Indiana Republican, Volume 1, Number 20, Madison, Jefferson County, 10 May 1817 — Page 2
j the prince regent, and was in at- the person or persons gumy ui me u..u uuu request; , - tendance on his roval hiehness in late treasonable attempt on the use their votes and influence, ,
. the carriage; on their passage life of the prince regent. have that law repealed, and,
us to conclude with unexampled Lord J. Murray was then cat- sion of the authors and abetters pubijc stirrnr he Uv, a contest whereon depend- led to the bar, and in answer to of the outrage 7A 1t the pub he sent iment (1 A' , " A r mf;nne nut tn him hv The address was then agreed to his district had to him been u
.. and which his been hitherto felt the chancellor of the exchequer, mmam. . and oliicially express, d, thro' l,vLrSeIves, asitisacknowkde- Mr. Curwen, Mr. Wynne, and 31.-A proclamation has medmm of the .Legislature of!,
S by other nations, to be the some other members, stated, that been published, ottering 10001. "T- trf ' u rf,lUn.J;!nrdnf the !drhamber. to reward for the apprehension ot that state had been oiicui!v;(
illvM ucui.li itiai tiuj vi
zo the lot of any people. Earl-Stanhope, lord Exmouth and lord Prudhomc (late lord Al
rernoriPercev) took the oath and from thehouse of lords, on their Message from we rnnce ivgem. "'-7 pumic,, their seats. return between Carleton house & -February 4. Lord Sidmouth pre- ment had been expressed, heslio
- The house then adjourned du- St. Jame's the glass of the car- sented a message to .me ntuse imvc u us exists rinc pkasure ; and at five o'clock riage was. fractured ; it was the from the prince regent. f 1 here was scarcely, a man Ihm, the lord Chancellor again took his glass on the . prince's left hand. The message was read by the heved m the remote settlement, -sc at on the-Woolsack. Lord Sid- The fracture appeared to be. pro- lord chancellor, and was as foi- of Indiana, who had not hear mouth said that before he moved duced by two bullets, for round lows : ., and reprobated the law ; and ;,
x that rhe speech delivered from the throne that day, "should be read frnm tkr WMUxrkl h'p had a sub
ject of very great importance to-slightest doubt that the fracture thought proper to order to be diture were very unlike .'ho c: communicate to the house for vas caused by bullets. About a ' laid before the house of lords, pa- the eastern cities. Six .dollar which reason he moved that stran- minute after this happened a very . pers containing an account of cer- per day sounded large enough t
- zers be ordered to withdraw large stone was thrown at the o- tain meetings and combinations them. I heir sources of ye Jt!,,
apertures had been made in the " His royal highness the prince was no wonaer, said Mr. H. tb glass, and the ' remainder of it regent, acting in the name and on his constituents disapproved r.: was not broken: he had not the the behalf of his majesty, has that law. Their ideas of expen.
HOUSE OF COMMONS
J f - Q. -
ther glass, and then three or four held in ditierent parts ot the coun- means or procuring money, wcrl other stones with great 1 violence ? try, tending to the disturbance few-and narrow, when compel
he had examined the first glass ot the public tranquility, the a- wun me commercial opulence c:
fr.-:n the lords, anneared at the " that was broken minutely ; there lienation of the affections "from a maritime country, or even ;!y
bar, with a communication ; be- was no crowd near the carriage at his majesty's person and. govern- independent competency of a irrr Iidriiitted to the table, thev the time; but if a pistol had been ment, and to the overthrow of older state. They were rcs-uir,.
stated, that they were command- fired with gunpowder, the per- the whole frame - and system of their country from a vi! !erp,cv cd by their lordships, to desire a son firing it, he thinks, must have the law and constitution; and his Agriculture was in its infancy; i
present conference with this been recognized ; he supposes as royal highness recommends these the produce they had to sp.rehouse, -in the painted chamber, no report was heard by him, they papers to the. immediate and se- their corn and their beef, iu!:
were "directed- to inform kthe trees; the opposite glass was up, tion to morrow ; and stated that compensation received at last s&. house, that in the absence of the it was not broke at allliegot he should then present the papers sion it was not to be presumed that usual messengcrc, the clerk assis- out of the carriage immediately alluded to in the message, which any had drawn heavily on rhe tre, tant, and the reading clerk, were after the prince regent ; did not he should move to refer to a se- treasury, since the commence.ikr dep-j!e J to convey the message. search the carriage, nor did he cret committee. Ordered. of the present session, & it wuulc The chancellor of the exche- know whether any bullets were become thishfouse to repsal.-
quer m.wed, " that the house do ' found at the bottom of it. The w Jav, because it was wrong, atthf aquiesc? in the message sent by master of the 'horse was in the CONGRESSIONAL. same time, practise all the wror,--the Lords." This -motion was carriage; splinters of the glass n T rr j . . which that hw authorized, to ;k i. . (1a i. k Remarks of Mr. lienor icfts, on toe . . . , , ... unammoussv agreed to. were round; the -stones which i - r date or its rercal. It would be The speaker then -said, that struck the Opposite 'glass did not r ' r'rWtbc compensation lav. holding out to the people the se-r-as the house had agreed to the enter the carriage, thet glass was Mr, KENDIUCFvS said he blance of doing what they requir Tnes--ig; requesting a conference, very thick, was decidiy in favor of a repeal ed,when wc were not so doing, & at would he proper to name, their In answer to aiquestion from -of the law of last session, but he if the people in the passage of thi incssennrrs. -lord Milton, the witness said that did not think the bill before the offensive law had been injured,
'liv. mhowmg members were nis royal nignness sat in the mid- committee the best ;possb!e substj- this kind of leiKlation would be
accord! ugly (leputed: 1 he chan die, between tne master ot the tute. 1 his bill contemplated the adding insult to that injury, cellar of the exchequer, Mr. Can- horse and the witness. The stone repeal of the law of last session. That it had been said tha, niog, Mr. Fonsonny, Mr. Tier- smashed the window and pound- from the time ot its passage. That lowering the compensation of Tiry,- Sir St Romilly, lord arch d the glass, which wasremarka- this bill then, while it speaks the members would have a -tenderer Hamilton, lord Lascelles, Mr. bly thick. There was a footman language of repeal, allows the to exclude from this fiocr the r - Freemantle, and several others, and a life guardsman by the side members on this floonto put their lentsofour country. liut, Is: who repaired to conference. Af- of the carriage. He could not hands into the treasury, -and draw it be remembered, said Mr. II tcr a short interval, they return- say whether the supposed bullets the proportional part of 1500, that the best talents were found ed to the house : when rperforated any part of the car- Dollars which will be coming to in the councils of the .nation, a; The chancellor of the exche- riage. them from the commencement of a time When no comperwatitm quer reported, that the lords had The witness having withdrawn, the present Congressional year, was certain or scarcely probable;
highness 'the prince regent, on had just heard, to induce the and of course nothing else. "was rt Life!.
his return from parliament this house to concur in the address necessary, than a bare repeal of day; that they had agreed upon (Hear .hear!) He therefore that law. The old law, on the . " We are "lad" fsavs the Inrli-
suujeci or compensation, would ana Gazette,) " to have it m stand revived of course. Thisre. power, in this week's in per,
an address to his royal highness, moved that the address be read.
and requested the concurrence of The address was then read, to stand revived of course. Thisre. power, in this week's inn
tne commons House in tne same, tne toiiowing crtect : " wc, your peal was what he wished, and nrcspnt nnr r, wiih Mr
The lords had Hlcpwi;e informed roval hihness'a dutiful nnrl with c.U rf,n:, - tt i -i , . .,Jr
.. , ' T o. ' " -luijuaiunrajAuivcvicw i;i xitriKincKs remarKS cn t::c them, that they had received the loyal subjects the commons operation, as would at least ex- pensation bill, while une'er cons!-Jc evidence of a witness, who was houp of parliament, beg leave press an opinion of this house, deration in the National LlL the right honorable James Mur- humbly to express our abhorrence that none of its members shall, or turc. We find the ntirnWX ray. of the outrage offered this day ought to redeve any compensate contained theirin, are "perfecdX The cuancellor of the exche- to the person or your roval hi?h- on during thi
...v... uiui, iiiv. Aut- iikjii uiiu tktiibi mai, niti 1. oil w Li ill 111 iiir 111 liirin pc fir rnc laur r r icr rrn l .1 . 1. . t .
ther consideration of the debate be found a person in those domin- session. That this rrrrnQiwt?. f. ' ,u. i.n-ai
on the address should be adiourn- ions canabie or committin?r cn Hi. nncntlnn nria nk;0r,i k.. t ri 1
ueen iainy rcprcacntca in inn , 7
on the address should be adjourn- ions capable of committing so da- operation was objected to, but it ed till to morrow. ring and flagitious an act. It is was admissible, on the nrinrinlp
This being agreed to, the right the earnest wishes of your faith-' that Congress had a ritrht to fix nn. 'ifmncf.f.L,.-,)!!:
honorable gentlemen moved that ful commons, in which they must their own compensation, and on representative from th irisrcprf the message of the lords be taken be joined by all descriptions of the ground, that the precedent sentations and aspersions of ' jnto consideration, and that lord faithful subjects, that your royal fixed at last session, was in point, invideous spirit who-- merited James Murray be called m and highness would be pleased to di- The law of last session, had a re- disappointments' have engender examined as to the fact stated in rect such measures to betaken, trospective operation. Mr. II. ed malevolent tho' unavai'ni' tf the address, , asshbuld Jead to the apprehen- sa-id, that, on the' ground of the position. ' P
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