The Beaver County Argus. (Beaver, Pa.) 1853-1859, November 18, 1857, Image 1

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ratarso AND PD
- TB' us- 6FDOLLAR
einnUM, 11 . ARVARCR; otb .
: will be., charged. No pap
all arrearages,are fettled,
of th EditorL.- • I
erpsemarge inserted.
per care, of fiftemi lines
each bfegateit insertion
L dliat nuulo to yearly ,
'Letter& and comm
shall Teiprompt stigma°
. _
. • SOFA OF T'
I
.Vtio t vipori the level; ni
sgaare
W;ittiworls of . precious Mk
I
--,- Masonic aro I •
Come let us contemplate tile
',. ' t i y or A titouglit.- .
~,.' i
4 lifitliffire - . . -- -/iigliest, and the I
~ .._ art frangtit. .
... _WO mietuponAlitOtil - Ili
!;- - t - .., 1 •75 - - --,--.---
044ti.....--------•,,,—.0- -
..,_ -,•,.....„
r." . . - . - -,..- . 4 t,
- -..•••ina...l,3llefitiln out hit palm.
, : !
rot ilk one matt leave Lip -Alindem ,ontside the
~..,, n.Soias - 4V:- -, :..:T.J .1 1 ! '" r '-
~,,...7;:i
-fix
milsegm,
-. " 7 ' - ''''''
' Atie.piii: upon-the square, fur the world must
.14ireits due i :, ; ' ,
6:ingfe 71t4.the anu / ltitldfrts ( 7 1 ul , d, tirifri-end
-- crew; - - 4- - :. - ,- 1 it ,_. i : 2
I I: intlueuee 'IC our gatt r ier YYY iii i gsraeutory
~..ii , lkeg T. ,,e ,, e ; ,i' „ , o .- „, the 2erell 4 ri :tie happy .
. •
cede. ' -"' _,.--„:„.„-- , ,
There's fiv.werld , :witr. all tire
‘ Vu F rying_tn - nr.l ItJabt:
AVe t+ll meet upon the level ili
~; : t te.3 a" --- diiiit. iiiri p 1 -- N.
ass d; -.-
.•1 - . L -
-IVe . oi-di 'stand before the Or eat , nd our alas-.
1% r will he there,
T., t:y.t.h.-I.4lochs we,affdr, 14 bi.
ma 'unerring °
jtf-e bb .11 meet upon ' the Ire 1 the e, but asrev.
tliew:e depart, t I l i ~
'--41.eteNi i mansion ererreatlT fo aoli truating, - !
1 •
in:ithful heart;„ • 1 ' ' "1
... Thcreli n mansion and rho e,.and a multitude
, . dthere,
r. .
...- , Who ltivre rust -
upon the ler I ) . ' - d been tried
A....4,', ~-i - --------__ - -• . --_,,,
_ ~ ,of..r.thiisquare. 4' '
IKE
Mil
Lin { raq trenn the level, t
here,
Let - u , ... 4 nrkt and leF Its labor .
[SOME
y in the vrefteyn tky;
, r FF: 1
Tog 4cr:ußi.gleviTrkirm
_.uport" , tat
flandqroC.lo.l, yo faithfuT 31 Isone:,
c'l-311! _
upuu tl t o_r..lnsrebeow, Itoy'rueet takes
:
Or' siL4 Ire.uris of preci uslmeardig thoSe
.4"s rib, Slusimic pro— ' -
rush uiltrathe,lerer,untl we part upon
tiFthe
-
ILI.N Ks OF 1 - S-L7E I:
are Aitilsol
r fgrrelary is all hard"
soa vtioni. draft it'
4:13 of toi. ,
% win - of otcat ialp6reotco t cid the gelileil
_,-- Fatit,„io tilepri.'selit panic'. icOm'incy :ntat
"-- ter , . iti; rarlie cannot fail to-be provis
, •,- 1 ,, .
- • tire, str.=3),l.A. dtsaster upon our Pacific tie, t•
,I. _ .
I 111-tll , -. - It is indeed • - true that spectila
„,,i , - t - .
lion Os:lot - le its worst; thata 'great reactton
-.; hab 0 :ea; plaCtrin: businiis ithitters, acid
---:-.* kliat I i
111 estate bad, ktVt-aecounts gone
„evrii ie-the lowest rates,i i n the; Califortaia
- , -::.;- - ,nrs; bat there canbe lib troubt - tbat the
'4.;.... - rui itilf_lilirst.willi:griajt fury, lima the
it - ited k . kegi •)/1. `Birk cry7lPress. ~ t , --
It 0- drins,. tfien, 'that at eaclusive'l'hard
aoney,”, currency-4as not prevente4i -4 'pets
1 , 1:1:i , 4 frOni doing its woist"! in Calfort#a.
Mr. Ferttey also apprehends that -the Pies- ,
--cat !`lifoini irill - burst r witl4 Oat ,fury upon
i: the abile•region" where batiks; otiiisne are]
i - inkaGiiii. - This shows how!, ',little .h lyi 1
.2..t:. , -to t r e ti' do with speculeiculi, and heir utt F
- ty worlhlosis.are the remedies seggeSted -or
ar)
litt7; pee.ent gmbartassmeits by th'e, hard
. .. - itioneyLtheofists.- The fadt, is. iiodttleitahlo
- ' ,lint iutiuetary crises 0.11.1 piesseirs axe more
:o,n-upland Nlole - M-4 . coutttri . dslifpere, there '
'-' is au'liank-uliii cirenlatioii, tip -it' Califor
- • Li - a, than where paper mQey is,thost abiin-,
ilaut-+ - , ip; • Nesv England.-- Yet [this islio
--7 .l s. , ,, utt;t`iit foCao excess i f ria , per. money,
: ..r' i icre ii , -a. Kapp a hank t :paper as
in all thingsersi. -- 7, The :talk col iloturyilit
i mill; ler money is simplyifolli. INo court
: .. "4y tt:j. has ie.s er-e - oloyed Sta . , advantages
1 , 4 s al. its 'iiie. 1 _41,. lime legislator
I. ~ - --- -S ithil:l'sliree.l-itis efforts ;to iterroving...sd;
--* ii.tkiniti g as nearly peifeAtfa which wej
f, .
1 , .!:14 can t.i.owe ithape, either geol. - had '
-. *gull...rent, as - the wiiklomi -el
4 l tally . .of
oiir 1.4 1 „. it....,:__ -
' -A
, 1 . "
ancaster
---- l''
. , ...Isi r. to wait.
- i'nzt , et. y , /it i •
it cer
ity,.ir in doultii whe - tierffOr,th - fulfill
: in . of a - TriinVise, or th4.arritial of "a
- SR '-!tl": ;, 14 4 4--- nf-ttiocey,'' ~.wailjng2,4tediacis,
I lus.
•IL,rjd
fields that patience' .is a Virtue: 7 -
- _ '° g !llipeful cannot watiforAitiner, add
foils Ili dppetito and digestion wiiii apples,
i.t:ll 40:4 - null butter. Older, gown, he.
i c anach - 4ait; for his rsajorityi and borrows
• llijec4.letO wait, _sad, th -y • iin,wer-thst
-.71"e- it atl - Waititig; -- atet - -tbey have waited
l':tg EltPugb, nod waitingwakes t'oek-';--
'••- :let waitiogis the selio' o - lof ()nil Oreie.b.l
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Tte grandest iceisomenis b TO'. to Ibe rik' ;
tf , l_for: f Small minds "are_ ways fizabit
;
Li roc
so when the .ti e cor i um they
4 , = , found eithcr stale or am tv --J - i Loadins
r - '-
1•FG111i, ~ 1 410•11FE.- - -Whel t
_Ai Itt.OSti llaetTa lighthouse he.,
• It? 8 Lisl.l,jict . 6 .31 y 01, leel
. ! 7 ) ;lie Ilzbt and iiik - c life.'
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VIVA!T OP TAXI AII2PAN
t SLAVE TB DE
!The revival of the African Slave Trade
is aeaionslyt agitated ht slave-holding 'cir
cles. Fedora and -intimations to ttmtef
feet bale ' gently been thrawn out, for
the passe- months,And the way is being'
prepared, io introduce thests:vies' of the
African Sl ve Trade sea plat& in tteSlave
IlemocratielPlatform. '
And why ibt 7 t atrocity is there,
what crimejigrlnst humanity-to whichthat
party is not equalt Lock at its Steady
progress in demoralization. flow itid4r,
, Dane weroMemocnita North, st' tlie pima
of the Fogipve Slave Law; so new the
mum Democrats uphold, sustain and justi
fy it. So with tint - ,repeal of the _Missouri
Complaint is4iand the passag6 of the Kan
- tuis Nebraska Act- The Northern mew
: bars of the party who deninizreecl those acts
of legiSlatiipr. outrage, InowL-eliimend and •
uphold - lire* unttl, debauched by thq„Aub
tlebut-infeitial spirit of Slaveryohey, can
now stand b ' . ! . Scott dem/adamant
ple--upon th, q 1 1: / ..ian doetrine of inal
ienable rig ts. - iin , -iiiider the assumed
-.ettield-stid eauction-4-IW - Vationil Celt
' lilitution, drve Freedom, r.
from ill out Te
i
ritories, and plant Slavery in its stead
From the pokitlon which the Slave-Deino
eratic party flow occupies, a sidgle step, will
Ibring it to ti e advocacy and championship
of the Forei n Slave trade, acd that step
1
i they are pre afing to take. Such is modern
rikinecracy. -, 2
The SGuthern Citize'n,publishettat (Knox
ville, Tennesiee, is 'even now4ldly and
openly advocating a revival of the Slave
Trade. TheiCitizen takgs die fr ground that
ie South is dwindling away,/ before the
, N orth - laments the absence of manufac-,
I, turirig and tither industrial pursuits, and
i arixiously pits, "is there a remedy?" and
'says, "Severil Southern j - iurnals have al
ready supplied us with tho answer—
_it is_to
-increase largely our labor power." Owin g,
to this want f the "labor power," says`the
Citizen, `the • osth 0;11mA - take peasinsion' of
Kensas, co i not establish manufactories,
cannot establ is h direct intercourse with Eu
i rope and wits all the world, and adds:
"Politicallyove may assert and vied!**
caste our right to settle --Kelpies, but the
Forth has , a outinual new influx of labor
from abroad-i--we little .oe none. Nature,
I • - .I •
[and the lews,whteh regulate se.tlement and
population, a lto stronger than our constitu
j tious end Qui- guamuties of norointerven
-1 tion. The North can pour her myriads in=
I tii Kansas. aid never miss-them.---1f we
cultivate an acre Mere, we leave an acre
untitled 1. re For 'every hearth we make
to smoke ineases, there is a hearth left
.
cold in Geor a or Alabama. Striving to
eat, nd our institutiorii into Ksmiss, under
present eite&stance l e, - is cutting a piece
from flee ei4 of a garment to sow it upon
the other—i is givitig a :hungry dog apiece
t,f hie own - t il to cite. ' -
On all Pid s, then,lwanCof-labor-ilaeete
• ms, It is oa
.. ,3ole• -1 aiffieulty—the one and
I
Eufrwient reason why the South cannothold
. her ono. I--
.;
1 The vnli,l, , litened ceotury,, stwhich flatters
itself itilis th nineteentiii," lati - sign'alized
iha history b one , gross and signal blander
a
1 hat of twi n e
tne monstrous , -theresy and
--,
falsehood_' ' thin theinees of_mett art erpaal.
I Some, nation' _ have 'tfolescored (through
policy orphillinthrotiy, =rgs little) to
I carry out that : heren into ptatiee, and it
1 has needed hitea • fesrlears to bear Rif trt - V
I ter fruitsTitew4thAttlteri''Statik-Aliniagh
they 'did - no4lld could not 'carry it to the
`inane lengthl of emancipating their negro
iL ,
, aves, yet did so farrgive way to the - prev--
I silent fully as to cut off from thee:mhos all
j fresh supply df the only kind of labor 'Mit
! able to theirlimate and soil to their own
t
1 grievous lose nd daMage, and without any
bepefft to anybody telee. Ileieby Africa
has suffered, perhaps! wore seriously than
Awake (a plepositido which we shall take
other opportuhities 'of - verifying): I "phillau.
Wimpy' has stultifie d itself, and agricul
ture has cut tiff its right hand.
_
Other natiitia have alaeady seen their
'toisttike, and tre contriving means and pre
texts to repair it. • The North has suffered
nothing by itsemincipation (or sale) of its
, neAroes; twee se, in the first place, she had
' - but few; in he second place, the einem
]
, stances of th European world have pour
' ed into her fields.4ll Iffililllited supply of fr.
bor, more suiied to her climate; and,, in tho ,
third Tilace, as her ioteiesLin-SliVery at.
f ays i iay, andr,..uowAiei - , rather e - S
ittihlavel
Trade thau-it(Slave Labos:_her_conimerce
irrthat way ) fo -ihi - liiiithera States, has
beetkconipensitted by clandestine trade to
SotittrAmertaa and the West. Indies.
Bat those na li
tiens AEle ec k-,4"-ad t t h e i r
.. - -
esti'? Vet and aboutl to repair At. Will
these Southern States; whiCh have the kr
geseleterest of all, be the last to see that
otter,? If..soi no Cassandra could Invite
for us i too %today a future."
Tints reasotikthe Oitie l en in fever of a
revival of the African Slave Trade, and to
this !neutronstietrine we shall soots hear
Northern Slav -Demoeratio doughfaces all
artiund us, crying amen. •
Oar readersicaunot bare forgotten- that
the Governor of 'Southi.iarolrna, last year,
in Lis annual i message, recommended the
re.opening of the African Slave Trade.
No man whd watches the signs of th
timeesin for a . moment doubt the next
stepithiet as to be taken by theoppressors
of men, and their unprincipled Northern
abottois- 'Bette:led 'is this. Nation I to die
° and infamy ,, nay more, we add, doom
ed to destrugtpm, unless the current of
ergots is seasonably airestel Tbe Slave,
,Power must be Overthrewo, or onetree in..
stitutious cannot stand.l i
The seizure of Cuba; and the tierinl of
the. Slave Trad' * are objects to be attained,
if Toehibli, by he present - administration.
e l
There are stem nd stirring times ahead.--
Let,The people *fleet, and prepare to act.
— gamma ( 0 ,.) Dem. ` , ,'--
intim ist
~.YND.
, •
;411?Firyr biturir, ptr
lie Tiro' DOLLAII
. • • ontirtued, until
, s: p at' the option
dis!
t the rate of Oct&
for Apne -Insertion—
& . , ts. - A. IlbQal
erti . - '
r .rotut t by mail,
EZI
man"
ire are
yep- the
_ _
,
I gh the tuber
igns . biLi ns
nd be tried
- -
11 tlie bright
wu in Gilifurnia. ,
infine , and, For
f!ict
, . . -
' one was about
r*slK' ed whit
1
oar be, nil;
, . .
,
.
' ~
-
111
23111
Ala= HaTORT ill:au mi
-1 Toiloup Bingsmul.
.Sovesal months situW the Bank of 11411.
Brunswick mw broken into, and over 870,.
00 stolen from its vaalia. , The details. of
this audacious robbery have already been
pnblishsW •#frer,heing tracked far a ; long
time and through many plates, ihe mix.
tnitoiriof they robber'' , have at last been ear
tuntd, and - are awaiting trial before -t/
Court of Atinixte in Nova tnetri.
are three in; slumber and their Anima , •
L Phil Study; flack ]land aid Bell Smith.
Thews three men, apparent are
amainnniinmAinesais• T;heY7 -41 4 1 nY
;trophies of no less than sixteen tnemoral
sehie*emerickt4' of which each of then! l bou.
'and whether lhey‘
. exaggernte the Import:-
*nee and reriqessness.of • these from a to
snf boUsting, tie Will,aot-rstep to inquire.
The leader of this trios -Phil §ltauly,_L
as Phil Sanford, prides himself upon being
one of the moat hrtftil cilliana in Christen
dom. ;He born in England and,is over
32 years ofd. His manner is affable .and
Quiet; yet he is a, very devil in barftldood,
`and gifted 'With airiest pnpsrallelern,
Lan Hol the eye of a lynx the subti e,M iii`of a
cat; the quick declaim of consiurrate gen
eral ,!and' a farce of exccatiOn which . sets all
, obshicles at defiance:
Phil first becimo known on this ,ricinti
neat in tbo city of Ifriffalo, where in a sin
gle night, committed thiee burglaries. He
yaq arrestedfor the crime, tried, convicted,
rrid i senteneeill to nine years nine months
imprisonment.: Unfortuoatey, his sentence
MIS soon afeCricouirnatea. and,.: true to his
instiuCts he Listened to deserve another.—
Scarrvly. hid he, got oat of prison, when he
,plannedlrgrilid enterprise against the Mil
ton Bank, of Dorchester; and one morning
the officers of that institution found them
selves ;Dan us • $32 tlOO. ' 1
)
• :Having succeeded in this . groat '- project
hecarried on,his operations in Albony, Re'
,chester, Buffalo'and Springfield; sometimes
'alone f .sometinies with - his associates.: But.
in Buffalo•the bird Was caged :a 'second time,
the Grand Jury found a true , bill of indict
!meat, end was sentenced to the Auburn
;State Prison for anOther period - of nine
years and nine tnouos. 1 Previous to the
Buffalo robbery, Phil .married the widow
of a Jew Arno kept an obscure hotel in the
city of Albany. When he
_foind himself
,a second timmunder , the restraint of iron]
Iran and-lie:airy locks, be act his genius to
_work to devise the Summit of recovering his 1
;liberty:' lie drew up a pitition to the Gov
ernor of the State for his pardon, signedly
ail the ',employees _of Alm prism"), Itad haviag
contiterfeit4lbe signature . of the Judge
'who.sentencedl him, sent if onto -Goy. Soy-
Meer. ; His excellency' was ensiiared by
I the trick; ho'Promptly sent on anf eider for
his-reldaze, and in a few days Phil found
himself out s ide the 'prirp well:
• The 'Gaud was afterwards diserivere'd,atid
I
'officers `,dispatched to'fi d the cri minal, and,
''after a ;liir:g 4d -frnitlsiiiseirch,they /ist
'ened to ,the toroposals. of his wire, who
_agreed to discover .* kyl(' . whereitiimattr i . upon
certain conditions: Thi-ebargain being -
con-
snmated, .Phil gat off with two, years
six mouths confinement. This inadequate
punislinent only whetted his instincts, and
gave biro new `aitlis in his luckY_star, and
he soon , after robbed the Wiudham County
Bank, of 523,p00. lie next, turned his
thoughts upauCanada, and went , to Mon
treat, where he committed marry robberies
'with liiipunitY- - -, among, others, ono of a
-
slooo` ,- from the ,
office of the Grand Trunk
Railroad, --A-Pelise , officer getting a'elne
-to his proceedipgs, triplred bins to Buffalo
where be-suc ce eded in capturing hiii. He
Was locked up for two or three mouths, and
them let :off for want -of sufficient evidence.
Aftribis dischirge he went t 3 New York,
where'his wife !was-then living. Scarcely
bad he stepped out of `the, ears when his
clura sposa denial:dam fur mantilla. ' The'
Phil bad no funds ; " :be was not. the man' to
spoil . his dignity by.-pilfering,so patty a
thing. :To relieve himself of 'his mbar
ressusenti he singslized the- night of his
visit to the Metropolis by breaking into a
store and stealing 's quantity of rich furs,
Which he; thought could lot fail , of satisfy
ing the most extravagant, wishes of his be
loved"; . I - ' , -
Bat wthrttmatalyifor him, he had not
obtained the article, ready made; he had
takewthe'il* Inaterlaite, . and 'though the
skies- were magnificent, his wire upbraided
hint - in no gentle terms for this oversight.
"They must dd," said Hill, they - 1-4 st be
made
un. They w ei c i app ,....,Fugly sent to a
furrier,wista 1 . --3. 11?-!tid ha v e 'it; they
....
_ ... .recognizod _by the lawful
srtiVer,. and Phil was arrested when he call
ed for the.article:. diff3 it has often happen
pi," philosophidallzlemarkod Phil, on his
Way to thO - Tombs; "these cursed, baublet
of women have .ften ruined groat men; -,. 1
Lie did 'not co , tent . himself merely with
!giving ut " , . to the tuaxims of• wisdom;
I bcit while on hi! way to that venerable per.-
iallinatitutton clipped from the officers, out
striplied them in] the raise, escaped from the
city, fled to ;fiigan, robbed the State
Think of c lill:, /
-went to Conneitient,plun
i ,
dered severatj . ewelry stores
.is tl& Stmt .
robbed an !Tiutitit exchange agent of a con.
siderable m; plundered eeveral -of the
Beprincipal Amps, and joined Jack Rawl and
81l Smith..-Tie trio next attempted to
rob an oil, cothpany. i '-' By. means of false
kip' the '
rascal, got:into the cotap's
safe, but to their chakrtn found the .eof F era
empty. Per two or three nights they eon ,
tinned the expecimeitt; but still found no
money. Enraged r
~, with his ill success, Phi
lc
resolved not; to ' all this tztxtble for
nothing. nevi') carefully examined the
company's boo and ; acquainted ' himself
kai e
with their method of . doing business, he
fared their name, assi, personath4ona of
thew eniplojece, gotit discounted end left,
the
thews
Whew i the note hecame due,. the
Wyottunate emplOyee whose name he bad i
assumed, was tried for forgery and 'eentewl
eel to Sing Sing for five years. , ,
1 • i 4
ME
" i•1f.;‘ , ;„.• , ,-;% ,
q
-.......• 4,... - f - 2 • 4 .„----,•;:- • f ly- A tIF: Irma
, -•-: . fig ' . 14. i ,..'' , `; '' ,1 1 , ';7 1 : - !'",.
- 1 BEAVfIR PA WE NW '- I ,agir 18A5 4 57 ..:
WI
• „ pietics'illiopor . i ciiikt-i.:=-•
Tit=oliiio • 4 1 $-Ikubv - ,
thet.' iiil. ,' % ~.ifieNt t iit i , , ,
s r oo
the ,ofieeie;thet
.. Aovi jiloo ' ,
A few liseks , . 40 41 1 raTat thilsii ..
Bank robbeir4A ~,, . ; has . lieeenittO
To dais peepeed r ous klik. : _ - Pbsveiliopy .
idtl444 l l, l i rgilt wl af4.leM
be tomes, ""Aez the seam. . ..
look, and-fridil'thb . t.g,i4 : ';': •
,
1,
prom.. 1
..
Ordinarily_ pini,nwmice"). effete, MA
let his confedeistes - Vieigite:' it. -- pus in
Nova §cotia,be departed:from • nits pri4elo
cgaingland to this cagligeuca he outride
detection • t 1
T unn
..,...Tack gatia, one i s, ireouipiirp,lnis•
born in New Hampd! , where bq exerci
sed the trade of _a J itiii-: ;.He. began
his career of crime etiOL stealing OX), fog.
wEich he suffered two.-YearsimpriOnmenit
After the expiration of his term, ho figured
in (he - robbery of the Pottsmolath Bank,
andAeceived $70,000 its his sharel of the
speils. , i Ho sent apart of it to hi . s s . father,
who; being found with some of Oa in his,
-possession, was arrested ,for . the crime:
Jack, not altogether forgetful of this °blip.
tions of'a son, ecinfesbed 'himself the guilty
party to the police. Ho - was imprisoned,
and his father set et liberty; bnk Abesae-
E v e
cal .made his escape in about fou ' months ,
At Concord be was arrested for la • Dy.—
Ile got 'nntiagivio; and in New V y , this
modettv i dsd Sheppaid.oemmittedi a heavy
wharf robbery. They caught and impris
oned Lim, andfor the third time be bioke
Sail. lie was, however,tposptured ip"Phil.
adelpiii, and sent ` back to New. Jersey,
where ho was acquittcdlin some unexplain
ed manner.'' . '
Disgusted with the Stites he went to Can.
ada with Stanley, and-the two travelled up
and doin-the St. Law bee. Seen:AA:late,
expresses, die.-1. - tilllftheater of their op=
erationis... Q. they attetuptd,to steal
a Vox cor l! dial , ' ~ + l,OOO in gol ddust, but
failed: -'. ~t,,
, " 1 khl foe the. attempt;
but traidift;rl'.e&fer want. of 'competent
evidence:T , .. -1 -- • :' .- ,
The last of his; dialmlicat trio L is Bell
Smith - 'whoni r 7wt_o4.T litillia the aer.val4
*to t
iii Sather ilii Uti - ' o fili.t,'" - Ite - does
the, mostdaugeieivaraed aervilfr Work,
_sad
receives the least pay.;-.-.N, Y. Tribune f a'
I '
WORICING HIS PAS GE. ...
,i
, • ,---..---.---,..• •:. r vr7, --, , , T" ~-
A tall, awkward-leaking ehaViest from
Mho Green.ltianntain.s 4.Vermont, Cattle 311
bboard ' ; , , cue, of the splendid *forth Rivet;
-boats at Albany. Ills dariosity, was aini4:l
,
loglkencited at once, and he onimeneeifl
,
“pecking,' as he called it,. intiv, every noo k J
and corner of the beat. • The captaio'ff tit:
flee, the'fr.ginaraipmi,- tie ba ra s tip—
'er - i , l'
all underwent Ids insilection; and then he
1 . J .
went on deck, aud'ate.* leek' in- imam.'
1
leen" at-the lever beim, th '. Y imueys and'
the various , 6sine ' tilt atlas!. tie caught
, .„
sight of the bell:,-*,. This w thee crowning
wouder,aud ho viewed it from over: poriitio!i,
walked . it,
around got, dow n on -hie knees'
-- f -
and looked up into it, and e i clai.
'Will raki, this bead : the I Dell
meetib' house a,grest sight' 1 •
.By- thietime, the attention, of the captain
and several passengers were attracted to this
genius. ,
.
'llea much would you ask to let a feller
ring this b4lr . . ,-,
.i
L.
, You may ring It • 11, dollnr, sir,' said
tbe captain; , •
f, , 1
4Wall, it is abargs '; ill fair and agreed
and no backing out.' 4 ll •., -,
'lt's a bargain, sir,' I said thel,Captito.'_ ,T ..
Our hero ' went deliberately and brought
a seat and took bold of the bell rope, and
having arranged everything to his satiate+,
Lion,commenced ringing, Slowl y st fi res, and
graually - faster and facer, till every ;body '
on liciardtbangtit the
,boar was on fire and
aisiteilvjideek, screaming wittilalartn. I 1
Theist ity'aittke captain, and 'there - eat
the lranetaintair,' ringing away, -first slow
sod then fast, and then. trine three tapiij
at '.a time. i - . The passengerqlegan ta . 41 4, ,`
tulate;jthe captairi l *t_it ilia tr -. 7- . 7-
But the passeogeri keidlitilirient-that the
eternal clangor should be stopped. • All
the white therapist ant s hero aculisturbe4
ringing away : meta ways thiru l a cockney
„ hone -; finger ever dreamed of. At last the
! caPtaii - tlitightit , time to atoP the simple
ton;ibut is answer was—,
' A fair bargain and no , biekini eout and,
he rang away for dear life. :. 1•_ 1,
"Well' says the captain, 'what will you
.
take to, atop ?',; .. • ,•. ,I - ,_. i
'WO, cairn, I etteio I eheant lote.noth. 1
ini if I'take fiveidollars and a Ow - Passage
to NeW York, but not a'. harried tent less.!, ,
'Well,"wilk down to the '.°See ,Und get
your money and a *sate .ti keip' said ' the
captain. ' ' : , , • .',. • .',. .:
ORGANIZED BAND or Fistslis Sines
Tutzvna.—Two • Wooten who stole .a hones
and buggy from a filr. Coenwall, in Venn
i Tines Ky.; a few days ago, j were arrested
,near Barroilaburgb. inlhat State and bra't
back tialLoulsvllle on Wedoenday.sight It
p is sup pcao that they i•eloog to, the mune
gang that made thew head quarters at Ilar
rodabstrig during the wing arid stunoni.. '
, , , I, . 1
Engieh
.1163.4 n -Aghb, writer sayiN ja _ .wa l
se to suusg asnied women, "that' theii,
%her, Evetinuaried a gardaer.!, It 'nigh! ,
added that the, gardeer , : hi coasequesloo
of--Jilt witch loat his situa P tiott.
. , , f
, . •
L; -•''' 144*.titte Phit adelPhla isle.•Leurrial,l
At r ii.(,v -4 ...OTIS IND118TBT::
ly,p .ii * O - stjuit t inat of MOrchaiiii ..rathcirr
4100 - kinatVoinfArolltieeral 'We are more .
.eailtiiiied . •iiicanying - fiOdnats:'almitfrom
tilace.leplain Own itr cieeting - thern: l '. We
lain'ttderivoreit to 'gefrichAnd powerful
bytainutreree,' instead of by productivein ,
doer,. 4 :,111 this we bamfalleointo a huge
intatil-e.', '
:WI bare' bier' content with *he
'of eirriers and treike*: when -, we
I liiritilddid to - these:the -better and
',pitifiterifii . isehanio Ind "iiiinufantu.
e livi'depiistid frail this
P' otily lie our agriculture. The. um
':'.4Pt*.ht laisa, f ':uP.ilotalit entirely
h-fridekof
the .i..=.-- i treinliettbe.
Inge, in our trade . : --- r. -, •
is! torthe tineitlnirtiiiattiest i .. nets
isitinfiiiitarillglkiiiiief.::
'?-The balizieti 'of tnotirlifitoces
igi jiA,s,'-;-not inlY in the ryi
' rerpeOnui--
ry - plyments , igterchinged;ltirlA
the wt. -important matter of labor eniplOy
-ed and en,Oported. --ProductiOrebt,earigive
Of wealth.... Commerce--or the'simplaliet•
of transportiog Ind
wealth_
the`: products of
labor products : no wealth it all: vmere
ly Appropriates a pert of tba- alth that
i ii
'productive ingeouittaild 'otter ' , create.—
Iliit;our'prOduction consists- ma' ly . cif nit,-
!rsil precincts, which are set abroad in
their raw . state, ar in l they 10, est-form of
iii
Tabricatien. ' How. Muchricher we sheuld
to if : to the Value of w • the product's we
l a
raise, we added the vale of theihighest
forms of. Mechanical skill;'. ' It is iu this
ii:!,lieet that the great manufacturing a tat e s
of the weildihave so immensely tho alan
tail", of us. , They export 'nothieM - or very
little of anything. that is not .diiinceff-lay,
doniestie labor, to the utmost praciiiible
paint 'of commercial value. , , They make
out of it' all that can be made out or it , 4y •
utilizing.' industry, taste, and' Overflies's, at
home. OUr policy is just the reverse: , All
that we -, prattle for exppriation we tend
On oid in that condition Which realizes the
least, possible price, -'-little mom thee...the , '
mere cost at `natural reduction. Butthis
is: not alt. 'We take the raw material back
'again in a manufactured sh a pe, in which
operation 'we part with the original pries of
the atifile and pay in addition to it the
price dr the value which_has , been stipend , ,
clod by the mechauical labo - ri - of foreign op.
erativos. In this'proceubi'itie obviousthat
wi lege n- vaat sum of wieltir. which we
might save;_ We lose, itr...fect, 2114116, 410-
ferenco of iulUe between a ratr,SPd a-taao
ufactured product—ork other 'words,'. we
lose the 'due of labor and *ill as diatitv
gel:died fromthe_ value.s. ot hti unimprtritil
natural product: -`, T l,
Let , us teak() for illustration a single. ex
ample, , which will show the operation of the
principle through the entire scope of ;that
absurd ilyitetu which i enaploys foreign labor'
to work up into useful forum the raw mate.
_rial of-e.ny, country: ' Say that a - pound•of
. raw Amer . :eau cotton will sell , in England
for ten cents; that labor and skill add to
t_hs . ,_ . amiglit
i o,, its telfuuftiolumi form-an` ay.,
erago - tucr l iiiiecl , value of sixty cents
,; -and
that, the fabric is sent to the ,United States
acid consumed here. What' is the effect?
Wii\pas,_back to England the tar cents re.]
:alga fof , sbuirtind of raw cottini, and six,
times that amount' besides, for 'the value
that mechanical ; industry ties imparted to
it . on the otheusideof the oeeau. hi Oilier
Words, we lose;silty cents. which Might
have been earned by ,houie labor am? saved
.
to the nation. : : ,
At this rate 'it is apparent that other
i
countries are making immense profit . in
our productions, . and that we are 101 o:
by a most ithprovideut policy. For exam:
pie, touching this One item of cotton, Bob..
ert J. Walker, in - his' Treasury Report Of
1845; sayal—qt present prices, our cotton
-crop will yield an anoint precinct of 872 0 .
000,000, and the 'in innfactureel fabric 8504-
000,000, funsiehirig profits abroad to thou
sands of ea italists and Wages to hundredi
of thOusant the working Chimes, all of
whom would be, eeply injured by any dis
-130,
turbance, growing ut of a state of war, to
the direct and adequ at e supply of the ;raw
material'.' That- is to s!, -foreign labor
realizes over five hundred - millions of 'dol
lars upon American products bq which. we
realize but, one-seventh part of' tttt sum . r
Why should we throw slay 'the sm.ser,
enths?;. Why let foreicommunities reap
a profit , by labor, of ov er, four hundred tail',
lions - of 'dollars, on : a -material ; grown on
Ameriosailoil,when we might,, , ix time, by
A. who- industrial policy , W ork up the cotton;
*old, and' appropriate the'
_profits of _the,
menufaeture ourselves.? In arguing in, fax
*or of, frtie trade, Mr; Walker has furnish= .
cid one of the most powerful statistical, Sr.
rin gum gla ep kv - : But
ts la' behalf of domestic mannta t etw
ius wh y , let us ask, could
hii recognise the - great- retired of fareige.
capitalists aid laborism an: having an unto-,
terruited supply from the Visited States, of
raw tattoo, 'and yet not perecive the impor
-1 tenet,- of reserving all the advantage of that
tuppost to the capitalists and laborers of his
awn country ? Why could be not see that,
Hit' was well to sell the cottort.onip of the
South to England and'Other States lei $72-
000;000, it would bo 'infinitely' better
sell it, in a fabricated form, 'to our:iiiin,
people and other people, for live hundred
millions of dollars ? The gainwitild CO:
`silt aid only, in thelpeciunimy profits'aar():
but also in the'benefit of sto much suds
labor and skill euiloyed and Maintained.
But a man contending for a theory cannat
discern the fallacy , ,and practical Avila of it.
What we lave said4f-eottontie opidl*,
ble with_eqnal forcelo all °that raw Area
kale products capable at being enhanced in
commercial value by means of (mechanical
ingenuity' and industry.. ~Our 'true polloi
is, to %gyre 'to every thing we!haVp..to tat
ohmage with-the world for coMmodithe or
money, the ; highest Measure
. 54 value-that'
dilligtoce and art casimpart to,it. When
that is done; tour merchants wilk be employ
'al profitably to the nation, in,liarrying the
fruits:of its litbor to foreign markets, and:
bringing back tit& fair returns, for, our ex=
changeable weal tE: • ' ' . !-
.. -
]I
hi. ad.
N .
, • -
4" Little Eitoa. 4 '
",•„, , '
1 IA kw Oohs siuca,t incoming d o wn
North Itiin4. arits seated in tho cabi
tirottiapitloent iteatner, Tim Newton
ica)versation':withisonre trieeds. It'yr
tinning late in 1116 - erentog
s end one
iniothee, seeking reposoftronr the attest
tolls ot the day,' made , preparations to
to e: to . their Some, , pulling'
'hieir. booti - 'entit coati,
ditwolo - iest;.otters, -theatteurpt to m
it; tioeta noteli Pair, homekoa pbeeil
threw of - ilothF th
F il
13
lit, fairJat,
- 0,..-wfth ei ~.‘ „ get _ --.......„_. , 'e4-
Widow_ Of ' rotintenjoi,eiv and from 'l..4iti de;
Lis tem p fill ehterutiha jfiandllticke'liptiteirv„.
Itig,! ' -rt : -.4.. ' 7 ,;-___„74.-..Z.f. 1 ~,;;( 4
e urls. - , ..„.r. , ' ` . r .'... ' r ,l
After welkingahtint4hO*lntatitn tiMoi •
-
tite lather/and sou steppodmithin a few I , at
of where ,we were seated, an licganini.;
'filtrations i for going. fo4ed. . I watched''
iLein. ' The father , itikiiskiW_l aideShan d;
ibe bed the fehild •was to ncevikhleit. li
I
op' upper birth, While the little , lOw , ag;
4ndiessing himself. Having finishid i Is.'
ms father tied_ a handkerchief around i s ,
head, to protect his curls,' which IStike 11.1!,
irthe sunlight'from hit young hippy' h rt„,
always. testeik there! - This done', I lob - 4 . '
flir im k to seek his resting place ; but u 7 l
4ciall( this, - he quietly kneeled down f 4 1
eel thi floor , put his little hands -toget her.,
tjo beautifuly child like and simple, - rest;
spg ilia saint 'TOO the lower berth,against '
whieh.he knelt, ' he began. his vesper pray'
Or: The father Sat down r by` his side, and
waited the esnielusloiW.lt was, for a eh Id
a long' prayer, but ..- woll understood, f ."
i
could hear,' the toniinering of hi; lisw t
svoice; tint could. not distinguish the, word 4 ,
CE spoke. There, were men iiroundNbiiniTi,
hristian men retiring to rest Without pr yi
4i;' in if praying at, all; a kind' of , inenial
desire' - Jur protectitio,, without - sulficient
'Coinage •or piety to !kneel down inthe .
Steamboat's iabin, and' before strangers acl
knowledge the gooduess of God,;.tO ask his
his protection and love. _
mother'Thie, was the ',training of seine ; pin i
Where was she nowf f h ow I R .t.
'I. .
ny times had her Bind= been lat 4 n
the sum locks; as she haktauglit'liiiii. o-
lisp li ' ening_ . prayer. k , I - I
....,sice i .l:
utile' s ight was, that, child t
,prayer, in the midst of , the busy, thimgh
less throng. He alone, of this World ,
toultitiide drew .1 high to heaven. If hank
the parental love that ' taught - . him'Hip
ii
his e evening prayer ' whether IlithOl ei
Or
l'rotestaut, dead orlliiiigVat t- off on igh.
I could-scarce retrain from weepingl the ,
,nor can I cow, a-r see again that ;sw i
child, id the eroWded'tunialt of the Sloan .
:looitt's cabin; bonding in devotion bef4te Lis
i
Maker. '
.. '', 1 ~
' - 1
Nit it . little while' before, I saw e erowd
of admiring listeneis,. 'gathering about ii
company of Italiin singers in the upfleissa
loon—a mother and two sons, with ;voice
-harp and violio; but-no one heede.); no on
l
`wired, for the little child at prayer: / -1 ,
When the littie WY
i had fioished'his eve
nag devotions, le -arose and 'kissed hi
father mosf affectionatelyi who put Min in
his berth for the - night. I felt a .stron g
d.sirti, to speak to them, but deferred it till
Morning. - When morning came"the.- on.
fusion of landing prevented me from -seeing
, therm again. But if 'ever I meet thailioy
in his happy youth: in his anziaus manhood;l
in his declining years, I'll 'thank hint for
the influence and ezainfile ,of that niglit't
' devotien, sod bless the natio of the Moth
es .
that taught , liiti' ' , ' ' 1 i i,
Beiceely any passing ineident,of , my life
ever made deeper , impression on my mind.
I went to 'my room anethanked God, that
1 ; had witnessed it; and , for its influence On
my `heart: Who prays on a steambdit?-L—
-iybo teach their children to pray
, at horde??
— r ijonte,JOurnat.'. ,' - i
-( •
A Cool Oporatipn.
lallo, therei CaPtingl' said a, brother'
Jalithan to the captain of a canal packet
o the . Etie Canal, '‘whaa do you charge for
, pisaage?' - '
r oagi
KL ea 'hreei cents poriitile, and boarded;':said
the tau.
.1
4 ,Wili s L guess I'll take passage captain,
seeing` slow lAA kinder give out walking
so far.'
Accordingly'hig3t, on board just; oa f the
steward was ringing the boll for• dinner.
;retiathati bat delsolind began to
lab the (Laing:: to thetutter consternation
of the captain, until , he Cleaved the tsblis
of all that was astable; whett ho got - up and
went on the deck, 'picking his teeth very
comfortable:
'snow far ii - ir, -- 4Splifig, - friiiielibre to whirO .
I came. board? .
'Nearly one star a,half miles, i said the
captain.
'Leta see,' said Janathan, 4 that would e
just four and a half '
cents. 'but never mind
esptieg, „here. ii Art) L :guess „I'll go
ashore now I'm kinder:rmed:l:lout
• The captain vamonsea for ehe,Ca
Jonathan wept 86hOTO.
PCAUTY. iii ,a BLUSH.—Goether was in
a ir
Company ith, a mother and her daughter,
when .the latter being. 'reproved for mine'
fault, bl ushed and burst into.,, tears. He
o
said:, flow bilaudfal your.reproach ;bas :
made yetis ' daughter ~ ' . That crimson hue '
and. thaw slivery tears becomeher, better
than any ornament (Vivid and pearli.-..-
Those may be'huag on the neck of. : a wan:
ton, but these are never' seenAsconneeted
with moral purity.*fttlflilfilr . be
sprinkled with the purest' 0,5 ,it tko., so
'beautiful an'this,;chtid.: blushing" beneath
'her,parett's disploasure;mid shedding tears
of sorrow for her fault. A blush is Abe
,sign which nature , hangs out to show where
,chaertty and honor dwell.
sm
. -
••
cllO-, •,c-e .7
.61 1,-
11.471..cW
• r i
THE frAi7E LAW 'A
-FAILURE i i
~ : i 7--- '- • ,-:
Behold how !great a mate- ictieS;'...., I _,
kiniiletil ! 'out,of three ,lietiiiilifeiict of , ri
31 r 1" j Gough -6 a fr,iend f ln En ii ia 4 l, *7:i l .
while temperance and anti-tent mat -' I
Ahern hive been li, hiiwo tot,' eat iiolcrit .
riT ,
collision.- The moderation ,
~..f e lapriett_V: j.
i
41191hand 4 Ivita';ilidtitie 41 4ticiPaiiid, itiii ,l 3',2;'
.uniph of moral-*sion,, while tit a4aaMi.:,
ltir.'bow Walt compelled: to-thetritest. It:
fort ' IA Matter ..--
•
ft 6.
ock l
re.'
of
yes
Ace
Gime' says
thallaititi , law friends say Nora' . suasacin<
has failed i lk sitid teetotalers say the Eh/spill
„ failed. And Iwe gon on telling the
ple;lerho - are ilaketap excuse for n
`doing, that all ngoildli:i:lie, and .tho weAd •
id given up to work its owu destruction.- 2 .. .
NOW/,atibuiltjhat-norio of those
have . The, Gospel is what it alwaye-
w 4 1 18„ „whatit always did.L, 11 . 4%,114
,pWw.er 0t4,4 satiation% them that.bo ! ,
and never has; nor never can faij. •
Alert fad 'to - preach its ttuths and practice .. ,
its pricept l 4; but :Li, therii that believe it Li
power of God, and uhder its influoncesmMt.
'denying ungodltees and worldly lust_ lipri
soberly, righteouslv, and godly in eke-prel 7 ,
eat evil worlJ . N ral suasion as
.: failwl;; t .
in-eases where therrisi.amorallpower; and
Where iite a bargain with. Deity for
the tett/inane() of every indulgence for at ich
the'slightest excuse can be maker but not k• - • •
where there- bas been a willingness to re-'1
ceive the truth, anti a determination to pay
the price that abstinaace hag involved. Tbo - I
Maine law has failed in eases where it has
not been er.f&ced, ' l .lUst as - any ; other 14- 1 . 1
7
would'm
wofail for the,sae reason. r, n• -
And.indeed. what Ass' net '
.`ailed 11 q! , ' • '
day schools have f.ittei v ilible societies have
failed, education has failed 'tlochanics' in
stittitta --- tate-fai44l 7 the_Refor*a_non I
failed, Missionary socictief have faitedr all -' 1
nature and_ truth have failed. B en
The sun shines, though (la ass and Clouds :1
eceasionally gather • a inorin threatens;
--%rth yields .rth
be ba
inii sod
1 ,
ELSE
0
-,..
the earth yields' rth i jhei fruit in obeli lart4
- , I
though', there be ba yen rocks and uncnitte , -.
vote& Rol: seed-qmeland harvest havo:uev..,-
er kited, !beeausa.uatare is tr
aed . God iscfaltbbil,,l . ,l4o it is!
ong and kgitiMitejaction.
,beauty is a joy fereVer.' it firgs .
[own reward, ancl the diligent 'lrapd maketh
rich. Let us pill: about.succcss, and labor 1
and live for it, and it will _ co e.'; Temper
'ante men who ca nnot go fOra ;Nino - jaw
let those alono ho eau, and do Sour own-_ , --.
work.,-§urely'it willltio teetotalerSiio harm
to shitluEi , n ruklie, house, thoughtit be ay .
fire. .7/ - ,„, 1 1..;f,.
Than squabbles 'a bout ininerlnrattersi
have nearly, in elVel`caserfiiiN•iirkyed oar
- "attQn. Who of 'us does• not ieinetitber the I
heagt-buruing `aid bitterness spoil - loss 'of . •
friends in connectionl with the ii-inite abgnf '
long • and sh?ri ? ple4g6's, fromll.B3;irt i o-1846?: ..,-
and what did we.gaiO? - -'.,Debt an flisordei l "- -
! !
among ouvelves, amtuegleceand contempr.
from the public; turil the , veilo6 l l4st did . ,
whiit they liked- after all, and so they will
again. , Let ' Us enlighten till Mind'. affect . .r
the heart,-an dstir n i p publicapininn ? and
the feoplo will do the rest. ' -
LovE of Hp3ro. 7 --It is only.shat:
low:minded pietenders -'who',...OokC either Vi
distinguished or, in a matter Of,PeraniutV-!.-
. ~
Merit or' onscure origin is matter or -per-
simal reproach. A man isrho isnot, album-,
ed of hirnself nettd'attet tie ashamed of his
early condition. I did' happen to me to ~
be bent in alo,g-eabin, raised., among the
enow4rifts of New litanipshire at a period
so earlythat whetn-the smoke firstiii.. - se-from,
its rude cbitotiey.\anif — glitled_over the fro. •
zen theee svakne similar. tii - Fitlenee&k , '
a White man's habitaiien between itiand the
settlements on the rivers of Canada., Its
remains "still exist; E make it an annual
,visit. I carry my children' to it, and teach . •
them. the hardships ' endured by the goners.
Lions before them. 1.1,,10ve to dwell on the'
teudertricollectians, 'the . kindredt ie sthe'
,early effect;ous; oarracia.atid ' inci=4
'acute which mingle with all' ; .l"know of th•kt.'l.
primitive : family abode: I weep to ,prink
that natte.Of these who inhabited itiare now '
among the liv
,io audit' Lfail:ju atfecti,oti:
atn veneration fothiriaiitheaisid it, via
defended - it against savage Violence and de-,
structwn, chhrisbed all domestic comforts,
beneath its reef, and through the firsilitur -
bleoCaf seven,. years,' revolutionary , war, -- ,
Shfunk•from neo t011,.n0 sacrifice to saie his
,conutry ) and to raise his Otldren.te a co
n-
Aition better than hiss " curdit may my name
land the name of my posterity be blotted
from the• memory of mankiral.--Paniel
Debater. ' • ,
; ,
10r orace l'iraipole, will! all D ig 'piper.
cilious hearticeiness, 'Wrote -surnOeff mu. '-;
able things. "Bad ,I childrocil: puce ti nu .._.
said, 1 o
My nont enclenfors -- -- - --Icif
breed them! musicians,. Considering 1 liiiit ---
no ear, inor,tiven a thought for manic ; flit) '
.preference eems odd, an(l'e t . it as, eiotro,7,
cod ' l fre " bent reflection. In siMit, fay .
latmc wort 'be td uMke - them h)ippy. I , •-.
think i th most Profitable method.' - It Is
) 2
a resonrce which will - lasi; t,he't‘ 'lines, -wn
~k - ,
lethe7 g l4} W.'defS; I ,t Ina 4 Thoth, depend :,
Upon Inemeefres, not- .o ' o thers always
'ainu4es nod
,osoothep, if Tint fioneolne; and bf....
; a
'alt faah"onable /team:l ine, It la, tlsetheafist. ..
It is `ca
able of -fame"; Without - Almidapgee
of anti ' In; iii• seseepiible of ' ei3flimiasuf
wi'thont being - .priceterillftP4ti4l unlike 'l,
other mral paieuxisfiq anti : -,.. of Icing "grist , -, '-
tiled' healieu..!r - _ J ,:.1:: - . - 'il i, _.. .-
,/ , ' •r-i ,- "
, lir .
charariee
talent is perfected is tiolleado a
- iii'ithoisttedav of the
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