2 = ‘ ago 3 a I A J | Bl Ww = | ul” a vi EN VOL. 6. BELLEFONTE, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 18, 1861. Sgm— riginal Pogtry. came oto im — | | ‘ [For the WATCHMAN. | THE IDIOT'S REQUEST. { BY *‘GAY.” | Oh, lay me down deep, where the outstretched boughs, Are, moss-covered, bending with years, Where no mo.tal ever lay stretched before, Nor trace of & grave appears— Where the deep dark forest, in echoes low, Sends forth no hum to the ear— Forever gilent—silent—and dark, Throughout the livelong year. Ob, let rae rest where sweetest of flowers Bloora, blossom, and fads away, And leave no traces of what they've been, Or how they could ever decay. Where wild birds warble their requiems free, ‘Tua rite, and, falling again On balmy zephyrs, are rolling along, In Aurora's bright sweeping train. Ob, let me lay deep, where stars smile down Through many a long still night, . O’er solemn grandeur—Dboth woods and waste— With twinkling faces bright. : Then as those faces peep from the sky, 1 My spirit shall often beseen, =. O'ertripping the tops of the tallest trees, _ Or hiding in foliage green. . I'll smile at the moon—she'll smile at mo, As she peers up over a cloud, . Dispelled by Aeolees—exhumed from his cave, And bellowing in thunders loud. I'll laugh, and I'll dance o'er the tallest trees, 111 pluck them up from the earth, . And my spectre shall visit the peasant’s howe, Yo frighten him at his hearth. As the fallen tree in a lonely place, My flesh shall be wasting away, Shall be crumbling to dust in it loneliness, For with it I never shall stay. J I'll stray with the Elves, I'll chase them about, And, sometimes, I'll wrestle them down, And, when twilight appears, I'll hie to my home, To my mystical cave in the ground. ell [For the Warcmy AN. LINES. ON THE DEATH OF MATTIE BULLOCK. BY MOLLIE MURRAY. Farewell, dear Mattie, a long farewell, Not like the farewell uttered oft’ before, We hoped to see thee oft again, and well, This is the last, till time shall be no more. We little thought, when we were with thee, And heard the sing and play fo sweet, That ere the summer would return, Thou wouldst be lying in the winding sheet. But Heaven thus will'd, and Heaven supreme command, : Thon hast obeyed, and passing quick away, Hast reaced that happy, that delightful land, Where night gives place to ever lasting day I well remember all thy looks, thy emile, Thy buoyant step, thine artless winning grace, Thy cheerful voice and friendly, pleasant smile, But now no longer can that smile we drace. There linger hore loved oues, who feel an aching void, : Which naught but thy companionship caa fill, W hase future hopes in thee are here destroyed ; May they submit, for t'was God’s holy will. A little while, and those who much did prize Thy many virtues, now thy loss deplore, Released from earth, will join them in theskies, And feel the pang, the parting pang no more. Parewell dear Mattie, calin be thy rest, May flowers around thee shed their sweot per- fume, . oo And the green turf lio mouldering on thy breast, ‘While friends and loved ones weep around thy tomb. wt MiLesBurG, Pa. WMisgellangons, ‘WHO GAINS BY THE WAR? ‘We alluded in our last issue to the miser- able financial condition of the South, as chronicled by the journalists of the North, and endeavored to lay before our readers a slight sketch of the skill and ability by which the Confederate Treasury nas thus far been provided for, in order that they might more | PY clearly understand the real resources and springs of wealth which the South has at ;its command. We also spoke of the deplor- :able picture which the North gives of the commerce and trade of the South, now that its ports are sealed, its imports are excluded and its means for obtaining shoes, clothing and other necessaries, even for its army, are entirely cut off. We propose to take a Southern view of this question also ; and we think it of easy demonstration that the effect of the sagacious policy adopted by the North is, though it may prove of great tem- porary inconvenience, only calculated, event- ually to enrich the South at the expense of the North. ¢ : . The closing of the Southern ports, may it i8 true, cut off, for a time, the importation of all foreign goods, but it at the same time effectually excludes all Northern manufac- tures : and while it deprives the South of gpthing really necessary, it in reality pre- ts it from impoverishing itself, by the { perity of the South, sure, established this branch of industry on a firm basis in those States, but there are no other locations which offer inducements equally great, and the disect effect of the continued interruption of intercourse be- tween the producers and the consumers must inevitably be to force the consumers to pro- duce for themseives. The history of our own country Surely affords us a sufficiently recent example of this fact. [It has become a trite saying that America declared her in- dependence in 1776, but that she achieved it in 1813. Up to the latter period, deed, she was a mere colony of Great Britain, and dependant upon England for manufactures of all kinds. But the war of 1812 [reed her from this thralldom. It gave a direct but only a temporary blow to commerce, while on the other hand it gave an impetus to man- ufacturies which could have been effected in no other way ; and at the expiration of the war, convinced of the elements of wealth and prosperity which they possessed. the New England States €id not fail to profit by their experience. Manufactures were fos- tered and encouraged by legislation, and the mother country was forced to seek other markets for mans fabrics for which America bad previously furnished her with the larg- est markets. What that war then did for the North, this one is now: doing for the South. The very opportunity for which the South has been yearning and striving for years, the North has now furnished it with. | Every day that this. war continies, serves but to give an additional impetus to the manufacturing enterprise of the South. Cot- tong. clothing, machinery, castings, guns, percussion caps and agricultural implements are all being successfully manufactured in Virginia, Tennessee and Alabama. Estab. lished factories are extended, new ones are being built. Population and capital inevita- bly flow to thriving districts. and with the necessary means once invested, the machin- ery erected and - the factories in operation, the North will find that even if a peace be established which secures an untrammelled communication between the two sections, the result of her insane policy will have been to build up a competing * production in the districts where she looked for the largest consumption. Unfortunately for the North- ern States, those manufactures which they produce most successfully, (hats, shoes, machinery castings. agricultural implements and other Amerinan wares). are precisely those which are required for the Slave States. When it is cut off from the South itis ent oft from the largest consumers. It is a death blow to its own prosperity. It may. to be sure. find a market for a certain class of cottons in the East India and South Ameri- can markets #®but for all the finer qualities, and all American wares. unless the cost of production be reduced, it can only, for the future, manufacture a quantity sufficient for the consumption of the Northern and West- ern States. » A similar effect ‘must he produced on the commerce of the States. * No peace can now be concluded, on any terms, which will re- store trade to the old channels. The South will spare no effort and leave no means un- tried which will enable 1t to retain for itself some of the vast advantages of its own com- merce. It is estimated that the South sends the North, yearly, products valued at over $500,000,000, upon which the commercial men and bankers of the North, and princi- pally of New York, reap harvests of golden profit. Through New York the large finan- cial operations of which Southern produce is the basis, are now made, and Southern ma- terials forms in fact the capital upon which are drawn millions of exchange which regu- late operations in all quarters of the globe. But this is not all. A large portion of the wealth of the North is derived from the shipping interest. The large tonnage of the United States is built and owned principal ly in the North, and the North does at least three fourths of the foreign’ carrying trade, The value of export freights alone—we take our estimates from a work to which we have more than once before alluded, ** Southern Wealth and Northern Profits” —amounts to about $28,000,000 per annum, about six sevenths of which is derived [rom the trans. ‘portation of Southern produce. The value of return frieghts on merchandize paid for by Southern cotton, tobacco and naval stores is probably even greater than this. The prosperity of the shipping interest of the North is actually dependant upon the pros- Statistics show that with the increasing agricultural wealth of the South the tonnage of the North has in- creased ; and the increase of American ton~ nage has been calcglated to be exactly in proportion to the iffereased operation of cot- ton—every additional bale of cotton requir- ing one ton additional of shipping to trans- rt it. Every day of the continuation of of this blockade is a loss to this interest ; — and not only a temporary, but a permanent one. The Slave States have already en deavored to turn to advantage their vast timber fields, and from year to year they have gradually been extending their ship building. In 1855 they built about ene : tenth as much tonnage as was built in ‘the North, but in 1858 shey built one fouctn as much, showing clearly that they have both the will and the ability to extend the opera~ tions of their ship yards. Every day that this war continues” does the North run a greater risk of diverting this great carrying trade from her own ports and her own ves- sels. Every day serves but the more firmly to convince England of the necessity of un- | trammeliled Southern communication for her | manufactures ; and as from day to day she | becomes more thoroughly acquainted with ' the trae strength of the South, so will her desire become greater fora more intunate alliance. This .the Southern Jonfederacy purchase of a large amount of foreign goods; at a time when every economy should neces- sarily be practised at home. ~The establish ment of resent, to the importation of fabrics from Europe and the North, but at the same time it forces the South to establish its own man- ufacturies:and to furnish itself, at least, with those articles ot prime necessity for which it is now principally dependant on the North, New Jersey, New York, and the New Eng and States, possess no natural or pre emi- went advantages that give them the control of the manufactures of the American Continent. Qapital, enterprise, population, have, to be e blockade has put an end, for the | will not be slow to grant. It will use, for | the present, the capital and shipping of Eng- | land in place of the capital and shipping of the North, and avail itself of foreign aid un- | til it is able to provide for the transporta- { tion of its own pruduce. What will New | York be, deprived of the carrying trade of the South, and without the profits of that trade, and the benefit of the exchanges aris- | ing fromher Southern business connections ? | The effect upon the agricultural products of the great West will also be disastrous. The { Gulf States are being forced for self protec f1on to diminish considerably the cultivation of cotton, and to devote a portion of their j labor to the growth of an increased crop of - mins cereals. The'consequence of this will be to ecable the South to - support, without im poverishing itself. arising from diminished production, will, in all probibility, tend to enhance the price, so as to make the profit quite as greatason a larger supply. The effect upon the West will be directly the contrary. The enlarged culture of cereals in the Slave states must create an over protection in the whole coun- try, and the crops of Kentucky, Western Virginia, and Maryland, will necessarily be thrown upon those-markets which are now mainly supplied from the West. Not only will prices be reduced in this way, but as the manufacturing districts of the Eastern States become impoverished, they will have less maverial to exchange, and be less able to pay remunerating rates for the products of the West. So it will be with England. — The policy of the Republican party, in de- priving Ler of raw material, diminishes her production. It excludes from American warkets, by a high tariff, fabrics which might otherwise be shipped to this country . it bankrupts the New York importer, and the inevitably effect must be to lessen the de- wand for grain. It cats from South Ameri. ca the great coffee markets of the Slave States, and necessarily incapaciates her, to some extent, to take the breadstuffs she oth- erwise would have taken in exchange. Which ever way we regard it, the conse- quences are the same—partially injurious to the Sonth, but disastrous to the North. The South loses little ; it spends comparatively little, and is piling its wealth up. The North loses everything, spends enormously and stores scarcely anything. . Every day adds, in fact, to the strength of the South and diminishes that of the North. ~The war tells alike onthe Western farmer, the Fast. ern farmer, thé Eastern manufacturer, and the New York banker. The effect upon the former, however, 15 only temporary ; upon the two latter it must be more permanent.— ‘The eventual result of ‘the war will safely be to unite the Slave ‘States in one grand Republic, and the North will then find that its suicidal policy has only been to estab~ lish a nation, which possesses not only vast resources in the growth of