Western Sun & General Advertiser, Volume 23, Number 19, Vincennes, Knox County, 16 June 1832 — Page 1

BY ELIHU STOUT.J VINC3NWBS, SATUHBAY, JU27E 26, 1832.

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2Jcatmi Sun

a v j jiuwiiaiicu ii . cents, ior a. numbers; winch may be discharged by the payment of 2 at the time of subscribing. Payment in advance, being the mutual interest of both parties, that mode is ttdicitcd. A failure to notify a wish to discontinue at the expiration of the time subscribed for, will be considered a new engagement ; &. no subscriber at liberty to discontinue, until all arrearages are paid. Subscribers must pay the postage on tiieir papers when sent by mail. Letters by mail to the Editor on business must be paid,orthcy will not be attended to. Produce will be received at the Cash Market Price, for subscriptions, if delivered within the year. AnvKRTisEMRKTs not exceeding thirteen lines, will be it.scrted three times for cue dollar, and twenty-five cents for each after insertion longer ones in the same proportion. gcT'lson- sending Advertisements, must specify thenum bcr of times they wish them inserted, or they will be continued until ordered out, and must be paid for accordingly. LAWS OF TH33 UNION. FA' SM) AT THK No. 2'2. AN ACT )rovtding tor the postponement of the trial of certain cases now pending in the Superior Courts of Arkansas Territory, and for withholding from sale or entry certain lands in said Territory. Ih it enacted by the Srr.ate ami House I of Refircsentativcs of the United States cf America in Congress assrmbled. That the District Attorney of the United States for thf Territory of Arkansas be, and he is hereby, authorized and required to postpone ti'itil after the expiration ot the next session of the Supreme Court of the United S au-s, nil further proceedings in any case which lias been tried, or now is pending for trial in the Superior Court of the territory of Ar kansas, upon which bills of review have been filed in said Superior Court on the part of the U. States undrr -the provisions of an act, passed Mav the eighth, 18.30, entitled "An act for further extending the powers of the powers ot the Judges of the Superior Court of the 'le-ri-tory of Arkansas, under the act of the :6th day of May, 1824, and for other purposes." Provided, however, that nothing in this act shall be applicable to any of the aforesaid cases now pending for trial on appeals in the ' Supreme Court of the L.uted Mates: Ami ed shall nrejud'ce the riirhts cf anv of the parties: Provided, (dsn, 1 hat no extra compensation shall aucwetl saul Jui'ircs !

try M:t?tfr.-. N

until after the termination of the next term ! from a pott in Colombia, contained in of the Supreme C( utt of the United States, j the preceding section, shall be taken oil. kfter which the Jues shall proceed todis- j as soon az tht president shall receive sa!)ose f said cases under the provisions ot ,:,.(., ,tor.. t nF.t,-

said acts, and then be allowed the addition:;1 rcmiDensa'ion lro.ii said time, ur.tu tne II, leilS.l" It'll iiimii .-..w "HA, i.,iii 1, it. ; 1 . . f ascs are cusposca o;, or intu, ny uie saui j ceurts of Arkansas " j Sec 2. And be i' fur' her enacted. That the President - f the United States shal r.mse all the lands, the titles of which are involved in, or dependant upon the trial ot ; faia tV.HS OI review, W Uli n aiC ClainUO OV purchasers alter the rendition ot theorem j !d iadmcnt. to be withheld from sale until Ke ifiither order ot Congress. ' Speaker of the Ifjuse cf Refiresentatives, JOHN C. CALHOUN, Vice President of the United States, and J'resider.t of the Senate. APPitOVfcD April CO. 1832. ANDREW JACKSON. n nt1 NT ACT tn nrnviflp thn mpn 1 of extending the benefits of vaccination, as a Preventive of the Small Pox, to the Indian tnhe and thereby, as tar us possible, to save them from the destructive ravages of that disease. IV' 'rac:ta cl'. ine Tr,v E ' enacted bn the Senate end H:.use v if'' ".. t iuc isu:.cu o.-u.-c Represent. itives cf the United States rf America, in Ccngyss assembled. That t sh:ll be the duty vi the several Indian Acentsawd Su!-Agents, under the direction cf the Secretary of War. to take such mea - sures as he shall deem most efficient, to con - vene the Indian tribes in their respective towns, or in such other places and numbers and at such seasons as shall be .nest conve nient to the Indian population, for the pur- ; rove of arresting the pre-; ess of s-nall pox. r.moiv the several tube 'hv vaccination. i And be :t furthtr enacted, Tha vc .he Si cret.iry of War be, and he hereby is empowered to em piny as many p.r vioi ins lrirewns, troni the arrm , or le.K.ent on the ho r near p ... i sacif t ,en' seriees shall be rrj e l, as he rn av h ne- i cessarv fur the cxt cat;: n rt 11 im-ewrv.wocom da-t the t h su iat.s to the leaote huW tnv ttiis aet; nul. w ho are inf. cted, r mav Ue ia i;..'V.edi it.r ( ; bt in nit.-cte i. witli thn dl '.ai coaipeu-ati'-n sh t! be s;x u s per .ay, aini mx me:;, whose cou.per.s i li'Mi sli.tll be twenty-five dollars per nom.h. V. . -,' . ..- II, t.u t .r r ( : .etc ',. it sa ui oe nu- i.u", m un .ii . i ... T i s., h v i f w ar r . tuse all lnd: i' A? S TO I )" VUMp. , 1 i iii wv.U euuiht v ae i;h- in i'i'it: and all ..r. t.-s ludi'.iti pwpulut'ua tu submit 1 ir 'Per i ne i; to a s'i idc Hie aceination.

Sec. 4. .1 rid he it further tr.actcd. That J nil Anents. Kuh-A p-f iifc Pi,..r;;n.,. ....r. i

Surgeons, employed in the execution of this !act, shall make monthly of their proceedings to

to the War Depart-1 arythererf shall vUb-!day

tv.ent. And the Secretary mit to Congress, on or before the first of ' February next, a general report cf all pro-1 cetdii.gs in the premises. I Sec. 5. lnd be it further enacted, That! cany this act intnHfrct, the sum of S.- j to 000 be appropriated out of anv moneys in the 1 reaut y not otherwise appropriated. approved May 5, 1S32. K. 24. AN ACT for altering the time ot holding the District Court of the United States for the District of Indiana. BE it enacted by the .Senate and ILuse cf Representatives of the United States Imerica, m congress assembhd. That

he dSJ h' r the1lj"!trdateSor' Jersey, six; within the State of Pennthe Uistnct ot Indiana shall be hereatterj , . . : .

holden on the last Mondays of Mav and No vemocr, in each year, instead ot the first Mondays of said months, as is now required by law. Sfx. 2. And be it further enacted. That all piocetdings of a civil or criminal nature,! now pending in, or returnable to. said Court, j i n Jir tirnrrnlfd in twr . .1.. t v. v. 4 v. vi iti w Ofllli A)U I III lllC I same manner as if no alteration uf the times i for holding said Court had taken place. Aitkoved, Mav 19, 183 s!. No. 25. AN AC V to extend the Patent of Jetiiro Wood. S K it enacted by the Senate and Hone iJi cf Jlejirezcntativescf the United States of Jmtrica in Congress csscndled, That mere ue, ana nereoy is, rnted iinto Jitiu o ood, a citir.cn of the United States, his heirs, assigns, and legal representatix es, for the term of fourteen years from the last day of August, 1833, the full and exclusive right and privilege of making, uvng, and vending t ) others to be used, his improvements in the construction of a plough, a description of which is gien in a schedule or specification annexed to letters patent granted to the said Jethro Wood for the same on the first day of September, IS 19: Provided, that all rights and privileges heretofore sold by the said patentee, to make, use, or vend the sdd improvements, shall enure to and be enjoyed by the purchasers, respectively, as fully and upon the same conditions during the period hereby granted, as for the existing term: And firwided aso. That the price at which the same has been usually sold by the said patentee, shall not bi; advanced upon future purchasers, Ai proved May 19, 1832. fNo 261 AN AC I for eivinr effect to a commercial arrangement between

the United States and the Republic ot;'a 'gcttd it. to tive couutenanc; to Colombia j this mahmiant charge, le )ropoed a

3DL it enacted by the Senate and j 3 House of Representatives of tht j UultldStatea of America in Congress ; . r. , ... 6 . .. . 1 hat vessels ot the Ilepub.ic : ' . , - ..-ww... , 01 O'oainia, ana .neir car - -cs, w nether "f foreign or domestic prt.duce.or ma j nufiduie, which shall come direct from j j the p-)Us of that nation lo the U. States,! ! s.a p:,y no greater duties on impoita I ,jon. anchorage, tonnare, or any other! Lj d , JX ferc5lftcr ,n bej icd on the vessels of the U States. Sec 2. And be it further enacted, Urn the restriction ot corning- direct lis taken off from vessels of the United c . . States in the nortn ot thi Ketmhlir nf , . ; ., 1 Colombia, and shall make known the same by his proclamation declaring the tact. Sec 3. And be it further f rcarff That j, ,,,e Ptcstdt nt of "the U. States shall a thuo titmbp sit'ct'jrlnru intVirmiiint. I , , , , ,, , ' .. , hat, hc V""S allowed or which mu he a,!,jwe" t0 American vessels and their !

cai goes in the pons of Colombia, ccr ther, from the chanrcier, originand extent responding with those, extended, or .oof this conspiracy, and Jro;i the cir.xbe extended by this act, to Colombian ! r vctkrs who may ayycar to hare engjcd vessels and their cargoes in the ports of' in it, at pkincipvls or accks-okiksJ a dethe United States, have been revoked or I termination be not maniftsttd io ovkkawk annulled, he is hereby authorized, by and in mr;!) vm: the Reprtscutaihex of proclamation, to suspend the operation of j the people" yr. All these horrors have

either or both of the provisions of this; ' 3Ct' a9 tnc C3se ,,iay be "O to withhold; ! anY or al1 tne privileges allowed, or to : be allowed, to Colombian vessels or thcii cargoes. ArPiiovED, Mav 19, IS32. - , r v' OT . V Af'T ...t .1.i. i uuuiui nic

revision and extension ol the rules and! which vvas engendered in the swe spircgulations of tae Naval service. ! rit which dictated the Coffin Handbills.

i 5 tf l- u cnacteci oy tne Senate and j kjl House of Refiresentatives of the United States cf America in Concret assembled, Thai the President of the U States bp, and he is hereby, authorized toconstitutc a board of Naval officers to; V ." , p . composed of the Naval Commissioncrs a,H two ost Captains, to meet at - the seat of government, whose duty it i shall be, with the aid and assistance of : the Attorney Cieneral, caretuby to. re - x!t' ana enlarge the rules and rcgula-luo-is governing the naval service, with. to 3lbPl thcm t0 lhc present ; rv'id futu;c exigencies ot this important, ar-n or naiioiui ueiencc. wntcn luicsatu; . ill - i i

re gill af ions, when approved by htm. and, throughout the Union. I here were sesanctioocd by t.onress, shaii hive the veral persons who heard this converaa-

; force ct law, ai d s and in lieu of all ' ,ll(.ru l(.rt'tl...r .n.,i I A .... i, .... A i i . . t r -. Ai'i'r.ovtD, May 19, 13 32. 1 , . l J .N At. 1 tor the 3pportion ineiu ii Ht presenta ives amon the i several Sutes, ac;crdi:v to the Fifth 1 Lc:i'J5.

H K It mCCtcd bil lht Sprint nnd

$ House ot Representatives of r."Zf1 ha,lQ,m f"0 ,ler th Vo" j ot March, 18oj, the House of Representatl ves shall be composed of mem bcrs elected agreeably to a latio of one representative for even forty seven thou sand and seven hundred persons in each Stale, computed according to the rule prescribed by the constitution of the y. States, that is to say, within the State ot Maine, eight; within the State of NewHampshire, five; within the State of Massachusetts, twelve within the State of Rhode Island, two; within the State of Connecticut, six; within the State ot Vermont, five; within hc Siatc of New syivania, iwcmy -i ign.; wnnin inc oiaic of Delaware, on ; within the State of Maryland, cisht; within the Slate ot Virginia, twenty one; within the State of North Carolina, thirteen: within the State of South Carolina nine; within lhe clalp nf Renri:,. nin,? within ,hP o ' State of Kentucky, thirteepj within the State of Tennessee, thitieen; within the State of Oliio, nineteen; within thi State of Indiana, seven; within the State ol Mississippi, two; within the State of Illinois, three; within the State ol Loui siana, three; withio the State of Missjurj, t?o, and within the State ol" Alabama, fivc. - 'row the (Hebe. CONVERSATIONS OF THE TH! PUEMDEN I. When Mr Stanberry fust attempted to give importance to himself by insinu ating that the President was the cause of his misfortune, and solicited the sympa thics of oilier tnembeis ol M.e House, by hinting that a similar fate awaited otners, Mr Bates, ot Me said, iiDoes the member from Ohio mean to state that the President of the United States has thrt utened jiersvnai xwjtence against any member of this ILjuse?" M Sr.bcr rv 'efdud: "I do. and I am purrAUtB WITH T1IK rKOOF." Jii.ice this fnsi statement, Mr. Stanberry has changed his position, and now charges, mt that the President has threatened fiersoial viclence against c.ty member cf the House, tut ihat he resolution, which was rejected by lhe House Encouraging this step, and with ja view to support the naked assertions l of this shameless man. t tie fncious on. ... . ' uuv u. tveticm. 'ves nave followed up his a'tcmpr by a '"K "I resolutions, resjlvio- " a THr- mvfs and rj:K-.s of thf. Rr.rRF. extativf-01 - i 111: rroi'i.r. ix thi llou-i: ahf no lo;i:u safe,'' vV.-. "that a select tovmit rr.r. r aitointfp v. ftfi lXSTKt'CTloNS TO FXUT Il'.E M KETOI?T W HAT 3IEA-L"F.F.S Alii: N? CF-SAKV TO TIvO TF.CT THE LIVES AXil FF.RSONS OF THE KEri:i:sE ;tatives or the PF.ori.i: jx Tins llorsE,' vV. -. " f.'i it said (vnmilfce he further instructed to enquire info the origin and extent of rVcoFiKr mamff.sted bu recent y. exacts n iun:n:r-, attemyied against nembers of f'tis Jlotncr '''that said Committee be instructed to enquire into the truth or falsity of the nrMon which charges the P evident of the I mtf.h States with comdenaneing direeth or indirectly. In any aj-yrobation, opin Jon n, Mi-fwm.M.f .o- ., n f . , - . r . r and nolmce jvrptlra'ed ati ninnicr of tht. Ilov."C. czr.- and lwhcthe Coalition worked up, out of the caning which Governor Houston gave Mr.; Stanberry, for the abusive speech pub- j . lished by the latter in the Iruellhrenccr, and the subservient affair which grew oit rtf it tirfriin f ri f it r (t rf! Wl ll UVvvn Vllw K ihlVUUS J 1 these parties, Messrs. Heard and Ar noi'j.; i nis ussue 01 jeitinea terrors, i ill i-. .f . J met with the contempt it deserved. j The House refused io dispense with the ': rule, so as tn nrmit the rcaoluticn tn ht- ,. . 4 moved. j From certain remarks, made bv Mr. Hatringcr on the floor of the House, i ' s nouse, , when the vote to ad-nit thesf. resolutions was taken.it seems th;it a conversation, 'held in his presence, between the Presi dent and the Rev J N. Danforth, is the ' ground worK of the montroUs charges presented, first to the notice of the House by M r. Stanberry, and now to the nation by the rejected resolutions pubhshed in the Intelligencer, which are re echoed bv the opposition prints tin. and sioce it has become iinn.rt.int c ,,r.;.. .u., .,... i.,- ... : 1 I t I . I . . i leueti apprehension exoioiieu m lhc reso.u'iotis quoted, vve have taken some - p.ms to as; crt un the suo-tance ot it , ... We will ioi attempt to give the tenor of the Ioo.t jnd fti'nilinr dialogue which occ jrvci bclwcen the President and Mr.

Danfrtrtli l. ..r.' 1 1 .. ... .-. , . ; i .l

conversation, bu- we can lav belons the P,es,dc n the occ.Mo,,, and other oc casions in his fireside conversations with his Iriends in ic'.ation to this subject. wiih sufficient accuracy, to sa'islv the erquby of the prompter of the rejected resolutions. If Mr. Con lict himself had r ally desired to know what the President thought or said in relation to lhe broil which has occupied 50 much of t.ie time of the House, we have no doubt he would have told him his inmost thot's uprn nearieo smrerry w men marks his character; and that he wou'd have made him sensible, as he did Mr. Danforth and the rest who heard him, of his virtuous lenubiican principles and feelings. The monstrous fabrications propagated through the opposition press, in relation to the President's private conversations, are intended to supply the place of proofs, and to support the insidious allegations against him, which are so crt fully interwoven in the rejected restdu tions. W'c are dirccly ii formed that Mr. Clay's most tmstcd agents h3e been busied in the effort to conjure up some alarming phantoms in connection with the hie affrays, and that Mess's. Doddridge and Mercer have been particularly anxious to pry, by an ex parte In qu'ssiiion, into the private and familiai discourses of the President, by r;av of preparation for their contemplated pro cecdings in the House. They shall bt gratified. They shall have not only eve ry sentiment entertained by the Chief Magistrate, to obtain which they have expressed so much solicitude, but they shall have aiso lhe opinions expressed by him on the same subject, in the pre sence of one of the most honorable men o! their own party, in the hearing ot the Editor of this print. We shall give the sentiments avowed by lhe President in the interviews allu dtd to, without attempting to preserve the dialogue of third panics by which they were elicited, retaining, ?.s far as recollection can turnuh it, the emphatic language in which he conveyed his ideas: He said, "That the nrrcst nnd confinement 0' Houston by the House ol Representatives, was an act of usurpation, not war ranted b any grant in the Constitution:

that the punishment of IIous.cn for tbc;tion& and laws that no line io the con-

violation of the lav, belonged to the Ju-t uicuiy, 1101 ro Vyongrcss; inai me power ot Ccr.gres9 to punish lor contempts, be. longed to it only in its capacity as a bodyto preserve its deliberations from in'crtuptiov; that no act which did not affect it3 functions as a deliberative assembU, could be construed into an offence against it as a political body: that it existed only as a deliberative body when i's members were assembled together in the Capitol: and hence its fiover of self froiection was confined to Us ivallss tor it had n . .. . i . . 1 1 burg beyond them: that the individual members of the House, when it was riot in session, were upon a looting nh other citizens ihcy were under the protection of the laws, and lhe courts would redress all injuries to them as to others " To sustain this view, he adverted to the case of Casimir Perier, the present Prime Minister of 1'iance, and a mem ber of the House of Deputies He sM ted that frcm late accounts, it appeared ihe Premier had, in the discussion in the House of Deputies, improperly asper sed the character of a Frech citizen that the citizen awaited the adjourn mcnt of the House, met him beyond the walls, and chastised him for the insult The Deputy and Prime Minister com plained to the House, and was referred by it, to the lav-s and the judicial authority for redress. And this, lie observed, was the proper course. The President expressly declared to Mr Danforth, Mr. Barringer, and others, thit Gov Houc'oriB conduct could not be justified, but asked whether member s I ot Congress could be iuatificd in slan j det ing private citizens, and in violating 1 ba ml jo if II mica 1m nfo rt tnrr ffrlOl i II1V I U13 Wl liV 1 ' U V J J Ut L'ttl IIIJL t i i lhe topic under discussion for such a purpose? He malnt ined that the direr was worse than the murderer because disgrace was worse than dezfh, and so much the wors-, as death itself was no cure for calumny, that an bono rable man would rather die than submit to have his character deitroyed he lived for character. On ihe suggestion that the course taken towards Mr. Stanberry would le3d j to a scene of violence at Washington city, he observed, Ihat the mischief would cure itself hat when member!, of Congress became sensible by the oc currence of a lew sweb cases, that the free citizens of the country would not submit to be abused by them, bui would hold thern p rsunady responsible for danders on their piivate character, thty wou'd cease to utter them. But ih.it "o long as members of Congress were per mined to avail ihcmselve of vvl at waassumed to be a privileged s:ath.n. to traduce private chatacter to assail the reputation of an Anericn cit'Zvn, oi i .- . . i i that ot his witc or dautritter. i or .nrio cent women had aheady been -.an tered in lhe debates of Congress.) wouul in tviubi) lead to personal ioUncc. It

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: surh rrnr h, .A...... ioUe its order, the, ow, o-.s-i uiv, a! I duties, and the rights ,f the iiiz- b- ; wandering beyond the p.ocnWrci h:r -it's ot Ccbaie; ihat it was the duty ol the House, if it could rot rctrain, to expel disorderly member that libels on private character, promulgated on the floor of the House, and transferred to the pub lic journals, sanctioned by th- charac- ! ter and prMcced hom being questioned ; in a Court of law, by the constitutional ; privuejs 01 the oody, wou d drive cm zens, a had been the cae with Houston, to violations of the law as i heir only mears of vindication; ihat, under such circumstances, St.'nberrv had invited the treatment fie suffered, and had crc4ied the impression that he deserted it To an intimation made by Mr Danforth, that lhe public funcionaries ought to be protected, coupled with ihe enquiry whether the P-sivIfiM had no other proteciton than a Andrew Jarkn, ho replied that the low sufficien ty piotectcd them all; that the President ha-, no other p'ot-ciion than -s Andrew J-.'.k-son, ard that was en ugh; that to u.cn, conducting th-mst!cs propciiv :s precieus b k (-.inidii g to a b ok nf constitutions, on v hi . h he laid his bar--) g3ve ample securit); and tat it gave Congress no 'igbt to ,.ui ih I r -ss, ,ti 2nd batteries corn;iiitted in thf M't-t.s; tha-. the acts v C gre', in ila i to contenifits of courts, showtd ne p" ion emenaincd b i, that the ofTe-c ccu.d only be cr nnd ted in th p s l-- of the body offc.ided and u the Hon-- of R: p csciitattves. in the I '- , a-.., t.jd telused 10 be bour.d by its own pinip!es as embodied in hi I w The fF'iy cddi'ioral idas adv , ccd by the President, r . lui subject, in th inlervi:w at which we were presen. c proceed novv 10 g've He said tnai he as rnv of the soidiors of the revolution, wou.d a-sert iha- ncy did not stud their b)o"d in con cridn against the Briiish ty a r;y, to iraostea to he American Cong'ess ;he ij.osm t4. (defined and despotic powe ever 'rrr'Cd by either House ot 'h Euiish P nnatnttit, that cf trying avd fiurth ' g for cn77a'ruciivc concernits commuted beyond the fiaie of its deliberation; hal ours was a jrovernment of written constitua a . s'ituticn, or letter of any Jaw, authorized eilher branch ot Congress to assurno jurisdiction over offences belonging to ihe courts and juries; that the Sedition law itself, as it had the sanction of all the departments of government, had tho semblance of right to countenance it but that the authority recently assumed to punish for offences analogous to those provided lor in that law, had r.ot even the color of a legislative act to sanction it, and was exercised in derogaiim of the genius of our Government; ht if tolerated in its sma; beginnings, it would make great encroachment in the end; that no people couid submit lo H tor a length of lime wi'noot b-ing prcpirtd for the S'iacKtts which it woo 1 cr'-ain-ly impos ; hat he was snp I ee Ame'ican criz ..s could not conv-M o p inciples whi;h ht. subjects cf the Pi u f h monarchy had succtsslul v esist d althougn enforced hy the if.fi-intc ot the Prim' ! trivet 'h:i V '. ? v II thTi the wofd rn e.h oc 1 1 v k could ncS be found Kith n ,he Ids oj the cj'iktitu'.ion. 1 he earncs' rritmei in vfdf h the President expresses his .pu.i rts upoi dti p'y interesting topici., tsi.etiji'j up io political questions iuw.li; g he nbvi iea and righ:s of hisl-Mov. , i 'z ns, gives a pretext to note tdkers I.:- f s:.:t fcmarks, to impu'f v; .tenet ard ill ;emper to his conversation Ito'e t.er was a more unjust imputation 1 hvrs is indeed a pecudar boldness ot thought, ar.d cneigy of expression, in the President's cenversation when discussit g subjects of animating interest but no man can mis'ake the generous enthusiasm which imparls emphasii to his tones, and an eloquent vehemence to his language, for passion or ill temper. On the contrary, the mind of every listener catches the natural warmth of hi feelings, and it is only when some cold, ra.culating political spy retires among his friends and gives garblt d expressions to party malignity to work upon, that the7 arc enabled to torture his con eisaiiona to mean something violent ar.d in-proper In the repetition of what has btcn uttered, the easy courtesy with which ho passes trom subjects which rouse tho enthusiasm of his character to thoe of a lii;ht and cheerful cast, i lost insulated expressions are given, and discolored by added circumstance and Jesuitical inferences are then employed to uraw alarming threats from the expression ot opinions supporting the legal rights of the citisen, against usurped authority. The charge of instigating violence, certainly comes with a bad prace from the Oppositi n, against the n an at tho hejd ot lhc Govcrnmtnt. who, it is well ki.on, has rcstraintd all connec etl wiih his adrnmUfatton from app eals ti.torec, io resent the iodigmtirs so Irtqut ntly ofUitd io them; ai.d wh0 it is knotrc;