VIE GAZE R& PUBLISIIING ISSOCIATIOIi BATUADAY. IiEOE2tIBER 2, Ins gfoe IllisiO"Tis-LoL Lost, Wanted Penna. RORraing., Lbe,, Inserted under •ppeo pHAte - hoaatnas, on this page. at TER PERTS PER LIMP, each tusertlon. THAT STEEL MANUFACTORY AT HARR [BOUM A recant pretentiona special telegram f from Hawishorg to the New York and Philadelphia newspapers announced that some English gentlemen. had - rmolved to Establish in that borough a steel manatee , tory otsp.fatge a scale aa, to tarnish em- L ploymeattiiflftsen dr oll 'Allied work . Mien; fliattliftittlle.raiice ofthisenterPrise, or tether, as a condition precedent thereto, the citizens of the borough had subscribed fifty ) thousand dollars to the - capital 'stock re quired for the t s cle tt a kinit:and.hed,la' ad dittos, donated fifteen acres ofl valuable land on which ter erect suitable buildings. ills inflated / iirnoun went elicited era ,„ Serious or humorous mment here and . elsewhere The tone of e empt: mamma, I ' and the admitted condi ea on which the '• I location of the enterprise, was determined, arealikemonfesalons of the anbordinate pa 's adtion held , hy _Harrisburg age Manafactur lag cealta.: Ent compliance With aueh terms 1- , Indicates a commendable dispositan on the . , ,part of the citizens to aid in the develop ment of industry and help the increase of the horeugh in 'acts* and population. 1. Bat, aside from these ennsidetations c' Which bpse no general stigul fi cance,) there ,/ Is matter for reflection and even eongratula. Von in ildanew enterprise. It does not stand Isolated and alone, but Is one of many ca. - ses, :.II pointing, in .one. dyeqic3,, , t. Months ' ago_ ea; epee! -thread. manufactory was, i rspeak,, taken. up bodily in-bcpt t•'' land, brought over, arid planted In *with, New .fetsey. • A."11tIle ititiceideetly ! Silk .. • ' • plush factory waft braught from Pranee and erected at Paterson, New Jersey. Some Englishgenjlegkett .bripcing . over a COlL liderlabie'rena 'or'stillcd men, established an edge tool fac . ory, of larie dimensions, at hfiddle'aver, New York. Various oth er enterPifses o€tilioMoppet, hive rapidly i fotiow.d The last of the series, so -far as We haves:informal' In, is the steel manufac tory at Harrisburg. - What do these movements imply , A conviction on the part of not a few Euro • peso manufacturers, that if they mean to atipply the market of the Gaited Stroes • with eoods,thsy must actually cast in 'their '• lots with us; come over themselves, with their capital, with their peculiar knowledge std aptitudes; and jassume a full sharp of the burdens sad resPonslbllities which inch removal entails. •- - This is one of the direct and most salutary Iresells of that system of impost duties ;made rmovissary by the prosecution of the t• - War for the defense of the Union. Of this system we shall have more to say soon. But, meanwhile, it Is worth while to note that this peculiar developmentis not 're , girded with satisfaction - by the advocates 't -of dvitish interests in this country, and Shat a powerful organization, composed principally of the factors and agents of for eien commercial and manufacturing houses, has been called into existence, for the ex press purpose of prevailing on Congress at r- the session which will commence next rweek, to elTrct such a revision of the nue laws at will check this development of "„industry In this country, and perpetuate the manufacturing supremacy of England, _France and Germany. This movement tio .t• not be wi hen' i.'Stilts In shaping the plumy of Reconstra ,Alen. The democratic party at the north, ?many years ago, Chatzied frnat on tie f_question - of .Protection, in order principally 10 meet the views of their democratic also itelatedin the South; who were led by their Wilacbmernt to a system of uncompensated , which necessarily invcrved th' , horers in a condition of Ignorance unsuited :to the higherjorms, to wponse Free Trade; 4 -. S• X'he Southern deinocrats, though foreedde relinquish that system of labor, hive not. - tayet unlearned the system of commercial intchanges suggested by It, and. which was pOneenial to itsgrasill and perpetuity.. germ s'no clitimqfzttrgerici on the put deniiicrata for a speedy recon-• araCtiCal on any terms that snail admit the Mithem raembfre of Congress to seats in lie resprctive Houma. -• rinrso TUE COVSTET.—The Augusta ' •1• • t Ga.) Transcript Is afraid the country wilt rninei. It says think it high time that the people • .; the iNorth should understand that the q.".lolperlty or-the South. depends upon one Ingle condition—the ability of the planter command tabor" and. that the prospects t;:e not at all Littering. ,We solemnly warn :40 'Northern people that it they do not al 'Syr us quietly , to reorganise oar systemof lbor, they will ruin tho country. '-. "Reorganizing labor" means restoring !awry. It means this, or, in this column ' 1..;1;m, it means nothing. The planters want "command" labor, not by fair wages and treatment, but by penal legislation; ; , ( 1 if they are not allowed to do this "the c'Slulty Will be ruined." Not quite. Every tinegogue who cannot have his own way 4 1,teatens ruin to the- country; but ruin ''Yer comes at the call of such men. ?Tun New York indepindent recently ate- • the conditions . .unoii Width 'the rebel J r :i - fes could be re.admltiedi and one - of • leie conditions was etatedto be "that the !..;ce ordained mail rights- to all citizens y f;roct this-the - New Castle Gazette declare, is useless to argue tha absurdity and un - s•nstitntionahty" of such a Conilitlon, and ;_iists that It :Is little short of 40 .treason kwhich the South has been the first timeie eserhesid'iiqual4taii_ • • pounced till' once ++ and'. rtasonable." The wbrd,2' l Dersocraoy'l 1-11 to be ' considereil - sjuonyinilui with . rights;" buKit , tismacrat, now-a , scouts all stplildealen tressoa. , ?:troirrao T •nniii , Teirre—The 1 .:tstrticted tiebals. In Lettish=4 7: ` s'j l tly begin to renew:the talk in ;-..:;0 2 , they hiqtpgeij hetet° th# *di. One' Sniesore, 11 -a-intent ht•the .1 . , 3y, and nog an,eillpr tlie Isjeyf