The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, July 08, 1843, Image 1

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    - Miners' :Inurnsil on thci• Cain SSein.
Owing to 001/7 1 61 !pities which newspsier
Editors ore habit! t 44istaie—tho pievalencq .n 1
Laws et the : preterit / 41mo, which makes it almiist
impossible to collect l ama! debts, and the , great es
pmses and waste of iimeive are forced to incur in
the collection of our subscriptions; which not un-'
frequently equals thsi amount of the debt; we hese
i t
. concludeirto publiihttio 'Miners' Journal henC -
forth the' cash principle, In accordance ui . h
the following terms 4nd conditions:
• For one Year in advance ' *
Six 1tt0nthe......1.,,,
/
Three Months.— .............;
One Month, ~
..
Single 00pie5..... 1 ... .........
We shall continue sending the paper td'our ni
merous subscribera abroad, as we have =been ac
eustorned to, until the ist of July. In the mean
time the accounts* those who are in arrears will
'be made out and forwarded, mid if not paid, le
,gether with the adva nce subscription, we 'shall be
forced to discontinue the mei, • .
. . l• - • , btUBBING.
• In order to ac+modate Clubs who wish to
subscribe, we , will ftirnish them with this paper,
On the following , terms—lnvariably in advance :
Copies to one address—per annum $5.00
10.00
l 0 do: 15 00
20 . ...25:. 00
Five .dollars in advance will pay for three years
subscription.!
. TO ADVERTISERS.
Adveitisements nit exceeding a square of trielve
e rinesyvill he ,charged: V. Inr -three insertions, and 50
F erns for aILIC insettinn. Five lines or under. 25 cents
Eta e'ach insertion. _yearly advertisers willo be dealt
with on the following terms: .
On'e Column...
•Three-fouitha do.
For any . perbd s
All advertikemen
'ess an-accountis oh
otherwise arranged.
Thee.harge to 111)
with the pritulege
~to t s ceeding one squ'ai
toe insertion or a stilt:
who occupy a inege4
All notices for
ngs not considered ri
,er notices which bar,
tintiously, with 'tliej
deaths. w ill' hechze
al:Maths, if which
frternissod relatives
neral, will be chard
We confidently i
friends in this ourl
$25 1 Two squares, .....$lO
.20'1 One do.. 6
.15 1 Business cards, 51ines, 3
orter thin a tear as per Agree,-
s - must be paid rnein advance nn
sued withtheadvertiser,an it is
rchrints will be $lO per annum,
keeping onendvertisement not
re standing during -the year and
ialler.one in each paper. Those
space tvill.be charged extra;
imtings and proceedings ofmeel
f general interest, and many oat
beeri inserted heretofore gran
exception ; a. Marriages ,and
ed 'as advertisements. .Notices
Linvitations' are evended to_the
ithe deceased, To'attend the fu
d as advertisements:
xpect th l
co-operation of out
new arrangement.
.
- ,_ OLD ESTABLISHED PASSAGE OFFICE
;-.. 100 'Pine Sired, eornei. South Street. ..
• • 1 1-.
THE Su_hscriber begs leave Waal!
• • . 7 ;4; • the at cation of his friends and the
, e 4 i 7,4 )t. Pula] in general,. to the following
• s .N...-k.. 4.2; .. arrangements for 1843, for the pur.
,pose of bringing tiut. Cabin, Second Cabin, and
Steerage Passengdes; by the following
(Regular Packet I Shlps to andfroal Liverpool..
;
' Ships' Captains *Dtlys of Sailing from
• Names. ' s's- • New York.
G. Washington, B arrows, . June 7 Oct 17 Far 7
;United States B limn • 13 • 13 • 13
Garrick S iddy , • 25 ' 25 ' 25
,Patrick Henry - Delano July 7 Nov 7 Mar
Sheffield' Allen ' 13 • 13 •
Bascius . , ' Cjillins ' 25, •25 25:
's
Independence Dive • Aug Dec 7AI 7.j
Virginian Allen 7
• 13 ' 13 ' !13-
'Biddons, - Ei Cobb '-25 • 25 ' '•25
• 'Ashburton , II itilestori Sep. 7 Jan 7 31" y 1
Sten Whitney 'Thompson ' L 3 • 13 •• , 13
She - rid - an • - Depeyster..- • 25 l'• 25 • 25
. .• Days of Saihng.from_
• f..• .Liverponl.'
Washington' morrows July 25 Nov 2531'r 25
' United,S.kates Britton Aug 1 Dec IAI 1
Grit-rick ' ' Skiddy a • 13 ' 13 •13
' patriek Henry - IJelanu •25•23 '. 25
INhelfield . Allen - Sept 1 Jana 1 M'y 1
- Iloschis Collins , •- 13 ' 13 • ,I 3
• Independence Nye • • A 22 •'•25 ' 25
- Virginian. • Allen • Oct.' 1 Feb 1 J'ne I
' iddriiis '' 11, Cobli ' 13 • 13. .` 13
' Ashburton Ilutticson ' 25 '' - 25 • 25
Sre'n Whitney Thonipson Nov I Mar I Ply ••1
' Sheridan. iDepcyster7 A..- 13 • 13- A F 3
I • I
- Ritalar. Parket Ships tOa,nel from Linda . .
, . .
Ships' . Captains . Oaysi,af Sailing froin
Names. • . New Yqdf. 7 --
Mediator C adwiCk - June 1 Oct 1 Feb 1
• Wellington Chadwick • 10 • ' :10 •
_ . ,10
Qncbec - Fletierd ' .20 •• 20 ' - '2O
1 Philadelphia flovey • July 1 Nov 1 M'r .a
-
Switzerland Switzerland Chadwick -: • 10....' -10 •• Hi'
11.41uilson Morgan , ' 20 I 20 •' 20
'Ontario .13.kudisli Aug .1 Dec .1 Al . --1
Toronto Griswold A.. 10 •-•-,
.1 . 0 •.- 10
I Westminster • 'Moore ' . . .. 20 ',ill) ‘, 20
St. James Sehor • Sept' I-Jan 1 Mil} , 1
Montreal Tinker 10
.1 • 10 ' 'lO
.
Gladiator 13iitton ~ ' '' 20' • 20 • 20
• 1, . -Days of sailing truth
- - • ' 1
Mediator - Chadwick July 17 Nov 17 M'r 17
Welkingtina 'Cliadw ick 1 27 ' 27 • 27
QUeb'ep ,I• flhberd . "Aug 7 Dec, 7 A'l 7
.Philadelphia liturgy :," 17 • 17 A 17
Switzerland Chadwick •-•,. 27 • 27 '27
i" 11. Hudson Morgan - S. -7 ... ./an 7 M'y 7
• 4 ._ Ontario- , Itiadish e I• 7 ' 'l7 '.'l7
' Toronto „ Grisv.:uld..._'. 27 ' 27 ' 27
Westltnimiter Mborc • - Oct. 7.Feb 7. J'ne.
Ft. Janus Sohor • 17 • 17 - ',. 17
•
Montreal - Tinker' • 1‘ 21 • 27 '- 27
• rGlaaiatur • Witton ' Nov 7 Mar 7 Pty..7
fn additiOn to he above Regular Lines, a nu&
bet of Splendid • etv York built Transient Ships,
such ifs the '•Adirondaq," 'Scotland, !Russell
Glover,' and 'Echo,' will continue to sail from
' Liverpool weeldyi iii.regular succession, thereby
preventing' tho least 'possibility of detentiOn or
delay in Liverpool: and for; the accommoda on.,
: of, persons wishing to roma, money to their - q.
ivies oc friends, I have Frdnwed the patine .cif
-4
' toy Drafts on thn,fellowingllnks :-
- The Ulster Bank, and brancTe
lic
IRELAND. The Provincial Bank d 0.,:
)
The National Bank ' do.
• - All Drafts payable at sight, at either of the:a
hove banks, their branches or agencies. --
.: .. ISlessrs. Spooner, Atwood &Co
ENGLAND. I_. • bankers, London.
. 4,p. W. Byrnes, Esq. Liverpool.
• 'Passengers can - also be engaged from Liver
pool to Philad . qpllia, Boston; and' Baltimore; by
the regular picket slips, on application being
made personally - or by letter, ( Post; paid, ) ad
. dressed to. , . ., - - . , •
''' • - JOSEPH MoMURRAY,
-• fop Pine street, 'corner of South.
' , - AGENTS—In Pottsville Benj. (lannan,•Esq.
, •.. i In, Lowell. Rich. Walsh. Esq'.4 •
• '. ',, In Albany, T. Gough, E'q.
• In Newark, Mid McColgan, Esq.
In Toronto, : U. C., Rogers and
~ , 9J'hompKin.
' ' -I also begleatre to Basilic my friends and the
public in getterl, that the greatest punctuality
will be observed in the sailing of the above - ships,
1
together Wan al others which I may have,'and
. that passengers ; 6, ill. experience no delay on their
'arrival at the different ports where i they mean,to
' embark. - r .''' •1
P. S.—Free passage - can also be secured from
the variousporils in Ireland and-Scotland flop
- • s ewhiCti steamboats run to Liverpool. • .
; JOSEPH MeIIIURRAY, '
1•100 Pine street, New York. .
'Gives drafts in sums to suit Applicants, on the
. "Provincia/ Bani, of Ireland, payable at
:Cork ... Banbridge • Limerick
' Ballymena Cioninol Parsontown
Londonderry Dowripatrick .Sligo
*, .Catran . ' Wexford Lurgtrn •
r ßelfast Omagh Waterford
.Galway DU ngannonßandon
Il
' ' iiis . ' Armagh , I Billyshannon
Athlone' Coleraine, ' Strabane, .
Kilkenny • Dungarvan Mina -
tallow 'ralee . - .Moneymoro ' .
. - Youghal • Cootehill : Enniskillen.
, Kilrush , Monaghan.
~. '
ENGLAND—Spooner, Atwood 4. Co., Bankers,
' liondon, payable in 'every town in Great Britain'
P. W. • BrarJr.s, Esquire, Liverpool.
Orli ) or'!Gria- ow BANS, Payable in every
ofshttii.S.eotlatt /, - •
New 'lrork;;lktilitiry-21,
_I 4
Fietuo... , ,liresh dream and Black Teas of
..n. panieVial ty, by the cbestvbalf chest, or by
eta... l'as sal at Wass toit the tituee by
'''' !%. Ar: A:LIENDEftt3ON.
• i ' -r
. i. 7 , . ....„ ..
9
i i i , .. „,.•i,, .
. 1
4
, r 4
11
......sz oo
~.... . , . . . .
. . .
.. . I
...,.. „ . . . .
.
"I !WILL TEACH :YOU TO PIERCE TUE BOWELS OF THE ELETIIs AND IM4N O OUT FROM ; THE CAVERNS, OF MOUNTAINS, METALS WHICH WILL GIVE STRENGTH TO. OUR HANDS .• N ''SUBAMCT ALL NATURE TO OUR USE AND PLEASURE ..--DR. Jomnsoll
•
. . . .
BEISECI
VOL.
ADJOURNED SALE.
Ifn-. . , .
. . .
lankruptcy.••Assigtme's
,
SanYLKILL COUNrY PROPERTY..{
WILL be: exposed for sale-at pnblic Vend!
v on SATURDAY, the Bth day ofJuly in;
at 10 o'clock in the:forenoon, at the House•
William a Hokin the Borough of Porttarbe
Schuylkill county, the unexpired term ot'atezi
for eleven years from the first d,y of Januai
1836, (with n.covenant of renewal fur ten-yci
from. the expiration- of said term,) on the Spo!
arid Lewis Veins on the Bobb Ttact in said cod
ty ; situated on the Schuylkill valley .I.2ailro
two and thiee.fourtlitt Oa mile from . Port C
bon, and known and designatea as the Union
!cries. '
On the premises ore erected a house for. ti
Superintendent, and 18 good tenements for Weill
men. Also, an Office, Blacksmith shop, Carpi]
ter shop and Stable, with a stone Engine Ilous
and all the necessary appliances for , an extens
colliery.
At the same time.nnd place will be sold a Ste
Engine of ;thirty hori.e power, attached to. tl
works, with pumps; chain, gearing, .F c., in col
plete order for working two pits, that is one
the Spohn ind one on the Lewis vein. • .
Sixty-one Railroad Cara, 44 Drift Wagons,
Lumber Wagons , 4 sets of Running Gear's;
Circular Screens, and a large lot of tools and i
pleinents suitable for mining, together with
Blacksmith's Bellows and tools,and a lot otßa
road Irom '
Also, the Lateral f ..Ronds, Stationary Scree
Shutes,_and Fixtures' with the irbn thereon, 1
amber with the Office, Railroad, Shutes, • Shl
Tools and Fixtures zit the landing at Port.Carb
and by said Colliery, and a variety of other art
cies suitable for mining purposes, all of whir
will be sold in lots to suit, purchasers. 1
For further particular's, apply to . •
51ARTIN WILLIAMS,
Superintendent on the Premises.
Dv ordei of the District Court of :the licit!
El=
.JAMES W. .N,EWLIN, !
Assignee of B: TI Springer, and of the lirnit
pa rtriership - under the name and firm of 13
Springei.
July I
,
PURSUANT to the order of the Orphan's' i Cotir of
Schuylkill county, .the Subscribers administrators
of the estate olAbrahatn Hoy, late Of the Borough, of
Orvvigstnirgi in the county ofScbuyikill,deccasedoYill
expose to sale by Public Vendee, on - Saturday, the
Bth day ()linty next, at 2 o'clock in the ofternoun,lat
the house of,Abraham Hoy, deceased, in the Borotigh
of Orwigsbiirg, and a county aforsaid; Two .certain
pieces of land situate' in the^ town ship of Manheim:
county ofSclinylkill bounded by land ol Benjamin Body,
George Body and others, to wit; puypart No 1 contains
12 acres, 1 1 perches ;No 2 contains 42 acres, being
part of.the farm or plantation. Late the estate of said
deceased \ Attendance will be given ant the Condi
.ti•ins of shle made known at the time and place of
sale by
.• •
!j,"-
l
HENRY "°Y ' Administra
ors;l
JOSEPH 110 Y, • • ' • • I
•
; By orde of the Court.
- \ JQIIN H. DQWNIN'q,Clerk!.
tshurg. June 10;.1813, ' e,• 24-4
Or i
AP:IIIIIISTELVTOR'S NUTLCE.
F.TTERS 01 pdtriinistration to the estate of S. m.
•
. administration io
Maud I'- Horning. late a inerchant.of Orwigstnirg,
deceased, laving been grAnted to the subscril4rs,
they hereby
.give notice-to a 11. persoiii having claims
.against the said estate, to present them for settlement,
without delay, and those indebted to the said estate,
will make metal° the subseribeta, at the office of
Roselary, in Orwigvburg. I .
ELIZABET7I L. IICRNING,
j .
j Administrairit
J. %V. ROSEBERRY,
Administrator.
23-1,
•
• -
Orwizslnirg, June 3, 1813
i ~-
In the Court of Commit Fleas of Schuykig .
1 County:
1
Philip lloy , Vend. E.,xpoMias to
es l March Term , 18 1 41 1 I I
John Snyder. —s6
On motion rule to show . causp . vity the mo t ,
cy
raised on the ibboxe execution, should not be paid.,
to Joseph While & Son, on their Judge - merit!, a..
gainst the thtleinknt, tn March t rm, 1639, No
11. _ Whereupon the said Court o dercd' that o•
tire be polished-three weeks in thMiners'jo rs
nal, of Pidtsville. for Creditors to appear on
Monday the 24th 'clay of July, at. 0 o'clock A.
e. \r,
M., being the Monday of the first , Court wcek
ofJuly.terni. 1843, to show' cause if 'any they
have. whOlte proceeds or: said exe. otion shoidd
not be paid over to, the said Joseph 't, hite & S n.
When and where all concerned m r ty \ attend. ;
CHARLES FR AIL.EY,
Prothonotar
244
,Tune }O,
FAMILY CARRIAGE
WO be sold, (cheap. tor cash,)la i square
- 0 - Family_ W '
aggon sditable tin. one or' ,
horses, nearly as good as new ; may be seer
Deibert's,'near Clemens& Parvin'S steam n
Union street. Etiquip of
JOIIN . PINKgR.T9N
Maliantingo
June 2.4, '26-3L
VOA', MINER'S
,SHOVELS.—JO
RICHARDS, mantifacturt;r of Coal Mint
Shovels, vvaantea Steel, No. 271 north'i
street, Phtlatqlphko.% Terms Cash
Juno 1.7,,
• MILLINERY AND FANCY - GOOD
MRS. ;MORGAN, in Market street; next
I v-m to Mr. Wo!finger'a tavern., respecttull
forms the citizens of Pottsville, and the p
generally, that she has just received •a new
fashionable assortment-of millinery and t.
goods, amongst which are the Albert. Braid,
rence Braid; Needle . Straw, English Straw,.
Finted Lawn Bonnets, with a' fine assortmei:
men's and boys' Leghorn and Sea' s grass • I
all of which will'be sold much lower than!
usual prides for cash. Bonnets altered and .
-up on the most reasonable terms,.
e
'Pottsvill
April 13. • 20
THE PHILADELPHIA, READING,
POTTSV.ILLE RMJ I ROAD.'
242= 2.f0 - 41
•
SUMMER ARRANGEMENT
CHANGE 9F HOURS,
On and 'after Saturday, April Ist. 1843, the pi
- ger trains will leave arthe following briars: I .1
t
From Pottsville at 51 - A. M. daily.
From Philadelphia at 6 A. M.
"both trains pass at Pottstown. The down
breakfasts' at Reading, and the up train at Norrisl
for which2s minntes are allowed at each station'.
Fenhs. , ,
Ist Clasi Cars. 2d Class 'Cars.
Between Philadelphia and Pottsville $350 and $2 50.
Between Philadelphia and Reading $225 and 'sl 75.
Excursion Tickets, good for two days only;'
Betvipen Philadelphia snd Pottsville. *5 00
Bet Ween Philadelphia and Reading, 300.
April' I, 4
TO RENT.: • •
THE PORT CLINTON FOUNDRY. and
Machine Shop, together with. all the Flasks,
Machinery, and fixtures belonging thereto. - Ap
ply to , ISAAC MEYERS, Esq 4 .
at Port Clinton, or r to
ECKERT 4. GUILFORD,
Swatara Furnace.
51-Ltf
December 17,
SMOKE DBE EY—Now YorliSnioke4
Beet of ' a superior quality. for sale by r
May 20; 21— , T • BEATTY.
PLASTER & SALT-150 ions of Plaster, yld
m- 150 sub Ground Salt. for gala by
tu• 00 4 , 1 MILLER KAOCERTft
IMO
WEIEKLY
PUBLIC SALE.
332212
25-4 t
PO'
AND
BY i*X.ISIvi_6TjpANTAN, .POTTSITiILE;. SCH . ITYUI4I - . C . 03..1*TiY; PA.
l• Office LyricliT2ito.
To
i
I gaze upon thee with deep passionate feeling,
Hook into thy eloquent bright eye,
And seek in vain for all' the fond revealing
Wbich heart conveys Wheart in still reply. •
•
I've loved thee, lady! let the wild confessing
I
. Spring to iny. bps ere jet the reason chides;!
And ; l have shrined the , thought as a deep bles.
sin,
- Ntirsing g the hope in Which the sorrow hide.
We may have spoken lightly and in jeering •
Ofsuch blest feelings, Whilst the gushing heart_
Of•one• beat with a darksame saddened fearing i •
MA all hie cherished hopes might yet depart.
I'veltded thee,' not as other worldlings palter .
Around the form their hike-warm souls admire;
Theffiiith I hold can- never swerve or alter, 1
Itif - feeicnt ardour never can expire:
Thoh cane r not love me -- thou host no .
returning
To yield fur all my , aching doubts and
Nunght to'allay the bitter anxious burning,
Fed by the fearful agony of years,
•
1
N
Perchance 'us better that 4e should be parted;
I will not then reproach thee, yet I hnow
My future lot is with - the 'weary hearted, •
' - Who, craving happineis have futird but woe.
I would not have thee 'feel one pang of sorrow,
1 would not thou shouldst know' the' cursing
blight,
'Which souls bereft, of love from grief do borrow,
To robe their beatings lin the gloom of night.
.1
But bright in thy young beauty be forever
Unconscious of the anguish you.have dealt;
And joyous as Spring's carol, may you never
Suffer the torture qther hearts have felt.
July 3,1343.
LONEST 110 Ult IDi NY LIFE.
• Like,my fellow-mortalS,- I have found Time to
resemble both the Hare and the Tortoise, some
times as fleet as the quadruped, at others as slow
as the' reptile in his dice. , -Many bright and brief
days recur to my memor'y tv-Iten he flew past With
the speed of a Flying Childers ; many dark and
and long_ ones, when hia, stepped es heavily and
delderaiely as • the black horse before a hearse.
All his divers paces are familiar to me—he has
galloped, trotted, ambled,' walked With me, and on
one memorable occasion, , seemed almost to stand
stock-still. Never, eh, h aver can I forget the day-,
lOngLyeconds which intie• up those month like
minutes, which composed hat inttrminableHour—
the Longest in n.y whole life !
'And pray, sir, how and when was that V.
For the when, modem, to be particular, it was
frOm half-past nine to half:past ten
,o'clock, A. MI
on the Ist of May, stew kilY le, Anno 1822;.
For the how, you shall hear. . I
At the dateAnit mentioned my residence was
in the‘,:idelphi, and having a strong partiality fo r '
The study of Natural .11isi.3ry from living speci i .
mons, it e.i..ed both my convenience and my taste
to drop in frequently at menagerie at.Eqeter
Change. _
' These visits were generally paid •at an early
hour; before town or codn try cousin s called to see
the lions, and indeed k frequently happened that
I found mYself quite alcine with the wild beasts.
An annual guinea- entiticid •me to go es often' as
agreeable, which happened so frequently, that the,
animals soon knew me: by sight, while with soma.
of them, for instance the elephant,* I.obtaincd
quite a friendly footing.' • ';Even Nero looked kind it
ly on me, and the rest ; of the creatures' did riot'
eye me with the glance's half shy and half savaged
which they threw at leis familiar visitere:
But there was one; notable • eiception. The
royal Bengal tiger could hot or would net recog
nise me, but persisted in growling at
.me as a
stranger, whinn of coulan belonged ttiiake in.
Nevertheless there Wad a fascination in his terri
ble beauty, and quite in his entriity, that Olen held
me in front of his cag^, , l enjoying the very him°.
tence:of his malice, rind recalling various tragical
tales of human victims'mangled or dervourcdhy
such striped monsters es the one before me and,
as, if the- cunning brubli Penetrated My •thoughts,
he would rehrarse as it were all the 'man-eating
ininceuvree of the species :'• now creeping steal
th'ily round his, den; as skulking through his
nutiVe jungles, then crouching for the fatal spring
and anon abounding rig + a the bars of his cage,
with a short, angry ros4 expressive of •the most
fiendish malignity. ,
There seemed to be dome antipathy between
. •
me and the tiger. - Ataey rate .he,took a peculiar
`pleasure in m)%presende in ostentatiously parading
his means of offence. Sometimes, stretching out
. -
one huge muscular
.lag between the bars, he un
sheathed, and exhibited hits tremendous claws, r'if.
ter which, with a devtlish ogre like grin, he dis
played his formidable, teeth, and then by-a ilelitie!r
ate yawn indulged ma With n look' into that
horrible red 011, down which h r e would fain ha l re
bolted me in gobbets.' The )awning jags were
invariably .closed with is ferociOus snap, and the
brutil performance was Wound tit with a howl so
unutterably hollow anti awful, so cannibalish,' th l at
even at hundredth repetition it still curdled my
very, blood, and thrilled II every nerve in my body.
'Lord ! what a dreOul creature ;
Very: ma'am . ; And yetthat Carnivorous Mon
stc'e, . capable of appalling the heart of the
bravest • man, failed Once to' strike tertor into
ode of the weakest of tl4n species—a delicate little
girl, of about six years old and rather small fur her
ape. She had been gazing at the Tiger very ear
nestly for some minutes;' and valet do "you think
she said'! I'
'Pray what, err , . • . •
..Oh, Mr.,. Cross; if evOr.that beautiful.great pus
sy has young ones, do save me a kitten -
•
, S - rr I , • •.
•
bn the morning of the first of play, 1822, be
tween nine and ten o'clbck, I entered the menage
rie of Exeter Change, '4O walked directly atinalu
al, into the great room i l l aipropriated to the larger
animals. There was im person visible, keeper or•
visiter, about the plaeslike Alexander Selkirk,'
4 was Lord of the Fowl and Brute. I bad the
lions all to myself. ASI I stopped t rough the
door, my eyes mechanteallY turned wards the
royal Bengal Tiger, fully' expecting to receive frem
him the customary salutes of a spiteful grin and a
'growl. ZBut thehuskyl,voice was silent, the gam
face wed - nowhere to bei Seen._ The nage was empty!
• My feeling: on the 'discovery, Wite - a.mixed one
of relief and disaopointinent.. Methought I breath
ed more freely from,the removal of that vague rip
prehension which had it alwaysclung to noti,'lie a
Presentiment of injury aborier or later from the sav
age-beast. A fewminnter, nevertheles‘spent to
• This same elephant! once nearly killed an Idsh
man,for ariinsUlt offered to his trunk. The act was
rash in the extreme,..butit Was impossittle," the Hi
bernian said.um rCelati a nose that you could pull with
both how*" I i •
--• 1, • Hi -
BEI
1
and
rEmi
train
own,
TSVILLE GENERAL ADVMTISER
SATURDAY ?MORNING, JULY 8, '1843.
111 T. 1100 D,
walking about the room, convinced me that his
departure had left a void never properly to be filled
up. Another ioyal ' tiger, larger even, arid as
ferocious, might take his place—but it was Unlike-.
ly that the new tenant 'would, ever select me for
that marked and
,persanal animosity 'which had al
most led me allithes to believe that we inherited
some ancient fend from our respected progeniiors.
An enemy, as well as en old friend, though not
lamented, must be 'missed. . It must be a loss, if
not to affection, to' memory an association, to be
deprived' of even. the ill•rvT the frown, or sneer of
an old familiar face , and th "brute was, at any rate,
'a good hatter.' Them was something piquant,
if not fiatterieg, in being selected for his exclusive
malignity. But be was gone, and the menagerie
had henceforward lest, for me, a portion of its in.
terest. , But stoV—there is a gentle' reader in an
ungentle horsy to expostulate. • •
'What!--sorry for a nasty, vicious wild beast,
as owed you a grudge for nothing at alLand only . l
wanted an.opportunity to spit his spite 1' !
Exactly so, madam. The cause is (rem un-'
common. Nay, I once know a foreign-gentleman i
in a very similar predicament. From Ye German:
reading, helped by an appropriate atvle of feeding;
the atomich of his imagin l ation had become 6tY
stuffed and. "overloaded with Zamieja, Brocken
Witches, Hobgablihs: Voinciiers, Were Wolves,
Incubi and other devilries; that for ;years' he
never .passed a night without what we call bad
dreams. Well,. I had not seen him for some
months, when at last ho'Called uper: me, looking
so wobegonejand,out of spirits, as to make me in-
quire rather anxiously about his health. He shook
his heed dejectedly, sighed deeply; laid his hand
on his chest,es if about.to complain of it, a'n'd in a
broken English; ihformed me of his case. .
, 04,: my govt fellow, I am' miserable quite.
Deie is someting ell wrong in mei--someiing very
bad—l have not ha'd the Night-Maie fur tree weeks,'
.Well, after that, sir, I can Swallow the tiger,
So pray go on.
After my fi rst • surprise was over,"my cur iosity
became excited, and begati to speeulate on the cau
ses of the creature's absence. Was he , l dead ?
Had he been destroyed for his frocity, or parted
with to make room for a milder speimen of the
species? Had he gone to perform in the legiti
mate drama—or taken French' leave? '1 was
looking routed for somebody to answer these que
ries, when all at once I tte.icried an object that made
me feel , liki a man suddenly blasted with is awn'
'der-bolt.
.Mercy • on us ! You don't mean to say that it
was the tiger I' ' .
I do. Huddled up in a dark corner of the
room, ;he bad been overlooked by me on' my en
trance, and, cunningly Suppressing his u4u'al a narl
of recognition, the trea l therous beast had proceeded
to intercept my retre t. At my fist glinpse of
him, he was skulking long, close "to the, wall, in
the direction all the oor. Had I possessed the
full power of, motion, he must have arrived there
first—but terror riyetted me to the spot. There I
stood, all my faculties frizen' up,:diuy i motionless
and dumb. Could I have cried out; my last breath
opife would certainly have escaped from me in one
long, shrill scream:- But it as pent up in my
bosom, where my heart. after one mighty bound
upwards, was fluttering likea scared bird. 1 titre
was a feeling of deadly choking at my throat, of
mortal sickness-at my stomach. IMy tongue in an
instant had become stiff and purched- , --my jaw
locked—my eyes Sze() In their sockets, and from
the rush of blood-seemed looking through:a mist,
whilst within my head a 7bizzing rioise,struckup
that rendered me utterly incapable of thought or
comprehension., ffuch, as far 'its I can recollect,
was my condition, and which, firm the symptoms,
I should say, woe very similarto a combined attack
of apoplexy and paralysis.
This state, however, did not last.' 'At first,
every limb and joint had suddenly stiffened, rigid
as cast. iron ; my very flesh, with the blood in its
veins, had congealed into marble : but after a few
seconds, the muscles as abruptiy 'relaxed , the joints
gave way, the blood thawed, and seemed escaping
from the vessels, the substance of my body seemed
losing its solidity, and with an inexpressible Sense
of its imbecility, I felt as if my whole frame would
fall in a, shapeless mass on the floor.
.The tiger, in the, interim, having gained the
ilor, had crouched down—cat-like--his hick cure.
eli inwards, ' his face betwen, his fore.pasva, and
With his glaring eyeballs steadily fixed on mine,
?was creeping on his belly by half-inclaes•towards
me, his tail, meanwhile working, from side to side
behind him, and as it were sculling him `vn.
In another moment this movementceasetl,,the.
,tail straightened itielf out, execpt the . rip, Which
. turned up, end hecorne nervously agitated, a war
ning as certain as the like signal from a enraged'
rattlesnake. %,
There was n 9 tithe to be lost. Apr vidential
. inspiration, a direct whisper, as it were, fr in ,beaV,..
en, reminded met the empty cage; and'auggested,
;
with ightnini Japidity, that ' the same . massive
hich brill formerly ' kept the Man Eater
withi , might n l ow-keep him out. In another in
stent4 was wiibin the den, had pulled to the - door,
and shot the heavy bolt. The ' tiger, toiled by.
the. siadderm+ of this unexpected manceuvre,
immediately rose" from his couchant position, and
after violently (lashing each flank - with his tail,
gave vent to his dissatisfaction in a prolonged. in
ward grumble, that sounded like distant thunder: -
Buthe did not long deliberate on hts course : to
my infinite horror, I saw him, approach the den,
where rearing l on his bind lege, in the altitude the'
heralds call rampant, be gave a tremendous roar,
which' made my blood curdle, and then resting his
fore-paws oia tile front of the cage, With his huge,
hideous face 'pressed sgailist the_ bare, he stared at,
me a long, stare, with two red fiery eyes, that al l
ternately gleamed end sparkled like burning coals:
'And didn't the Tiger; sir, poke hie great claws,
sir, into the.cage, sir, end pick you sir, bit kir bit,
sit, between the bar!' ' • .
Patience, my dear tittle fellow, patience. Since
the Creation, perhaps, e . Man 80,11 Wildßeast,
literally changing placed in such 'en anomalous
position : and in there days of dulness and a dearth
of dramatic mivelties, having, furnished so very
original and striking a situation, the Reader ought
to be allowed a little time to enjoy it. , •
It wee now any turn to know and understand.
how Time 'travels in divers paces with divers per.
sons,.' To feel hoW the precio . us"atoll that life is
made oh:night be drawn out, like fine gold, into
inconceivable lengths. To leaen,the extreme dur.,
ation of minima and seconds, 'andi possible
menta' of existence—the pra4icability of living
ages, as in dreams, between one vital pulsation
and another
, .
' Oh those interminable and invaluable intervalS
between breath and breath !
How nail i doooribotiy : whit gigantic scale
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. , •;„, ......, • . - :at • .. ,
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can I give a notion of thecriormous expansion - of
the ordinary fractioPs of tint; when marked on a
Dial of the' World's eireumf4ence by the Shadow,
of death t
Methinks while that horrible face, and. those
red, fiery eyes were gazing 011ie, Pyramids
have been built—Dabylons fauuded—Empires es' r ;
tablisheil—Royal DYnastiesilave risen, ruled,
fallen—yee, oven , 111ot - other Planets might have
fulfilled their appointed cycles frop, Cteation
Destruction during those notninal minutes winch
II their inimense enact, seem id actually to be 'PO;
paring me for Eternity',, ,
.t
In the mean time the tiger kept his old position
front of the cage, without making any attempt to
get at me. Ho could hate no fear of my getting
out to eat him, and 'as to to's devouring rue, havi.
hag recently breakfasted'on s a!shin of beef,ho seems ,
ed in no hurry for a ,second meal, knowing pee r
fectly well, that whenever titi might feel inclined to
lunch, he . had me ready forr, as it were, in hilt
safe., - ,
Thus the beast continued with intolerable perrio. l
verance to stare in upon Mr; who, crouched up n i t
the further corner of the d'en, had only to await hi
pleasure or displeasure. One or twice; indeid,
tried'to call out for help, hui the•sound died in my
throat, and when at length C succeeded, the, tiger,
whether to drown' my voice, or from sytnprithy!,,
set up such a' i roar at the same time, and this
did so,repeatedly, that convinced of the futility of
the experiment, I attandoned myself in silencete
.aiv fate. Its•crisis was approaching.. If tie hail
no hunger for food the savage had.an appetite fdr
,Le.venge, and soon showed himielf disposed, cat.
like, In sport with his victim, and torment him !te
finks by exciting his terror. 4I have said cat-lika;
but'there seemed. sonaethingl More supernaturally
ingenious in the cruelty of his proceedings. He
Certainly made faces' at me, twisting his grim lea.
tures t.'vvith the most frightful contortions—especir
ally ^firs mouth,—drawing back his lips' so as to
show' his teeth—then smacking them, or licking
them with his tangue-of th 4 roughness Of which
he occasionally gave m 8 ti (hint by rasping it a.
gainst the iron bars. 'But the climax ofhis image.°
waa'to come. Strange as it OMyiteern, he absolute
ly winked at me, not a`-,mere, feline t bliqk at ex
cess of light, but a isignificarit,lnowing wink, and
then inflating his cheek, priferil into my face a long,
hot breath, smelling most ominously, of raw fresh!:
'The horrid wretchl .why he seemed to know
what he was about like a Christian !'
Yes, madam—or, at 'any rate like an inhuman
human being. But, before long, he, ,evidelitly
grew tired nf,such mere pastime. Hie tail—that
landof misehief—r'esined its activity; swinging
land flourishing in Ithe air,. with a thimp every
n
now and the on his flank, as if he were beating
time ,to sortie . Tiger's March oh 'hislowm head.
At last it dropped, and at the same instant thrus
ting one pawhetween the bars he tried by cin_ex
periinental semicircular sweep, whether any part
of me was within his 'reach. He took nothing,
However, Metinn, but his miens so, nearly
, brushed nay Isnees;thrit a change of posture be.
came,impemtive. 'The den was toO low to . allow
•
of my standing up, Isci that the only way was to
lie down on my side, with my back . againet • that
of • the. cage y ,-of course making nctself as much
like a bas relief as possible:
Fortunately my coat warit:_closely buttoned up
to the throat, for the hitch of a claw in a leppel
would have been fatal; as it `WV, the paw of the
I brutg, in some of its sweeps, came within two in-,
cbes of my person; iFoiled in this fishingfor me,
he then struck the bars, cerintimi but they .were
• tf in
too massive, and too - well imbed ed their 'sec t
,
.cts, to breakoar hend,. or 'give' way. Nevertire.
less, I felt far'from 'safe. ThenJ was such
• 1.
helical sagacity in the Beast's proceedings that It
Would.hardly have been Wonderful if he 44 de
iiberately undone the bolt and fastenings his
front-door and o allied . in to me. . '
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'
Confound' the keepers ! . I
Not one of therri,Jlpper or Under, even looked
.;
into the room. 'Far any help to roe, they might
as well have been keepineshcep, or turnpikeea or
•
little farms, or the king's peace—or keeping the
Keep at Windsoi,• or editing the. Keepsake !4or
keeping the London Sweeps and •Jack-in-the-
Gide]) to keep May Hay ! I • ' _
-Oh ! what a pang, sharp as tiger'a tooth eoluld
inflict, shot through my, heart as*thnembglreil
that date with all its, cheerful and fragrant'assOci
atioris—sights, and scents, and sound so-cruelly •
different to the object before my eyes, the ortor ‘ in
my nostrils, the noise in my ears! ' I
How I wished myself under the hawthorn, of
even,on them=llow I yearned to be on a village ;
green, with or without a Maypole; but *hi do 1
_
speak or, such sweet localities! •
1 •
Mayday es it wag, and sweep as I was not,
would willingly hav l crbeen up the - foulest flue in
I Landon, cleaning
_it gratis. Tates that had for-•
merly scemeillalacki and hard, now looked white
and mild In cthapariaon With my own. The'
gloorniest - things, - the darkest misfortunes; even
unto negrci.slavcry shone out; 'like the holiday
Sonterkins—with th i ashed faces. , I
My own case was getting desperate. (The Ti
ger enraged by his failures, was furious, and kept
up an incessant fretful grumble--sometiraes deep
raening into a growl, 'ir rising almcist into a shriek
—wile again • and 'again ,he tried the bars, or
swept for me with his claws.' Luncl-14 me It was
plain had come, and an appetite along with it, as
appeared.lay his efforts to get at me, as well as his
frequently opening hand Shutting his paws, and
licking his lips, in laet making a sort of Hume
cidal feast on the -beforehand.
The effect of this mock mastication on' rity•
nerves was ingspiessibly terrible—as the awful
rehearsal of a real tragedy. Besides from a tors
respondence of,
_imagination, I seemed actually to
'feel in my flesh and bones - every . bite he simulated,
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and the - _conseqUent! agonies. Oh, horriblehor
ribl—horrible!
'Horrible, indeed : ! I wonilyou did not faint!
Madam, I- dared, not. Al my vigilance was
too - necessary to preserve me from those danger
ous anatches, so often made -suddenly ass if to
catch me off my gUard. It was far more likely
thrin the brain overstrained by such intense excite
ment, would give lway,- and drive me by some
frantic impulise— maniac—into those foamy,
.1
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Still bolt and bar, and reason, retained its place.
But alas! if even Ithe mind remained Arm, the
physical energies might fail: So long al I could'
maintain my Position, as still - and as stiff as a
corpse, - my life was comparatively safe; but the
necessary effort wao almost beyond -the power of
human nature, and; certainly could not be 101,-1
protracted-i-the jOblte and sinewy musttetas.
and, then—: ! , ; 1! -
tiercifultiortoo I .—the triiis4Oitollu4ed to
1
was fast.approaChing, for the
,Overtas6d muscles
were gradually,give; give, given.....who suddenly
There was a peculiar cry Beim same animal in the
I • •
- The .Tiger answered it. With a yell,
'and, as if reminded of some hatred ohjeet—:at least
":as obnoxious to him as myself—inStantly dropped
'lfrOm the cage, and made one step t.etvards the
apot. But he stopped short—turning), his face a
gain towards the cage, to which he weuld proba
bly have returned but for a repetition of the same
cry. The Tiger ar.sUered it as before with, a yell
of defiance, and bounded off through the doer; in
to the next .chamber,. whence growls, roars,=, and
shrieks of brutal rage soon announced that Some
desperate combat hid commenced.
. 'The uproar alarming the Keepers,, they rushed
in, when springing from the cage with equill alac
rity, I rushed out ;• and while the men were secu
ring the Tigerj secured myself by running home
to tny house in the Adelphi, at a tate never at
tained before or since.
. .
Not' did "Time, who .travels in divers paces
1
with divers persons' ever go at so ex raordinary
a rate fur slowness—as he had done witli me.
On consulting, my watch, the ...Ige. Which I tiad,
pasierin -the Tiger's Den most have been some
sixty, minutes! . . .
Anth'so ended, Courteous Reader, the Longest
Hour in my.life. ' . ,
Russia and her Entperpr.
The. folldwing is from the correspoMlent of the
Newark J.) Daily Advertiser:-
Thei Emperor is now 47 years old, and for the
lest 20. years his life has heen one c4' cons:ant
enterprise and toil.. The offairs.of,his Overgrown
Empiie, of which he clairni the title of "Father,"
are all to be kept under his immediate euperinten
deuce ; if a courier arrives, front Siberia, or War
saw, or the shores of the 'Caspian, he Must ova.
look the despatch ; if his grenadiers are to parade,
he must' be present; even if a fire, breaks out in
the capitol,. there he.. ia, Tufting, sweating and
shouting with the best of them.
Those who hive seen his Majesty, describe his
appearance as imposing in
,the extreme. He is
six feet 'two inches in height, finely formed, with
great breadth of shoulder and chest, great length
and symmetry of limb, - with a large blue.piercing
eye, Grecian nose, and every part of fits frame le
in,-the tame colossal proportion. At the regal le.
Pee, he is distinguished among all the j'ettmled and
sabred princes, by his plain dress and command-;',
hag figure., and he towers among them i all'llike the
king - of Israel among* the shepherd
. warrionothat
surrounded him. He is the gigantic head of the
most g,igantic.empire on earth.
• 1 Russia is 'certainly' a most:Wonderful country.
Stretching 'around three quarters of theglobe, it
,already numbers 70,900,000 of inhabitants, and in
a century more, may number 100,000,000! It
embraces every variety of sad, product ) , arid occu
cition, from the stunted! pines, of Archangel- to
'the bloorning gardens of the Cremin, kora the
hunters of bears on. the hills of Kainschatki,
to the 'Jiggers of salt lin the mines efCrecovi.—'
The iich Wheat fields on the shores of the Baltic
sea, nom their annual produce into th i e granaries
•
of Odessa; the shepherd of the interidr, pasthres
I his immense herds on the central steppes, and at
etch returning fair, drive Sile firstling of his fleck
to the bazaars of Moscow ; whila.fro the frozen
nprth, where.life well nigh ..goes out," the hardy
forester floats down duringhis ahor't lived sum
:niter, the' furs which belied taken beneath the
light of the Aurora,.dniing his lung wintry night.
All this varied population arc divided into two
classes.
First comes the hereditary nobles huge sons
of Anak, purse proud, high-spirited, and for most
part ignorant, rolling in splendor and filth, cdver
ed with diamonds and Vermin—a set of princely
deaperadoes, ready at any time for al revel or a
muster, a masquerade or
i l a'campaign. From these
riotous nabobs, two or three of whoni could buy
up the whole of lowa, at ~ G overnmnt prices,"
there is but one step to the serfs, in comparison
With Whom but Southern Slaves are freemen in
deed. Herds of them throng all the plantations .
Of the nobility, working without pay, living on
rye meal and chopped Strout, until they can live
no longer, and then die, ietiving a wreiched inher
itance ofbondage to their children. - •
This immense
,ernpire; with its great territory
and its gloat diveesity of-rank, is controlled by a
standing army of 500,000 infantry, 100,000 ar
tilleryinen, and this army is controlled by the
.rAutecrat of all the Russians." This I hold to
I.
he the .strongest Government_ in existence. In
case of an invasion, the iaexhatistiblc wealth of'
the-.nobles , and the inexhaustible riuMber of he
serf-hood would supply' an army of 'one million
N,
fighting men! Of this army, the infantry are
admirably drilled; well uniformed, highly expert
in the uc'e of the: beYonet, and the hanliest 'soldiers
i I
in Eurepo.l, — l -,
,
, The eavalry. are goOd, and the artiilerymen are:.
good; but the. great 'strength in defensive warfare
lies in the Cosine horsemen \ Who can red
without admiration and terror of-these wild cava
liers of the desert—ot their intense :attachment to
their country--of their tiger-like cunning, in ly
ing in wait for their prey, and theii terciiy.ni de
stroying it—and of their astonishing powers of-en
d a. ilie ice, sleeping on dui - horses, and baking their
meat under the saddle! To see one of f , these troops
of marauders in their green jackets, and rad breech '
es; arid jockey nap, with a mstlock slung over their'
shoulders .and a twelve foot pike in i r thair ha'nds,
'rise Up suddenly from the horizon f 1&0 a cloud of
sand, and come scouring over the plain with-whoop
and - halloo,' must be a frightful apparition to an.
ft
invading army. - Bone r
e arts'sFrenctuneu saw i t
-often to their sorrow ail fell afore it like the si
moon.
Bat whit will ,the am de Nicholas,
with an am Wens, conquest loving people like the
Russian, do next!. It is very easy to sec what he
would do , if it were not:for the ffectS'of England.
Turkey would soon go into that capacious maw
which has already swalloweclPoland, and a great
"part of Persia, without appearing to be any nearer
frill, than was the sl?ugh of despair after all the
contributions .of stone and rubbish from the land
of destritetion.l The Empress Catharine,,ldng
since saw that the 'possession of Tury..Y .z would
give her. possession of the Archipelago, enclitic
key of the whohilEast, and the erecter) a
column un the frontier of the.rlevoted Country, with
this inscription: - .Thisirrilae way to [ con:tontine-
Orr.' That colur-is, the guide post of Russian
Politics: andehould another general War break out,
en army of"Ruesians might soon ho seen marching
by it - inriumph, bearing the spoils of one of, the .
~ot. i est Capitols of kanroPe, to a city which, one
hundred and fifty yearseio; wail a. frozen marsh.
'•
The President %sit- tol New York coat the city
4 4 ) 0 4 .
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. (i.The following Jitter frem-one of ther.equelde -• ~..
est and most intelligent of oar heavy 'Meta:int' . • il
exprestes, we belieq, the convictions,* a the -,:,•" i
majority of our! •1410cantild ethrithunitY, Wit! W - - - r
the City and Countiir,' ' WO IA tattentionidPirs - '• ~,,•
fucta i Embodies, toe frtiits of large eliperiii&co , ,
and vast 14thefits et a , Proteefille"Tar}r beloind . ..,,
the realh of cart!. 'We hope to - hearAirther•thina ''
the atither.l • - I ;•• '-• -' - . '-'' , Ed; -.- 1
- *3.1e3-ear k i on the iirtiliZ ' ' :... ..
1
Tu the I.Edilur3 if II f Tribune .:. • • , '.. - 'I
, . : ~ . - • 1 • ~, -
Twu, valued. ethitheondents have recently Bak.
ed my cipinion upthe the thibject of the. Taris 7 -ita
operation upon theiliffeeent interest. 0/the Conn-
tiy,;
,and ce ono; of Ilietit expreat*eAtiail to 'pub- -,
lish'the views eif -et'i ' ‘ .reSitlent',4•;theCity, I have
concluded, i with'yOk perthlaitithy to reply through
..
your cialueons.,
•-• ','• r .. .
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• Twenty ; years ado,' through: the influenekof
Gev.cLlNio;4 auskAhe late Elear*x •Keowits of - --•
Albany, I became , a Couvertto a Protective Tar&
.:i •
'Frequent convematiOns with those gentlemen
-'
up 7 ~- ,•,
on thesubject ethisincetl me that no country np- ..„- _
d•th
en earth pessesaeereseurcea. arithieiteelf Of i ii..: - .
beet ming:eo stitsttinti l-- aily prosperous and in&i,''''-'t.J
pendent , Mt ' our ip,vn,that..in its length and - ,' - t . ..: ,- ,
breadth' it embraced every elemeiat of priaiperity ; _
and when that 11,r+perity.was once secured by
permanent[ legislacion for'the proteceion of our
own interests, sionoeould be more; favorably _situ;
ated to proseeute a;profitable Foreign Commerce. ,
• • .
Commeree is but the agent of the Some interestai ,
and, when thhy ' are: ound 'ar.d . prosperous, it
......
twice blesses --thi'agenti end the employer.
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- lic3Cetion hail siredgthened these opinions; '
bi.t itWes reeerVetliior Ithe preset:AY.4th, (1843) to- •
deinen'strater their orundne.t..s.: ' -- .
.•
Thu' last ti: o . gefis . : after 'mature deliberation, •
.1
adopted a l'arit' ut Duties which, while it brings
ample revenue t o thb T rea sury , fosters,to'a !thee._
• , .
al A
extent, mericari.7!Lbor. • -
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Under the inflti,eiteit of this Tariff ever3c ,inter
est of the Gbuntry - :46 rising from a state of nriper- •
alieleddapression ituite.as rapidly is could bo de
sired; and what , will greatly diseppeint the oppo- .
itents of th's :flees*, the importation of Foreign ' '
Gauds•the oresSettlear . will be somewhat beyond " ,
the wants of the' pouiltry, producing a Revenue
from Cust:inis of seem] two or three millions more
than the estimate hf (h i e last 'Committee of ‘Vaye •
1• i i
and Meath. ',-. • •• •
, , •
This Its° Hot thOre I conjecture. A good_fell
trade is ant s cipated, land the o:ders that have,geno I I .
forward for .goode ;to thrive in July and August
will be found to be 'quite lrge enough. The °pia. _ -
ion I am aware haeOht'sii ed, to a cerwiderable,ex- 1.
tent, that l ecathe this city is strictly commercial, '
its eitizene arc getter fly opposed to e"Fariff.--_ -
Such .is net thelaft. - So Lir as my„infoemation ,
extends, a I larg, prepOrtio,n of our wed-inforated
American. ruer hoots are the friends of a Protec
tive Teriff.l A few, who are exclusively in the -
Importing business, the Foreign iutereat, which Is ,
I • ,
large, and I gerie l rally respectable • as,regarda char-
acter, and it p, :lon of.the Shipping interest, - are
the advocates of What, is` e/Med Free Tride.
Several l a the iiiii?i•iniell' t - of the 1 ilea .
class, '
hotvevvsaid - th ;tie; that they ha_dito
• er i ha e,
-, • . , • .
lexpectitioit that We ebuld-liseserie a sound and
svell.regulatedCurieney'xvitholft a Tariff., , .. ' •
Talk. to them of Free Trade in ships. and, they
' will tell you they ':ecruld malls.° without diecrim
'illation,' [ .; i • . , .•
Noehaie tho l Southed much reason - to com
plain
' ..
of tile prbserit state of thing's'. No section
of the cothory is recovering more rapidly from the
terrible revulsion of • 1836 and '7, than the- States •••
at the•_,Sonth and Sontit-West. Cotton,-at the L
present price, pays the planter better thati the lii
ricuftiu al products of the Northern and 'Weetern
St`dfcs - revnueeithe the farmer of those States., . -
In AldiMma bad AltisisSippi, it is estimated
thata • •
that a go:Alegi? will grow 0 Vapid Cotton. At
5 cetits pir pbtipd, this would amount to 150 to •
150 dols. Ti a foid-and clothe itanegre, costa '
from GO ti6s,diallata, leaviag a clear profit frOm
his labor of about SO dollar?. '• . • . •
.-
The present 'value of the negro - ts from 350 to
• ,, icA) dollars, end cotteri 7 • lands which-in ,1530
brought 20 to:30 -"loiters per acre, r.ow sell from
...
8 to 12. iThantheral increase of stock, (I mean
human 11 1 sit-and blood,) it is always estimated
will p4 . theitherest on the investment. -
The cousurninion - Of cotton in this country the
present year, ,'Will not probably vary much froth
four h,atitired thouriand biles, and thus' fiu•it has
beed•taken by our manufacturers at, prices that .
have paid thd planter 10 or 15 per cent. more
' than that shipped to Liverpool or Havre. •..
And so of bread stuff , : For years past, the ea
fest and ,net Market for Westein Flour has been ,
tithe district of country in Nag England devoted ,
•to Mthitilacturee; - and, although oar merchants
•have 'nceasionally felt authorised, 'by : accounts
from
the l other side, to { Alp Flour to EuroPe, the
result ha invariably sh own that the:kome market
is snored? be relied upon than the, foreign.
Under the present system, it is fair to estimate
that the dornestio market; for the great staple of - -
I 1 - • - • 1
the South will ihereasefeotne 10 per cent. per en.' .
' 1 I - tocome;
num for 'l2 or; 5 years and before that
period arrives,yirginia.'Noith Carolina, Georgia,
Tentlesse, antl.perhaps Alabama, will have be- •
t
come Ta off States; each with its Lowell and Pti
terscin within its borders.
Dunn my experiethe in trade—and_it oitenda .
back mo e then. twenty-five years--all our Com
mercial t•vulsions have had their origin in excess, -
sivc impnations from abroad. It is vain to say
the coon r y wilt tette o no more goods than it seta
allyfrequ Ica: " Nine times out of ten, all thegoode -
brought here will be !sold. If the importer finds .. -
there is allergia inrplus in,first bends, be will of- '
fer to' thjobber inducements, either In price or
Moth,
'time, or 4 t 3 take them off from his hands;
and when the jobber ,finds he has actomulfted a' .
stack beyond the rhumb froth his regular cue- • .
[ tourers, I e will be sure. to place a portion of that
~
;stock where he ought not, by taking up-men of .:
doubtful credit --.-and so , of the retailer iti the ethin'....
try. Preserve the present rate.ef dutie.e, and all i
these evils will be ;avoided. , : • .., ~ . i
- I '
.The preAmt Tariff - excludes from our Market
Manch eE teePrints—an.aftiele, the - importation Sit
which has heretofore - taken a large amount of Spa- •
cia-liut i f the country--and what has been the
consequ the 1 . . Why: within the list' eight
months 'there have been improvements in this
country in the Machinery ,conneCted • with thii
1 branchf business, (printing.) such aewere nevi
i:
er made n Engllnd during the same number of
years; and the-cent:theer is now furnished with
Domesti Calicoes,' at 6:to 1i 'its per yard, •
i r
erior tel the irtmorted goo'
' , to pay f ore 18 th-2.7. -- , Ar
with nucrops other tulle,
W
• hc raper• - foreig,n / cie
t ri
there esi Ihe alwaya such -
tat and 103,a5-will favor
Who, peat / Middle life; .__
amouifter of pecie ,formerly • sent from thii coon.
try,,threry year for she , putrehaseoP fast India Cot
itons-gedds familiarly I known ) at lhat‘day' lit
, Hum-hums?'
~ The . Tariff Of 'l4l§ unposed du.
ties upor4l;tose goads that, amounted to a prohibi
tion...
tion.. Within two yoini - th erea ft er, their pities
was Supplied by -a domestic article, se perior its tax
taro, and et is reduced , price ;
_and - from that linear
to 'the present, the mannfactnreArf brown told . 1
'bleacbeCottithe has steadily advanced, until '
Nevi
Englan ,ricirw'spreada her heAvy fabrics 'ln ill
Canton 3144, side by side with Ll'
goods, d chat ages a,icorstr . 2, l , lBii.
e . q47 l liat --11'lf mild you make 'this" Elit•
'!.:bi.cctiott p7manent I'--
,I apanor * Li 4
a.liill gti :far to^ - -,' ~ . I'' •
M
• '. ' -! • '',"nuollze - Pi? nntitlita
'i OW derives' 'lama ireat •
n .todiiridW
41611 itopulatia. • NM:4I * p
A WIR
.
28
tetu . of
fc.'tv yea!
ft.44l'
.4 Oatenit`4