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Washington Globe

   Washington Globe (Newspaper) - February 4, 1842, Washington, District Of Columbia                                BY FRANCIS P. P. BLAIR JOHN C. PROPRIETORS AND BLAIR HIV CITY OK paper by year for than a $ I per month Semi-Weekly paper by the for leas than a W cu. per the year an ii for aix months 1 Globe during a session in to the Daily for lean than to the Semi-Weekly for leas than or to the Weekly fur than six will not be may discontinue their at any time by faring for the time they have received but net j Those who subscribe for a and do not at the time of order a the end of will be considered until they order tlie paper lo be pay three - Every - 2,) advertisements charted in A liberal discount made to those who advertise by the All to made in Those who hare not of may remit by at cur pottage The Postmaster's certificate of such be receipt The ol any bank will be mil be given to any the nr a that il bten all of the United to teith trill as any medicine prepare ti lor the not be taken out of the been TOO 202.  8 P. 4, 1842.  Q. R. PHELPS'S COMPOUND TOMATO vegetable for diseases arising of ami all Chronic also a for 1 as a Cathartic n and all Bilious A fleet Pills are no if they ever among those of doubtful They have parsed away from those that are daily launched upon the tide of and now stand before the AND GENERAL undesigned having been appointed a for city and county of offers his services in that and the transaction of any business with individuals or connected wi ll the several public requiring an agent at the seat of including claims before Having had experience in the General Land he hopes to give satisfaction to those who may B. No. 87 Dock Philadelph A a for the orders for any of the current j publications of the directed to G. B. General Newspaper and Magazine No. 87 Doek will be promptly attended 3.  WW BRANCH 13, 1837.  is respectfully made known that merchandise or other commodities received at this for delivery in this or to be forwarded to or to points on the line of the will hereafter be to the following of which those interested will please lake The freight and charges on all goods to individuals in this city or its vicinity must be paid before their removal from the Commodities offered lor transportation mast be distinctly and be accompanied by a in of the number and description oi packages to be the name of the and of the party forwarding the otherwise they be will not be responsible for damage arising from leakage or nor will they be responsible for damage alleged to have been received by any goods or commodities transported by them the claim shall be made before the removal of the goods from the if goods which have been transported on this road be not or taken away by their consignee or owners on the day of their arrival at the the Company will not be responsible for or pay any claims for loss or damage which may be sustained by in other il as above be permitted to remain in or on the cars on or at the one or more nights after their they will re main so at exclusive of the owners or con hoar for receiving and delivering until further be from 9 a. m. until 4 p. m By 13tf Agent,  as high in and extensively employed ploy him for the prosecution of claims before a charges will be and letters addressed to with a retaining fee commensurate to the vervice will be promptly and attended Office on 15th st. Treasury Washington D. esq. John Joseph H. Hon. John T. esq. D. Hon. J. B. M. Pa. Messrs. A. and Co. Messrs. Jenkins and Co. Messrs. James Power and S. H. esq. Gen. Daniel C. Hon. Hon. Joshua Hon. James A. J. B St. I Terre Hon. R. J. Mi. Hon. S R. Hon. D. H. Hon. G. n. T. H. St. Hon. John A. H. Lake Oct. 6. 18416m  W. B. R R. 15, 1841. WASHINGTON BRANCH RAILROAD The of the Philadelphia Steamboat Line having advertised thai they will commence their regular route between Baltimore and Frenchtown and on Monday ibe 19th is hereby on and after that a passenger car will be by the Medical Faculty wherever they have and there are but few towns that produce some remarkable cafes cf their curative The numerous which have presented to the proprietor from men and evince in an mariner the extensive applicability of remedy to diseases Professional and those of sedentary fondly applaud hygiene properties in to their and the want of have the cures performed by this medicine been the subject of editorial comment in and and it may with be asserted that no medicine of ihe kind has ever received testimonials of greater commendation than are attached to are in general use as a family and there are thousands of families who declare they are never satisfied unless they have a supply always on They have no rival in bilious liver sick arid loss either a time before or after they render the liable to contract contagious or epidemic and be te sorted to by persons residing in low and marshy or when travelling or exposed to persons attending the by lone watching and or exposure to the of the sick become debilitated and lose their will find great assistance from these in renovating and purifying the and restoring ihe functions to a healthy debilitated by intense and long application to business ami and also ot sedentary will derive great benefit from an occasional use ol from of Iho or from a previous injudicious use of are prevented from that will find in these Pill - a vegetable in most cases will produce the desirable effects of that without its deleterious that and deranged state of the tem which occurs in the winter and commence these Pills are particularly applicable in of the and have many a life that otherwise would have been a sacrifice to the changes of the persons liable to sore swelling ui the and other symptoms indicating or should take warning in and a remedy while it is searching out and eradicating makes no deductions from the vital powers of the from physicians in every variety of climate in the United and the bear to the peculiar and potent of this in fact they are prescribed by physicians in preference to any other cathartic and alterati ve medic having acquired an as an and SECOND OF INVALIDS AND OF CATE HEALTH WHO VISIT December 15, long been a mailer ot to the inhabitant of this on the arrival of the United S ates with of it never been in their power to commend them a suitable residence in Ii has then f- necessary for prions either to take It ihU done at should be Mr. or February 3, of was read and ol on moved a change ol certain which agreed on leave the memorial the of the a modification of their If done at rai before of to the Committee for the t of whom the Reporter in the confusion abode in the hotels in where the noise and of a crowded and the want of the pure atmosphere and calm retirement of a country prevent their deriving that benefit from ihe change of which they or the unanimous of the House the and of the legislature of Maine that a military road may be made fiom mine in the part of the to Fort or to are compelled to go to places in the country where no adequate preparations have been l in panoi tne Butte to rori 01 10 receiving and Where other point oil the river Objections were a. m. instead of 3 p. m. the pr esent | increasing demand for the is only for the Proprietor to continue the this j lhe public may other are introduced tomato preparations for the true COMPOUND TOMATO for PHELPS'S TOMATO and be particular to observe that the label r above line for or with the Western mail train for Frederick at the Relay arriving at Philadelphia by 11, and Frederick by 81 the same April 15 R. M. D. Price 37* by most of ihe Druggists in the Disti ici as well as throughout the Nov 264m  OF FARE TO arrangement nas been entered into between the Winchester and Potomac and Baltimore and Ohio Railroad for the conveyance of Passengers at a reduced rate of in both between Washington and by the train which leaves this city at 6 a. m. reach the Relay House in time for where they take the cars for the arrive Ferry by 3 p. m. and reach Winchester before from to 50.  S. B. will find this route the most pleasant and expeditious to the Virginia Sulphur 15tf  B and O. R. R 9 h Dec. 1841.  afternoon train from Baltimore to having ceased the noon train from this city to will be for the on Saturday the 11th on Monday the 13tb evening train from this city for Baltimore will be at 4 o'clock of 54 as at ol which travellers will please take 9tf  editions in the in oc avo at about one half the prices of the London just direct from by F. Moore's Life of one Moore's Life of an and Memoirs of Capt. both comprised in one vol Hallam's Literature of four Selections of the best articles f rom the Review from its six The Living Poets ot two Sharon Turner's History of the Anglo three Index to Si Monarchy of the Middle one vol a and History of with the Continuation by fifteen and Adventures of Jonathan or Scenes on the by Mrs. one James Mackintosh's History of the tion of 1688, two Essay on the Study of with his Life and by one vol. A few copies of each only imported Sept 4______________________________________________  NEWSPAPER AND MAGA Brother RICHLY BOUND ILLUSTRATED for by F. most of im ported by Decline and complete in one large in Turkey and S do do c in one vol. London 2 nt w 1340, beautifully engraved from the 11 Van Dyke anJ others Burnet's History of his O 2 containing from the paintings ef Sir Godfrey Sir Peter and of ornamental bindings of Wordsworth's Mrs. Hemai of editions of them splendidly Byron with 12Q0 Gil with 600 illustrations Turner's Rivers of France illustrated CoaM Scenery illustrated Childe Illustrations edition of the Book of Common Prayer Passes of the Alps Hoffer's Views in the Tyrol I edition of Chronicles Pictorial History of England Games of and many other Works a similar too numerous for received ihe following pieces of new Music at the old between and 12.h the by S. blume her written by F. W. music by H. written and adapted to a popular melody by J. H. twenty favorite melodies for beginners on ilie piano by W. R. Coppock FLUTE and Mali's for or in forty eight each number this work is devoted exclusively to or Sacred in order that purchaser may be accommodated with one or as may a selection of the operatic melodies for the airs arranged as cotillions for the and collection of the most popular for the Evening A consisting of the most favorite fashionable mu arranged as and for the and German of Bellini's Opera of arranged for the a collection of the moat of arranged for the and from the works of and other celebrated To which are instructions for each 7  HERO AND THE HEROIC IN in six by Thomas Second American 1 Lectures on the Philosophy of translated from the 2 History of by W. Cooke 2 History of from the fail of the Roman Empire to the French translated from the French of Peer of 1 Lectures cm Modern by Jared 2 ole's 4 new translated from the German of 1 received for sab by F. 23 Immediate east of EW published and for by F. the the Lost by Dr. containing evidence of their their and with illustration s of Scripture together with the travels of the n Ancient 1 The Martyrs of by Sir David being the lives of Tycho and 50ccnts. and the Faioe 1 being number 131 of Harper's Family with maps and 50 16.  The New The New York Tne Knickerbocker The The Boston weekly The Philadelphia Saturday The Philadelphia The Dollar The The North American The New York Toe New York of Six British of the above be subscribed for at the Bookstore of F. who will also import to order any of the English or foreign 11 __  by G. The Ruins of AthiM Sonnets and other by G. 1 additional this day fer 39  of an bound Bibles and Prayer English and of every for Drawing Scrap Books ol Richly Gold and Silver Pencil Pocket Card abd 23  BOOKS FOR SALE AT THIS have large oc avt Reports ot the Secretaries of the Treasury on the liom the of the Government to year 1836, to which is prefixed the Reports cf Alexander Hamilton on Public a National and the of a They are comprised in 3 averaging 630 pages and bound in law Price 33 a volume a have also in larce octavo the opinions of the General of the United from beginning of the Government to March 1, 1841, taken Irom official documents transmitted lo to which are now added a copious wuh references lo the clauses of ihe and of and Indian treaties referred ami n of the acts of Congress cited and commented Published undar the inspection of Henry D. late Attorney of ihe it makes 1506pages, and is bound in one law Price a AND Nov. 2 1841dtf  CORRESPONDENCE WITH A two just printed from the London and for by F. Critical and Miscellaneous Writings of Sir Edward Lytton 2 and the edited by Dickens in 2 Sept. 21  HE a Album for 1^42edited by De engraved and bound in an ornamental and containing twenty-one new pieces of music and some old compositions of eminent which have not before teen the few coptes this day 20 F. RHYMING DICTIONARY a new very much enlarged and wuh much additional matter connected the oi poetry and a few copies just imported Lemdon for sale by Feb 17 F. WOOD'S LIFE OF in one octavo volume of 606 with many bound in lull and containing also a of the and History of the and Sufferings the Holy snd other Primitive by the Rev. John price gl 25; a few copies just for sale 2  and oi are in no wise calculated for ia a of a due consideration of this and oi the great benefit lhat would derived by who seek to regain that in ti e mild and climate of il a abode should be provided for the a practitioner long in has appropriated his ct flee estate called the in t healthy and part of the so as to form a equally agreeable and In opW to out this intention to ihe fullest extent ibat pro knowledge and a long of ol tropical climates could no pains have to form an which tds to the well to h rational enjoyment that can be from dwelling in the mil est surrounded by ihe roost picturesque l out in the beautiful siyle of a five hundred The is s on the south mde of ihe and is in a great from the hilly now and then blow Irom ihi north the winter The district in which it Irom its extreme termed the Windsor of The has been bu It with every attention lo those comforts so indispensable to and of which the f this coun try are so All the rooms have boarded floors and glass The is on the footing of lhat of a of wh eh the form making and without being confined to thote teg which ate necessary at In esta invalid has it in his power to vary his by walking in the ues of and palm ridn g on horseback or in a or the neighboring sr. thickly spread ihe populous A large sugar estate close at an opportunity oi dr nking the hot cane the woods furnish to the numerous family Jos constantly on ihe situated about of The wh ch crosses a most lovely is as From Havana to fifteen on from B to Beuna twenty miles on a carriage It about five By application to the subscriber at bis in No. 95 O'Reilly ihe party can be forwarded lo the estate without persons applying are if not previously to bring an introduction trum some respectable mercantile house of this M. de Orally No. 35.  have and a time at the of Dr. mi as to the Buena It not for beauty of scenery and a healthy any place I have seen in and will find ibe family of Dr. most agreeable and and the and Spanish are all several members of the J. addition to the above of the J. ihe distinguished United references can be made on ihe subject C. esq. of John of Judge 28 6m  under the firm of Penn and Van Antwerp propose to publish a St. It will be aim to early of passing and frequent and satisfactory the principal of the with an current for this The paper will be champion of sll designed lo lessen the dangers of and protect and cherish ihe vast inland commerce of which St. Louts mu t be regarded as the portion of the columns of ihe Reporter will be devoted and for ihe lion of those who ider variety ihe spice of and another portion to and improvement calculated to develope the varied and unequalled resources of II and the superior ol city destined in a very few years to eclipse ail her sisters of the politics of the will be decidedly whilst it will firmly fearlessly maintain the just and genial cf the great parly of which it is to lean humble its course will ever be strictly Abuses no only serves to weaken a good It is therefore car fue I to exclude as far as it may be possible to do and uniformly to decline ihe publication of articles unnecessarily ir or calculated to produce sectional jealousies or schisms in the party with which we Out business will be lo not to to exert our to promote harmony throughout ihe great Democratic to impress upon the minds of our political brethern vital but sometimes disregarded union there is first number of the will be issued about the fifteenth of December It will be larger than the Washington Globe or and will be published on ihe following half yearly in - 00  in advance 5 - - 3 00  is that 1 be on to pay before receive the first number of the will be or at the usual are in progress which will enable to add the subscription of the Argus to lhat of the 7 V. P. VAN at of Mr. A. who that it wna a ol great touching the national that the road was imperiously necessary to the military the the well as to our lellow m ui the Madawaska and And the were ordered to be and referred to the on Military A leave were presented by the following werr appropriately presented the number which waa to the Committee on Revo the of H. A. and of John presented of widow of one of the series presented by Mr A hams as calling lor information to hia ibut by inadvertence not on waa taken up and adopted without a That the President of the United Slates be to cause be communicated to this if not with ihe or Andrew of the at lie Court ol relating lo any letter or letters him in hi thm commander I the squadron in the together with copies of the Mid leiter or and of ihe reasons assigned by me said for COOPER of Georgia gavo notice that on to morrow he will leave ui a to provide for the payment of certain incurred by volunteer in United States RANDALL gave notice that he would mk leave to introduce a regulating taking of testimony in esses of contested and for other HOUSE Mr. from the Committee n Public asked leave to introduce a resolution from the on calling on the Secretary of the Treasury Co communicate the report of ilia to investigate the affairs of the New Yoik Objected MASON of Ohio leave to present a Hi one volume the volume con ihe complete Poetical of Rev. H. 11 Milman and John edition of just in from the Loudon price 75 Coleridge's both prose and compute in one handsome octavo price ttro Just received sale ty F. Pet 33  AT AMERICAN LIFE proprietors of havins opened a Lice establishment in the city of New are able any demand at shoit The boat will be lo any part of ihe on a written order through the post stating of boat directed to JOSEPH FRANCIS CO. March 6ly New Comp on for ibe A fresh supply of which just been at St where the genuine arti cle kept constat tly for iale Aug 17 Agent for the In two c oth price published at or in full leather at published at For four 11.  25; Harry by the author of Charles 1 large volume 75, ten in complete for 25, handsomely printed price handsome in two lario octavo containing Ferdinand Count Roderick Ad mures of Sir Launcelot Humphrey Adventures of an and Memoirs of the Lde and Writings of by Sir Walter Price 25, pub Fsr saKr by importer and dealer in Fancy and has jcM received by ship a very laige supply of Cooper and superior Black put up in stone bottles ot half and Suffice it to lhat all the public that have have discarded For wholesale And at Stationers 8  FESSENDEN Mr. W W. IRWIN asked leave to present certain joint resolutions trom the of Mr. OF The SPEAKER announced the unfinished to be the following resolution heretofore offered by Mr. in presenting to Uie consideration of this Home a petition lor the dissolution of the the member liom has justly incurred the ceo sure el which Mr. T. F. Marshall had heretofore the following as a substitute Federal is h permanent form 0/ and of perpetual altered or in the mode pointed out hy that and the this ig their political character and the sune are sworn to and the 101, oi 1 implies the destruction of that the overthrow ol the American die ol our national A ut of the lo dissolve the law framed hy their and lo support which they are commanded by those constituents to be belore they can enter upon the execution of the political powers created by and to is a high breach of a contempt offered to this a proposition to the I .eg is and each member of in and us the destruction ot our country and the crime of high That die Hon. John member from In presenting for the consideration ot the House ol Representatives of the United States a petition for the dissolution of ihe has offered the deepest indignity to the House which lie is a an insult to the people of the United States of which lhat House is the legislative and if thu outrage be permuted to pass unrebuked and have disgraced his their in the of the whole Thai the John for this the first of the bnd ever ihe and for the ha has permitted to be and these 8tern, and the Douse deem it an act of grace aod mercy when they only inflict him their severest censure for conduct so utterly unworthy of his past i stations to the Bute and his present This they hereby do for maintenance of their own purity and for the they turn him over to and the indignation of all true American which and as a substitute for the win Mr. had yesterday offered the amendment hat a select committee be appointed 10 take into con the contempt arid breach of privilege alleged to have been commuted hy John a member ol in presenting a on the day of January lo be signed by a certain citizens of praying that Congress should take toi the peaceable dissolution of the and that it be the of Md committee to consider and report whether further proceedings should be taken by the liouse in ihe matter ot said alleged contempt and breach of uti l if the said shall be of opinion that any action on the part ef the House in relation to the presentation of said petition by the said John Adams be proper and then the said committee do in their will be the I and most appropriate mode of conducting the proceeding of the House In relation having relation to the powers and duty of the the ef parliamentary and trie rights of the member then rose to resume the speech which he had commenced ihe day but observed that previously to he desired to state as the mover ol the original which had given rise enure he was Milling alter all had been said arid to withdraw resolution he nad and together with the amendments by the gentleman from was now under by ihe provided the honorable from Massachusetts wan on hid to withdraw the he had offered praying for a ol the ADAMS In the with a solemn appeal to my in presenting the I had acted under a sense ot duty from which I could not That is the answer I give to the gentleman Irom who heaid said Mr. I am not likely to withdraw the lor I leel my sell by a sense of duty as and as sacred as that which gentleman Irom to in urging and supporting the proposition 1 have made to the was that the proposition was a simple one: that it was perfectly and was incapable of being that the and that the whole it was apparent on its it may be more distinctly by the I will now csk lhat it be i by ihe | t resolution was here as in presenting to the consideration of this House a petition lor the dissolution of the the member from incurred the censure ol thu is for the presenting of such a and anking this to consider 1 say the gentleman has the censure of tin - House this As I observed the resolution contemplates the infliction of no pun save lhat public indignation which an act the expression of the censure of this I maintain by the act of ihe from tins House placed in a position in which it is compelled lo a public expression of its either or it. these used by the and friends about pains arid To hear the employed by some of those who have the one would suppose that the calendar was haunting their expressions have no warrant in any I have nor in the 1 have offered to this 1 The Massachusetts insists most strenuously on his to Why has he not done it 1 How often Itus he not nd the House 1 and he most most and most dexterously defended i I here wuh ail ingenuity and power for which he is ko justly 1 regret that any necessity should be up on me ui to previous it would five me far more pleasure refer to he vr 1 am really by the oi i he lo look a little at the gentleman defied this House and in so He has aguin and again declared here h 1 regard hs fatal lothe I shall not icier lo Speaking ol what these petitioners iwk for at the bands of thm the gentleman told us thai time for action had not yet plainly intimating lhat such time would and that when it did come he should be to act. During the late extra and again the gentleman has re to the interposition of the treaty making and he in a certain this Government through ihe agency of that emancipate the slaves of South ami ol the He that but will not dwell for u moment upon the As soon il was I effort to dismiss it from my mind as as the recurrence ot it gives me the Has he not avowed the sentiment that there exist under this Co which and shall be peaceably il they can forcibly I refer to these ith a view to connect them with any charce may have been against the or ol noticing t vil example and pernicious lhat a question between the gentleman and the what I want to rhow in coming to a decision tn to thH U is proper to consider the entire with all that which has very becu connected With the question from Massachusetts that it h only the light of p. he is now contending but I not question aa involving the of had I on this on mosl have my this Union not endeared it is W to n. 1 lo the ihe n now us touches that Union and not the mere right or the couine of the debate was had be several the course of South Carolina ou a certain b le and to the opinion a vowed by one of the Representatives Irom Sute on this as well us by others not on this II Why were thine Do they nut imply thai the subject of the of the Statis one far loo sacred lo be with Do iliev imply consciousness of more guilt in every to destroy And must the gentle man irom Massachusetts be excused for having here made himself the oi gan of men avowedly hostile to because at other have avowed similar It be necessary that I should defend those gentle men they are abundantly capable of lor that from instead of presenting this should have offered a resolution in lite same and had moved ita lo a st with similar to those he at the time oi this What would there be a resolution and the in a It is not ihe outward it is the Ihe tendency of the which I hope tin* will I theie is not a member of this body who would in such a case have he to vole a censure imi the But so lar as tie is concerned I maintain the case is the same the course of this House should therefore be the am unwilling to regard the voies given here to lay subject upon Ihe table as indicative of any concurrence of sympathy of any gentleman on floor on the object ot these far from it. I t. urn or political prejudices and excitements which may prevail among the of six und of eighty-seven is not yet extinct in these It may but it still and it may be aroused when shall arise a fit occasion lor its Ami this proposition was made by colleague Si yester to commit the whole subject to a this measure ia urged on the that it will tend to But I ask my colleague whether the most me thod to restore and confidence lo re assure the hopes and to allay ihe aroused fears of all who love this id not to pass resolution of censure now Such a step as 1 give new energy aud leal lo our free and will inspire new hopes in the ol every true shall we gain by referring the subject to a To me it seems a little prising that such a should proceed from my col if I mistake has on various occasions to lay the whole subject What would be the effect of such a It would transfer subject beyond the reach of the without meeting and disposing oi the questions raised by my own reso lutton and the amendment moved by ihe gentleman Irom Ken Marshall ] After voting for I am somewhat at a loss to it should now be desired by him lo refer the matter lo a select I would be gained hy such a Of how many must the committee and of whom must it It must be constituted of members of this men wno have been considering the whole subject lor last and many of whom have expressed their on various points connected with it. Would any lima tic gained hy now com the it might be said that this was proposed with a view to obtain a cooler snd more dispassionate of Ilit would it work? The committee would retire to their there they would discuss what was to be and what was to be aod finally furnish an elaborate report recommending the gentleman from Massachusetts should or be Ami would the question lie elucidated by such a Would a decision Upon it be any nearer than it was at Not a The w hole would operate merely as a measure of delay and of When the report the debate would at once be renewed now seemed ami perhaps with Mr. G. could see to be by such a buL on the he see that by it the very end desired might be if not in the end defeated the and the precedents to which liu colleague's resolution Mr. G. when the House was calling its and especially that from Massachusetts to the report of a committee of the Senate of the United States in the case of John He would now detain the House by referring to one or two other passages of that The document was ably whole question of fully a laboriously Mr. G. here quoted the language ol the in one place reprobated Uie idea of the crutches ol the judicial tribunals aa an apology for crippling the Congressional and argued that the power of Congress lo must 1discretionary, became it could not be brought the provisions of any general and that the power would rendered by a which Mr. G. as being pregnant with and full of instruction bearing on the present Alter American precedents and British the report came to the conclusion thai the power ol Congress to its own members by the und bv and lie quoted the which closed by a recommendation to the which that the by m had been guilty of conduct incompatible with the station and duty ol a arid that he be resolution received a majority of 19 votes to 10. One more vote would have carried it. as Mr. even vote was obtained only by one or two of the Senators leaving their seats under a pledge given to them if actually Smith would immediately resign hie Mr. G. considered the tances lo a virtual in compliance with recommendation of the lo the list of yeas the name ol ihe gentleman from stood charge against J dm said Mr G. is in one to several which have been lo doling the course of Uie committed was not committed m face of Uie during actual sitting of the it was committed in the where criminal prosecution against the offender had actually Yet in the estimation of gentleman from that formed no warrant for the Senate's staying the exercise of ita primitive at that the the the scruples of the from a wImn there no remedy 1 Hera t h r i m strenuously denied by om who as ite If that knot an I give It up i who cosier on ma and others the sobriquet r ti on and yet maintain a proportion like i be just enough to lake it lu and that the from will henceforth b reckoned 1 the Ou Uie with which the fen ileman presentation ol the petition s fleet tbc quotum ut batate That a select shall report an aigu and reuma against the | rayer of the p. the Massachusetts wouW no doubt be and would ine subject and would then report reasons mk x aa not now it tea calculation the fiat of the whole rou cannot rite it the go it on in TOme haa to dispose of amount to calculation - va to in that ihe oii the Union Union of the The movement is intended a. attack on the most i dln ou set up a and place the gentleman from with lita right of in one and the Union so many grains ol in the il were not too the whole wear the m peel of it puts one in mind of a quack doctor should approach a man In perfect health with a petition he would take his nostrum to make him in ruder v e might enjoy the honor ol restoring him to health ho argued the question with which into the mouth be or not to that Is the 'tis nobler in the mind to slings and arrows of outrageous to take aims against a sea of by end of the petition proposes much sucha remedy for I an ol being allowed lo apply his torch with which o ukt the Inventor ofthe of n l captain of a in the I pray you to allow ov 11 r o you and your may reV ter i my new w your all reach the ahorc m ho the gentleman feo m mav acme ether of the l may become minds the first that will present as a will he to draw up io Conness All they have iodo wilt be to enclose it to the gentleman from ami he will feel tho most sacred from he cannot to preferii it in this and then ihe whole question be gone over For I prefer to rest on o e broad basis ofthe Union to rely it g ou any of ibera nominations the gentleman from I had rather bear the ills wa have than fly to others that we know not supposing the memorial to be and ihe to report upon of what color will the report Aro we sure of lam inclined to think the and of report will depend very much on what vein il o gentleman happens lo be inai ihe the 1 lather think if be should have been discursif g the treaty making power from the destruction of slavery in the the tenor of the report may not be very the other the gentleman should chance to in the vein in he waa when he disdained ait eise i aimer l then we might hope ihst the report would be to the petitioners time is me scruples of the Massachusetts aa ft of of whom be has now so wm an American tks and also arraigned before the on charge s if would expose him to the heaviest the crimi nal But this caee had been already and aa I am unwilling lo consume any of the of the House I will the freedom of opinion of these forty-six men of Haverhill impa red by the I have moved in the slightest Do by adopting that their right of or the free use and enjoyment of their or their NN ill they not be exactly as free after thai resolution shall hive been or the amendment proposed by the honorable gentleman from to to arid to as they were It is not my to invade that most of all the righi ol Our business is not with them or their but with the gentleman from and with him not not as an but as a member of this legislative who has brought to its consideration and asked it to act upon a pennon iu so many for a dissolution of this The petition has been and now we must act on it. Vou may try lo avoid it as much aa you hut you You may or or lay on the table; but there it is. In this movement I have no object gratify in relation to the gentle mm from he ought to be aware of I no in contrasting the present with the disastrous twilight of the setting sun with ita more splendid Let u I entered this hall atthe late extra session wuh a feeling of reverence toward ihe gentleman from a feeling natural Irom my with his previous and past experience in I looked upon him us an aged and public 1 am still inclined to regard with all deference and and it is painful lo me to be by a sense of public to submit such a proposition in regard to him as I have I would gladly cast a veil of total these but it is now They have become a part ol They must live on its pager and neither 1 nor any other limn the gentleman can held responsible for any this may inflict upon bis gentleman has assumed various phases during the course of these At one ne seemed to court mar at another he exhibits himself as a persecuted as loaded with criminal charges of the deepest and yet denied the rights of an accused lie aa specially and with as much astuteness and ingenuity as a nisi calling to his aid all the resources ol wit and of ibe and indeed of the entire art of the To morrow he takes a new and assures us he loves the Union too far too to say or do that can by possibility impair its perpetuity He has offered two or three calling for certain which he says is necessary lo I shall not detain the House to read these but I if the gentleman is to be considered here as an arraigned whether these matters can possibly be important to his gentleman of certain political and of an unholy of the union of the most discordant and heterogeneous though I am aware he alluded I shall not stop to consider such he is al perfect liberty to attribute to my agency in this affair just what motives he and it to just such sort of as he chooses to put I not stop or stoop to defend noi do I hold it y that 1 should defend oilier I is any party to aiini from agitating a like A party What party can by All men of all parties must eoon lose whatever is dear to them if the design of petitioners is to be is there no period in thi of this Republic when the demon of party spirit may receive a None when may refuse to listen to the selfish feeling of the political If there surely the present ia such a gentleman from has sounded all the and shoals ol he has reached ibe zenith of hia political and again he figure hi re amid scenes in this Hall of which Ills country will 1 should plad if he had furnished no occasion for such proceedings Glad should I have been had he always acted in the rpii it of disavowal he has once made The gentleman had his again and again to sate the which he to think fo il lie had consented lo the he have Mated this whole and passed the residue us as an American citizen entitled to our shall the right of by no although I do consider lhat very many an I very prevail in to lhat Ti e right of is a very under our free Republican and under the arbitrary and Governments of Europe the humbly approaches the thr iie of the monarch with a he a a favor a grace at the hands of his and asks it But here a petitioning zen one ol that mass of which ihe and which has undis power to to and to control it. He as the monarch stands He is commander he is on this his voice is heard and power has a to through his he does and his voice is heard and lie does not come before this House but as demanding his lightens a as one ol the depositaries of ihe r. The Government is limited by the will of the all us power is placed tinder checks and restraints by the States creating it. other Governments with our lias no power to confer it ran only justice and without favor or This relation of the lo their own Government shows that in this country the right ol petition is one importance than when there iaa master over will it that any particular portion of ihe people have a right to the Government to do what ihe whole people tn he Can curb a be here or Will it be tn a petition confers new on the Government I If il then it follows ibat ihe powers of h Republican Government are derivable front a an 1 not from that entire of the people who created the and who control itsi We have said here about but I really think that this doctrine h the in perfect abstraction that 1 ever heard of in my The gentleman deems the t ight oI petition eo sacred if petitioners should demand au immediate dissolution of the Government arid the fevering of the ihe gentleman as to to a compliance with such a feels himself constrained in conscience io present the not thai he rot that he any ac ion but simply that lie may pay homage to ihe venerable right of can in thu my great objection this whole proceeding that n io familiarize the public mind with ihe idea the The people ofthe United States know thoir dure maintain is no doubt or difficulty on that point The great and aim of Congress should be io as far as all local and sofien and pnt an end lo all and One great effort ought to I e to previ nt a eruis fiom ever arriving as might an inducement to so rash a Whenever it shall be pinion of the people that the nme has actually It is not you not any act or authority of that ran for a moment restrain recate ad may lie calculated ui foment Instead of popular and sectional jealousies and When the wave of revolution shall once and and Ihe from and reports and our will all but as so many feathers floating on its it tie come to agitate the Shall we do anv act which shall encourage the people to calculate the value Union and we eh In their minds the question Or we not in compliance with the d advice ot ihe Father his frown down the first allusion to the contess lor I prefer lo rest on things as long as I and while 1 would not indulge any ui distrust in legard to the gentleman Irom I suit think that his action would depend too much on the of moment willing to repose my confidence on 1 have been too long trace day's disasters in his and to their disturbance and I invite the House to an end to the which can do if they Who an argument in favor of preserving the I see no indications of a civil hear of no in the no of rebellion io popular no Slate no committees uf There ia not a ripple on the surface or this wide-spread of people are and in a Mate ol perfect 1 beg men of Haverhill think that ihe Union should le with this deduct the of the seventeen content with the For do we want an Fat the seventeen or for the men of 11 us with throwing down Uie Union about on earl j 0>wk both a more rational and a cheaper node of i will be for to depute the gen as envoy extraordinary and minister nary to on his arrival let the town be runt let forty-six men and let the honorable gentleman and present there the very same argument by word of mouth if chairman of the he present and which we mun print and to the worM I feel very certain that his powers of persuasion with be just as effectual argument be n ade orally aa if made in and even more since know the power as a it not be belter that these forty-six men of should thus be hy a direct than by the course of having then referred lo a select reported and lhat u pon pi by this and sent to them in the form of an argument to convince them lhat the Union bad better not at be I have that there msy be some as to the character of the report which may come Irom I would not in any refer even to the public of that gentleman I look aa I doubt not the gentleman s I know his countrymen with pride and to the acts of his public But the gentleman - s. so many different at the different t Ins u I must I still sonic I am not in of divulging or repeating private or reading confidential but I have n c. a 1.1. ter of a somewhat public character from a man I not sonally but who waa a Senator ol Me I n t and who is son of a Senator of the closing to mea leuer written loa Senator by the liom under date of the 15Ui which I shall now take the liberty to having been i t merely authorized but requested by the writer oi the letter dj so. The gentleman having resigned his seat in the Se i about a year alier the case of John the follow letter to a Mr. ihen a Senator from the ol 1 en eveni my of the of the 1 was not The ol to British and which has been and and and i. thw part ofthe country for the last eighteen mor finds in the thanks be to the same invincible ot ance which it found at the last session of Coi gr. 1 ill and influence of my has COl 1stIIli... I and they hare had the best opportunity to tl e r own in their own You have to with due the process ef re which ni y be pursued against your So that at if an at em ' io divide the Union should be you will have m complain of being taken by il I reman i t with instead of threatening and separa I could only have expressed my abhorrence of every tempt or however and from what r My with regard lo the I known to John and Aaron Burr in my vt. my just as if had been ol and if any native of in pursuit of end v. I ii Burr and Smith were aiming should proceed as far to I as far as my power ni tame maimer as I thought they ought to have I believe it wili lie far better for you and for the whole nation to have men from this who will prepare you for mean to lhan one feeling and believing that we have all but one common could avow no r as representing this section ol ihe the honorable gentleman from Massachusetts will enter do say doubts and suspicions as to ti e the cherished by some of the people of New had he the same course which m been no no the saint bright sunshine been exhibited throughout io to h I th I touched ihe 1 should not to I must say lo m his own tali I had rather lake the Union it il rust ii to bands And will this House and question of or will y m it at the aod treat the of lias i Who is I usk lhat wants any argument for the I'm We Where ia Bunker Wt .ro u Voi Where is Where are the u d ail rich in victories over the meteor flag of The gentleman u once a witness and an argument m to at where he e in his a peti ion for the dissolution of this and to i r get what he has and whal his father was before Inm It should be a consolation io the gentleman that he in ti e course of live long enough lo down the fabric ot amid the ruina his The people of the United States have not forgotten ihe farewell of him who achieved 1 bey look with exulting pride the national as it floats this and every stripe and every with all their has been to them a argument in favor of that Union that has made ihe envy of the It has satisfied the measure of their wishes for more than half a and I Iu spile of all which the gentleman Irom Massachusetts shall lie able lo that it will continue to satisfy to G. concluded by observing that he had before him documents which were to the subject in but which he should to lest they might increase the excitement h already and tend lo aggravate which could not too anon be and Mr. ADAMS einin CUSHING with the expression of the hope that the petition had come from and not had been suppi from the district of another he C at some stage of the hate an to sav a few ADAMS ihen addressed the House at Ha said that he wood here in the most extraordinary position that any member of the House ever stood Willi two criminal trials going on i and he was called io defend himself on whilst every waa made that could possibly be made io deprive him of the power tf defending himself against gentleman from Albemarle was when he said he Adams) privilege of defending himself against these He had only ol ihe House permission to defend and tie had not thought proper to grant was now proposed to send subject to a com mi whom he might defend ead tf the House thought there was enough iu either of the s of the gentleman from or the claimed  

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