Washington Globe (Newspaper) - February 5, 1842, Washington, District Of Columbia BY FRANCIS P. P. BLAIR JOHN C. PROPRIETORS 10 00 by ihe Iom than tl per paper the for lew than a 50 per Weekly paper by the year aa 00 for Globe during a 00 to 00 to the Daily for lew than to the lor Iom than or to Weekly for than aix will not be may their papen at any time by paying for the time they have but not for a yeary and do not at the time order a at the end of wiil be considered until they order the paper to be and pay FOR or three - - il 00 Every - 25 Longer charged in A liberal discount made tu by the Alt be made in who have not an opportunity of paying may remit by m our pottage The certificate of such remittance be receipt The oi any bank will be attention will be given to any a that it hat been to the with will not taken out of the B. No. 87 Dock roR the orders for any of Ihe current publications of the directed to O. B. General Newspaper and Magazine No. 87 Dock will be promptly attended 3. BLAIR THE WORLD 18 GOVERNED TOO 203. OF 8 P. M. FEBRUARY 5, 1842. ' ' - BRANCH December 13,1837. is respectfully made known that merchandise or other commodities received at this ior delivery in this or to be forwarded to or to points on the line of the will hereafter be subject to the following of which those interested will please take The freight and charges on all goods consigned to individuals in this city or its vicinity must be paid before their removal frong the Commodities offered tor transportation must be distinctly and be accompanied by in of the number and description of packages to be the name of the and of the party forwarding the otherwise they cannot be Company 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 shall have been transported on this toad be not received or taken away by their consignee or owners on the day of their arrival at the the Company will not be for or pay any claims for loss or damage which may bo sustained by such in other it as above be permitted to remain in or on the cars on or at the one or more nights after their they will remain so at the exclusive ruk of the owners or hour for receiving and delivering goods until further be from 9 a. m. until 4 p. Oct 13tf Agent. W. B. R April 15,1841. WASHINGTON BRANCH RAILROAD The proprietors of the Philadelphia Steamboat Line having advertised that will their regular route between Baltimore and aad on Monday the 19th is hereby on and after that a car will be despatched daily fop with the tonnage which will leave this city at ill a. m. instead of 3 p. m. the present hour of this passengers can connect with the above line fur ur with the Western mail train for Frederick at the Relay arriving at Philadelphia by 11, and Frederick by 8 the same April REDUCTION OF FARE TO arrangement 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 at Harper's Ferry by 3 p. m. and reach Winchester before from Washington to 50. S. B. Invalids will find this route the most pleasant and expeditious to the Virginia Sulphur 15if B and O. R. R. 9ih Dec- 1841. afternoon train from Baltimore to having ceased the noon train from this city to Baltimore will be for the on 8aturday the on Monday tbe 13th evening train from this city for Baltimore will be despatched at 4 o'clock instead of 54 as at ot wh ch travellers will please take 9tf EDITIONS IN THE ENGLISH in octavo at about one half the prices of the London just direct from by F. Life of one Life of an Ii ish and Memoirs of Capt. both in one Literature of four of the best articles from the Edinburg Review from its six Living ot two Turner's History of the Anglo three Index to Si one Monarchy of the Middle one and Smollett History of with the Continuation by fifteen and Adventures of Jonathan Jefferson or Scenes on the by Mrs one James Mackintosh's History of the tion of 1G88, two the Study ot with his Life and by one A few copies of each only 4 OF O INVALIDS AND PERSONS OF DELICATE HEALTH WHO THIS And December 15, 1841.It bas long been a matter of regret to the inhabitants of this on the arrival of invalids from the United S ates with letters of it has been in power to them a suitable residence in the It has therefore been necessary for either to take up their abode in the hotels in where the noise and of a crowded and the want of tbe pure atmosphere and calm of a country prevent their deriving that benefit from the change of climate which naturally or are compelled to go to places in the country whf re no adequate preparations have been made for receiving and where the and manner of are in no wise calculated for persons in a delicate state of a doe consideration of this and of the great benefit that would be derived by invalids who seek to regain that health in the mild and beneficent climate of if a suitable abode should be provided for the a medical practitioner long established in this has appropriated his beautiful coffee estate called the situated in the healthy and romantic part of the so as to form a residence equally agreeable and In order to carry out this intention to the fullest extent that professional knowledge and a long experience of the effects of tropical climates could no pains have been spared to form an which affords to the as well as to the healthy rational enjoyment that can be derived from dwelling in the mildest surrounded by Ihe most picturesque The laid out in the beautiful style of a coffee comprise about five hundred The Buena is situated on the south side of the and is in a great fiom the chilly which now and then blow from the north during the winter The district in which it lies has irom its extreme termed the Windsor of The hou e hts built with every attention to those comforts so to and of which the buildings i f this conn try are io All the looms have boarded floors and gliss The is on the footing of that of a private of which the guests form making themselves quite at and without being confined to those regulations which are necessary at In this csta invalid has it in bis power to vary his by walking in the shady avenues of and palm riding on horseback or in a or visiting the neighboring so thickly spread through the populous A large sugar estate close at affords an opportunity ot drinking the hot cane while the surrounding woods furnish amusement to the subscribers numerous family resides constantly on the is situated about miles southwest of The which crosses a most lovely is as From Havana to fifteen miles on from B jural to twenty on carriage It occupies about five By application to the subscriber at his residence in No. 95 O'Reilly ihe parly cau be forwarded to tbe estate without persons applying are if not previously to bring an introduction from some respectable mercantile house of this M. de Oreilly No. 95. I have visited and spent a short lime at the estate of Dr. described in the above and most fully concur in every statement there made as to the Buena It is not surpassed for beauty of scenery and a healthy location by any place which I have seen in and the invalid will find the numerous family of Dr. most agreeable and and the Eng and Spanish languages are all spoken by several members of the J. addition to above testimony of the R. J. the distinguished United States references can be made on the subject to E. C. esq. of John esq. of General Talma Judge Dec 236m__ under the firm of Perm and Van Antwerp propose to publish a newspaper in St. It will be aim to early intelligence of passing and frequent and satisfactory notices of ihe principal markets of the with an accurate price current for this The paper will be champion of all measures designed to lessen the dangers of and protect and the vast inland commerce of which St. Louis must be regarded as tbe portion of the columns of tbe Reporter will be devoted to Literature and for the gratification of those who consider variety the spice of and another portion to agricultural and improvements calculated to develope tbe varied and unequalled resources of Ac. and the superior advantages of St. city destined in a very few years to eclipse all her sisters of the politics of the Reporter will be decidedly whilst it will firmly and fearlessly maintain the just and genial principles of the great party of which it is to be an humble its course will ever be strictly Abuses makes no virulence only serves to weaken a good It is therefore our fixed determination to exclude as far as it may be possible to do and uniformly to decline the publication of articles unnecessarily or calculated to produce sectional jealousies or schisms in tbe party with which we have hitherto Our business will be to not to to exert our energies to promote harmony throughout the great Democratic to impress upon the minds of our political ihe vital but Sometimes disregarded union there is strength first number of the Reporter will be issued about the fifteenth of December It will be larger than the Washing or and will be published on the following half yearly in - 00 in advance 00' - - 3 00 is that subscribers wi 1 not on to pay before they receive the first number of the will be or at the usual are in progress which will enable us io add tbe subscription list of the Argus to that of tbe r jr. Dec. 7 V. P. VAN ZINES Brother per The New The New York Tne Knickerbocker The Lady's The Boston The Philadelphia Saturday The Philadelphia The Dollar The North American The New York Tbe New York of Six British of the above may be for at the Bookstore of F. who will also import to order any of the English or foreign 11 by G. i Ruins of Sonnets and other by G. 1 vol. additional supply this day for tale 38 com 25, Harry by tbe author of Charles 1 large volume with (I 75; Capt. ten in complete for 25, handsomely price upwards of 12 handsome complete in two large octavo containing Ferdinand Count Roderick Ran Adventures of Sir Launcelot Humphrey Adventures of an Por and Memoirs of the Life and Writings of by Sir Walter Price 25, pub listed at For sale by PER ICR BLTcK FISCHER importer and dealer in Fancy Staple has just received by the ship a very large supply of Cooper and superior Black put up in stone bottles of half and Suffice it to say that all the public that have used have discarded aJl other For wholesale and at Stationers 8 SPEECH OF MR. the House of January 11, 1842 On the Treasury note Mr. When the motion was made to lay th s upon the I in favor of and I think that it iv necessary that I should now briefly state the wh eh led me to give that for it is welt known to all my acquaintances that I am in favor f issuing Treasury notes whenever emergencies arise in the affairs of Government as it to resort to The system ought to have been adopted at the last instead of a and if it had it have prevented many of disastrous results which are now presented by our public this in i's present contains and unless its features shall be 1 can never give it my I regret that the amendment offered by my which provided a from the avails of the for the redemption these had been decided by the Chair to be out of For had the principles contained In that amendment been incorporated in Ihe I should most cheerfully have given this measure my have another objection to this and it is to that very clause which the Whigs seem to think a sufficient reason why they should support the Il is that in the the adoption of which would commit me as sanctioning tbe principle fiat a loan should still be in tbe power of the notwithstanding the proposed issue of Treasury in my ought to be fatal to the let me is it now proposed to authorize the Government not only to issue five mi lions of dollars of Treasury but also to make a loan ot seven mil lions of Was there any thing in the pro of the to prevent both of these measures from going into effect at the same And yet are told by the provisions of this that so soon as the loan can be the power t issue Treasury notes under its provisions shall This I. look upon as a mere mode of arming the Government with a moneyed that is not intended to be conferred by a majority of it is well known that you have exhausted your power to raise money in this and that you now to look the means of mak ng your in the mean while your agents are borrowing money in you are here i your Treasury a provi o that no more shall be when it is ascertained that the I an has been the provisions of this are and are calculated to im pose upon ths by holding out professions which it is not reasonable to suppose can be complied suppose you issue your five millions of of Treasury and at the same time your iu Europe shall negotiate a loan of six millions and a half of an l at tbe cost of tome ten thousand of dollars what would be the result of the silly proviso to this Would it not fail to accomplish the object for which it is now professedly It and unless the is amended as to Treasury notes for tbe it ought not to gentlemen or willing to vote for a which goes to he the Government with power to raise money by when it was not necessary to relieve its immediate If such an amendment should be and a fund provided for the redemption of the Treasury notes to be issued under the provisions of this it would not only meet with my cordial but I have no doubt but that it would insure the success of this measure by making those notes as for all Government as specie Though only a looker and not much in the habit of troubling the House with my I have been somewhat amused by the course pursued by the great Whig party on and I rejoice that the time has when on that side of the Home begin to view things in their true and proper this measure was known to be a favorite measure with the Democratic party in of it had been successfully adopted by and had received their entire This measure against which the Whig party had posred out their fiercest they were now compelled tj it woulU prepared to as the policy of the retracting all they had formerly against it. Had the issue of Treasury notes been resorted to at the extra instead of the ill-judged twelve mil lions the political fanaticism of the Whig party given way to the best interests of the so far to have enabled them to adopt this Government would now have in good and the business of the would be far more prosperous than of resorting to this ihe Whig with their recent proposed a loan of twelve millions of dollars as one of the leading measures that was to bring back happiness and prosperity to what they called a distressed and ruined Their orators of ihe day bad been ringing the changes ruin and disaster from one end of the Union to tbe and they then proposed to relieve the distresses of tbe people aboot which had so eloquently declaimed by the absurd and silly measure of borrowing For twelve years they had been moving heaven and earth in order to destroy the credit and character of this and at last obtained it must be confessed that they had succeeded well in the object they had in view for both the credit and character of the Go were nearly I that 1 have not the ati ity to present tins Wh g party in all its naked To show it in i's true and bold it up to the gaze of an and injured but I will endeavor before I get through with my remarks to present some which will mane those political and Tyler feel that the time will soon if it has not when shorn of their political and deprived of tbe loaves and fishes ot they will meet their reward from the hands of an injured They will he cast off and or if renu et will be remembered only with all the prominent measures of this party have been fraught with and I must that when 1 upon the which they acquired and the reckless and unwise courte ot policy pursued by in ihe management and direction of ihe of I feel and find myself a loss to use language sufficiently to paint their odious acts in their true and proper it si ems to me that every nerve has been and all their to bring upon and make all ihe evils which they falsely upon the Democratic snd which they seduced the people ia an evil by hard and of unheard of to believe and which could be remedied only by placing them in And what a contrast does this Whig Administration when compared with the late Democratic the credit of the sood your Treasury abundantly able to all the demands and commerce and our country and had the Independent Treasury been untouched by Whig it would ere have broken down and driven out from among the whole brood of rotten banks and and given us a sound and as the prepare and over which ihe Whig party poured out their anl shel their crocodile if they existed at l the pensioned and broken down politician and Bui how is a with the Government and the Your Treasury is credit The currency nearly business of the coun try disasters of almost every thick and are in upon us a No man possessing an American can draw the contrast without feeling chagrined and painfully mortified at the are imaginary They are stubborn and serious The is now truly and writhing under the bitter fruits of Ah 1 the patriot statesman will here after look upon this epoch as a dark spot on fair page of our country's I was about that at the lime of authorizing this the and presses of the Whig party were declaiming about ruin and depressed an impoverished and that that was a glorious act of and if I mistake I have heard gentleman on this that it was a measure that would afford the iich capitalist and money lender a safe investment of their and induce them to disgorge their treasures of gold and and pour them out in refreshing abundance the as if by diverting twelve millions of dollars from its legitimate channel of and appropriating it to purposes for which Government should have supplied other by thus draining the money and up every spare afford relief to an embarrassed and distressed Tnis was the Whig argument for And leaders rushed on with such hot to the consummation of their that the and among them had no time to weigh and examine tbe result of their it is now wfU and believed that this twelve dulling grand device of the Whig for one of the most disastrous projects dint could have been conceived instead of relieving the it gold and silver from their proper and distress and embarrassment followed as a natural and necessary Had Treasury notes been adopted as a measure of relief of a is there a man the hearing of biv voice so dull in and so restricted in of the business and of the as to suppose that twelve of them could be put in circulation without relieving the country to u considerable the majority saw it and knew it at the t xtra but so wedded were they to their de termined were they in their opposition to anything like Democratic a measure that would have relieved anl preserved the faith and credit cf the They would rather see the country stiff the than so far admit that ir opponents were in the right in adopting this mode of and that opposition to it had been criminal and They pursued their own and disasters thick and heavy have followed in their 1 regret much to see the embarrassed condition of the f regret to see the bonds of the Government hawked about the shops and the Trea Department supplicating tbe money What brought about this deplorable state of is that economy which was so loudly preached before the and if tightly prac would have produced very different Where were the Whig orators who dt so eloquently in praise of and Where now is the gentleman from who said at the extra n that he would as soon expect to see jewels in a snoot in a Democratic The gentleman had now the of Wh g economy be fore him in the shape of tbe Government hawked about in the of York at about ninety-five cents in the and not taken at while now it was proposed to five millions of Treasury when the was declared And should these notes be issued without providing a fund tor their I have no bat that they will soon from three to five cents in the brings me to the principal question involved in this You have refused to provide a fund for the redemption of these by one of tbe most of Uht devices of the Federal school ot them into circulation with no guarantee other than the promise to that they will For my part I will never give my sanction to the circulation of sach without setting apart a particular fund to meet it. is the true Republican and those who swerve from it will sooner or later find their Why should not this doctrine be followed up on this Why not take the readiest as well as the only way to preserve the credit of the Government unimpaired when in your power to do all your measures of relief have tamed out a perfect Your policy has been such a-to forfeit the confidence of all prudent and discreet and this mighty nation with all her resources of with on with the and with a credit for solvency and punctuality in the of her debts above has been unable to borrow And you admit that you have no means ou band to carry on the operations of Govern This state of has not been brought by it is the result of your unwise aud hasty and nothing bin a thorough change of men and measures can restore the credit of this Government to its former high and reinstate it again in the confidence of the having destroyed the credit of the nation by your extravagant and indiscreet and having brought her into a state of you are now attempting to prolong her sickly by resorting to this which you have heretofore in unmeasured as the only alternative to afford you immediate relief from Can you reasonably expect to after your bonds have depreciated 5 per below they have been hawked about in and no potting in circulation your or rather forcing them upon the country to sustain th at and more especially when you provide no funds fiom which they shall be to give them immediate or prospective except their receipt for public You have now already above sewn millions of dollars of Treasury notes in and which are now shall be they will exceed and be equal to two thirds of the whole revenue derived from tbe you that they can be kept at par under such depend upon they will at least if not five per and will ul turn out like all a curse upon our your Treasury notes are already one per below and you increase them the immediate demands for Government th y from sp e c in proportion to their yon l provide some certain fund for their which will give them a and certain I am in favor of this measure in can of and for the purpose of giving temporary whenever the Government may them to be but I am unwilling hhv sane lion to issuing Treasury notes at unless I a n satisfied that they can be at par in the business transactions of the I am that this Government shall contribute its aid and influence in perpetuating the curre which is already upon by putting in circulation a irredeemable paper Th's moa 8ure, % like all other Whig measures which have their appearance in this in under the high pressure of are by the honorable chairman of the Committee of Ways and that unless we immediately pass this the wheels of must be and the nation the wheels of this so far it relates to payment of the demands the have already been and if bankruptcy be a that ton i; upon Your drafts have been protend aDd the public creditor his the payment of his just And whin which we and of which we warned have come upon when the of Whig and Wnig mle have overshadowed our land like a your Treasury drained of its last and your credit and your starving creditors knocking at your and asking in vain for the payment of their you it will give you a an instant cure for all the disasters which in your have brought upon our if you had had wisdom or honesty enough to have adopted this measure at the proper there can be no doubt but that these Treasury notes would have answered all the purposes for which they are but when the Treasury is and your credit jour bonds are hawked about the money market for sale and can find no you expect that your Treasury with less than your will answer the purpose of your and sustain your sinking credi you might as well life to animate the as to that the Treasury present can sustained at or give credit and to sickly existence of diseased if you in this without providing other means than what you have fer redemption of thi you will soon find that this measure of relief will and its will only be felt by bringing accumulated disasters upon tbe embarrassments in which the Government now finds itself have not come upon us by It required no great degree of political sagacity to forsce the disasters that wonld fall upon the when the late and speckled cabinet eame into Anxious to grasp the of they called tiie late extra and no sooner was lhan the universal ery of and dis and was again again The orators and presses of the Whig party took it and not assertions on the of their retail slanderers perverted what I said on that and went o far as to charge me with denouncing the as In this of first thing that was done by that extraordinary was to take twenty-five dollars out of what they called an empty bestow it upon a political and the next act of this and most economical was to take the avails of tbe public land from the public and bestow on the Sia To rob this Government of the that belonged to the at ihe very time that they that it was a fell swoop they robbed the Government of a fortune worth some hundred millions of dollars at the same with these two a was passed to borrow twelve millions of end now ihe Government was found to be most splendid This is tbe the Whig party has brought the Government after the promises they had made to the If an individual to conduct his as the affairs of Government have been if tie lived in be would be thought a suitable for ihe lunatic him be guilty of as much profligacy and and in France he would be sent to the while in or he would be doomed to the I know of no parallel of profligacy more applicable to party than the conduct of tbe late United Stales That in the plenitude cf its undertook to disp ay magnificence and munificence in donat tng the tunds of that belonging in part to widows and and which had been entrusted tp its by ing a service of silver plate upon its president worth some twenty-five thousand That institution is now broken up and declared bankrupt for and her but betrayed are turned out This only about three months bestowed her public worth upon the and it now finds itself bankrupt and unable to pay its I feel uo disposition to run the parallel than to the Bank of the United States bad with its Whig party has met with its I trust that the the esre of being relieved from both at the extra bestowed ai a douceur to a thrown away the of the public having also thrown the burden of the Post Office Depart ment on the National where it ought never to have been next thing the Whig party did was to pass an act to borrow mo was the retrench and reform which they had so liberally pro mised the The result of all those liberal ware signally displayed in the disgraceful position in which the Government was now this state of however much I might rejoice in the disaster and destruction of what I believed a wicked and corrupt the moment they got into had abused the confi the and violated all their pledges they so solemnly made to yet I feel for my and whenever her interest or her honor is at I trust I always be found in the and boldly marching to the I am not to be deterred by the taunts and jeers of my political which have so often distinguished the decorum of this from pursuing fearlessly what 1 believe to be my regardless of all I to refer again to this but I must go back to that subject for a All must recollect the vindictive assaults that were made upon me on th s for my opposition to this as well as the return I trust I made to and the who infest this and scatter from thence their poisonous venom throughout the had also thought fit to make me the subject of their scurrilous did I complain of of as some others upon this floor have I consoled myself with the that though their hearts were as black as their fangs were and worthy only of my pity and This douceur of was one of the popularity hunting measures of the Whig Their first glorious act of relief to what they called a distressed How signally has it turned upon their own For it is so much at war with all our notions of Republican equality and and so palpably a of the that few are found hardy enough to defend it. It in my so far as I met the universal condemnation of 1 have observed that I re ice in the desaster and of the Whig and I think friend of our country ought to to see the des of a e professions of and pledges of economy and have been so flagrantly vio and whose acts have resul ed so disgrace uily and so upon the of the and it is now get acknowledged by nil that lhat party is tiie themselves are that measures will not be approved by ihe and many of it would are attempting to their wavering political by sacrificing that of will not attempt to soon and enumerate all the evils may l-e anticipated from and unwise I on y io cull the at lention of the people to some of ihe calamit es cud upon country hy ihe Wh g a th -y were ascending the zenith of iht ir And God only knows how much farther they would hare pursued the same desolating had not some of measures been so shocking as to alarm the fears of the and induce h m to interpose veto power and stop them in their reckless Ani for this the Pre i lent is entitled to a nation's I that it has saved us from tbe mortification of our constitutional rights from ths moie appalling spectacle of our country embroiled in a civil war and drenched in tbe blood of our composed of all the f the and made o unite frnn the of without avowing any principle isve lhat of uncompromising war upon the Democracy of the nation an l the of ihe effected so far to overthrow the Democratic and p i cal power of the those salutary principles which had taken thi country more than forty years to Im Id up ami bankrupt the Treasury and disgrace tbe they naw attempt to feast their morbid but appetites by that by resorting to this Democratic sacrificed reputation of their political Let them go on I am the last man in standing as 1 do in the and in opposition to to wish to or lo arrest them in their downward course to they are doing the work for us with an accelerated speed and lar sooner than could be accomplished by any other I only to rouse and call the attention of the American people to thee of their politi cal and bhow them the danger have to apprehend from and trusting political power to and honorable from at the extra in one of his sallies which produced so much merriment on this likened the Wh g party to the thriving infant of a gigantic and predicted that at this time it would be and 1 can cow the gentleman lhat this gigantic infant has about given its last lhat it is with its bead cut i and lhat all he and his friends have now to do is sing ihp Wh g rendered desperate by their has turned and attempted to visit them upon the bead of their own this not Who had not witnessed the bitter denunciations that had been unsparingly heaped on the head of the present Chief Magistrate by these who assisted in placing him in They have vilified and abused him because he refused to go with them in all their reckless and uncalled for at acks made upon President Tyler by bis late friends and cal have woke up public sympathy in his and led tbe public carefully to investi gate his moral and political 1 am inclined to believe that they will find that up to the time of his union with the Whig he had sustained a for worth and political and beloved by all who knew He had the important duties of various high offices which tiad been conferred upon credit to himself and honor to his he had stood the test of public and passed un scathed ihe fiery ordeal of public and at the time of g himself wi h the Whig one of the raoM political leaders of Virginia and of the But because he refuses to carry out all the mad projects of that its leaders have turned upon aim with a fury unparalleled iu ths ai n Is of po and are attempting to immolate him upon the altar of their they know how pointless arc their for I can inform those gentleman that as he in the r he in the confidence of the people nt large and if the light of his burning up by the torch of bis lute political shall un mask ths fatal projects of the Whie and biing him back to the faithful performance of his for And if he will continue steadily to resist encroachment of ihe Whig party upon our c- n. and di aud the high duties intrusted to as indicated by his veto mes I have no but that a grateful people will respond to his ' well thou good and faithful why is all this Whig censure and Whig con poured out so unsparingly upon the bead of Has he done thing which deserves such unmeasured as we often bear heaped upon bim by bis late What single measure of theirs has be except the vetoing their bank bills And shall for this conscientious discharge of his be and for doing an act which will rank him among the first patriots of the nation and his act that has entitled him to the gratitude of the American and to the applause of every patriot of and which will transmit his name to posterity M one of the illustrious Fathers of our is made the pretext for their ruthless and wicked attack upon It is very easy to perceive that it is only a The Whig leaders have ulterior in their attack upon their Not that they regard a Bank as a measure of general interest and relief to the but because they thought it secure to political and aflord them the means of elevating their favorites to and controlling the destinies of the They have been defeated ia their and plans of wickedness have broken by the interposition of their and for they seek to sacrifice to appease their I am no apologist of President He was nor is he the maa of my choice for But when I see bis former political who had shortly before celebrated his and sung his praises in their and Tyler turn upon him and denounce him aw an apostate and I heard ol their burning bim in and stirring up the mob to insult him in his in the capital of the when I saw in one of their party papers the threats of the assassin's dagger for the conscientious discharge of his while he stood calm and fearless in the firm discharge of his unawed and uninfluenced by I cannot but admire him for his and respect him for his And if I am Bot greatly they will find that the President is the only among the many distinguished leaders of that mammoth who bas retained in his favor the least semblance of public and does at this time stand higher in the estimation of ihe nation than any other individual of the Whig remember to have on a former the venerable gentleman from of the Whig tbe Independent Treasury as a monster too dreadful to be and that its author Van had been weak enough to proclaim it as a measure of great interest to the second only to the Declaration of and although I listened to him with great under ihe hopes of obtaining lessons of wisdom from his experience and yet all 1 learned from his argument was the bold assertion that a large majority of the States had condemned the by electing General Harrison to the He seemed to enjoy the prospect wh ch hii then in of overthrowing this Democratic and with all his the hasty action of the House for its The same and only argument was used on ibis as on most of the other measures of the late extra session oi No matter how absurd and ridiculous was tbe if it was brought forward by r it was sure to be backed by ihv assertion lhat people hid will d that wss denouncing the Independent Treasury is a with eloquently Acclami ing danger of uniting ihe puise and the sword in the of the what measures did he cr his party propose to of he an l without beine sure of ob and lu fore they had provided any remedy for the evils they repealed the Independent only law which existed at that time separating the purse from the and thereby uniting lhat power in the hands of the of which they so bitterly gentleman and his Whig friends were willing te breakdown every larner which that law provided for the safety of the public and to leave the whole revenue in the of tbe uncontrolled by and a single reason o her than that it was a Democratic and that the by electing had declared against and ever tr at we have bad no law but the c f the Execu ive to keep and the public it is was baldly denounced by the whole Whig but they never or at lean they never in my examine its point out its or condemn it upon an ex animation of all their clamor and denunciation made on this floor and against the Independent I have never yet beard a valid objection brought up against it It is that the whole Whig beaded by President proclaimed that the people had condemned the and that to the reason which i board offered for ihe repeal of that and a reason which I wholly ia of For if wen rightly and fairly presented to the 1 bare no doubt but that they would it by overwhelming I believe it to be one of aost wiso and salutary measures for the aad of tbe tad for from the of i genius of nan ma repeal of ibis as one of the reckless and uncalled for measures of the Whig party since they came into aad I it has been one of the prominent breaking down the credit of tbe aad bringing her to her present deplorable let me tell gentlemen that nothing bat a resort to this measure will save die country from the daggers of bankruptcy and rain which bow It is the only measure in the power of the Government that can be adopted that will restore regulate the and give as a sound By adopting this would compel the banks to pay and consequently put an end to all those insolvent paper money making factories which now flood Ihe country with their the interest of this country demands the restoration of and the people will never rest satisfied until the Independent Treasury shall be It will require another election to bring aboat this desirable and then I hope we shall have the 1111 measures of the Whig party and all their which they have attempted to fatten upon the and correct ones adopted and established upon the ruins of the Whig party and Whig few words and I have This Whig party came into power promising to restore confident to the to the and bring abont How have these promises been instead of restoring they by repealing the Independent and giving aid and countenance to insolvent fixed noon the as far as lay in their ia the shape of irredeemable paper Instead of prosperity to ihe they as they all brought it lo tbe verge of earning disasters that will take many yean of the mil beneficent rule of Democracy to thank tbe was in the Thank God that we see the dawn of better days for our and that a spirit was roused the people that would ere long sweep away the last vestige of corruption and misrule from our have no desire of this subject I did when I obtained tbe intend to say half as much as I have as I many pressed themselves on my which I could not refrain from giving a passing I in merely that it would me pleasure to vote for thin in the present exigency of the if it coold be put in such a shape as to enable me to do so consistently with my views of what the honor and interest of country AND GENERAL A undersigned having been appointed a Notary Public for city and county of respectfully his services in that and tVr the transaction of any business with individuals or connected the several public Departments requiring an agent at the seat of including claims before Having had several experience iu the General Land he hopes to give satisfaction to those who may employ him for the prosecution of claims before that charges will be and letters addressed to him with a retailing fee commensurate to the service will be promptly and faithfully attended Office on 15th st. opposite Treasury D. St. Clair esq. John Joseph H. esq. esq. Hon. John James T. esq. H. D. Hon. J. B. M. A. Gregg and Co. Messrs. Jenkins and Co. Messrs. James Power and 8. H. esq. Daniel C. Hon. Hon. James A. Hon. J. B. St. I R. J. S. esq. R. Hon. D. H. Hon. G. T. H. St. John A. H. Lake 6 18416m received the fallowing pieces of new Music at the old store between and 12.h goes the by S. Nelson her written by F. W. music by H. written and adapted to a popular melody by J. H. twenty favorite melodies for beginners ou the piano by W. R. Coppock FLUTE Firth and Hall's easy studies for the or in forty-eight each number of this work is devoted exclusively to or Sacred in order that the purchaser may be accommodated with either one or as may be a of the most operatic melodies for the airs arranged as cotillions for the flute and collection of tho most popular for the Evening consisting of the most favorite fashionable arranged as solos and for the and German of Bellini's Opera of arranged for the G a collection of the most popular airs of Ac. by E. new collection ot instrumental consisting of arranged for the and from tbe works of other celebrated To which are instructions for each 7 BOOKS FOR 8ALE AT OFFICE We have large octavo the Reports of the of the Treasury on the from tbe foundation of the Government to tbe year 1836, to which is prefixed the Reports cf Alexander Hamilton on Public a National and the of a They are comprised iu 3 averaging 630 pages and bound in law 33 a volume a have also in large octavo the opinions of the General of the United from the beginning of tbe Government to March 1, 1841, taken from official documents transmitted to to which are now added a copious with references to the clauses of the and of foreign and Indian treaties referred and a table of tbe acts of Congress cited and commented Published the inspection of Henry D. late Attorney General of tbe Untied It 1506 and is bound in one law Price a AND Nov. 1841dtf Lord just and for aale by F. immediately east ot or the Adventures of a a two Macassar Almond Regenerator ior the Just received by C. H. Oct. 14 Corner 14 and