with the discharge of their they would wholly avoid as their object is to into facts as contributing to increase the patronage ofthe executive without looking to the or desiring to cast censure on those in but while they cautiously avoid any remark of a party as inconsistent with the gravity of the and incompatible with the intention of the Senate ' in directing the they trust that they are incapable of shrinking from the performance ofthe important | and solemn duty confided to thoroughly investigating to the bottom of a subject as they the fate of our political institutions and the liberty of the by declining to investigate fully and as regards its character and every measure or practice of the government connected with the whether it has or has not been a subject of party speaking of the practice of removing from office on as of recent of comprehended under the causes which have of late contributed to the increase of executive your committee are lhat cases of removals may be found in the early stages of the but they are so and exercised so little lhat ' they may be said to constitute rather lhat forming a practice It is only within the last few that removals from office have been as a and for the first time an opportunity has been of testing the tendency of the and witnessing the mighty increase which it has given lo the force of executive and the entire and fearful in conjunction with other it is in the character of our political Nor and party it is easy to see that the direct and inevitable is to convert the entire body of those in office into corrupt and supple instruments of and to raise up a host of and subservient ready for every base and Were a premium offered for the best means of extending to the utmost the power of to destroy the love of and to subserviency and man to encourage vice and discourage in a to prepare for the subversion of and the establishment of no scheme more perfect could be and such must be the ofthe with whatever intention or to whatever extent connected with this portion oi the your committee cannot adverting to the similar in its character and growing out of act ofthe 15 1820, which among other from and after its all district and other disbursing officers therein to be appointed under the the shall be appointed for the term of four object of congress in passing this lo enforce a more faithful performance of duty on the pari of the disbursing by withholding reappointments from those who had not faithfully discharged their without intending to reject those who At first the practice conformed to the intention ofthe and thereby the good intended was accomplished without materially increasing the patronage of the but a very great change has which has in the opinion of your defeated the object of the and at the same time added greatly to the influence of Faithful performance of duly no longer insures a of The consequence is feeling of on the the part of the increasing as his term approaches its with a great increase of the number of those who desire his followed by an active competition between the occupant and those who his followed by all I he acts of compliance and subserviency by which power is and of course with a corresponding increase of the number of those influenced by the executive enumerating the causes which have of late increased executive committee of pass over one of very recent they are aware that it is almost impossible lo allude to in the most delicate without feeling of a party which they are sincerely anxious to They refer to the increased power which late events have given to the over the public and with the currency ofthe this oi the subject of their it the intention of the committee to confine to the tendency of the to which as increasing executive avoiding all allusions to or to the legality of the acts in diversity of opinion may as expediency or legality of removing the there it is be none as to the that the removal as