BY DAVID OVER. SPEECH OF |[l)\. SI 110,\' fiMRO.I OUST THE TARIFF, In the Senate of tie U. States, Jum 15, 1860. Mr. CAMERON. Mr. President, corning from a State deeply interested in the subject uuder consideration, 1 may be expected to dis cuss it somewhat at length. Nothing, however, ean be further from my intention at this time. My colleague has iu his able aud lucid speech, consuming more than two hours, entered so fully iuto the details of the measure, that nothing 1 might be able to add would sensibly affect the result. Resiles, upon a motion to postpone, an argument from one whose opinions upon this subject are so well known would be superfluous. My views in regard to the great question of protection have undergone no change from the beginning. As it seemed to be the neoessity of the country then, so it appears to my mind now. \Y iih my colleague, however, it is other wise, he cjnSe.vscs to a change of sentiment touching the policy of Government toward the industrial interests of which it is, or should be, Dae jealous guardian, aud 1 hail the change as au omen of further changes for the better ou his -ide of the Seuate Chamber. 1 regret that so few of his political associates thought pro per to remain in their seats during his argu ment; for until I discovered but five of those Senators in their places, oue of whom, if I mis take not, was asleep, 1 had confidently expect ed sufficient aid through his iufluenee to carry the hill which has received the support of the House and meets his cordial approval. If changes are to be made in favor ot the measure, they must be looked for ou that side ot the Chamber, for it may be considered a settled que.-tien that Republican Senators only wait opportunity to vote agaiust postponement for tne bill when it comes upon its final passage. Mr. HAMMOND. It the Senator will allow me to iiiturrnpt him, I would like to make a count ou his side ot the House. Mr. CAMERON. That is not my business. Besides, the Senator from South Carolina will allow rue to say, that the other tide is the one oil which the impression is to be made. 1 had for a ljug time believed and truMed that the workirigmeo of my State were to get some re lief during the administration of Mr. Buchan an. Son t>f Pennsylvania as be i<, aud raised to the high, I may say, proud, position he now bolus by the votes of the laboring classes, it was not too much to expect of him that be would have advantaged himself of that high position to benefit the i-tate which has honor ed him so much, iu the various messages he has sent to us, he has declared himself iu favor of that sort of protection which we desire in Pennsylvania. But, sir, 1 begin to fear that we shall get nothing from him; and if uiy col league should fail to secure the five or six ex pected votes from among his political associates, J shall despair of obtaiuiog any measure of le lief for the induMtrial iuterests of the country until the Senate and the Administration shall cease to he controlled by the present Demo cratic party. Those five or six expected votes woutd, it brought to the aid of this side of the House, carry prosperity and happiness to the three millions ol people my colleague and my self represent. Nor will the regrets which must follow the defeat of the beneficial mea sure under consideration, be narrowly selfi-b in their nature; because we hold to the doctrine that P< nusy lvania caunot be prospered except hor sister States in the Union shall eujoy that prosperity in common. We believe that tbe advautage of one part must redound to the ad vantage of every other pait. While you ; gen tlemen of the South, are protecting your pecu liar institutions, you ought, at least, not to j forget that we of tbe North have a peculiar institution to protect am! encourage—our free , white labor. But 1 will not pursue this sub ject further, aod would say Dothiug more were it not for the purpose I have to correct some errors iu the statement of the distinguished Senator from Virginia, the cbaiiinan of the Com mittee OD Ftuauce. He began by telling us that DO change was necessary iu the revenue system from the wants of ihe Government; that a change had not been asked for by the manufacturers, and that this bill is defective in all its details. He has for gotten that he has been at tbe head of lite Fi nance Committee of tho Senate duriug this Ad ministration, and for many years before. That Mr. Buchanan catne into power with a full Trea sury, with over §17,000,000 in hand and but a trifling debt. That the debt has been in creased by bim over §-10,000,000. That tbe §40,000,000 ot debt and the surplus of §17,- 000,000 makes, together, §57,000,000 squan dered by the Administration, besides the income of tbe present tariff, whioh the chairman of Fi nance says is ample for the support of the Gov ernment. Tbe chairman of Ftuance also pays a high compliment to the ability of the Secre tary of the Treasury. 1 have not tbe same confidence id bim. I have no belief in bis fit ness for the place ho now occupies. He is doubtless a man of integrity, but out of bis sphere. He iuaugoarated his administration by a blunder; by buying the pubiic debt at a premium of about sixteen per cent, in the be lief that his income was inexhaustible, and witlr.n the same year was compelled te ask for o 1 ran to meet the ordinary wants of the Gov ernment. His reports, so far as I remember, have been a series of mistakes aud utisealcu -atiuns. 1 shall uot euter upou details, but (, ae striking blunder may be cited as a case iu P'-tut. In oue of bis estimates, arguing against the necessity of a modification of tbe tanff, be "•aid be would receive during the then current 7 e * r *12,000,000 from tho duty ou sugar.— hen the money was counted he found but .4,ooo,ooo—showing a mistake 0f§3,000,000. i A Weekly Paper, Devoted to Literature, folitics, the Arte, Scienoes, Agriculture, See.. &c—Terms: One Dollar and Fifty Cents in Advance. I It wan an error of judgment; be should have remembered that the year on which his estimate was based was to all others an exceptional year, owing to the fact that unusual frosts dur ing the year preceding had cut off the home crop increasing the price and causing a large importation. The ad valorem duty ou this large i importation at the high prices iuduced by the destruction of the home crop, produced so large a revenue from this source alone, that a statesman must at once have seen that such in crease would not be likely airain to occur. A blunder like this by a gentleman at the bead of the Treasury Department, should render us cautious in receiving Lis estimates as a basis of legislation. \V hen the Chairman of the Committee on Finance says that the country asks for no change iu the revenue laws, he forgets the hundreds of petitions with their thousands of nauies of laboring men attached, asking for re lief. If he has read the petitions referred to the Committee on Finance, he must have seen, that not only the iron and coal interests, but every other brauoh of iudustry throughout the j country bus been prostrated. That in my j State, as elsewbere, ntcu were seeking vainly for employment, while those dependent on the labor of tbeir strong arms were asking for broad— for the necessaries of life, indirectly j denied to ibcui here by those to whom the lux- i urieg of life have become common because of their continued ahundaDee. lo all the estab lishments now in actual operation, the laborer is workiug at greatly reduced wages, while the j employers are reaping no profit on the capital i invested. He should know that the stability of tree governments depends upon the inteili- ! gence and moral cuiiure of the governed, that j the laborer uud the artisan should be afforded the means of so educating their children, wiiieb means are only to he derived from tlie protec tion and encouragement of those branches of iudustry necessary to the development of the resources of Status. Mr. Hunter. I said, "except she iron in terest." j Mr. Cameron. Does the Senator think he can get along without the irou interest of Peou , syivania and other States? Does he remember | that the annual value of ttie mjuuf-tctured ! products of Philadelphia aloue is $250,000,- j 000, or twenty per cent, more than the eutirc j boasted cottm crop of the United States? Has he not heard that the products of (he fac tories atid workshops of the youug city of Cin cinnati amount annually to more thau $112,- 000,000? That the commerce of the great , northern lakes reaches every year the euor ' QJOUS sum of $750,000,000? But I do not j agree with hiui that it is tbo iron interest alone that needs protection. The various industrial ; interests of the country depend upon each other. When one is suffering depression, the others sympathize with if, and thus the wrong becomes comm -u to all. On the other hand, wuer; you encourage one you indirectly quick en ail the rest. lo evidcuee of my statement that it is not alone be iron interest that is ! asking for the passage of this bill, 1 cite the : attention of the Senator to the fact that every I Republican Senator stands ready and anxious to put this measure on its final passage, and jto record their votes iu its favor. They would j not do so did not their constituents demand it | at their hands iu behalf of their interests. The Senator has read many letters to show that the biJ, as it coines from the House, is a bad ooe that no change is necessary. Un fortunately, all those letters, as I understand them, are the productions of foreign agents ot foreign manufacturers. I believe there were no Americans among bis correspondents, save the custom house officers: and who has yet to learn that custom house officials will make just such statements as those in authority above them dictate? Sir, the whole system of our revenue is in the hands of foreigners—at the mercy of foreign capital, I might say. Fif teen years ago there were importing merchauts in our eities, men of capital and experience, men of intelligence, who devoted their entire ene.gies to the business of commerce. Thev ; sacrificed much to insure, Dot their own pros perity solely, but the prospeiity of our great commercial cities, seaport or inland. Where are they now? Driven into other pursuits, j some ol them into hopeless bankruptcy, by a system which permit led, aud tiil permits, the agents of foreign capital and pauper labor to operate fraudulently upon our commercial in terests. Let us look at the system. Tbe Hriush manufacturer sends hie agent to New : \ rk; the agent establishes a commercial house, and gives auother name to the concern his own, perhaps; to this agent the British manufacturer furnishes tbe goods to be sold in our markets, iuvoiced at a price to suit hiui s If. Oq that invoice the duty is laid. Tbe single article of stpel occurs to my mind just at this point. Will gentlemen believe that tbe raw iron from which the steel is made sells in the Liverpool market for a higher price thau i the steel is iuvoiced for in tbe New ¥ork cus- ! torn house? Strange as it may seem, indica tive of fraud as the transaction may appear on its very fioe, such is the fact. The same is j true ot all other articles of trade coming into our ports to ooiupete with American manufac tures. lake tho article of cloth, mentioned b J toy colleague. Formerly we got a large auiouut of it from England, aD d we nnoufae tured quantities at home. But our home man fiOturers have been driven out of the business entirely, so that there is not to day a siugle manufacturer of broadcloth in the United States. The large factories erected to carry on the business under the tariff of 1842 have been given over to other, and in some cases, baser purposes. Some bave gone into the manufacture ot oarpet varus; others have been dismantled of tbeir appliances, and turned to some little account iu other directions. Wo i now get nearly all our broadcloth from Ger uaauy, where it is tu inufactureJ in accordance i BEDFORD. PA.. FRIDAY, AUGUST 17, 1860. j with a system something like this: a man has an establishment in which he has invested a large capital. When he is about to make up an invoice, he goes to his clerks and workmen, and aaoertaios the amount of cost of the raw mrterial, and the cost of the labor put upon it. He sums up these items, and the total is the amount of the invoice which enters the custom house ou our shores with the goods. It comes here invoiced to a partner, aud is sold for two or three tunes the invoice price. T.ike the article of horse shoe nails. In Germany, the country blacksmith is the manufacturer.— He goes to the country storekeeper for his irou takes it to his shop, and makes it into nails, at three ceuts per pound. He can make eight pounds per day, and on this pittance of twenty four cents he lives, supports his family, and finds his own fuel. The nails are seui here iu voiced at six cents a pound, and sold at a price just low enough to ootumaui the Ameri can market These, sir, are but a few of the articles up on which frauds aro committed agaiost the revenue laws, but they are fair samples of the working of the system. One ot the great benefits we shall derive from the passage of the bill now before us, will be the destruction of the system of false invoices and public warehouses, by which the foreign manufacturer is entitled to control our capital—that is, be sends goods here and stores them in Govern ment warehouses at no expense to himself.— 1 here they are suffered to remain until prices rule to suit his interest. In this wav he saves the interest on the duties, not paj ing them until the goods are taken from the warehouses, and is always ready to glut the market with the surplus ot unsaleable and uufasbionable pro> ducts of Europe, whenever our own manu factures are prostrated by an alteration of our ever cbaDgiug revenue laws. Among other things, the Senator from Vir gioia produced a letter from soma foreign im porters of iron in New iork in opposition to this bill. Their argument is based upon a false statement, made for their own purposes, by which they mike it appear that the duty, charges, and commissious are an actual protec tion of fifty-three per ceot to the American manufacturer. An American statesmau should not go abioad for arguments to build up„ revenue system. The foreigner, comity only to make a fortune out of the depression of our trade and business; to return Lome to en joy it, Cau have no sjmpathy with the prosper ity of our country, and ought not to be per mitted to legislate for us, uor, in fact, to ex ercise any coutrol whatever over our legisla tion. The statement purports to he the cost of importing railroad and common bar iron from Wales at the present time. In opposition to that statemeut, I desire to present another trom one of the most intelligent iron masters in Pennsylvania, as thoroughly educated an iron manufacturer, perhaps, as there is iu the world. He is, besides, a man of learning and veracity, and is mere extensively engaged iu the business at this time than any man iu the country. His statemeut is iu reply to a letter I addressed to him the other da}', after Iho Senator from Virginia bad exhibited bis state ment from a foreign importer > New York. He says : "The objeet of presenting such a statement Is j palpable on its face, it is to make it appear liiat certain expenses in the purchase of Iron are pe- j culiar to importations from foreign countries, from ; which American iror is free; also, in quoting the I lowest priced common Oars at the period of great j est depression in value, and at the highest rate of ' insurance and freight, with exhorbitant commissions j for buying, shipping and inspecting, and auother throw-in of bankers' commission and interest. i (Why did they not also add a charge for profit 1) 1 All these items produce on a low value a high per- j centage, viz : 29£ per cent. This added t< the 24 per cent, duty, the present tarifT, he argues, is 53 per cent, protection to the American manufacturer. "I wish it were frue that we American uianufac turers had none of these cuarges to pay ; but let us see how we stand in relation to the Welsh iron masters. "The Welsh works can deliver rails and bars at Cardiff at a cost of ss. and 6d., are at Cardiff not exceeding Is. per ton, or 25 cents, making a total on shipboard of $1 50 per ton. Receiving, . American Mill j. and shipping. Danville to Philadelphia, $3 75 25 cents. Safe Harbor to Philadelphia, 200 25 •' Cambria to Pniladelphia. 500 25 " Pottsville to Philadelphia, 200 25 " Phoenixville to Philadelphia, 100 25 Scranton to New York, 375 25 Trenton to New York, 175 25 " Mount Savage to Baltimore, 300 25 < 8)22 25 8)2 00 Average, 2 78 25 ets. Maxing a total of $3 03 per ton on shipboard, or double what it costs the Welsh masters. Insurauc: and Freights frcm Cardiff. Per ton. Insurance. Northern & eastern ports, 12s a2os. 1 per cent. Southern Atlantic ports, 125.a225. 2tolJperct. Gulf ports, Bs.a22s. 2\ to 1J p. ct. Average freight A insurance, $3 75 1| percent. Insurance and Freight from Philadelphia. Freight. Insurance. Northern & Eastern ports, $2 50 1 per cent. Southern Atlantic ports, 226 1 per cont. Gulf ports, 400 14to2|p. ct. Average freight & insurance, 275 1} per cent. Comparison. Cardiff. Jmtncan. Expenses Imm mill to ship, $l6O S3 00 Freights to ports of entry, 879 275 Primage on freights, sp. c. 19 14 Total average, 689 p. t. 6 51 p.t. Difference in favor of Cardiff 62 cents per ton. ••Thj charges of commission for buying, ship ping;, and inspecting, are o.ily incurred when inter mediate parties come between the buyers and manufac turers, and are as applicable to American as ihey are to the foreign iron, interest is also a matter of negotiation, hut generally very largely in favor of the British manufacturer. • Condensed Comparison. Cardiff. American. One ton of railroad iron, at £5 10., at $4 90, $26 82 SSO CO Expenses to port of entry, as above, 6 89 6 51 Duty, at 24 per cent., ea given, 660 _ 39 31 66 61 Difference in favor of Cardiff, 17 20 56 51 "Now, rails from Cardiff can be put iu New Or leans at th s time for less than S4O per ton, duty I paid. We couM not do this, unless we put the iron at $33 60 per ton, which is simply an utter im possibility." I have another statement, from the same gentle man, sh 'vinjj tlie production and consumption of iron in the United St.tvs for the veai 16 *6, in which, us '.'iil !* seen, the question is presented in its ccouora las well as its statistical aspect: Pig and forge iron, converted into— Domestic. Foreign. Total. j £. ;led, b rrisered, ana wro jnK-.ron, of every descrip tion, iuclaJimr cut nails, noilcr iron, &c., &c. 519 081 298,275 817.336 Iron fori uudiies, 337.154 55,403 3t2 557 i Total manufactures of iron from pig, $c. 856,235 353,678; 1209,913 A* Ote—l ho above is not tlie quantity of pie iron, but the product of it. Coal used in manufacturing the above iron. Domestic. Foreign. Total. i To. s. Tons. Tons. Kails, bars, boiler iron, nails, cast. ir.gs, 4-c. 816,23 d 353,678 1,209,913 j Coal, at 6 tons per i ton- 5 5 5 4,281,175 1,768,390 6,049,665- Ihe coal used in j ducing the above iron, cou | sunied in the U. •>., amounted to 6,049,565 tons. I Of which our own mines turuished 4,281,175 " And tlie mines of Great Britain, 1,768 390 " iron Ore. Tons. 856,235 tons domestic iron, at 3| tons of ore per ton, 2,396,822 353,678 tons foreign iron, at 3 J tons of ore per ton. 1.237,873, 1.209,913 Total. % 4,234,693 i Men employed and persons supported. DATA. Twenty tons of pig iron; 8 tons of rails; 6| tons i ol rolled bars; 4cc. J£ ich represent one nun em- ' pUyed one year, or a family of five persons sup ported one year. I t ike as the average eight tons of irou per man—thus : Hands. Persons. Dora. 856.235 divM by 8 gives 167,030, 0r535 150 • For'n. 353,678 " 44.210, or 221,050 Tot'l. 1.209,913 151,240 756.200 Consumption of food at S3O per head, ich ich is mucJi loicer than is usually taken by political economists. °f food -535,150 Amer. people,at S3O each,givesSl6,*'s4.soo 221 050 fornr sin their country, at S3O 6.631,500 756,200 22,686,000 The above figures are all inside of the actual tacts, and will he s ife to stand on. An accurate detailei statement, which, I take it, you do not ex pect of nie at this time, womd add largely so some of the aliove aggregates. In order to show the relation existing be tween the productive interests and ail other branches of industry, I desire to present the following statement of the tonnage furuished the Heading railroad and Schuylkill cau iJ from a single iu mufacturing establishment in one year; Reading ruilrowl—Tonnage to and from Pheenix Iron ; ll orks for the year ending December, 31 1859. JN WARD. Tons. ! Iron ore, 7.345 I Pig iron, 5,668 Anthracite coal, 62,089 tons, less 5 per j cent, discount, 59.935 Bituminous coal, 278 Old rails, ] ,228 Fire-brick, 667 'l'otal tons, 2.240 lbs. each, 75,021 Equivalent to 84,023 tons of 2,000 lbs. each. OUTWARD. Total quantity of manufactured iron, Sec., of all kiuds, 8,513 Total tonnage, 2 440 lbs. each, 83.534 Equivalent to 91,776 tons of 2,000 lbs. each. Schuylkill navigation— Tonnage to and fr.m Pha nix Iron IVurkt for the year ending December, Si 1859. INWARD. Tons. Pig iron, 8,036 Iron ore, 3.549 Soapstone and sand, 606 Anthracite coal, 3,043 tons, less 5 per cent. discount, 2,891 Bitumiuous coal, 763 16,845 Limestone, 12,867 28,712 Equivalent to 34,454 tons of 2,000 lbs. each. OUTWARD. Manufactured iron, Ac. 12,356 41,068 Equivalent to 49,996 tons of 2,000 lbs. each. Recapitulation Schuyikiii Reading Total navigation. Railroad. Inward, 28,712 75.021 103,733 Outward, 12,356 8,513 20 869 41.068 83,534 124,602 Tons, 2,000 lbs. each 45,996 93.775 139,771 In addition to the above, there was a consid erable tonnage oi merchandise, such as oil, brass, steel, rope, hardware, Sic., used at the works. The town of Piimnixville contains over six thousand inhabitants who are dependent 011 the iron works; and whatever transportation or pas senger business they afford is directly due to the fact that the manufacture of iron is carried on at this point. The quantity of rails and bar iron manufac tured at the Phoenix works in the year 1859. was 24,350 10lib ot 2,240 lbs. each, so that the trans portation 011 the Reading railroad and the Schuyl kill navigation of raw materials (saying nothing of the hauling done in wagons by nearly 200 horses and mules) was 5£ ions for each ton of manufactured iron. The freight to the Reading railroad alone on the above 75,021 tons exceeded 898.000. This lact will serve to show how important to transportation companies is the development of the iron business. The PhiEnix Iron Works could have supplieJ fifty percent, more ruanofactureu iron during the pa-t year if the orders could have been obtained. Of course, in tnat case, the tonnage of raw ma terials would have been correspondingly in creased. 1 also desire to submit, in this connection, a statement of the cost of importing iron uuder the present ta 9f, (1857,) furnished by the eld j nd highly resi "ctable houso of E. J. Ettiog j ; & Br<>., imporf rs of iron, in the city of Phil- i ; udelphta. This iron is for an iuvoice ordered | | of factors in Liverpool, and the statement will be seen to conflict seriously with that obtained lof the foreign importer, by the Senator from Virginia. Here is the statement: £l, at 84 44 and to pr- et. exchange. S4 88 | Commission, 2$ pr. ct, on $4 80. 12 i So 00 i ! Duty, 24 pr. ct. oil S4 80, 1 15 Total per pound sterling, 6 15 Shipp'g charges in Liverpool pr. ton, 2s. 6d. • Freight to Philadelphia, 15 0 Primage, 5 pr. ct. on 155., 0 9 18 3_JS4 38 Price of iron X'S pr. ton, at S6 15 49 20 liisurance, 1 per cent on cost, 49 Cost, delivered in Philad'a, per ton; 54 07 UNDER THE TARIFF OF 1846. £o 15s- (Oct. 22, 1849,) pr. ton at Si 44, 525 55 L : verpool shipping charges, 55 26 10 Duty, 30 pr. ct. on *26 10: exchange, 10 pr. ct.; insurance 1 pr. ct._s2B 97, at 30 per cent. 8 69 Other iieins, 4 cents: British exchange, &2 61; freight, 12s. 6d—?2 92; insur ance, 26 cents. 5 83 Cos:, delivered at Philad'a, per ton, 40 62 In concluding my remarks on this LraLcfToT the subject, 1 will here present a tabular statement showing the quantity of railroad iron ! imported into the United States, with the year ly averaged price, as well as the appraised val ue thereof: \ ears. Tons. Price per Appraised ton value. 1847, 13.537 So 1 Ol" 5680.348 1848, 29,489 41 38 1 219.185 1849, 69.163 32 56 2.252.246 1850, 142.036 26 32 3j738!03f! 1851, 188.626 26 03 4,901'452 1*52, 245.626 25 36 6,228,794 j 1853, 298,995 34 87 10,426,037 1*54, 282.666 42 49 1855, 127.517 39 16 4.993.900 1956, 155,496 39 74 6.179,280 1857, 179,305 41 58 7.455.596 18.58 75.745 39 41 2.9c87.'076 1859, 69.966 32 49 2.274.032 Average, 1,878,167 - 34 79 65 356,879 Thirty per cent., equal to 10 SlO 43 per ton. 1854 to 1859. both inclusive, 6 vears, quantity 890.695 tons. Price per tori, S4O 32. Thirty per cent., equal to sl2 10 per ton. From this it appears that §sl 01 per ton was the maximum price of rails on shipboard be tween the years 1817 and 1859, iasluive— Tins, with an ad valorem duty of thirty per cent, yielded a revenue ,of §ls 30 per tun ; making the cost of the Iron here §66 31. But ou referring to the table, we find the price of iron to have fallen to §26 03, in 1851, with a duly of only §7 80 ; thus showitig that when we need the most protection we get the least under the operation of ad valorem duties. A specific duty in any one of those years would have prevented the depressions in our business and the prostration of the industry of the en tire country in consequpuoe. Taking, as set down in the statement just submitted, the average cost of railroad iron per ton, it will be seen that, under the ad valorem duty of thuty per cent, the duty per ton was §l2 00 : or ten cents more than the specific duty proposed is the Morrill bill. 1 have many more statements of a kindred uature among my memoranda, but will not ex haust the patience of the Senate in reading more of them at this time. I will only in- I quire, if the bill is not right, why do not the I chairman of the Committee of Fiuaoce and his I political friends alter or amend it ? I will vote for any bill which proposes substantial protec tion to the prostrate and suffering labor of my State, coute from what quarter it otay. It will not do for thein to plead want of time. The bill csme from the House on ibe 12tb of May, having received the sauctioo and approval of a' large majority of that body, composed of men iof all parlies. Daring ail tint time, the Sen ( ator from Virginia and bis political friends have had eutire control of the legislation of the Senate. lam satisfied that all the Senators on this side of the Chamber will cousent to re main long enough to give them full tuuc to pass a bill affording more revenue, and incor porating the priuoipie of protection. There may be gentlemen who are notiu favor of pro tection, who desire a tariff for revenue purpo ses only ; but, sir, I am in favor of protection as the object, aud revenue as the incident 1 hold that it is but fair, that our labor should be protected against custom-house frauds, and against the pauper labor of Europe. I recall two or three cases just now,goiog to show how touch less reward labor commands aud receives m England than hers. Until withiu the last lew years, nearly all the wood-screws i.*ed iu the world, and certainly in this country, were made in our own workshops. Recently, how ever, some one of our numerous inventors in vented a machine making a decided improve ment by adding a gimlet to the end of the screw. He went to England, and disposed o VOL. 33, NO. 33. | bis patent there. British capitalists seized I upon it, put it in operation, and now the wood screw manufactories of this country are forced to suspend, and England furnishes us with that article. The reason is that the machine can be worked by little girls, obtained from the ; almshouses , perhaps from the streets and ! poorhouses, aud vagrants from the lanes and alleys are brought in to workat low wages. They not only supply the home market, but • eorne here and glut our market, to the exolu- I siou of our owr. art,sans. Now this branch of j business is a very large one, formerly giving employment and support to thousands of our honest laborers. Wo had a right to its cou | ticuance, for the invention came from the genius of au Autericau citizen, under the fostering care and protection of one of our former tariffs. A little protection now would induce some oue of our intelligent artisans : again to improve upon the machinery, and thus enable us to reduce the price still lower. The soap manufacture was formerly a very i important interest in this country, so important in fact, that probably few gentlemen on this floor have an idea of the immense capital that was invested, or of the great numbers to whom the business gave employ. Some two or three • years ago a gentleman of ray acquaintance, a j chemist of great practical knowledge and skill io bis profeession, as also of large experience, discovered a process by which he concentrated the alkali, and produced a substance which ho called caustic soda. He went out to England for the purpose of iutroducing the article and supplying the market there. Forming a COD nection with a capitalist in EJiuburg, Scotland, he set up the manufacture of this caustic soda, and had actually manufactured several tons, when discovery was made of the fact that the British Government had imposed a very heavy excise upon the manufacture of soap, aud a peDßlty, consisting of fine aud ituprisonmeut, on persons manufacturing it without authority derived from the Government itself. The oz cise oo soap was .£lB pounds per ton. The penalty for violating the excise law was fine aud imprisonment. Not even the housewife was permitted to make soap in her own kitchen ou paiu of fine and imprisonment. Owing to this state of affairs, the gentleman referred to quit the Lusiocss and returned to this country. what followed: directly afterward the British Government changed its excise laws, and enabled their ininuf ,crurers not on ly to supply their homo market with this arti cle of caustic soda for soap making, but also to manufacture aud send it over to glut our own markets, so that it now Jnaa the eutire control of our home manufacture. In connection with this matter there is still another fraud. This caustic soda is put up in iron barrels by the British manufacturer, for the purpose of evad ing our tevenue laws, aud getting rid of the duty on iron. these, Mr. President, sre but a few of the many instances of fraud practised under the system we now have ; and this, I think, is the worst feature of the present revenue system. Were it not for the frauds constantly practi ced under it, and which can only be avoided by substituting specific for ad valorem duties, the rates might not appear so objectionable. in couciusion, it uiay be proper to speak of another of the evil effects of the ayslera, which the fcecretary of the Treasury, and the chair man ot the Committee on Finance seem to be so much enamored of. I refer to the excess of specie cxportatious over importations uuderthe present ad valorem tariff; a tabular statement o.' which I herewith present: , lulled Stales exports and imports of specie during a period oj nine years, from JSol to 1859, inclusive: and the aggregate /or a period of ticeulyseccn years, from 18—4 to 1800, inclusive. Specie imports. Exports. $5,453,592 $29,472,752 5,502,044 42,674,135 4,201,382 27,486,875 6,958,184 41.436,456 3,659,812 56.247,343 12,461,799 69,136.922 Jjjfo 19,274,496 52.633.147 1859 7,434,789 57;502;305 $69,156,730 422,335,420 69,156,730 Surplus exports over imports, 1851 '°. ,8 f 9 - , $353,178,690 cpecte loss to the country. *r c °" J P<* r e to-al exports aud imports from 15:.4 to 1800, inclusive: Imports, $246,987,465 165,519,707 Surplus imports over exports. $81,467,758 Gaiu to the country. Thus it will be seen that, during the ex istence of protective tariffs, from 1324 to 1850, in the gaiu of specie to the couotrv was $£1,467,753, that being the excess of imports over exports. But for the niue years next succeeding, under the ad valorem or free-trade policy, we uot only lost that large gain to the country, but $271,710,932 in addi'tioa. Is ,t any wonder, then, that uuder such a fata! drain ot the vital elements of trade, the industrial energies of the couutry should Dave succumbed, aud the spectacle of closed manufactories and si.ent workshops should be presented, where so lately all was bustle and activity ? The Democrats of Auburn bavo lately been indulging in a celebration, whereof a barbaoue was the distinguished feature. Tbe day was fine, the assemblage was qui'e respectable, tbe ox proved teuder, and was done not only to death but to a turn. Only one thing occurred to mar tbe festivities of tbe occasion. The exact nature of this unpleasant interruption of i>eiiJocrtie joys is not definitely giveo. It is darkiy thrown up to us in the following signifi cant and suggestive query, propounded by the Auburn Advertiser : "WHO WAS THE MAS/— We mean the cam who put tbe tartar emetic on that 'rotst ox whole.' Distrust Attorney, do your duty."