TIE Mi OF PUBLICAt ION, On the Cash System. • r The Miners Journal will after the Ist of January next, oe published on the following terms and: condi tions t. - For one 'tear,. Six months,... Three Payable semi-annually in advance by those who re- : sidein the countv--and annually in advance by those who - reside at a. distance. [Kr No paper will be sent untesi the sUbscription to paid in .- advance. Five dollars in advance will pay for three years subscription. ll Papers delivered by the Post Rider will be chalged 25 cents extra. TO ADVERTISERS ' Advertisements not exceeding a square cif twelve lines will be charged $ 1 for three insertionts, and 50 cents fOr .me insertion. Five lines or under. 25 cents for each ;nsertion. Yearly advertisers will be dealt with on the following terms: Ono Column. ..... $2O Two squares, 10 Three-fourths d0....15 1 One do. Ilalf column, ...... .12 r Business cards, 5 lines, 3 All advertisements_mttflie paid for in advance un iess an account is opened with the advertiser The charge of Merchants will lie.s4l per annum, with the privilege of keeping one advertisement not exceeding one square standing dining the year and inserting a smaller one in,each paper. Those who occupy a larger, space Wilt,be charged extra. - Notices for Tavern Licti.nee. S 2. All notices for Meetot;,, and proceedings ofineet ins not considered of general Interest, and many oth er notices which have been inserted heretofore gra tediously, with the t xception of l't.larriag , s and Death+ will be charged a verti-cinema. t otters of Deaths, in which invitations are extended to the friends and relatives of iht - i - dt ceased,,to attend the lu ta, will be charged as ad‘ertisements I hear thy Voice, 0 Spring BY s' ILI.LA.I 1. PARODIF.. hear thy voice, 0 Spring' - Its Bete like teem: are floating threitzh the 'air, %Veining my goul.with their wilo ravishing, From earth's heart wearying carp. Dismely s rect thy stmg-- , But yet. methinks, as near the groves I past!; . Low sighs on viewless wings are borne along Tear: , m the epringiiig grass. For where are th. y, the young. Th e inv.d. the heautthli. who, when thy voice, A ye:.r agnne along these valleys. rung, Did hear-thee and iejnice! Thou see I.'Bl for them in vain— Nn more 'll6'll greet I lire in thy joy 0114 FOll,lll Calmly they sleet, bencuill the murmuring main Or moulder in the ground. Yet peace. my heart—be slid! Look upward to yo rOzu re s . ky, and know To heavenher online now their bosoms thrill, Where balmier breezes blow. ' For them hash lloomed sering, W -hose flowers peremat deck a hotter sod Whose mustc is the 4tet_ that steaphs slug ; Whose I etc, the smi le • 'UNITED sTATE' SENATE—March 31 Farewell Steeelkof Mr. Clay. After the transaction of busine:4s of a price nature, Mr. Guy rose.ao‘l spoke I , li vl. 4 Mr. CI-%T said that he arose for the purpose of cooking a motion, but, before doing so, he would In•g love to make a single observation.in relation to a subject which he should 'leave unfinished lor mant the resolutioTis .which lie had proposed a: amendment. , to the C-onstitution of the United States. He had wislyd Prior to his retirement, from the Scnafe, to obtain an ex pressi at of its sense on these amendments; but, owing to ill,: health and the state of the business of the body, and owing also to the a b senc e o f severa l hi s friends, lie had thought it to lie, unnecessary to call for such an expression, or to reply to the :dile aniuments which had been used on the other side in opposi'ion to these amendments. However, he would leave the subject in the hands of the Semite, to lie disposed of as its meinbers might thiiik proper, and he would remark that notwith standing all that he hail hearol:the opinions winch he entertained when lie introduced these amend ments remained unchanged. And now he hoped that he would be allowed to announce, formally, his retirement from the Senate of the United, Mates, and he trusted' that lie would be pardoned for availing himself of the occasion to make a few observations with regard to himself. He remark ed that he entered the Senate, of the UnitiaP.States in I sn6, and at th t time he regarded it as he now did. as a body which 'might be compared, withnut disadvantage, to any legidative body that ever exi-tail, either in ancient or modern times, whether they looked to its dignity, its powers, or to the mode of its constitution, and, he would so add, as to the amount of the ability which he would lease behind him on his revrement. In -comparison with the - Chamber of - Peers of France and the House of Peers of England—he was sure it could be made without the least disadvantage to the American Senate ; and with respect to the constieution of these• bodies, their members held their places in virtue of no 6legated authority. but derived their power by e a creation of the 'Crown. transmitted through -a course of heredita 'ry events, or the issuing of nerVprotents; but here a different state of things existed ; fur Senators held the pi:oud title of representatives of sovereign States, of Common erealths. He had long been in the service of the United Slates, and lie now desired to seek that repose which wits citt'y t . . 7) be fouhd in the bosom of his family, in private life, and at his home. It had been his purpose to ter minate his Senatorial career, in NoVeriber, in4q,, after the conchtiion of the struggle.wtoich'ehar acterized that yber ; but having at that time Nam ed that an exult session of Congress was to be called, .and winch his subsequent - reflections prompted him to think was inevitahle,•he felt de sirous, prior to his retirement, to co-operate with his friends and with the Senate of the United States, in restoring the prosperity of the countri% by the adoption of the measures which, in their iinhzement, were best calculated to accomplish the object ; and therefore he concluded to attend the extra session. It was called. as is well known, by the lamented Harrison But he died, and the :succession which took place produced a new as pect in the public affairs of the country. Had thmeral Harrison lived, he (Mr. Clay) did not entertain a particle of doubt that eveay measure which it was hoped would have been accomplish ed at the extra session would have b een liv the comperatien ofithe Executive branch iv tilt the Legislative branch ; anul he hoped that he mi•Mt he allowed to say, with respent, that if' there be any one who, free front part. feelings . viol party bias, would reflect With candor and jus tice, he would approach' to the conclusion to - wlech he (Mr. ('lay) thought that the country :would come, that. if there was any thing to com plain of in council ton with the extra session, 'it was not so much as to what Was done, but what was left undone. Had Harrison lived, and the measures which were so desirable been carried out, he would have resigned his scat; he did not do so, becaue lie indulged the hope, the vain hope, that, nt the regular seekiim of Congress. what had been unaccomplislied at the 'extra ses sion would have been ace omplished in some of the forms proposed,.or that tiro re would be' sonic equivalent ; but, events soon 'after the extra ses sion, events resulting from a failure to accomplish the objects of the extra session, events which seemed to throw on - his friendS , every where ap parent defeat, induced him to •attend at the regu lar session, and, whether in adversity or prosper ity, to share the fortunes of his friends. Not :Withstanding, he came here with the purpose he was-now about to effectuate—to retire as soon as he could, from the public councils. From 1806, the period of his entering the Senate, down to the present time, With but-short intervals, he had - been engaged in the service of his country. Of the nature and value of his services, during that long career, it dill-not bcconie him to speak, - but history, if it should design to notice Masi would, ' he-did not doubt, transmit to 'posterity an impar tial record. But, on one subject he might speak MINERS' $260 . 1 00 "I WILL TEAL . if SOU TO F IERCE TILE BOWELS OF THE E.IRTD , AND CRING OCT FROM, TOR CAVERN S OF MOUNTAINS, METALS W in" WILL GIV E STRENGTH TO OUR HANDS' AND SUBJECT ALL NATURE TO OUR USE AND i;LE .A 'ku air. Da. JOHNSON VOL XVIII. without vanity. His public actssand . conduct were subject.; of public judgment, but the private inotices of his actions, those which have prompt ed him. to take the part which he had taken, could be known only to the Great Inspector of human hearts, and to himself; and he trusted that he migh . t, be pardoned for repeating an obser vatimi which he made thirteen years agp. What- ever errors he may have committed, and doubtless lie had committed many, many, since he entered the public service, he might appeal to the Be- sign Beil4 for the truth of the declaration; which he made with great pride and confidence, that he had been actuated by no motives, with a deal of personal aggrandizement, in the advoca- ey of measur •s upon which he had been called to act ; but he had an cy e, and a single eye, and a heart, and a single heart, deroteAl to the best in tereAs hf his country. During tills long period, he had not escaped the fate of Other - public men; he-had been the object ol hitter and unmeasured detraction and calumny ; and he had borne it, he would not say almost with composure, but ire had borne it without creating any disturbance here. He had borne it with an un•haken confidence that the -triumph of truth and justice was certain, and that ;time would settlir all things as they should be settled. He had porde it under the conviction' that nu injury Au him would result fri , m it, and that He to whom they were all re sponsible would acquit him, whatever injustice he might experience at the hands of those who maligned airn. But he had not been unaustain- ed daring this time. Every where on the ywide spread continent., he had enjoyed the benefit of warm-hearted, enthusiastic friends, who sppreciat- ed justly the motives by which he had been actuat ed ; and, if he had suitable language he woulit here make to them a .public acknowledgment for their kindness and affection. If he had been giiilty of a want of expression of gratitude towards those friends, what should he say, what could he say, at all l'ollllllellAll rate with the many tokens of appro bation received from those whose Semaiir he had no long been 1 He emigrated to Kentm ky forg ave years ago, and went there as an orphan, as one who had not attained m ijority ; as an orphan who had novel recognized a father's love. lie was p or and penniless, without the favor of the grt at. w oh an tin and inadequate education, and limited to the means for this one object. He bad scarcely put his foot on.the soil of that State be fore he was calla:iced with. parental fondness, arid caressed like her own child ; arid from that day to this, her choicest honors, always unsolicited, had been showered upon him. When he stood, in the darkest moments of hts existence, abandon ed by the world, and ealimmiated by his own countrymen, she threw around hint her impene trable shield, and, bearing him aloft, repelled the attacks of malignancy and detracti. n. It vas to him, therefore, an unspeakable pleasure that be was shortly to return to, his borne, and that he would eventually deposh, and the day was not far distant, his last remains "under her generous soil, where sleep her gallant and patriotic sons. An epithet had recently been'applted to him whether for the purpose of honor or detraction he did riot ,know.. He had beer. held up to pie country as p Dictator. The idea of a dictatorship was drawn from Roman institutions, rind when tt was created the perdun who was invested with that authority had - ciincentrand in his person till the powers of Stale ; all the property and the life of every citizen were in his hands ; he could raise armies without levies arid revenue without law. Now, if he (Mr. 1; ay) had been a Dictator, what would. have been the tamer with which he would have been en trusted I , Would he not have hod an army, na vy, revenue, and a distribution of the:patronage of the Ci ivernment I • But had he any power, in shprt, whatever T If be had been a Dictator, he tlfouelii that thcrice who lately applied the epithet must admit two things. First, that his dictator ship had teen distinguished I y no cruel execu tion ; that it had teen entitled by no blood, and soiled by nn act utolishonor. And although he did nut know when the commission of dictatorship harp date—he supposed, however, from the extra session—they moot admit that if he hatdbecome invested with or usurped the power of a Dictator, he had voluntarily surrendered it much sooner titan the time fixed by the H n tan law for its con tinuance. Haan eittleavor, at the extra session, and at this, by a co-operation with his friends to carry out the measures fur which they contended" ut 1841) ; if a derareito see a discorded currency arid the exchanges regulated ; if a desire to replen ish the empty cullers of the Treasury by an im position of suitattle duties; if a desire to extend relief tot the unrirtimate bankrupts of the country, who tail been ruined ‘ in 6 great measure, by the polrey of this•Governnient ; if a desire, with the co-operation of his friends, to limit. restrain, and to cheek the executivF branch of this Government; if a drsire to preserve the honor and credit of the country 11 adequate and suitable provisions suffi cient for the I orpose of fulfilling the public en nteplents, if a faithful promise and an ardent de sire to carry out and redeem the `pledges which were irate by his friends when they were strug gling for au a quisition of power—if these consti tuted line a thutator, their he supposed that he must hear the odium of the epithet. His dispost tron in the pull service had been enthusiastic. he was ready tin own : did those, who supp 'sea that h.; hid enter! mined a de.ore to dictate, had only mistaken his ardor in debate, a n d his pitrnitte ex et Iliffis to fulfil the trust under which he held his seat.—baring this long and arduous' services In toe public councils, and especially during the fast eleven years' service in the Senate of Pie Uni:ed States, with an ardor of temperament and an en thusiast:yr of character, lie had no doubt—in the •honest ! pursuit and endeavor to maintain the o pinions', which he entertained in oppesition to those which prevailed on the opposite side with regard to public affairs--otten; and unintentionally and in discreetly, made use of language which was sus ceptible of an injurious interpretation by his bro iher.Senaters, But if there were any who retain ed any feelings of disaffection resulting from the employment of such language he b. gged to assure them that he now made the amplest apology for deviating from a parliamentary course of proceed ing, : and ho assured the Senate, one and all, without exception and without reserve, that he re tired froln the Senate without carrying with him a singlet - feeling of resentment or disaffection tow- ards thrlSenate itself or any ono of its members. He went from it under the hope they would mu• tually endeavor to maintain - the honor of their country, and, whatever Might be their personal considerations, that they would only dwell tin con flicts of mind against mind, end in the struggles of intellect against intellect, in the inodgieff promo ' ling iteinterests and its happiness, These were • the feelings under, which he had spoken, arid now AND POTTSITHIE GENERAL ADVERTISER, WEEKLY BY, BENJAMIN BAN_NAN, POTTSVILLE, SCHUYKILL COUNTY, PA.- he trusted that he be allowed to make the motion which it was his purpose to submit when he arose. It was to present the, credentials of his friend and .4necessor. If any ! void would be crea ted by his withdrawal from the Senate, tit would be filled to overflowing by his worthy successor,- • • whose c. gallant bearing and steadfast to-principle, .and his uncommon powers in debate, were streatly known to the whole country. Ile moved that his credentials be received, and the oath required be taken ; and now, in retiring, es he was about to do, forever, from the Senate of the United States, he would express the l 'earnest hope that patriotic measures would be adopted for the relief of the country; and that it might fulfil the destiny which was chntempfated by the framers of the Constitu tion; that the deliberations in the public councils, now and hereafter, may be for the good 'of the common country, and for the restoration of its for mer prosperity, and perseriation and matntenance of its honor abroad and its interests athome. He retired from the Senate at a period of infinite dis tress, and he wished that he could have taken his leave under more favoro'ile auspices. Without saving upon whom reproach ithotild fall for the condition in - which the country was placed. he thought that he might appeal to the Senate and to the country for the truth of the obAervation, that there was no blame which justly hated nr has door. And ngw, said Mr. Clay, may the blessings of !leaven rest upon the he.ds of the whole Senate, and may they still advance in honor and foie, and, et hen ttu:y shall return to the bosom of their constituents, May they all individually meet there the reward the highest of all human rewatds. the grateful salutation of ft Well dope thou good and faithful servant." Mr. President. and Mes-ieurs Senators, I bid you. one and all, a long, a last fare well ! We fiind in the New York Courier and Enqui rer, a communication on the evil limes and their remedy, from which we make the following ex tract : o The grand remedies would be a National Bank, a Tariff. and aid furnished by the Federal power to the States. The first is out of the ques tion will' our present President, and the present majorities in Congress. He is against the meas ure, and there is not a constitutional majority in Congress to overrule his objections. A tariff is recommended by the President of over twenty per cent. Let that go to thirty, and let t it go there quickly. for the patient needs presenfremedies, if lie is to be saved at all. Next Congress should pass an act furnishing securities for the `state debts in the shape of stock. to the amount of two hundred millions of dollars, if necessary, and place it beneath these State debts as security. Mon may start at this proposition. but Why should they What are they f Are their not to the Federal power, what a family of isons are to a parent f What parent, having twen ty-six sons scattered over the common domain— industrious, enterprising, honorable sons--who in the course of their improvements, and the up.. ward and onward-course of their prosperity, should be suddenly paralized by the inroads of a despot, until their means were, for the present, dried up, and their power to command them fir the present inoperative, and yet with big hearts, and noble souls and undaunted courage, were doing all they could dd to rid themselves of debt, brought upon them by the tyrant. I ask _what parent, having", the power of relief, and even hesitating moment to grant it;, would be looked upon in any other light than as a monster f The States of this Uni on, I assume it, stand in the same relation to the Federal power as such a family of sons would stand to a common parent. The obligation to relieve in the ono case, is no less binding than in the other. I assume it, and it can ho proved, that any ab rogation of, or interference with the Land Bill, (except to modify and sustain it.) by suspending its operations. would ieflict a yet eeeper wound upon the credit of both the Federal Government, and that of the States, and injure, deeply, radical ly injure, instead of benetitting either. " My MUTIIEII.—AIas! how little do we appre ciate a mother's tenderness while living--how heed less are we in youth, of all her anxieties and kind ness. 'But when she is dead and gone, and when the cares and coldness of the word come withering to our hearts, when wad how hard it is to find true sympathy, how few love us for ourselves, how few will efrientl us in our misfortunes, men it is that we think of the mother that we have lost. It is true I had always loved mother, even in my most heedless.thys ; but I felt how inconsiderate and how ineffectual had been my love. My heart mel ted, and I retraced the days of infmcy, when I was led by a mother's hand,,ond rocked - to sleep in a mother's arms, and was without care or sorrow.— •• Oh! my mother," exclaimed I burying my face in dm grass of the grave, w oh ! that I was once more by . your side. SI • eping never ti wake again on the cares and troubles of this world ! " TUT DIUVRIRD NWT TILE WORST Ills .—A gentleman stevped into a tacecn, and saw a filth% drunkard, once a respectable ni.n, viraittitg for bir liquor. lie thus accosted him , why do you make yourself the vilest of men r I aim the vilest," said the drunknril, Yes you are," said the gentleman, •• sea how you look—drink that glass, and you will be in the g,ulter." I deny your pozi-zi-tian," said the drunkard. Who—who is the ad-vilest, the tempi.teaipted. or the tempter? who—who was wor-werat, Sa. Satan or,—hiccup—Eve ?" ri Why-, Satan," said the gentleman. Well—hiccup—well, be-behold the temp tempter !" said he, pointing to the bar: The ar gument was trresi.itible. The bar•kcepir flew into a pa , sion and turned the poor fellow out of his house without his dram.—Moordia. z; REFOTI3I. - Almut five hundred ladies of Mont. tidier, Vt., recently addressed a JetitiMi to Mnj•lr Kelsey, inn-keeper in that village, urging him to repudiate alcohol and all that it inherits. 'the Major took but little time to consider and answer ed that he would do so cheerfully—only regretting that he had not sooner ceased selling the, poison, and thus escipkl their rebuke. A tailor in Deptford, England, has placed in 'his window a long list of names of persons owing him money, together with the various sums, from a pound to fifty-four shillings odd, amounting to £738, with a notice, that persons who had died Or failed in business are not included. , Crow& -of persons gather round the windoW to see the list of debtors thus set forth.: SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 9, 1842 The It emedy. Nothing Perfpet. Row beautiful the rose! . And yet Sharp thorns its stem infest; How bright the diamond glows! But it Has specks upon its breast. Think not in man to fiLd . throne Of truth an,lsinless grace; The best are ofl unkind, And prone To tread life's turbid ways Love and Marriage. Mr. Catlin in his new work upon Indian char. acters, gives the following grsphic sketch daluve scene between Graham, tho English fnent,l3(Oce. 014, and the niece of the unfortunate chief which the balk has deliniAted with the pen of acaaster. It was on one of those glowing evening; -of sunny south, when the clouds are gilded it splen dor to await the departing god of light, afte a hard day's toil in pursuit of a tiger, which at Oat f e ll wounded by the ripe of . Graham, and was finally despatched by the tomahawk of his swarth: friend, that the young t , fficer first experienced tht witch ery of love. 'Wearied and feverish from excitemen in a climate to which his system had •eareely *come rem cited. he gladly accepted the protTerel ham mock of netted crass,. suspended by Natlfeocee. Oceolas niece, beneath the umbrageou..wide spreading branches of a large oak tree, frotrwhose limits hung the graceful, yet melant holy aoking m a s s—at times in festoons, at others lallintin per pendirular masses, to the length of etcher ten feet ; forming a drapery infinitely surpasing in beauty and splendor all the richest and mut t orate works of art. In this simple, yet ingeniously consiruced al couch. the young hunter reposed hr wean, while Nittitieoece watched his dtturbed Teen, apd a.pu:ed her bill fancy with his dlirtous unittoriiip in a liingua , ze she could not cimpre- bend, whilst she carefully, with a fan tren' from the leathers of the pinnawatv, or wild tut key, nush ed away the intrusive musketoes, or the to less. annoying sand flies. :the; a few hours' repose, Captain Graham a woke refreshed and turning his still halfelosed eyes, they rested upon a face of beauty of to pe culiar a character, and in such perfect aceodanee with his own romantic disposition, that ha very ,soul felt suddenly a thrill ho had never liefre ex perimiced. Beside him stood, iii blushing uodes ty, a perfect child of nivure— her dazzlii.;.leaek ; eyAllaaittig fire under an excitement entirey new to her unsaphisticated and pri louse consumion —she felt abashed, yet new not why—whikt Gra ham drank deep and largely at the first sping ul love, and dwelt with rapture upon the perfil um metry of her firm as she leaned against if huge trunk of the oak under which he had slept. Natbleogeo possessed not only a face olloveli ness, hut a form which might vie in beautyof pro portion with the most exquisite production; of the Roman or Grecian sculptor. Her costume was such as would shock the re fined modesty of the more intellectual lass of white females; but nature knows no shone but that of sin, and assuredly, if virtue consist of pu rity of thought, sentiment, or action. Ib artlr as girl was pure as t' , e fountain which Jail; reflect ed with her unrivalled charms. The upper part of her form, according to the custom of her tribe, was left uncovered—ter long black htir floated to the winds, unbraidid, over her finely proportioned shoulders, and as no zeph yrs caught the unconfined trdsses, they world play upm a bu:4 Venus herself might have proudly owned. Her head wis surmounted by a tuft of feathers plucked from the wings of the snow white ortolo, or virgin crane, interspersed with those of the gaudy crimsoned flaming i—the whole i confined by pearls of value collected among the Islands at the southern extiemity of the peninsula of Florida. She wore a skirt of Chnsaee, or fawn's skin of the softest texture, which was embroidered with minute sea shells, interspersed with pearls of rare beauty. and extraordinary magnitude, and further ornamsnted with strips of ermine skins and a set riely of feathers of the richest hue. This huk- kasykee, as it is denominated intho .arninole lan guso,e, extended horn her waist to a little belol, her knees Her beautifully formed legs were encased in uphetaikas, also made of Ghassee, ornamented at -the outsides by a double row of beads—a pair of prettily worked moccasins, or Indian shoes, made to correspond with other portions of her dress, completed the attire of the chieftain's niece. Nathleocee was the orphan daughter of a neigh boring king, who had hoen killed in a battle; from infancy she had been. leered and cherished by her uncle with all the find affection which a noble minded man feels for a lovely object looking up to him for protection. She was scarcely seventeen when Graham became enamored of her estroritt nary charms. With all the natural gra-e and dig nity of one horn free es the bounding fawn of the wilderness, she combined the retiring modesty end fern nme timidity of girl jut blushing into woman hood ; there was withal an arch play fulnevs which caused the heart of many a young Seminole war nor to bounibwith rapture when her piercing black eves chanced to rest upon him. Although .he loved her i• Hanlte-tustenuzVi " or white warrior. as Captain Graham was called throughout the Seminole nation, still she conceiv ed it. 'a degradation to ho allied to a Istelialke. or white - man ; hut at length yielded to hi's continued' importunities, and the 3 were m uric,' according to the forms and ceremonies of the Seminole Indians. Three successive seasona produced ;lemony off springs to gladden the hearts of the affectionate parents ; then come a withering blight upon the hones of future happiness—the tend wife was des tined to be seperated by the rude hand of war from her husband, and the father from his chil dren. Speaking of the Mexicans who compose the in vading army, in Tetas, a writer says: • They arc a very i n f er i or race o f nien ; general ly very diminutive i ln stature, with dark, svkxrthy 14kitts, and numbers Of them look like a mixture of Indian and negro blood, while . some appear to have a small sprinkle of white blood in their veins. They- are no soldiers—have small arms and very little muscular sirength, lazy and cow ardly by nature—half the day they want to be ly ing down, taking a siesta on therdirty ground; they are poor marksmen; and although they can load and file a musket almost as fast as any sort ed . men in the world, they never take their aim, sad generally turn their _head away; when , they pull the trigger. - kTitriff Meeting wee held at Danville; Pe r on Saturday last; • . • ENE , . , 0 1. ' ,•1 ',_ '.,'-. -','.. ,-..--, - -- . 4.-, 4 ' '..' . •• --; ..... a Home Lem,-,ne,” At the regular meeting of the r Home League' of the state of New York, held in this city on Wednesday evening the 23d inst., among the valu able papers read was tho followingletter from His Excellency Gov. DAVIS, of Massachusetts.—lt was addressed to General Tazt..w•rm E. and not intend id for publication ; but it is pertinent to the sub ject and comes from a great and good man, known to be devoted to the well-being of his country, and thoroughly acquainted with the whole subject of Prot‘ition to American Labor. We hope-Gover nor Davis will not disapprove of its publication, as it was demanded by the whole meeting. and seiz ed upon as public property, whether Gen. TALL- M inG g would conset or Y Tribune. WORCESTER, March 21,1842 MT DE an Sin :-Yours of the Bth reached me only a few days ay. and I immediately made known your views in Boston. lam heartily re joiced to see the spirit of the, country rousing up. When I saw with what tranquility we were de scending toward the verge of the Compromise Act, I began to think nothing but the distress of long experience could recall the sense of the people; and it is that which has electrified them at this early day. An empty Treasury and competition with the starved labor of Europe will wake our country men up and put then, upon the enquiry. There is no doubt a tendency to over-production of manufactures cn the old continent, and they must balance better between them and food. Eng land is in a sad position, having a vast surplus population, with vast atrangements for manufac turing, while her markets abroad have been dimin ished by a great increase of the same industry elsewhere.—she monopol zrs her immense colt,- nial trade, but it happens that nor'.e of her Atlan tic colonies arc producers iit ordinary f;iiid, and here her sy stem pre saes heavily upon her ptipula ikon on 'his pima, and I see no hope of present relief. 11, however, she con oht in mist cotton ft out India and su l ply in return the manufactured goods, her system will acquire a new impulse, for she , will have a hundred millions to provide foir. Our condition is exactly opposite—Agriculture here predominates, and our policy here should be to encourage other pursuits to maintain Agricul ture, and this may do till we reach a point of ex cess whit h will not be in our day. It gives me great satisfaction to see other parts of tile country moving. and especially New York, for it is the business of the Agricultural States to move and support a division of labor, for this is the only process by which they can sustain them- . selves. To talk of protection to Manufacturers, widen the idea that they are reaping special bene fits, is idle. - The policy goes greatly beyond the purpose of aiding a particular class of persons, for the enquiry no, shall we in substance be all fdr. niers, or shall we divide into various employments, that our tonnes may be supplied? If the far mers feel no need of this division, then let us give it up; for the manufacturers and mechanics can live as well by the land na they. I have always thought Protection to Manufacturers was an un fortunate misnomer ; for it is labor of all sorts that we aim to sustain and support, as much one class as another, and let us hold firmly to that. We ge for the great interest of labor, and if we can take c ire of that, there is nothing to fear, for the coun try will be prosperous an happy. Let us then, under no name, late sight of ou object, or of our identity. We ninanat free pros erous labor, while Free Trade aims - at cheap - .ids made cheap by cheap labor. In the eye 01 Free Trade the suf fering, starvation, and utter neglect of the laborers, ns well as their moral and intellectual degradation a r e nothing ; a rent a yard in calicoes outweighs all these mighty matters, and thus avarice is left to triumph over humanity and morality. England asks for free trade just to the extent that she wants the markets of other countries, and no further. Her position is the opposite of ours ; her surplus is goods, while ours is produce. She wants free vent for-these goods in our markets, but takes care that our food shall not interfere wtth her agricul- The United States are in a deplorable condition —no currency—no confidence—with every thing depressed, dark and gloomy. The Treasury is empty and the finances distracted; but it is all working out ono great problem, and that is, that we must take care of ourselvei by fostering our own-industry. Opinion is rapidly turning to this as the great remedial measure which is to dispel the clouds vi Inch hove gathered • around us, and give us the bright sunshine again. God speed your efforts.' I write in great haste, and Remain your friend and ob't serv't, Ftowsns,. TREES; SU 1111 oEn T.—We are not about to philosophize at all, but we wish to ask the farmer—the man who hes a house and a lot with 'it—the owner of any. spot of solid earth— why it is that ho does not more often realize the power which he has, to make himself master .of a literal paradise 1 Our poets always talk of green leaves, and bright fresh flowers, and noble trees, as things belonging of course to a blessed place. Our by nine sing of "t flowery plains" and o trees of life immortal," and ail our representations 'of happy places and scenery include them as a mat• ter of course. Why cannot this be realized ! The man who has a hotse, a garden, a yard, a firm. can, with a little care, have all these, although he can lay no claim to Therels wisdom in cultivating these lovely ornament: ; although we promise not to pli:losuidirr... tin cannot help saying that there is mot -, pi d t-I , phy 1 , 1 thrse no tions than 01.151 b. lalatae. ' l ' it're is reason as will as poor:. he ‘shu has about his dwelling these children df dlie earth, will bare among them the songsters of air; and tho fragrance and music which comes on the breath of summer titian.. his opened window will sweeten his in telleCtual associations as well as regale his senses. Now, if ads little' article should be the means of planting a hundred trees and flooersove should not be surprised to find out, in the end, that 0 had cherished, also, a hundred domestic virtues.—&- fated. ECOSORT OF ANTRIIACITE COAL - YOU STE►?I .uo►Ta,—The Report of the Camden and Amboy Railroad company, mentioni a fact which will not be without its influence- in materiallpexteriding the consumptiOn of an anthracite coal. It is sta• ted that in one of the boats of the company, the Trenton, whose new boilers were , built during the past peat., upon a• plan 'calculated for the best ap plication of Coal, the consumption per day does not exceed two tons and one quarter, costing ten dollirs, whilst seven , cords of wood, consisting, 27 50400 dollars. were consumed formerly by the same boat, on the same run. • BY MRS. lIKM.tN By the soft green light . ' in.the woody glade, Ou the banks of moss where thy childhood pla:Cd By the household tree through which thine eve First lookbd in love. to the summer sky, 14 the delvy gleam, by the very breath d'the primrose tufts in the grass beneath. Upon the heart there is laid a spell. Holy ana pree.ous—.7ohl guard it Well! By the sleepy ripple of the stream. Which loth lulled thee into many a dream; By the shiver of the ivy leaves To the wind of morn, at thy casement eaves By the bees' deep murmur in the limes— B) the music of the Sabbath climes— By every sound of the native shade— Stronger and dearer the spell is made. Be the gathering round the winter hearth When twilight called unto household mirth; By the Cary tale, or,the ternd In that ring of happy faces Mid; • By the quiet hour, when heartS unite In the parting prayer, and the-kind'. good-night! By the smiling eye, and the loving tone, Over thy life has the spell been thrown. • And bless that gift hath gentle might. A guardian power, and a guiding 11 hith led the freemen forth to stand In the mountain battles of his land; It hash brought the wanderer o'er the sea's; To dog on the hills of his own fresh,breeze ; barkAt.d to die gates of hit, tiolier's hall, It hash led the weeping prodigal. Yes! when the heart In its pride would stray tom the pure first loves of its youth away, y hen the sul yang 'Sreath of the world would come O'er the flowers it hro't from its c hitd:mod', home; Think then again of the woody glade, Anil the sound by the rustling ivy made, Think of the tree at thy father's door. And the kindly spell shall have power once more. , There's flange yin the mines old man.' I irv claimed to a miner, who with his arnis bent, lean mg against the sides of the immense vault, ab sorbed in meditation ; ;it must be a frightful lif The old man looked with a steadfast but some what vacant stare, and then in half broken sen tences he muttered, .danger—where i 3 there not danger—on the earth, or beneath it, on the moun tain or in the valley, on the ocean, or in the qui t of nature's most hidden spot—where bath not death left some token of his presence I' •Truly,' I replied ; -but the vicissitudes of life are various ; the sailor seeks his living on the wa ters, rind he knew each moment that they may engulph him ; the hunter seeks death in the wild woods, the soldier in the field of battle . , and the miner knows not but that the spot where he now stands, to-morrow may be his tomb.' -It is so, indeed,' replied the old man ; .we find death in the means we seek to perpetuate life; 'tis a strange riddle, who shall solve it r .llave you long followed this occupation 1' I asked, somewhat struck with the old man's man- 'From a boy—l drew my first breath in the mines—l shall yield it up in their gloom.' - 'You have seen sonic of these vicissitudes,' I said, , to which . you just now alluded.' 'Yes,' he replied with a faltering voice, I have There arts a time when three small boys looked up to me, and called me father. They were stur dy .stripplings. Now it seems but yesterday, they stood before me in the pride of their strength, and I filled, too, with a father's vanity ! But the Lord cha•teneth the proud heart.—Where are they now 1 , I saw the youngest—he was the dearest of the flock—his, mother's spirit seemed to have settled on him—crushed at my feety-l-a bleeding mass; we were together—so near that his hot blood sprung up into my face. Molten lead had been more lasting than those fearful drops. • One moment and his light laugh was in my ears—the next, and the large mass came; there was no cry of terror, but transition to eter nity was as the ligntning's flash—and my poor boy lay crushed beneath the tearful load.. It was an awful moment ! but time, that change - tit sll things,'brou6lit relief, and .1 still had two sons. But my cup of affliction was not yet full. They, too, were taken from me. Side by side they died —nd as their brother, but the fire damp caught their breath, and left them scorch anti lifeless.— They brought them home to the old man ; his jewels— than whom earth's richest treasures in his sight hail no - price—and told him he was childless and alone. It is a strange decree that the old plant should thus survive the strippling things we shadedArind for whom it would have died a.thousand times. It is surprising that I should wish to die here in the mines?' 'You have indeed,' .1 replied, 'drunk of afflic tion ; whence do you derive consolation The old man looked up. 'From Heaie God gave and he taketh away,--blessed be hi: name !' I bowed my head to the miner's pious prayer and the old man passed on. JOHN DAVIS Msncn.—This is the month when hares, in England, become toad. Hence the saying—""mad as a March hare." It is singular, that the inferi or animals should be so much more regular in their habits than man. Hares go mad In spring —dog's in mid-summer, when red Sirius rages ; but men go mad at all times. If any given time was set apart for the madness of mankind, we might pass laws for its prevention, as well as for the prevention of hydrophobia. This would at one put a stop to gambling, whether in lotteries or fancy stocks; it would ,prevent all doubly haz ardous speculations; and such schemes as the .dot . seheme," which beggared so many lunatics, would never have lived beyond a day.—N. l';ok TAKEN AT tits WORD.--“ I say, stronger, It raina,": said a merchant the other day, to a square built down easter who was quietly passing hi. store irr you,had better stop in and buy an urn sell .you one at half price." Without a word of reply, the Yankee walked in, selected one of very superior silk, and inquired the price. o Five dollars, sir, we sell them at—have never sold them for less," was : the polite responsa of the merchant, who, in the eagerness for trade had alicarly forgettenitis conditions of sole.—Jonathan cool y lacing doWn two dollars and a half, took the umbrella and walked oft leaving the merchant to calculate his profits upon the sale of his goods at half price. A Mite RE.PIIOIIf.-I ' o a young infidel who_ was scoffing at Christianity, because of the mis conduct of its professors, the late Dr. Mason, said : • , - ,','. ~., 'Did you ever kno v an uproar to be male be cause an infidel went astray from the path of mo rality " . • • - - - The infidel admitted that he did not. 'Then don't you see,' said pr. M. that by ex pecting" the professor of Christianity to be holy; you pay it the highest compliment in your Pow. er 1' The young man was silent. NO. 15 The Sven' of home. The Miner Dlr. Calhoun to 1b23. The sentiments of Mr. Calhoun, uttered in our National i.egislaturenearly twenty .years imie; are strikingly applicable to - the present position and policy of this nation. He says: • - The result of a war in the present state of out • , naval power, is he Machado of our coast, and - consequent destruction of our ttade. The wants and habits of the country, founded on the use of . foreign articles, must be grati6ed ;.; importation to • certain extent continues, through -the policy of the enemy, or unlawful traffic ; the expoitation of ' out bulky articles is prevented; the specie of the ? country is drawn of to pay the balance porp•ettial• ly accumulating against us; end the final result is the total derangement of our currency. To this distressing state of things'iliere are two remedies, • and only two; one in our powfr Immediately, iho othel repairing much time and exertion, but both constituting in his opinion, the essential 'policy of • this country, he meant- the navy, and domestic manufactures. By the former, we could open the' way to our markets; by the latter we Minn thein from beyond the ocean, and natural zn them in • our own soil. Had we the means of attaining an immediate naVal assendenty. ho acknowlialged ;Mit the. policy recommended by this bill, would be ry questionable ; but as it is not the faet—ns it is , a period remote, with every exertion, and will b. 3 probably more so, from that relaxation of t xer.: lion so natural in pence, when necessity is not felt, it became the duty of this blouse to resort to a considerable extent, nt least, as far as it is pro. posed, to the only remaining remedy, the protec tion of the Manufactures. This produced an interest strictly American, GE • much so as agriculture. In this it had the decided advantage of commerce ur navigatton ; and the country will from it.derive much advantage. A. gain, it is calculated to bind together more closely our widely spread republic. It will greatly in. crease our mutual dependence and intiiyeourse, and will, as a necessary consequence, excite an in. ef'ased attention to internal improvement, a sub ject every way so intimately connected ( with the ultimate attainment of national strength, and (ho perfection of our political institutions.' He regiird it'd the fact that it would make the parts adhere • more closely, that it would form a new and most po , erful cement, far out-weighing any political ohjections that might be urged against the system. In hi. opinion, tl.e liberty and tritioirof this-coun try were inseperahle united ! That ss the desttue. non of the latter would most certainly invtive that of former ; sp l its maintenance viill, with (vial certainty, preserve it. He dud not tipeak lightly. He had often and long revolved it in his mind, and he had critically examined into tl..e causes that delgroyed the liheity of oilier states —None of thein apply to iis, at bail with a force to alarm: The I , a.iis of our n public is two broad, and its structure too strong, to be shaken by them. Its _. extrusion and organization will he found to [(Tor effecti.al rocurity against their operatiiin ; but let it be deeply impressed on the heart of this House and country, that nMk they guarded against the old they exposed us to a new and terrible danger —disunion. This single word comprehended al. - most the sum of our political dangers; and nitwit tt we ought to lie perpetantily guarded. Foreign Itcnn H STEAMLIIS.—Two of the HalifaX steam ships, the Brot,nia and Calitlonin, have been this,week put into the giteen's. Graving Dock.— We observe the vessels belonging to this line un dergo frequent inspection there, that nothing may bo felt undone that may contribute to safety. Our nautical readers will be gratified by a 10. k at the Caledonia's bottom, as she now lies dry. We un lerstand that not a shadow of straining or twist ;to be seen. It is matter of considerable in% t among shipbuilders and other judges kat steamers, great as is their length, show less straining than any other class of shipping that has done hard work. erect heed I‘l,, TIT A Lrrf OP Tilt MEMOPLI9.—The aztithe register. d in London and no suburbs in the week ending the 19th in.t.tet, amounted to 957, of which number 453 were males ar.d 45* females. The Porte has withdrals n its pretest against he installation et Jetusultat uf the English Bishop Alex ender. The veteran r , pealer, Tom Steele, obtained hiEi discharge as an insolvent del/ter or. 'Wednesday. Mr. Oriel, of Devizes, states that ,the wages. Of agricultural luboters, in Wiltshire, range from 7 to 9 shillings a wick, and that' the greatest dis: tress prevails amongat them, many families being uc'u.dly starving. Sir Robert PO was burnt in fifty at Bathgato on the 23d ult.; he was carried through the WWII on a pole, followed by a large crowd, who kept firing at the effigy during the whole of its grog. ress. A halt was nude at the doors of the twist obnoxious 'runes in the toWn—the crowd hissing and shouting Down with the Tories." After parading the town, tbo edigy was placed in a tar barrel, atill set on fire, nn - individual pronouncing the following words: "So perish all traitors to their country." After the burping was over, the large concourse quietly di-pc rued.— Glorgnur Chro nide. lc men of the name of Leary, a so'dier, is ii.onr in C , irk jail claimed, on his own ronlessi:ln, with the murder of the It v. Mr HUM Itoa, near Bandon, in 1433. TENIrER4tirE —Thu tir.t anniversary of the, Washington Temperance societies of the city of New York and its vicinity. wits celebrated by a.' procession in'New York on Tuesday last. li . ear• - Iv fifty different Societies Irontnong Wand, New . Jersey, and the neighboring counties, were retire. sented on the occasion. u Tbo•procession,' says the Tribune, w was neatly two miles in length. and marched through the streets, between lines of astonished and rejoicing citizens crowding the cur acre to behold this great and before .unheard-of display of Temperance triumphs, to Wq:inatott Parade Ground, were three stems had boen'etect• ed, from which the gro it .coneourse, which must have embraced same eight thou:and pe•iple,• was aililreesed in hertfelt, eloquent language by Mr: Barrel, District Attorney of. Queen's County, Capt. W. A• Wisdom, of PI-diode:phi:l, Moira. I John Holman and T. M. Woodruff, of this e irty,;. Then funning in proces,in bgain, they marched to the Park, where they went dismissed." • .In the everling l ,a great number sat down to grand dinner in ,the Centre Market Ilall. night meetings ripe held in various parts of, the city. The Holi.Tunopottu •ruittsonursEr addressed a large; meeting nt the Tabernacle: MECII.Of MAL tra.ants.—A good trade is worth thousand dollars to any young man. ft is worth more than money as at inheritance ; for this may fail; that never! will if he bo industrious. We thinh well of those institutions of teaming, whem di's, tedium of att4ly is occasionally relieved by em ployments in some mechanical operations. Theta promote . : the heidth both of body and mind. and may give the student a trade, which -in the event of his not being able to acquire a living by his wits, will still enable, hint to derive a elite support from profitable labor. , „ A TEE-TOTALLER. — By the upsetting . of abertt a feW days since in the Foto/lac., at Heiper's Ferry, a man was so nearly drowned that the greatest efforts wall required to restore animation: Fhe usual stimulants .were applied, and es he re. lived, an ,ef ,rt xvaslmade to induce hini . to swal low some brandy. Exhausted as he was, how ev eT; he refused, havirig signed the total abstinence pledge, and being unwilling in any tiny to aiorate it. • He recovered folly withoutthehrandy: I A..meering in favor of Texas beiibeon Gel Savannah,