V GENERAL 'JACKSON'S LETTERS. Wc republish tlio following letters, from Gener al Jackson to tho editors of tho Waohington Globe. Iermitaok, July l)j 1837. Now is the lime to separate tho gdvem merit from all hanks receive and "disburse the revenue in nothing but -gold anil silver coin, and the circulationofourcoin through all publip disbursements will regulate tho currency forevdr licrcafter keep "the gov ernment free froth all embarrassment, while it leaves the ebirimercial community to trade upon its own capital, and the banks lo ac commodate it with such exchange and cred it as best suits their' own interests both being money makirig concerns, devoid of patriotism, looking alone to their own in terests, regardless of all others. It has Tjeen, and ever will be, a curse to the gov ernment, to have any entanglement or in tcfest with either, or more than a general superintending care of all. , lBut the commercial community hitherto has been fostered by the Government, to the great injury of the labor of the country, until the mercantile aristocracy, combined with the banks, have assumed the right to "control and manage tho Government, as 'their particular interest requires, regardless of the rights of the great democracy of numbers, who they believe ought to be, arid they are determined thfey shall be, hewers "of wood and drawers of water. I repeat, that I am proud to see the firm and noble stahd taken by the Executive Government on this occasion. Tho people are with it and will support it triumphantly. ""The history of the world neverhas re corded such base treachery and perfidy as has been committed by the deposito banks against the Governmenl, anil purely with the view of gratifying Biddle and the Bar ings, and by the suspension of spjeeic.pay mcnts, degrade, embarrass, and ruin if they could, their own country, for the selfish views of making large profits by throwing o'lit millions of depreciated paper upon the 'people selling their specie at large premi ums, and buying up their own paper at discounts or from 25 to 50 per cent, and now looking forward to bo indulged in these speculations for years to coma before they resume specie payments. Hermitage, July 23, 1837. Iy Dear Sir: I have just received the Globe of the 13th, and am pleased to dis cover fiom it and other papers that the de mocracy are uniting upon the plan of separ ating the Government from corporations of all kinds, and to collect the revenue, keep and disburse it, by their own agentsi 'Phis alone can secure safety to our revenue, and control over issues of papci1 by the State Tjanks. The Tevcnue, reduced to the real Vants of the Government, payable in gold 'and silver cbin, (ho credits,) to bo disbursed 1jy the Government in gold and silver, will give us an undeviating metallic currency; prevent hereafter overtrading, and give prosperity to all branches of business, whilst the hanks and the commercial com munity will be left to manage their exchar ges, and all matters between them, in their own way. I hope and trust that the whole democracy of the whole Union will unite in adopting these measures, and the democra cy of numbers will never have another con test with the aristocracy of the few and their paper credit system, Upon which they at present rely to rule the country. I hope no Treasury notes will bo issued. The Treasury drafts upon actual deposilcs are constitutional, and do not partake of pa per credits as Treasury notes, which aic subject to depreciation by the merchants and banks, and shavers and brokers; and will be, if issued, and the Government cannot avoid it. Different must it be with Treasury drafts, drawn upon actual depos its; and from the conduct of the banks and the merchants, they deserve no favors from the Government, which they have attempt ed to disgrace, and to destroy its credit both at home and abroad. It is the great work ing class that deserves protection from the frauds of tho banks. BANK OF THE UNITED STATES More than ninety days have elapsed since the Bank of the United States stopped pay ment, and what is more, it continues to refuse to make the monthly returns requi red by its charter. What will our wise and patriotic Governor do in this case? "Will ho fulfil the promise so boastfully Tn ad c in his proclamation, and sec that the laws are faithfully complied with, or will he continue to bow iri meek submision to the will and behest of Mr. Biddle? "We assert, without fear, that he will not dare to take any steps by which the interests of the Mammoth Bank may bo compromittcd or jeopardised. He was elected by the-influence of the Bank, and in return has Sold 'himself to be one of the veriest slaves that moves upon live carlh. Poor Pcnnsylva -nia, how art fhou degraded! A WHITE NEGRESS. There is a female slave, aged 1 1 , belong ing to Mr. John Craig, on" Keowee river, Pickens District, S C. descended from full blooded African parents, and who has been iuce tho aee of seven gradually undergoing a change from black to while. On her neck, breast, anu enouuiers, says me Co lumbia Times, it is perfect, of a soft, deli cate, transparent, and healthy appearance, unlike the Albino, nor arte her eyes pink like1 those of an Albino, but natural. I'liis Is nof the first case of the Ethiopian chan- THE CREDIT SYSTEM. We copy the following article upon'this subject from the tochestcr( 'iV. lr.)ftepub lican. It embraces 'many sound views, and combats, successfully, the declarations of the whigs, that the designs of the democrat ic party is to "destroy the credit system of the United States" by tlic establishment of an exclusive metallic tiifrcncy. Tho universal whig currency party, in conjunction with many pseudo-democrats, have commenced the joint shout of "Great is the credit system 6fthc United Stales, and death to the agrarians that would de stroy ill" This clarnor reminds us of one certain Ephesiaiis of old who adopted the same style tfargummt when they suppo sed their craft in danger from the brcachihg of a noted Reformer of that age, and the whigs and their co-workers of this, is per fect both acting from sordid motives. To have presented the matters in dispute fairly before the peoplcj wolild have been death to tho craftsmen of Ephcsus so also would it be to the schemes of those who are so loud in the praise of "the credit system;" and as the other resorted to clamor for pro tection against the force of truth, so do the latter for the preservation and perpetuation of a corrupt and useless banking system. It is important in all contests that the combattants be well informed as to the matter in controversy: else, after the fray, they may have the mortification to find that they have given and received blows on the wrong side that they have dealt to their friends, what should have been awarded to their enemies. The whigs and their abet tors say that the friends of the Administra tion are aiming to destroy uthe credit sys tem" of the U. S. by which is meant the Bank system, by the establishment of an "exclusive metallic currency." It is ori this ground that the shout is raised, of "great is the credit (that is, the present banking) system of the United States, and in which the people are invited to join. But before they do this, let them be well assured that thdy are rtttl deceived by the craftiness of the Bank craftsmen. The REAL DEMOCRAT seeks NOT the destruction of credit, but rather its ENFRANCHISEMENT from legislative thraldom, whereby it is now made siibser vieni to tlld views of the schemcing arid cor rupt. He neither wishes for nor seeks the establishment of an exclusive metallic cur rency, but wishes, so long as it is the only currency recoonized dy the Constitu tiom of ins country, that laws should not be framed calculated to entomb it in the vaults of bank3j while its place is supplied by a depreciated paper representative the certain reSult of the soimuch-vaunted cred it SYSTEM WHILE SIIA6KLED BY INJUDICIOUS laws. This is the common sense View of the subject, and let it be fairly presented to the people and justice will triumph in spite of the concentrated efibrts of bank monopo lists, though backed by the labors of a legion of political missionaries like Daniel Webster. It is true, the nation is just emerging from a pecuniary embarrassment of no Or dinary character, & many look to the estab lishment of a National Bank as the only remedy for the present disease, and as the only obstacle to its recurrence in future. Those who thus reason, arc "mis-t-a-k-e-n-" The EMANCIPATION of credit will do both but a National Bank neither "The regulaton of the currency" is a cant phrase with whig politicians, yeto adopt Mr. lobster's plan of doing it, would be to dnriihilate every State Bank in the Union, as well as the power to charter such institutions! Short 6f the exercise of such power, the "regulator" would do little towards the execution of its office; with it, the people of the United States would become the victims of a bank despotism of the most odious character. That Congress possesses the exclusive pow er of "regulating the currency of the coun try," is readily granted, but this power is derived from that claiise of the Constitution which declares that congress shall have power to coin money arid to regulate or fix Smark the phrasei) the value thereof. It loes not say congress shall reoulatd the "credit s3'stcnv" according to the doctrines of Daniel Webster and his worshippers. The Constitution knows no other currency but a mctalic one, and it is that, and that on ly, which congress has power to regulate. The "credit system" and the constitutional currency are not identical a fact which the whigs and monopolist, seem arixious to for get or condeal. The true method toobviato tho pTCsentand avoid future difficulties is, to unshackle the credit or bank system, thereby effecting a complete divorcement of tank and stale a conjunction which has brought much evil oil Our Coilntry THE NEXT SENATE There are many reasons to believe that, notwithstanding the gerrymanderirtgprocess carried on by the whigs and anti-masons, during the seslon of 1835 0, the democrat ic party will, at tho next election, succeed irt regenerating Our State Senate, and secure a flint and decisive majority in that body. Our political frends are alive to the impor tance of this object, and it is not, we think Calculating too much upon their exertions to predict, that sound and incorruptible dcmOcrrfts will, at the next Session fill the places which were last year Occupied by such arch-traitors and anoslates as Dickev. ! Penrose, MiddlecofT", Fore and Cunning- num. oiiuuiu pucii uc uiu resuii, anu lucre is good reason to hopo it will bo, the event will bo welcomed with joy from one extrem ity of the stato to tho otlwr. TEXAN CHIVALRY. The Washington Globe' pbhtains thcTol lowing lettcr'from Richard Pollard, Charge d'Affaircs of the United Stales to the Re public of Chili. Santiago, dc Chili, April 25, 1837. Gentlemen: I have had a soil 'murdered in Texas by a Texan officer, with a cruelty unparale'lled. I have called upon President Houston for the punishment of the murder er of my s'om As every thing relating to Texas seems, to be so interesting to the people of the United States, as public jus tide is the concern of all, I send you here with a copy of my letter to President Hous ton and ask tho favor of you to give it an insertion in your paper. Is it not strange, that so great an outrage has passed so long unnoticed by those in Texas authorized to take cognizance of it? If such a murder had been committed by a Mexican upon a Texan, how great would have been its publicity, and how loud would have been the cry of our papers against the atrocity. But how much worse is this, when a Texan has taken the life of a Tex an, and without provocation; where no other motive could have prompted than a malignant feeling, which, dcvclopes more the attributes of a devil than a man. He who sheds the blood of an enemy unne cessarily, offends against civilization, na ture, and Heaven. But he who takes the blod, the life of a brother, wantonly and cruelly, as in this case, makes tho ofTcnce a hundred fold more damnatory; I rely upon the press of my country to vindidate the claims of humanitv. so much outraged in this case, ahd the demands of justice so urgently balled for by it. I am, most respectfully, Your obedient servant, RICHARD POLLARD. To the Publishers Of the Globe. After this letter, follows a copy of the letter lo Presidf nt Houston above alluded to. It contains a minute account of the barbarous torture inflicted upon the son of Mr. Pollard, by one Lieutenant Heath of the Texan Army, which resulted in his death. At the time of the murder, young roilard; wno was a sergeant m the I exan strniy, was cntierly disabled by il wound he had received in a previous duel. The letter is too long for insertion in our columns Tho case which it details is truly lamenta ble, and is sufficient to show what sort of materials the Texan army and the Texan population are composed of. It is evident that the father has no hopes of everobtain ing, at the hands of Texan Justice, the pun- ishmcnt of his son's murderer; and it is doubtless the despair of this, whidh has in duced him to appeal, through the prcssi to the sympathy of his fellow citizens. He has ours fully. From the bottom of our heart wc pity all those unfortunate fathers, who have sons in Texas. Boston Jltlas fX fill . vjonsfiracy. i no speculators ol our country are a discerning and cautious body of men. They have, through all their transgressions, thus far, been able to Coriceal their intentions and their means, from the Argus-eye of tho public. Gifted to a great extent with the power of dissimulation, it is nut natural they should be able to deceive upon a large and successful scale: But, a late occurrence, which took place in New York btatc, reveals their cupidity arid power. Under the head of 'AlarmingFloui Com hmatton! we find a discovery of one of the most hellish plots against the people: and although it may be greater than is tepresen ted, it cannot exceed the fears and the opin- iiiiib uu umurinincii previous to the an nouncement. It appears that the speculators and Hanks have been detected in the most criminal intercourse the most illicit com panionship the former cheating the peo pie wifh means furnished by the latter, The Buffalo Journal, savs: wc could name we believe, a single bank for inatanr'n. noin-or,! r ., ...i.H.i. within a few days has engaged to make dis counts to the amount of at least SI ..inn nnn to three individuals, for the purchase of wheat,' and tho agents of which individuals have already passed though this city & gone "j'31 ' iuiuuusu wneat oi tno new crops Wc could also name an association of indi viduals m another part of our state, who al ready own ono barik ih Michirran .mil .mntl,. er in the valley of the Scioto, Ohio, if not uiuui-u mncr nanus, whose agenlsare in the iiuiu uiuKing purcnases. bhoulil institutions like these exist?' Are the people to starve, while the warehouses oi i nese men are tiled with the stable com uiuuuy m mo countryf We are not the advocates of any rash measure wc respect ... ..... . , Lummy; nut wo could sec such moil and such Institutions consigned to a bitterer fate than the ordinary modes of punishment can furnish. There is no p som none orthc fief feelings of man in tho wretch, who Could look on r. dread purpose of his ambition, while many . . ' - iiu yiveii mm lo alle viate the scarcity, He is, it is true, human Sr!!rT U -18 friP1" arctheprinci ItiLl imon.slonablo"P idity; the impulse of those who know no God save Mammon' lAincaster Intelligencer. iamnon. r r0K'nn&rf "S"'1 had ,,i8 Wo Insured for 80,000, that is 838-1.000. the distress and wan Yh cl, p ZatedZkT , K tho b,af Blri,ck community last winter, unmK t tJ0 .e well, and at TWENTY-FIFTH CONGRESS. We nave seen several statements pub lished, purporting to give the political com plexion of the House of Representatives of the 25th Congress. As an mat wc nave seen are erroneous, wc have thought it would.be both interesting and useful to the public "to publish a correctstatcment. Ailrnin. Opp. Itcsult not known. Maine, Q 4 New Hampshire, G Massachusetts, 2 10 Rhode Island; 2 Connecticut, 0 Vermont, 1 4 New York, 30 i" New Jersey, 0 Pennsylvania, 17 H Delaware, 1 Maryland( 4 4 Virginia, 15 6 North Carolina, 5 7 1 South Carollila, 2" 7 Georgia, 8 1 Kentucky; 1 10 2 Tennessee!; 3 10 Ohio, 8 11 Indiana, 1 4 ' 2 Louisiana; 4 Z Mississippi; 2 Illinois, 3 Alabama, 11 3 Missouri, 2 , Arkansas, 1 124 107 11 Jlcmarks upon the column headed ilJle sxdt not knotun," Rhode Island.' The election in this State is by general ticket, and is to take place next week. At the Presidential elec tion in November last, the Van Bilrcn elec tors obtained a majority of 251 votes ill the State. North Carolina. The district in which the result is not known, is the one repre sented in the lasi Congress by W. B. Shep ard, (whig,) and Lynn Boyd, (adm ) Wil liams's disirict gave a small majority against the administration, and Boyd s an over: whelming majority in favor of it, at the last 1'rcsidential election . Indiana. These districts were' rcprc sented in the last congress by the Hon John JF. Davis aud the Hon. E: Jl. Hen- negan, both friends of the administration Each of these districts crave about a thou sand majority against the administration at the last Presidential election. It is proba- nie, inerciore, that whigs will be returned irom mem. Alabama. Messrs. 6iamnan and Mar tint (administration,) arid Lawler, (whig,) represented these districts in the last Con gress. The administration majority in Messrs. Chapman's and Martin's districts is very large. In Mr. Lawler's the par ues are supposed to DC about equal in num tiers. iMicmoAN. The election takes place next week. The administration majority in ims oiaie, at tnc late Presidential clec tion, Was 3,280. Sncctc nauin Bunk. Tim Mnniinifnn Company, (says the N. Y. Express) com menced paying specie for their notes ori Friday, having refused until they have near ly got in their circulation; and they are now enabled to resume" the payment of their bills, but not of their deposits. Why this distinction wc are unable to say. They have made no publick announcement of their intentions. The suits of Isaac Bron son, for the payment of their bills, we pre sume will now be settled. By the laws of the United Stales, the deposits of the reve nues must be placed in the nearest specie paying banks, Under this law, wc pre sume tho deposits wiil be removed from tho Brooklyn to the Manhattan Barik The following from the Liridlay (Han cock county, (Ohio) Courier, of August Sid, is certainly the most remarkable pheno mennn we remember ever' having read of. The country, for miles around presents near ly a dead level. STRANGE PHENOMENON. On Saturday the 29th ult, Mr. Richard Vaile, Jr. was engaged in digging a well on his premises, about 4 miles south ofLindlay after having dug down something like 18 feet, the appearance of water was evident. Mr. Wade being anxious to obtain water, seized a crowbar, which was standing near, and made several strokes near the centre whereupon the water gushed out in vivid orrents. Had ifot Mr. Wado bcert extreme ly active m attempting to escape, he would have perished almost instantly. At the time the water gnshed forth, a continued roaring ensued similar to a loud clap of thunder, which shook the earth violently .ur verai nours. By an application of a . .... - tt iuuk iirn nn ...v-utauu iu inn vlir. it .i V "V "lu puueaeon mat lay on the top of the well. The water still continues to boil ctfnomy.-A neighbor of ours informs us that wood does further, when left out of doors, than when well housed. Rnmn ri.T ,' b bu,,u upwards ot a mile in one night! Il 5tVI!tft fTin, .. - ' 1 'IO quarter of a thnBing on for a Hangman's Office. noo of the western counties of fiSaa ,cs5th-cadidatcsSa;he SINGULAR OCCURRENCE The fblloving singular ntcideiit occur J atKonigsburjr, in the north of Prussia, sob, 1 snuii Hum suiku. ii uuiuc oi water lin UtVIl JIUt.lU UJWt! IIIU Oil, UI il WlnUOW (J .0 ly posed to the sun, which was.shi,iinfrSirM, upon it. 'I ho vessel was so placed ik he ic water reiractcd and cohccntrntn.i ,v. rays of the heat like a convex elnm ... directed their focal force upon a nnn nf,v. window frame, which in a little while w set on file. No serious damage wasuW for tho firing was soon perceived; but thu oopurrence, collated with many clriiuinshj. nna ef n llnslrtlniil'A firn M'liinl. 1 that place on the 14th Juno, 1811, is though to explain the causes of that conflagration,'?;, . .. ... utturrcun which nave iiuuunu remained a niv l!t. t I i - ! t a " sicrj, Eloneihcnl! Jlmuliramalion!-I.mr ing! Wo learn from tho last Carlisle Ifo publicait,(it being the only paper in tl( place that throws any light on the tub jeet, tho others obsciving a dark and mysterious silence V) that a colored rnu by the name of Johnson, who 1ms acct ored wife and family residing there, vis Lynched on the evening of Sunday wort for the alleged offence of eloping wu white young girl ! It appears from il we can learn, that, about two weeks aga . tho young girl, who was in a iklhtit situation, and the negro Johnson, lef Carlisle about the same time, aild in sue' manner as to create tho belief that thn had left the place together. Johnson tt turned in a few days, and it then beam known that he had taken her away, hict aroused the just indignation ofanurabe of Individuals, who were determined t wreak their vengeance upon him. Heir ing of this the negro left town quietly o: Sunday evening, but was overtaken u. short time by about three hundred citizen". who stripped him entirely, tarred kz all over, and then rolled him in the dor. Some of the party were for rcsortmsu other extremities, so iriconacd wetcib at the outrage of the negro ; but the c tencrencc of others, and his own sunph tions for mercy, Induced thcrrt to iKtlitm p , on conditions that he would lcae t! place entirely. The girl has since bee' taken home by some of her relatives, and is said that Johnson nad been hired by. white married man td convoy her awav The abolitionists, wc learn, "have induce Johnson to return again, and to proserc. some of the principal persons who hi' Lynched him ! Should this be the a wc may expect to hear of something vorj, al than simply Lynching wo may expf -M 'war to the knifi-.' Tint nilrli nn llm far !-'9 of abolitionism, which threatens to drli.: our peaceful and prosperous land with blood of its citizens: Ifafrisbtlrg Ciw MILITARY, A Court Martial was recently held Union, I-ayetle county President, (' William Ilcdrick, for tlie trial of Co; Sumuel Snider, of the Oth Company the general charge of misbehaviour. T' specifications were, that on a training d he appeared as a 'fanta.stical"-his blacked and his person otherwise rWic: lously, shamefully; and unoflicer-like at coutrcd;" and thai lie countenanced a? permitted three oilier persons disguised sr accoutred in the like rldiculmls manner t appear on parade at the same time." On all the specifications he was feme guilty, and the Court sentenced him to t--cashiered and rendered incapable of hot ing a commission for the lerfn of 7 years. Brigadier General James C. Cumminu' confirmed the sentence of the Court anddf clarcd the Captaincy of the Oth Compant vacant. This is right. The details of our .Mi''' tia System are defective and ought to t improved, but those engaged in bringm; tho whole system into disrepute, should tt punished whenever the law can reach ihcu The Great Lakes. Relative extent, el evation, &c. The Ontario is 180 md lonfr. 40 miles wiiln. Sfin fl ilnnn nnil 111 surface is computed at 231 feet clevatice abovh the tide waters at tho Three Riven, lr 270 miles below Cape St. Vincent. The Erie is 270 miles long, 00 mite, Wide, 120 feet deep, and its surface is as- w ceftained to bo hear 505 feet above tide w ft tor at Albany. The Huron is 250 miles long, 100 mile' average breadth, 000 feet deep, and its soi face is ijear 585 feet above tido walcr. Tho Michigan is401 miles long, GOmilfl wide, depth and elevation the same as Hu ron. G'recn Bay is about 100 miles long, j 20 miles wide, depth unknown; clevatiot the same as Huron and Michigan. Lake Superior is 480 miles long, If1, miles average width, 000 feet deep, and if I surface is 010 feet above tide walcr. The Tomato, The valuable nualitie of this excellent vegetable a're being' grad ually developed; and its use must, ere Ion?, bo very general. A respceted friend la week informed us, that, in addition to value as an esculent, it was accidental discovered in his family, that the Tom" will instantly remove from liften the stai of ink, and what is generally termed , c rust." We do not remember to have seer this mentioned before; and wo have felt a duty to appriso our femalo friends of twvjj fact. Mams Sentinel. A Stage Driver has been committed, t Nashville on tho chargo of robbing the tt ,'cl o' el 4i -I? ..'" . 1 .8) th ' 81 K CI In ij n: To te D to in v , at 0 n 8i W n 'b I i