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By D. WO^IMS, state m^yter. COLUMBIA, 8 CX MAY 1, 1829. , Vol. XV ?No. 18. ' - ' ? ? ? ?? VF.UY FIlllVsY MOKNINt roiwauEui IERM8~+Thrtt i KVRHY rmi*AT MORNING. rilWlMlWfl Dt/lmrt p<r atmum, j>?jrai/? ia ?Mta?,er *W VlUnpagktU ?/ ADVEkTISEMEKTSinttrtrd at Ik$*$v*!r9tti. 4 rr.oM rtiK Bi/ov TO MARY ovrur. AK.-m itnjAH* or of 11 WI1MIO Mt Bg Martin .irchtr S'itt, Esq. II. A. Our wadding day another eUf?, In IbltfMtr. from youth to age, Wa'ea Iravrll'd OH together; Yet atMi affcctloacUccra I lie road, \edh?tp? lo lifbtMit every toad That llni* U* laid oo ekhcr. Nor ?month a* Wealth c old ntafce (I O'rr up* and down* anjttikd alilt, We never ft It ill* *lth or will i t'icin; To aUorti-u or firrwkc tticio. Nor can w*. Mary, Jmtly my, Though nrillier mute to young or gay, A* wht-o cold Pro dent* aptirnlng, We acampar'd forth for Plaaaure^i ?akc, And fortune thought lo overtake, Or weel at evVy turttipg. Nor ran w? my we*r* ptaeh the irarto )'or lull * long ltd an*lou? count*, With Curt aUM ?!otir Merit, Andnueh a.boutehold (roup around At llyiuen ha* loo often found A drag ifpon Itia wheal*. Tl? true w? rareljr daurt orrJn~, Ur Itoand with that el*?tlc tprlng. The atcpa of yotttli dhcovcr, Jiuthad<itMdiill?*not cut o* out, < iur daneiug day*, I make no douM We'd prove, wero not yet over. to timet which memory still enhnnces, <>fgood 8e?teh reol* and country dunce*, On limb ?'?it *n<l ?n|>pl We tripp'd l? gaily through the rdglif, N'or thought Uany treat ?*p|?it To duitco down iLlrty coupie. Hat now, nmldst n stately throng, The cmv? qundrlller glides ?loit?. With far mora nir? than grace*, Or unabash'd wldle (pfrtrnns ?Inn*, In *Udy unlit, the breathless fnir Her whirling Vcau cmbrnccs. Thy figure ?? III preserves itr grnce. Ana ?tl|l that charm Is in thy face. A* strong ns first I lound it, The smile with sense end sweetness fraught, Wbkh breaks through ivery cloud of thought, And q>rcads a sunshine round it. Our bloom UJeed it ~one,nnd yep Mart owst sM* mo??i??? m*|I<*w hue nuppIlM its plac* hut hudlyt The crow's-feet too about the ejref, Increase of late to sUnh e ?l*e. They pucker User* mo?l sadly. Some wrrakler, too, we mu*t allow, Ilavemark'd the tablet />f the hrnw, And though they are l<ut alight tlutf, They show his hieroglyphic hand, And make us fully undvrttand. Old Time begins to write there. Already b? has cleor'd the pnge, And stamp'd some diameters of age, So plain that you may trace .hero; Tie lias tbinn'd my lochs, and turned to grey The few remaining!? ?n I ray A wl-muit soon replace tbem. Fiime gentle hint*, too, we're reeelred, Mint years (if hints may he he|i?vad) In other pul*fo have nrtwe'd u*; Our beds seem harder th>?n ihoy were, And often ?' trlfllra light a? air** ' Can rufilo and molest us. At dinner we grow nice, and th'nk Much more of what we eat and drink, Than wa were wont, when nl In To feat! on every kind of food Which that great artist, F?i?laeho IMe. Could put upon the table. Of late, too, quite in lore with home, "We seldom feel disposed to roam, The fire side ?"im ?o nosey; T!ut. when I fain would read nt night, The eatjdle* gire*urh wretched light, I'm sometimes rather duxey. The print'* Indeed so had in all Their t>ooV??the4w|Hf'? ?o very *mall? Ti?qOlte enouth to vea one; The nasrspaper, I1** sura t applies A ta*k to fry the best ofeye?. Without a pair of rjutt on. Hut not in ?? alone the chnngr; Through life and m?oner? a? we ranee, The world around kerpt moving} Foilie* i no rear e upon my word! And fashion* now are *o nt???i.->|, There's nothing that's improving. Look to the Senate. B?r. or F.tae*>. AixI *ag, dors aught in this doll i?gi Our early dajrs rr?emt.t<\ When Pill end Fox were eneh ? ?'*r, When F.rvkioe floor?.he l Kt tli* h.?r; Aud Slddotisplay'd with KetuIih' The very searow* are no more Th*?easom that they Were before, Whm you and I flr-t kw* them; Our Fnmmera now are short ami ?ol.l, Our Winter* so severe., the nM Can hardly struggle Ihroogh them Y# t still no change* ean deefrny Our plea*urer, while we lists* enjoy The elrele that'* a winI U?: While in ottr children ?hti* we find More comforts then we've |cf> l-.hiu.t, Hinee flymen's knot fust bound u* % Nor let us g'oom the Utile ?pwee We're felto runs thmph in ?he race We fret I hat lift* U waiting! ^ )wlot we ?till h?ve wdm to Llrw, Sine*,onr farri, our Heard coulVn, , Oar ieve U quit* ?? luting. From the Charleston Mcrcury, JAHt 2$. Wo copy the follow lor from the New York Morning Herald. It Upart Of en edi tor!*) tirade iii reply to article on the tariff published in the Columbia Telescope, in whfcsh the writer bed very properly inwltt cd on the imi>ortance of the south to the welfarw* and prosperity of the northern stales ??It it at range tiierc are men in that section et the country ao infatuated as to hold such language. Scarcity ?would thh union feel thehMT) if the barren tandaand the end tern /line fitaint of the Carolina*, were tunk into the oceamifnd yti they hold a tone of drjtanct and importance bersvting tiosrrtfon of the fate, ana leant of ult theoouth. Tin-j talk of disunion And spending their tnom-v in London instead of Siratogn | 'i'hey ha<l fi ???.? best pny their debts in Wall-street. We wonder if their plalna and their negroen would sell for enough at auction to satisfy their creditors in New' York, whom they boast of feeding and supporting? ?' It would nuasle a traveller through North and South Carolina to conceive how the ignorant, not ?? half-educated" hnt uned ucated planters in those regions should bo incommoded with onr northern pretenders to gentility. Plant them north of the Potnntac, and gi\c them n sight of New-England, and they would return no doubt, M with a great ucc??bion of knowledge of various kinds." This is n pretty f.iir specimen of the man* net' in which the touthern states nrc invaria bly treated hy the tariff piper* at the north, when they condescend to notice litem at all reeling i?owcr, aiul forgetting right, they have hut one answer for all the nigumeuts and entreaties of the south, and thnt is con tumely and abuse. The union would not feel the low if the Carolittns were buried in the ocean!?and befoic the southern people talk of abandoning Saratoga, and spending their money clcwncre, they had better *ell their plains and their negroes to pay their dehtsin Widl-ttrcct! Why one would real ly imagine troni this that the ninth is mort gaged to the north, and thnt our kind breth ren, not content with hating taxed us enor mously, intend actually to offer us for sale. Hut, passing over the invulti-ig absurdity of this attack, let ask seriously, why is lan guage of this kind used towards the smth.* Why is it that this section of the union is constantly and studiously held up at the north as a proper object for hostility, suspi cion and contempt? Whut have the south cm people done to provoke this bitter and tcvetigvfut feeling* Unjustly oppressed, tliiy navocKerclwsd freely *.he privilege of remonstrance,suffering in every interest es sential to their welfare, they have earnestly npocajed to the justice and libci rdity of their bicthren??believing the constitution violat ed, they have openly and candidly urged tilt reasons from which their conviction i? dent ed?feeling themselves degraded, they have expressed their natural and becoming warmth, their sense of the impositions under which they labor?sincerely attached to tliu union, and fearful thnt a continued repetition of ir.Mtlts and oppressions may |>ossibly driv them to extremity, they have appealed to the interest ns well as the patriotism of their oppressors?and whilst dwelling with fond ness on the beauty and glory of tin* union, have nl*o represented the IncaTcuTStJTe value of the trade of th6 south to the northern states. This Is the head and front of their offending?and it is because oppressed, they daie to complain, and senktide ot their rights, they dure to assert them, that they i.rc visited with these bitter out|>ouriugs of vituperation and a!?use, and spoken of in I terms, not only eminently improper from j one section of the confederacy to another,' but scarcely Incoming in n parent sta'.e to a j weak and nepeiulen* colony. Indeed, the manner in which the southern ?.fates are treated by the northern presses ih| utmost ns Inconceivable, ns it is lamentably i true. With regard to them, the presn lit the north, with one or two honorable ex ception*, scarcely dares to speak, except it I be to revile them. The pernicious influence: of the manufacturing interest controls it with despotic sway. No southrrn argument is permitted to be spread before the people no southern appeal is allowed to nwaken their generosity, ?r enkindle kindly and pat- j I nolle feelings. They ah: kept studiously ig ' nonint, not only of the reasonings of the /.outli against the tariff, but even ot the fx ritement which that odious measure has pro- j dtired. The people of the south have not only generally r? Tied upon the efflrary of their arguments, but hnvc particularly tilist ed to the effect that might be produ'-ed by the solemn legislative protests of this state, and Cteorgia, and by the eipially decisive re Milutious of Virginia. Those protects and resolutions have scarcely been noticed ii a northern print, or, if mentioned at all, hive been despatched in a single line, and that line, ridicule and sarcasm. Such is the gen erd (ondition of the northern press?tram melled, Mmnefully trammelled as tegards the south?devmed to and governed !?y ni'inuf^eturers and monopolists?seldom no lle tug the southern states at all, sod then only for the base purpose of misrepresenting their sentiments and feelings, or of exciting vulgar prejudices against thrm?and sue I, is the prospect of the s?>utli of being fairly lie.iid and impartially judged at the math, or of producing inning <t th"*ir persecutors a returning sense ?*f justice. Under thes? circumstance* it mnv be nsk 'id, what shall the southern states do.' Shall 'hey lie down In apathy, and permit the ta riff to be milted upr>e them.' Unkistly treated by the northern press, shall they triake no efcbrl to do jarticfc to them?elve?> Injured, Khali they cc*m>to remonstrate? In Mined, ?!iMI they submit lit silcnct f Weed ing at every pore, shall they continue tame ly to blood; oven unto death? la the tariff nothing? Have UieV protected only against a phantom> , Uavo they been raWtnken in snppoetng H an injury, and J?iie?ounc<Vg it aa unconstitutional? Or, koflylng and feeling It, an they do, to be a griitmis and intolera ble but then, shall they im* make one effort more to throw off the teeotwa which op* presses them, and to briog onr gorerr.ment, and our tariff brethren, to a ferine of johtice. [rUOM TUK SOUTHKJ^MirATaiOT.] MThe three .IwerlclmMrvie**." This \? the title of u^^Hf In the Lon don Kt view, in which Wtlree principal periodical* iti the UuliedroMuare describ ed, in a spirit of impartiality highly credita ble to the work in which it appears. Wc liiive subjoined nomeextracta. ?, M Thew are three Quarterly Review* nofr published In the United Stat&) one at ttos <?>.?, onr nt Philadelphia, und ?Ji>c at Clvarlc* tnn. 'l hcy lire each exceedingly creditable tqn clmen* of the talents And Attainments of our hrcthrrn of the new world; nnd we, whatever other* may think* ViMrl a real satis faction somewhat approaching to pride, in belittling the English language cultivated Wc ? success, and maai? the Instrument of dimming so much valuable information through countries where therude dialcct of the Indian savage, w**, n century ago, the only medium of communicating the com monest thoughts ami desires of the wild huntsman'* life. The spread of our native tongue over the widest nntt fairest portions of the globe, is a remarkable example of the influence of a great commercial nation in the civilization of mankind, and It Is more than probable, that, in a few years, the use of the English will us far exceed that of all ether languages, us did the Spanish within a cen tury alter tnc discovery of the pa*agc of the cape. " The North American Review, publlih cd at llostou, in now in its 60th number.-? This work is well known in England, and is distinguished, if not tor its brilliancy, f.ir its calm jfnod ?eu.,e, and its general 'freedom from national nreiuces. ? ? ? ? ? ? ? "Our readers doubtless have pcrcc'.vcd from the extract wc lia\e given, thit this Review is ?t a temperate, gentlemanly and uiiprejudir.ed character. There is nothing that weenn see m it, of any jealousy of Eng land, and her institutions, or any vain pa rade of the power, the ret ources, or the in telligence of our trans-atlantic brethren., It is indeed, fortunate that the unnatural ani mosities of children, boasting a common mother, and participating each*, very large ly, In the bles?iug&of a fro# government, should no longer be fomented by the passions and prejudice* of ignorant and flippant wri te rs on either side of the water, li istothc real interest, both of England and America, that a constant feeling of kindness should be cherished between them;?those who desire friendship and peace, cannot do better than to promote their common Hteruture, and freely interchange a tribute of respect for all those productions that belong to high prln [ ciplea and solid learning. " The American Quarterly Review, Is printed ut Philadelphia, und has yet ouly tcaclicd its tenth numlicr. It appcurs to us well adapted for popularity, and conveys a great body of valuable iutormation, not Very new or very original, but well adapted to the wants of a people whose literary hub its have yet to l>c formed. The lulijcctH, und the mode of treating them, are rather more elementary than in the North Ameri can Review; and it is pit-Imps, rather more distinguished for a strong religious tone, not in the least allied to fanaticism, but very de rided. We have read many of the article* with grVat pleasure and improvement, j " Of the Southern Review, two numbers I have only vet appeared 1'he publication ? r.ouuncnced in February of the present year, j It sets out by taking ine American hull by 'the horn*, ami perl?a|H?, the very novelty of | its tone may render it popular. Nations do | not, sometimes, object to be laughed at." After quoting the introductory remarks to I the article on classical learning, in the first ' number, the London Rev ievver accompanies ' his extract with the following comment: " I'be article which these remarks intro duce is on "classical learning," which is tfomewhut in ill-odourwithththusy and utili ty seeking people of ih?> people of the Unit id States. The argument for the cultivation oj an acquaintance with the great wtiters of antiquity, is forcibly, and sometimes elo quently put." "The Southern Reviewer has proved that in defcndaig cl.ttsieal learning, he is not disp'tsed to neglect the claims of practical utility; for lie lias gone at oner, in li s next iilklf, to the 14 pt inciplvs of husbandry," and talks etry sensibly ahout the Volution "? crops and m tnurrs. A controversial aitii lr on^hc execution ?>f the American, folom 1 ll iynr, by l/oi I It twdon, (.vloria) ronUins many cut ions illegiHonV, which wc cannot attempt to follo v. The first numlM-r this work eeitainlv displays much variety ot tal ent; for we liuve papers on the ciiIiiiIim, phrenology, politic ill economy, colonuution and mineralogy. " I'lie second number contains a very Imweiful aiticli on "the constitution of the nite?l States," the object of which is c.dm ly but firmly, to resist the encrnactifaents which thenoithern slates of the union have gradually bun making on the southern." "The American pciiodipuK which we have radidly noticed, present ns with a few favorable specimens of original work* pub lished in the United Sta'?-s, pirticu'ntiv in works of iirragin itim. Oar Southern He viewer U inclined to be ttfllcitnUy- severe upon hi* poetical brethren?and not with out justice-" ffVemlAt V. 8. Ttlt*r*pM,m/ Jpriitl ] [From the Richmond whig,]?uV?rkei circumstances prove that Dun Green ex ercise* uhlHHindcd influence over th? mind oi Gen. Jackson. We understand that no appointment has been made, that Duff waa not known toharb approved, either by sign ing a recommendation* or by a viva voce ex pression of approbation. 1 Ihvj who know lien. Jackson well, say that no man resigns himself more wholly and absolutely to those in' whom he reposes confldcncc. A differ ent iufcrcnc-e might certainly be plausibly supported, from the history ol his life. How laUacious all/tublie conduct Is, in giving one a true idea of a roan's chatacter, every per son known w ho having first imagined to liiin self what sort of a character a particular noted individual whs, subsequently b.cainc acquainted with hint in person. People of America! What think you of your affair* being managed, under the rose, by DuffGreeo* llad you any anticipation of this state of trunks, when you were frantic to make Jackson President.1 You complain ?d that Alexander Hamilton dictated to Gen. Washington, that Albei t Gallatin exer cised un ufdue influence over Mr. Jefferson. ?What will you say to DUFF GREEN'S being your president defacto7 What think you such mentors as he and Maj. Lee, to your favorite Hero* i)r? yon not feel cha giined and mm tilted at the reflection? Can you think without humiliation upon the facts *l? ?>? ?!>... -L - ?* ? ? - * * ...... ...?.v ???vii >i.iv nit; i n-MUt ill OI IIIC United State* as a nose cf wax iti their hand* ??that the old and f.iithful officers of itic fjovcrnment, appointed by Washington, Jef ferson and Madison, arc removed and de prived of the bread for their wive* ar.d chil drcn, At the institution of *ueh men ns these?that they are rewarding their ft iends with your money, and your offices! Wc will press the subject no farther. Calcula ted as'hesc things are to verify our predic tion* of (>cn. Jackson, and to pro\ c what we hate a thousand times **id, that he has no tingle qualification for (he Presidency, yet our indignation at iccing into what hand* the destinies of this great and free country have fallen surpasses the grovelling and un justifiable satisfaction we inay he supposed tn teel ut the fulfilment ofour ownpiophc *ie?." It km ah X*.?No one who has visited Washington, and taken the least trouble to inform himself, does not know that the cdi tor of this paper hascnrefully refrained from every tiling which could givetho least color for the abuse we have quoted. Confiding in the patriintiMn and intelligence of the President and his constitutional adviser", and linving enough to do in cur own private af fairs and our editorial duties, we have de barred ourselves from the cxefclso of a right common to every citisen, (the right of recommending othei* to the favor of the President,) cxceyt in two or three cases? and those exceptions were in favor of per sons resident in the District, who were ap plicants for minor offices, in the faithful di?^ charge of the duties of which wc were im mediately interested. The article from the Whig is copied, that wc may take the occasion which it offers, to ask those r>f our personal and political friends, to whom our recommendation hns been refused, if they do not see in it a justi fication of the nde which we have adopted and rigidly adhered and also to say to the many individuals who have transmitted applications, &c. to us that the ai*.vcr which they have ret cived, i? the answer giv en to all?to wit?that such prpcr* have! been sent to the department, <jj* to which It (? hrotiet that thry ?hou/d have been tent I in thr fitkt inntanee. | Our rule was adopted, upon a sense of what was due to those charged with the public interest* and to ourselves; as well as from a thorough comiction, that the coali tion had resolved on the destruction of this press, as one of the steps essential to their future success One of their fir?.t movements for that pur pose, whs to ns.scrt that Messrs. Calhoun and Van Hureu were rival candidates, and Jthat this nres* was pledged tn sustain the I former I'pon this poinr, we have had no Igcsitntion. This pvc?s is under no obi ign itions to Mr. Calhoun or Mr. Van Huren. It I was built up by that party who elevated our beloved president to his exaltol station, end it will be devoted to the preservation of its mrcnptli find influence. Mr. Calhoun and Mr. Van I'.urcn, art* both the personal friends of the editor. 'I bey bntli, a^ \uuli, j ? will prominent member* ??f the repub lican party, haven right toclnim the protec tion of the press t?t large, nnd of tIi!h n pr?r tirnlar. It htr. n<?t heen heretofore, and will not hereafter be withheld from either. Ax to their pretensions to the prfisidcnr.y, the discussion upmf that subject will be in time, when the fiartu ahull re*olve to permit (?en. Jackson t?? retire to private life. Another brunch of thi> movement, wai the r i?v?ilnti?.n of n report, that the cabinet wax dividt'd in enitm-il, and that Mr. Van Hnren had undertaken to rnntrotd its policy. The denunciation of the VVhig is in aid of thi?, unfler '.he vain hope t!mt the eneniv would he indulged in sowing discord ami distrust, wlii re duty and interestcombine '+iih prin ciple to promote harmonv. I'l?e president bus selected for his advi ser*, men whose ch irm ter* are pledged for a faithful discharge of their pn!?l?c Unties, and whofc good sense nod expeiitvit e liavi long since i?.?t? i? t? *1 'hem, tlo?t the mitiI means of -dnii'K higher honoM, i? to merit them. Men whts? claims t> public? r? ??!* deuce will be ndiancedhy the striking ? on trast, bet wren n cabinet devoting themselve* txtluiivrly an;l laboriously to the pit f'T uvroee of vhe^r respective duties, and a cabi net employed in traversing the country# di rectly aad pfersonally ep&sKtd In themoftt barefaced electioneering. 1 he lute cabinet vu united by a sense of common danger. The patent cabinet I* United by a tense of duty to the nfcblic, personal Mard for each other* aad a high mperi for the president, in whose faibe they are all so intimately connected. We should be blind and infatuated, if we did not understand the object of theconcert ed attack upon us and our press. The peo^ Ele.by the extensive circulation which tbejr ave given this paper, and their represen tatives by our election as printer to Con gress, have so identified it with the republi can party, that any disparagement cast upon thia press. Will affect the party itkelfc If our opponents can Induce our potitlca! friend* to believe that we claim too mnch at their hands, or what is of equal Importuned to tham, could they induce us to believe that enough haa not been conceeded, they would have, as they think, succeeded in neutralising our po rtions, and our disaffec tion would be seised upon as another evi-' dence of divided councils and used aaaatrik injr pi oof that the president of the people is unfit for the station to which they have called him. Upon this point, we do not ask coun cil from our encinie?. We know that the attacks of our opponents wil| be received by o*ir friends as certificates of good behaviour;, and the disposition to maintain our press, will keep pace with the efforts of our op ponent* to destroy it. It is thus that malico and envy punish themselves. LAWS OV I'AliTNKRStllP* The following remarks on partnerncrahip. arc embraced in one of a course of law lec ture* which Judge Belts is delivering at N. York. *\Ve insert them as prob&hly exhibit ing bound views of the subject, and as likely to be interesting to many of our readers t [Mobile Remitter.] A general mercantile partnership is an association of individuals which impart to each ore the powers all might collectively emjrtoy, in conducting the business ol gene ral merchants: and the partnership in the rye of the law, i* equally general, though the contribution of cupitul and shares of the profits arc unequal; or the |>owcr? of some of the partners arc limited by a private agreement as between themselves. The partners so limited may still bind the firm with third presons whodeal with them with odt express notice of the restriction. Part ners are often ot ovcwi d, nominal, and ?e eret or dormant; all are chargeable for the debts of the firm, unless it la proved that credit was given to the house under a full knowledge that the nominal partner had no interest (it it. A dormant partner is said to be liable, not because credit is ghren on ac count of the use of his name, but because by withdrawing hit share of the profits he fs supposed to dintlnish the ability of the fiim to pay its debts and Without being subjected to any risk, he would reccivc usurious inter est lor ltls capital. The broad powers ot' partners have been equitably restrained, so that their exercise is nugntory unless used in relation to, or in connection with, the bu siness of the concern. So one partner can not apply the effects or credits of the firm tothc satisfaction of his individual debts; and it has been ruled in ^Itit state, that a srpc ratc creditor, obtaining the partnerahip pa per for the private debt of one of the part ners, is required to ahn-V the usaent of the whole firm, in order to bind them. To this effect several cases were cited. The priiw ctplc applies with still greater force, where one partner attempts to bind the firm as nuretift for n stranger. It is patticularly important that these principtea should be understood as applied to nrgociable paper. The usage of merchants hns immemorially established the rule that one parter may put the name nf the firm on negotiable paper, - and thereby render tl.cm liable to a bona fide holder, even though they were ignorant of the transaction and intentionally defrauded by their partner. And the rule must br considered as extending to accrtnmodation as well as to husines* paper; though mu?h subtle reasoning has been applied to particu lar rases: a recapitulation of whicn would be foreign to the scope of this analysis Hut when n nerson taking the instrument from a partner, tnorvn it is negociatcd for Ills individual benefit, and without the con currence of the other", he cannot avail himself of the security as binding on the firm. One general partner cannot bind hUefl partners by any instrument under ienl, ex cept a release of h partnership debt, which he is permitted to giv*. But if the other partiicrsacknowl"dgethe*cal, tt'will render the execution valid as to them ail. The inle is attended with inconveniences, and in cvadedbysome nice distinctions. The safe ty of commercial transactions requires that a more definite one sHuld be established. P?y a late act of Congress, the signature of imr nf s firm to a custom house bfcnd bind* all the other partners. f t'row tl>r -AVm- York Enqntrtr, Jtprl! CO J 'I KK AUCTION HILL. When it was dceme.l expedient to throw open the Miction bufcincts and allow tvcry rospertable man to have n lirrnv, upon giving security for the payment of the Stale t;ix, the object wm to a!>olish what the noti?miction men trrm?"d tie monbfioty, which constituted the basis of that active op position which filled the halls of Congress and the polls of the election with sMverrn* <lu> r clamor. Beyond throwing open this unction business to alt, we confidently say i he | cople contemplated mo other regulation* tint* those whkh are fouml it the exist'nj; itvkd l;?w?{ It was therefore* with no less Mit-prlse and astonishment* than with real regret, we accidentally discovered in the bill introduced in the Assembly by our wor