Huntingdon globe. ([Huntingdon, Pa.]) 1843-1856, March 05, 1856, Image 1

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mitt ittingss•Nditic* — ,o- - Vo•BE;'• •
/ Vol' s titi:iri - Orr; ” • • • ' . 51'4 . 13
41 "'" «: 2 • ;1 1 . f 'riot paid iitiariCe, 200
Nai ii4er • iiiSC;4riiiinied aireiragCs
2 SA
4failuit to haify d iscontin auttt tit ;the -ex•-
;titritioit;tif ithc-toitzt..Ottbstribed -for w .bei-coo
tiiderted'a: novi eng-egement. • • •
if% ..V.EI3.BI9;OI4',AOVER.TISING. , :: '
,t; jOsertian.. :2 ins.: 3 ins.
;.. • •;•:, , 50
:I.§q 16 .lineg, brevier, „50 75 1,,.00
„ ; ,00 159 200
. 1.50 2 25 , 3, 00
Iv
/:3 j .Girl. 12in.
V.ilsnußfe;• .s3„, ,
00 $5 00" 88 00
"" 5 00 ' 8 00 . 12' 00
7 56 'lO 00'''15 00
-4" .„ " , •"9 09 •1•4'90',23 - 00
44 . " 1 • " 00 25' 00 38' 00
— 25 00 - 40 '00• . 00-00
'• Business eirds not
teCdrng.„6-lines;-one •
,-'%.E'x'ecotor ! le quid Ad loin isteators' Notices,. 1 75
i tors' Notices, "•- .; ' 1 i 25
Ntenivirtar the t 'Corapaittee of :the Board
.'• of tilistees 'ef the 're.rnier.i' High
• "'SOIL:dor of Pennsylvania ; ; ; - •
extract fioni9le
met orial=of,•the tiie" . Poard
'Trustees f -the.. Farmers': -High 'School .of
'Pent sylvixtiia~. aril commend it ttithe careful
~perna • andconsideration every man in
ihe;community.
''`-jflhere is art yone subject Upon which' the'
pubilic mind• should 'be brought le're'fleCt it
is - upon. the true dignity and.respeetabilitit of
_
r.rroYs.. ;Intelligent
reflection all, that
needed:to place labor
'and the laborer in the
, . ,
'harillrable 'Position ' before - the 'whole
they . occupy in the
_minds - of
men..of sense. and-.reflection ; and to ; make
zmen ashamed to hasoeilde- with the man - who
'ls'aShained"'to, knOW of he'insti
-- • - • • .
nation_ so well calculated 'to bring about this
_result :us-the Farmers' High School of Penn
'sylvan and hope the Legislature Will extend
it tote needs and deserves :
-
The
objecte : pf the, Farmers' High School
of Pennsylvania.are so important, and seem
to. commend, themselves ,se. directly: to public
favor,, that ; : the, trustees, come to the ;Legisla
ture with.per feet confidence that the peeple's
.representatives will afferd the aid required to
place- : ,the institution in, actual operation.—
()titer and _younger States have made.appro
priation, to .similar objects., • Why. should
_Pennsylvania, with her .• vast agricultural..re
sources,. developed and undeveloped, remain
;, „:. . • . .
-..,,This,:institntion proposes,. by uniting the
acquisilion of. knowledge- with.. daily. toil, to
impart inlerestto the one,and,add • dignity to
£le. other:, .
It proposes, to, remedy an evil which exists
atevery literary institution in the Common
wealth., ~; T hate,vil, i s, t he low repute inwhich
manuallabor is; held,hy the student. We have
had,:it.is true; farms connected with some' of
our colleges, upon which those of the students
who choose-Might• lessen the-expenses of ac
quiring their education by mczn.w4l, labor.—
Those-who wrought upon the farm were,,by
thase who - did not labor, esteemed pool' ; and
like the poor' man's children; edneatedit pub
lic.expense under the act zof April 4.1 , 1809,
[5 Smith's Laws, 734,] they, ppeame, a. dis
tinct class, cut of 'from the society of those
wile, by the 'very' dietinetion thus created,
were led-to believelheir parents rich: It is
thus that manual labor is degrading in. the
'eyes of ; the: youth of .our colleges_ to such an
extent' that in nine instances ,our of ten they
are gradnated With an utter distaso and 'ab-
Aorrence for. ,the
• pursuits and occupations of
'their fathers, whether in thefield or the shop.
The.aisoCiatidn.Of manual /abar,With filitOery,
viiich is but extension, of this same Prep.:
(lice,.restS air.incuus upon the sunny
landS,and; fertile flelds,of the south"..,,There
ithonsandd,' of .families • endure peierty . land
Want "rather ;'than degrade themselves by
anan - zretbzbor; ' . ; .
Our: presentcommon school law's, placing,
thechildren of - the - poor' and, the rich.ort
po' one
common it is esteemed honorable in
-into '-acquire knoWledge.at f he. - pnblic
Pense. . • ,
.The Farmers' High Sclinol, proposes tore-
quire, such aril an t otnianiial
b6:found:beneficiai and-proper,'Of every, stu
dent, as, one of the conditions of. his
elon to, .and of his continuance in the inatitu;
.. The ambition of studente, thuS.,pliced.
up d a Per fe etlequ li ty., ,vv o itandard bat - .
advariOnienP• in, learning, and-S4lt in labor
i/evizte degrirde w tiring tate .
active exct•efse energies u . i. - rOind . d. 'Of ,bidy,
but this inc entive" , to' indhatry,
.might have laid 44ororia t. • • ,
The,refits,arisirig from 'the labor of the:
students are to t)'Artte the treasury
siitution, to lessen the 'expensesnf their edit
cation'. It has been estimated that after. the:
iii4iution'Shall„have been put in, uperat a iii,_
with'suitable buildings;four 'hundred acres,uf :
such' land as' that Which lids' been secured ant
keel - rota debt; the aecessaryeppenses of:the
stialeht,: includirid:boarding,. waehing and'
tuition, - not exceed' 'seventy -fiVe dollars
per, annum.
not proposed 1,6 teach ilk dead tangira
fr;s. jf,,Aepmed by, any essential to 4 good
edheitlim, 'they shotild . .be.aequired;prier to.
the' 'd,r e whicti:,puliils can' be admitted' iii, ;
to this institution:"_ „ - •
" 'With this exception 'it
,is proPased l to afford=
therstUdent, it four year? , Course, as Corn.:
plete hri'd tharough an education as can_ be
aelittilled at eur'beA literary institution's—an,
iduccitfOn whieb, — though - not less scientific,
be rendere d More . piactieat' by the daily
aperations_arid illustrations_ in'the field •arid
the:shop:
One great and'leading phject.of the tr,stitu-,.
tion is - tO so lessen, by rnanual - labor, the ex
p.enses as' I:9 bring the acquisition of a seism . -
trfic edueation within the,, reach of, the._ far- .
m
rno, community,: How' many fitmerriean'
afford, out Of the net profttifef the farms; -to;
give - their icing a collegiate 'edneation ar.;
77 ; 7 -- :---r --
eXP,ense.of.a,9.t.less • than three, hur,idred d,9llars
q year? felt) a f ford it at ad
expeneeof-•sveizty-fiVe boltaars ¢° 1t ` this rate,
each isoril.b.otild receive n dedabitiori,‘•;vetatit,
ipmaA , the etCpjratio.g . ,of, the egikra? : Aq,eupply,
upon his iatrhees farni ;he pisce r .of
g'er
'Urdtkei, viihOse 'tern . ha' coirie"to enjoy
the' 4distritaket of the ifilatittitioni.'' plow'
soon would.the , Sorr, Ithaca restbred:tO the farm
he, had, ler; but a few-years before,,, work, an
entire change - upon the yard—the
_garden—
'the orch'ard--the' field Holi.rnuch 'would
be done durinc , * hours Whiehlnlcitrilef years:
had... been ppent lin- idleness, to: ornament and
,beautify. • cl: . • rr.- '
-experimentalfarni,, this 1 institution
will greatly benefit the agricultural commu
nity.
. =
~:-Experiments.in the introduction .of neiv,
seeds,..grainsi roots, ~modes of culture, ,farm
implements, dm, are generally to.o trouble
some and expensive,to• be often !tried or , fully
jested- by, the indzviduai 'ft - I=er ;_•, At' 'this
school, however, which will••be in.correspon
deuce with ; agricultural in every
part ,of the civilized.world; reiperirrients• can
be made with :great , : facility, and: certainty,
.and.,akla Co,loPairalive:trifling-cost, and the re
sults be made,known•to all thel citizens of
the Commonwealth without charge...i..
- • -
• ' The cautious farmet aivait the vesult
of experiments' and tests Constantly' going:on
introduee upon' hie farm
only such 'seeds, grains; , :plants , 'arid
and such modes of cultivation . as 'experiairee
has •s ho n: t o be' 'adapted; a c
miate,.anti such. inadtrineS and imfdetneritslef
irusbandry' as = ha4'-iitoCod . the- jest' cif' actual
trial. .2 2 • 2 , , • 24,
=I
. Situate, as theinstitution_will be, in, the ,
creowenithical centre of the State; within 'about
.
twenty mires"af e. of Station on
the Pennsylvanialtailroad, and within eight
or tetl rrilleS'ef :the Lock-Haven' andlyione
Railioad,,*hich 'will probably completed
by the time - stud,ents can be .adatitte'd; will
beleadify aceeSSible' to all the c:itizerts of the,
Conithon weal t
.
„ .
The Farmers'High:School of Pennsylvania
is:eMphati4e.py“l State institution. TheGov
errior and Secretary of the Commonwealth,
and:44e President ‘ ef the Pettrtia States,Agri
cultinal Society,,arepx-officio membersef the
Bi*ro„ of Trustees. , ,Three ,of : the nine.. rf.-
mairtin_g Members of the board,areto,bectlect
ed, annually by, the-Exeputive Committee of
the :Petin'?a State Agricultural• Society, and
three., represec,tatities from each county.agri
culto,ral society in the! Commonwealth. The
advantages , the institution. will, therefore,
be secured ,equally to
_the citizens of every
courtly in the State. .
•
The following is a i3yriopsis of 'the, new
Tavern. License Bill, as it has:passed the Sen-
MCI
.
The first Section,
.simply provides 'that no
house, for, the sale , of liquors of'any.k,indshall
be,:kePt without, a license. • .
Tho.iieconci: section .provides that, venders,
or, WrioleSale dealers of 'vinous, spirituous _or
malt )i q uOrs sliall,not.,selr in quantities•._ less
than orip gallon; ;,.anerhatno..ficense. to, sell
iri any'quantity - whatever shall ' be granted to
" the ,keepers i of any restaiiraitt,reating hOuSe,
cater house, or 'cellar ) :thea • tre; or other place
of amusement oerefreshrrierit - .? 7 • ,
..The . third section proiideti that brAvers and
distillers', glair' be licensed agreeably to
_the
aet,of. the 10th of Spril, ; 184 at three times
the rate of tax a - ssessed by said.act :.'Provided,
no license shall be granted - far less than fifty
dollars, and no• sales-less .than•five gallons.
!The fourth section directs.that , the provis
ions, of, the ad shall not , apply to importers
sellincr.imported liquors in the original bale
or.cask. ' -
•
SEC. 5. Act not to apply to druggists and
apOttieParie s. EG., 6. ,Nao license to be granted-except to
citizens of
_ l ate Vnited - States.
SEC. 7. ticense - to be granted,,by, the : Court
Of Quarter Sessions;
,throe
application, to,
he. published for throe,weeks.
SEC ' : Refers to.publication of application
for lic'enie;,arid,Certificatc. , • ,of twelve citizens
required - that:tavern is necessary, and appli
cant of gocid - repUte and prepared with,house
room,; &c.,,t0 accommo,date„travellers.;
No ,P9'50(140: be licensed to:keep
a • tavern in any.city.or county town, un'less
provided, Wit , leaSt: four r,ooms . and • eight,
beds„rtil' in the country two rooms and: four.
~5u0..16, Applicant to, give bond inthe ff surn
of $lOOO, With security; ,
Sep. 11., Proof. Of the , adveytisernent :and
ills _ filing of the bond to . be furnished to the
oleik.of the' court before license isgranted. -
: SEC I. I2. ClaSgiftpSith - p i yatpS -,0,f, license to
de l a ifillop • and ayils, according
to the act of May 4, 184:1 7 —to pay three times.
the r . #le4 - prescribed., yin, the -.lotb . section`, of
Said but riolicense,leSs thin $50.„
,The _,l3th .section classi'fiei:the tavern li-
PenSerfand as Xis We• Publish it
entire : .
- SEc., 13y That all (Int s els, Inns, and-Taverns
classified an - ct yalcd t ,aecordir4.tn - the
estimated r yearly, rental ot, thehouse and
propep.Y.pitended to be Occupied for per- :
poses, as - follows, to_Wit:: All cases :where
the :valuation of , the yearlii,rental of the said,
tiOnse and property . shall be ten I.,hotisand dol
lars, ShallicoristitutetheAritPlasi,and
pay one thausancidollara.
Where the valuation of the yearly rental
'shall be eight thousand dollars; and not 'more:
than ten thousand. dollars,-the second class,
and shall pay:eight; hundred dollars. ('
7 •Where the .valuation of rental-shall be six:
thousand, dollars,-. ( and not more than eight•
thousand dollars; the : third class,:_and shall
pay six:bunked dollera. , ' .
- I WhereActlY,aluation - of .ren tat shall be fduf
thoUsand.dogarsond: not more than six thous
and dellars,(:theJourth cicri p ,tand: shell pay'
four ; ' - ,
Where, the ,valuation,of-rental .thall be -two 1
thousand dollars,. and • '' - not more. i than .four:,
thousand dollars, .the fifth:ela.ss, an d shall pay,'
three "hundred dollars. „ . -
_ bersohe mAluation of-rental shall rho one
thousand : chars, attd "nqt, more .than -
zi.
The License Law.
rial
ME
'''ITUNTINGDON,
thonearml.dollarsi: the sikth class, anii , ‘-ahall
pay two - hundred dollars? 3' 3
)
Where theivaluatiou of Teritalthall bro fivd
htindred - dollariy:aniLhot *Over -brie thoilearid
, dollars; theieventhiclass, arid shalltpay: orie
hundredldollars. '; "
AVlierethe valuation -• of the reutal'ehillf - be
three hundred dollars, and not'over fitre:hun
dred dollars, the eighth :class, ancl,,,,shaltipay
geventy-five dollars. „ , , • •
- ".Where the ;valuation of rental shall „be pn
'der 'three 'lnindreCdollarri,';the
and shall pay fifty
Provirle,d, hqwever; That'in' Abe cities 'Of
44iiladelphia and Pittsburg no lice nse , und e r lheclassificatiOri of , the 12th „and 13h sec
lielaii'of this act, ;shall -be rot:, ; less - than one
hundrcd'dollars, nor in Bounty, towns 'or Vor
'oughs having,more than 20'0' taicahles fclr less
than seventy:five - dollar's. ' - •• •
_The 14th section provi,de,s,that. all persons
'applying. for licenses, and classified under
12th, and 13th sections' "of this act,' shall be
assessed and returned :as"..prOvided in;the'6lh,
7th; f3th and.9th'sectloriS of an "aCt relating,
to ',tins, taverns, " and retailers vinous an il
. ,
.SOirituous liquors," passed' the of
:Nfarch, D._ 1834 ; eicept la the, county" ; ."of
Philadelphia, e,
wher the , Conti 'of 'Quarter
"Se§sions shall appOiht three - persons as ap
praiseriibf taverri,lioense.
_ •
' Sic. 15. Liceri6l.O frarned..' • • 2
.::••
The 16th, 17th, 18th and 19th sections re
fer to the duties'of as`Sessers;aPpraiserS, - and
,othef officers -id relation to-licenses: granted.
The 20th section-provides thatithe number
-of: license's granted to.keepers of hotels, inns
ot-taverns,: in.the aggregate shall not exceed
in-the cities -one to every hundred .taxables,
.nor .in the several counties in the• State more
than\ one to every two hundred- , taxibles, the
number of said taxables to be taken from the
returns of-the previouiryear.:
- The subsequent _sectionsto the 28th, pre
scribe the penalties fOr the violation' of the
law, and the duties of theCourtsiJustices and
Constables'uneer it:' , r•i
..The 28th'a'nd last section' is as follo'ws :
SEC._ 28. That 'nothing • herein contained
shall ,be• construed to impair or =alter the pro
visions of an ::act apProvedthe . 26th day of
February;' A; D. 1855, - entitled. " An act tO
prevent the saleof intoxicating-liquors on
the first' day of the week, commonly called
Sundayl" nor any of- 'the provisions of the
act - of - thwBth - of May, 1854,: entitled "An act
to protect certain:rights,.and prevent '•abuses
in the:sale" and-use or intoxicating drinks,"
but the act entitled " An act to restrain' the
sale ,of intoxicating lignors,” and-all . other
laws_or,partinflaws •inconsistent herewith
are hereby; repealed- nor. shall 'any license
heretofore granted be annulled:
The Washirigton trnian vs Lbrd
endon.
•• The Washin,gton griion, referring to Lord
Clarendon's declaration itr the House of Lords,
that an apology_had been tendered •the,U9i
ted States for Mr..Crampton's ; violation:of
the laws of this country, says: .•
- -We-venture to say, and we do .not, say, it
lightly, , that Lord Clarendonis statement,
,in
the - HonseOf Lords is "substantially incorreCt,
and we shall be greatly disappointed if Hug
is:not the judgement ofbothleciuntries 'when
the,dgeuments shall be made.-publie.•
_lt has been said that an apology has,• been
tendered by England to the United States, for
- thewrong done to theirlawS and sovereign
rights,'nrid , that our government line 'refused
to accept it r and an effort is made.by the of
gans.of the British Ministry to . impress . the
English people with the belief that President
Pierce's administration is unreasonable; but;
from what we have heard of the - correspon
dence, we venture to assure our readers that
the facts therein 9ontained will .expose this
stratagem, and prove to the satisfaction of
every candid man that no such apology has
been made. •The documents•will'enable the
peephsef the. nited States to: judge of the
merits of case, and of the
,grounds otn
Which Lord Clarend - on'A accuracy, is
peaehed. If Wears not `much Mistaken as to
the
_disclosures which will be made. by:Abe
documents, ,it will be found that,. cur laws
and, territorial. rights have'been openly viola : .
ted by:British officials Within our jurisdic
tion'; and that not only'has nO offer of
faction,, or even:acknowledgment - of-an: , error
beep made,,butacts, most manifestly : in:KW !
lation of our laws are, defeeded ,and,jastified.,
exercising the :privilege of cOMplaip-,
ing, and respeCtftilly suggesting' that we are
entitled- :to -,some: redress for 'fatal: blow
struck at eur,sovereig,nly, we,are threatened
by the organs of the British - rninistiy'with a
visit - of the 'British fleet to 'burn "our :Cities;
devastate dui boastS r and kindle.'thifitimelof
a servile war. To make bluster_a Uttle
more'redoubtable, we are told that the - French
fleet is to Talie'part'in the . 'pleasant pastime.
With Free •bu r rein tiliiis are; - ai thalierld
knows.. oft-, the Fleeting ,of::eordiality- -"and
fr iendship; : ap a it is,,boieved t hat...- . there is ft,
inutual'desire that - ,they r shOnld so remain... 7-
It is not, therefcire, very probable - 'that the
Empefor of the French' will accommodate
his ally Witbhis fleet for • any , such enter
prise. - • • • , -
-• Come who may, or what may, Great 'grit=
ain may;take this assurance, that the United
Staterwill Claim a due respect for her riatiOn= - .
al rights and Will•persist in aEsertingthein.--'
This conntry -will•never donsent to:open its
territories to the 'recruiting agents • of 'adven-.
takers Or potentEitek. If it pelds . 'iii pritish
pretensiensin relation to recruiting; it,must.
give•hp'-itri olainri• to'be an independent na-',
tion; if we ere , not much .niisinfOrmed,' . the
recruiting, - gneat bas asstinied agraver as
pect than-it isten,erally suppoSed fo wear.--
Tithe acts:of'BritiSh officials, approved and
vindicated 'by their gOvernment; are to pass
unnoticed; the United States' 'are .'are
in' the eyes' of i the 'world ; They are nOi an ,
independent; poWer. Undei-. the' principle,
which England 'claims, - she - may - :rot 'only
exercise -Open 'our sail- one- of '.the - highest
right's it4f soVereignty, but., if She . ' can es
tabliSlC it,- sae throws open 'OM; - Country to
the 'recruiting sergeant of every nation 'on
the , globe.- .-•-' •
E
=EI
: : X.41,t,Q.11 : =.0,','1:8.6,
•
p • • ....VPD!,-.7 1, a4
Tflat_England Can, Do and .What the United
, • ,Siate.sCknnot.
tl , lO London Daily. Tel.egrapli, Feb. 24.)
,been' taken for:granted .V•a ( large
Ait'ophirtion - of the
_AnieriCan press that Eng-'
-laeid• in 'a land''eciritest would be POwilitlass
'upon the .American 4 contirrent This
grarid.mistake, and we _hasten_ to ,correct so,
palpable an error. 'Bay that war has broken
nut—take th futtran ted=4 hen on theli.mer
leant continent:would be - the . only'seene 'of
land operations: We do-not, :however,,pre
-sume to talk of an invasion inland.. That is
absurd; we Would haVe no
,chance. The
fitibt would be'utioiit he frontiers of our Brit
ish North-American Provinces. Ours would
be on shore a defensive ,_campaign. The
Americans say, declare war, and the Canadas
are ours: We deny in toto this' assertion: It
doubtlesS, very- encouraging for Ain eifea
to believe so, bait is far-fetched; in-reality.
We have in the British provinces a, popula
tion of =above' 3,000,006; - of these fully 345,-,
•984 are of an age to bear arms,,and are' nius
j.ered in the militia.-. The
- militia of_the. Can
adas and maratimne - provinces number,.,
a grand' total Of above 400,000 Men by'
: the last census, and is thifi subdivided: Iri
Lower .Canada into 36 regiments, forming
1.73, battalions ,and 137„769, men,, in= Western
'Canada there - are,.4- re„uirnents, com p rising
battalions`. 44,122,c0 men ; 3p this
force is attached ai legimerit" of - cavaley,,, 11
"ccimpanieS, of 'artillery,„,,ag. '6„; reginieni :of
rifles, the m tia; 'Of Wm, -firuaisFick, conSistS
of '1 'regiment "Of.'ca,viliy, in 10 troops, 3, de
tached corps of irregular cavalry; 1 regiment
of artillery, i§ regiments of militia, and - sonte
'ifle'dorpi,-comprising a grand total ..of ; 1030
sergeants, and 27,260 • mill:. and,.,file; . the
Militia. of Noii . a:Scotia nuiriber,'so,oo.o meth;
militia a Prince .EdWaiirs Islalid 7,302
men.
Our militia is one of the finest upon the
North American - Continent Whereas, the
American militia,' as far as discipline and or - -
ganization is concerned, chiefly :exists upon
paper. Throughout the
. 13iitish. ,P,royinces
arelarge'numbers - of military rien4onerg; in
valuable as a point d'appui for regimental or
ganization. There are also livridredsOf•reti 7
red British' officers from the regular' 'army,
Whose,professional experience is above - price.
Every regiment of Canadian • •militia would
contain Cully twenty per cent; of' old disci;
plined officers. And, -mark, discipline will
decide: a frontiers war. Independently -Of
these ,resources, numerically, England has
during the.last - few years riot been behind
hand in organizing her. militia. Prior to the
proposed.withdrawal of a large portion' of our
regular regiments, a plan was drawn up - by
an officer of experienee•in the' Provinces,
Colonel Sleigh, and approved of by the Gov;
ernment, and by it transmitted• to the Gover
nors of the British North American Provin
ces, for the reorganization of the provincial
army. This plan embraced the - fOrmation of
garrison corps'and`-lerrcible battalions; and
has been acted Upon in Cdnada, and, in fact - ,
forms the groundwork of the present, organi
zation Of the Canadian Militia: The chief
towns in the Canadai 'no w possess These cerps,
and,in efficiency, -and discipline, they, are
second to none on the American continent.
We have shown that we possess, an -effi
cient, well-olliOered militia of 400;000 - then. =
We can send to Canada front - the United
Kingdom, within six weeks, 60,000 bayonets
,--our embodied militia,, equal. to , regulars,
could furnish alone' that quota--and • 6000
from the. West - India Command, -Our artil
lery is one of:: the ..finest in:the -world •;• and
thus, with 456,000 men, militia and regulars,
we can defy any attack from the -, American
lines. The prospect.of a European peace is
so great, that we can also 'almost count' upon
$O,OOO men fromrthe. - Crimea in - addition to
the above. In , a campaign of invasion, the
enemy must bringtheir commissariat of sup
ply with them. We are •On the defensive-in
our own country, with:ample supplies. -We
have . railways extending: from Quebec •fo
Western Canada, and in twenty four hotirs we
could Move a .large army to any given 'point.
The Americans couldnot take usby'a• cottp de .
main. Our telegraph , wires place every point
of the Provinces in immediate contact. In
Canada,an-American army would' be thrash
ed to -its heart's content. It Could:not live
twelve hours across-tire frontier. :•Brag , and
Buncombe is one. • thing ; :but Aliscipline is
quite-another element,-and in that' respect
we are - pre-eminently.tsuperior. Canadte'is
safe.- ; T. ! et• Arnericans , ponder.' over this' fact,
and at once:give over-•all• their -nonsensical
rhndamciotacieahout an invasion:of our Prom;
inces. • •- - : • - •
We have shown what the AiriericariS - •ean.;
not do, now we will-point out' What 'we can,
do:• , , Our Navy is the InoSt POWerful :that
floats. in-ships, guns;' calibre 'and-- . IbB
can , sweep . the Ocean from the Arctic to the
Torrid Zone- - --from the Atlantie -to the Pa
cific. Nair; before'in England's history did
Britannia more thoroughly rale the waves.—
The American seaboard is ours. We - could
annihilate.:their•commerce. •As theii'
vy, it is absurd tolalk- of it; the Aniericans
themselves - confess that we could blow it out of
the water'in • one broad side. Then 'how, are
the Atlaittiecitie's of the United States situ a- .
fed? There is not one city ; from Passama
quoddy'Bay in. the North, to Galveston', Bay
in the South, which hai water enough to float
a frigate, or
,gun-boat, that we cannot batter'
to the ground in. 'twenty four hours. The
following" ci ties 'in the United States ar6 "corn.'
parativelpiit our mercy after war is otice-de ,
stared: Portland,, Maine-; Portsmouth",• New
Hampshire; Boston, Massachusetts; New=
port, Rhode Island ; New Haven, Connecti
cut ;New York, •Brooklin Jersey` - City,
with all towns on Long •Island . t3onnd ;
Baltimore; Maryland; •Wilmington; - North?
Carolina,; Charleston, SOOth Carblita , ; St.
Augustine" and -Apalachicola, Florida ;:11/la.: ti
bile, 'Alabama; and Galveeton,. - 'rexas, while
San Fianciscois the certain prize of our Pa.=
cific squadron'. • • •
Independently of our vast military resour
ces; in our thoroughly "loyal provinces, ,wa '
must not forget that we can. 'command ttie .
Lakes. We could "despatch • 'a powerful flee t
SEMI
ME
al atfskmers andi ; gunboataup the St; Law
rence to Quebec, and from thence, via Mon
treal and the Rideau Canal into Lake Ontario,
through tbe Welland•Ca.ital ;into 'LakerErie,
And via Detroit and Lake St,,Clair into Lakd
Enron. lelessen the - :fraught of water, ,the
-. heavy - guns, oar' 32 .- bilid - 68=paunders and
chief stores of shot - and - could; if;necea
eary, be sent per rail from -Quebec 'to Canada,
West, there to,be reshipped at ear Lake ports
oe.board' our men-of-war. Thus we , pouf('
'sweep the Lakes, and every Ainericali sto.%Vn
and 'village, from- Mackinavi, Michigan'' to
_Oswego,Lake Ontario. If war was declared,
our _fleetewould at Ponce appear before the
chief of - the, Atlanlic cities : --Boston,
,New
York arid Charleston—indidate,that th.e first
American soldier who CiciSsed , the 'Canadian
-frontiers, and!these , LOWIIS would be battered:
, to. the ground, ; and Canada will be safe fog a
. generation to come. 7 - And doubtless such
'would be 'Our
' policy
In the above 'details oratir military and na
val operations, we have not referred; to :the
condition afthe,Southern. States. Carrany
reasonable inan'believe that, if a war _broke
out, and with the command - we 'will have of
-all.the southern :Porta; -- ‘thei` 'slaves,: —go
; through fire and: water,,*hen cppartunity of
fers, to escape from their horrid. bondage, will
See the St. 'George on the Main, and not rise
en masse - to lihnrate t hemselved, and loin 'the
:free ,• standard of England; Our splendid
West, India regiments would soon discipline
the sjayes,.and i )ye hesitas not ;o assert,,that
the war would result in the ,liberatic - ri of
three millions of fellow-creafirresi now 'held
in - the iron chainsnof slavery- , ;;Letits
war, and the :United, ,then, become, the
dis-United
; States. The , Republic; Will be at
'an . end. •
• KNOW7NOTHINGISM DON'T PAT.-4'lle edi
tor of the • leading Know-Nothing; - parer" in
Tennessee addresses his delincinerit' siabScri ,
bees as follows - •
--!'As manYof • yonad will enclose to=ws
what you owe us justly,Ave will credit you
on.our books, snd write opposite your names
that you are Gentl6ien and
,Christians !
Those of you Who' eatiq pay, and will Write
to us,. acknowledging your-.indebtediless ' We
will record as clever fellows, and those of you
who.will not do either, we will publish this
spring, iti an extra sheet, as - a. Set of on:ACE :
'Lass nasoA - ts, willing - to 'have - a . poor man
labor for, youlfor. years for nothing, and 'pay
for paper, ink, and the 'lira : of hands to serye
you, without pay.
"Come to Knoxville, you loidy :rascals, on
a pilgrimage, and see our - little ones; 'chips
of theold block,' looking dagger's at us, and
crying for, bread. ;Come and See us
_wit-from
elbows out„airifthe efiTcerS of the law lead
ing us about for debts' created to' furnish . you
a paper, and you .will fork over at once ! -
"And you hypocrites, who are members of
different churches, owing.us ,for our . paper,
hoW dare you, around' your tardily altars,
night and 'morning; pray to God, 'pay US . this
day our.delbdts-aS we pay to. others.' • lie
knows. you owe its,. and ,won't pay, and until
you do pay; . yonmay rimy yourselves out of
breath, arid yeti Will never' be heard 'yeS'yoti
saintly- villains,- you have - been owing us longenough to make- us 'poor, halti• miserable ;
blind, and naked,' and yourselves „ride at ont
expense. You get to, heaven without paying
us up T. -Never •!" '
~ WHEAT rLQ. lLbrots.—The Alton ( III.) Cour=
ier,.speculating in regard to . the
,prospect of
wheat, says the' crop" of last, year is not all
marketed ; and that 'part of it which his left
the producers' hands itufae.from being in•the
hands of the consumers . . -It Anticipates a
Very fine Crap , the cgming. season, both on
account athe . increased number of acres
sown and the favorable Winter far the grain,
uninterrupted cold Weather' and snow-tieing
good for,
,the grain, , The Chicago, Journal
says
. .
•,„ •
The snow „ which has fallen (hiring the, past
60 days is equalle flit:3 inches mannre.-
People capable .of: estimating Matters inia - ciine
that. the wheat crop of 1856 will be thcfarg
est ever bariested in iliis'country,.. To L es9-
mate the value - of the snow:upon the groupd
at • ten -millions would be 'a low
figure. The Peoria Press• says tbe• quantity
of grain. in store in that oity , is 490;000 bush
els. It aade:: "The -country_ is _still, , filled
with grain, and every' 'clay the reeeipld are
increasing. We presurrie - there ie flat a town
in Central Illinois,. nor between. Cl:tient' and
St. LouiS, that can shawas.good a recor4of
their winter transactions as penria,” 7,These
speculations and facts - 'have" an important
,bearing upon prices. • •- •
•
•A
SHARP, DODGE.--Fyler, who murdered
his wife some time Since, near .Syracuse, N.
Y., is playing a sharp game upon'the counsel
who : defended•him.
_lt appears that theagree-'
meat between them:was, In case .Fyier..wats
saved" froin hanging, his .courisel- were .to
have $4,000. Of this amount 'sl,ooo was
paid in cash, and the remainder secured by a
mortgage oribisfarrn,!-.. The counsel put: Ina
pleae(insanity, , and Fyler was sent to the
, Lunatic - 'Asylum. The Mortgage is now
about due, and the' holders, on proposing to
foreclose it, were. met with the defence that
if the maker of it was insane when the mui:
der was committed, , could he have been sane
at the time of ,giving 'the mortgage Ft looks .
as if the lawyers were caught this time..
33:7`The!'Philadelphia Daily News,..'-whith
has been for some ttme, in the jnterest f of : the_
Kno'w-NOthings, haS become convinced Of the:
weakness 'of the organiiatiOy antl - .thOti ) . ex- -
presses its conviction in - WedneSday'a 'paper :
",The fact is, : and it vvould;bffuwarsa..than
folly 'to .disguise. _ Know-pOthing.ism .is
effete. Jr has lost the" res . peCt and cOnfidence
of the mass of peOpl6; "adli j
the foot ball ofocirrupt arni ;unprincipled' OIL
litical demagoguea r who seek platleAtod pow`-
er by means of its, secret machinery, but in ;.
whom the people"haie 'nO conptfence, - and
never wills support any movement they
mqy 41114eriatke.4 2 ! - •;: I
("Love ari'd i'dough eietiot be hid
r z,
1 • .. . , . .4
tli6 l , • Fe to
afeetirtg of Ealtedrit firckh-the 1r...n0-47•Noth-
.'• trig National: Convieritititai
thellerthfirwan'd Western 'Detentes %who
l
ixtlted fitful the K Wm-Nothing islationa con
vention, yesterday,: met yesterday_ t a.4ern?mi,
I it the Merchants' . Fourth street,l3e
r tow A rc h, and - oriinized by thii serectionAd
'‘ the-following named officers:,- -
•. ( ;.:Py4sideot-- r Es.7oPverogr Thomas
Secretaries—L. G-Pcok and L. H. Web , .
ster. t •
"The toildwing riaitied detentes were Frei-
pamysh,ir,g—TE2r , GoFernpr, f Colby.,
c,onngcticut.-,-4. G..rec,ls, J. E. Dunham '
H. Gii's'wakl,` E. - D. It', - COOtb.'
" Rhode 1 Perkins, ifightibkale, Oliver
Massachusetts 7 -AY- ~§. c.T4Prs.toPi Z.
Panghorg., `
r .
- Pe -- n"nsylvarkiii- - :=John M.
Re,' T.- I . 'Coffee; -S:' P.iTha - s6. ' •
Ohio—A. F. Spooner, T. 11.., Ford,
Olds, 0. J. Fishhook, Thomas . MoClees, E.
T. turievanillri-LC. , liedges; H. Baker,
N.• -}L licob •Eggbattf, W.: - B.
A I lison ~ W. B. Chaprtp44 4 *.P. Rogers, - Chas.
Pias.
Nicholas, •D. Stambaugh ,, W.
H. Webstee; W': Peiiri"Clsik
• IllinOis - -itedrycS:: Jennings,.
- • M.r.,Clark,c, of.lovva, rnoyed: that 'a commit:
,tee of one -front: each State bpt,a.ppoipted,,to
prepare a protest - or
presSiite`of thelien'tirnents of the body.
--"Mt.:ClarliZsaid:thatiria.object-Was•tiAalfe
sueh•a;tdotest prepared ,as ,would.. stove. that
ihe,othp r_b o ody ; .l,yal,npt -.„,
A diS'ciissiin arose on the motion.
Mr. Dunham, of Conn.. said that he world
act with, it,t he, Fe : se ot, body, if 1 here . was-to . be
no affiliation with the' I?,tack
Fre was stilt an'Amierieari, and ivotild con.-
thine to 14'so„.buthe Could-not/Stand on:the
platform adopted by the, other.
Mr.. Booth, of .Conn. 7.: was-, of the same
He said that if Mr. 'Fillmore be
nominated by the other Convention, and he
would be willing to stand-on the anti-Nebras
ka Platform;he'conld - do — foilim. He had
bolted fromthe'Ju i tie Convention, becaiiie he
could not • stand" on :the Platform with the
twelfth.section in it; he had bolted from.the
Conirentiort to 7 daY, because it had refused to
repudiate - the Nebraska Iniquity ; and With,
out - inetining to be irreverent,- Said he, I swear
that I ,wAI ,whenever that meal.
sure is sustained. . „ .•
'Mr: StaMbangh,'Ot bbio,' thought it would
not do for the bolteritd be trio stiff. If'the
Republicans could meet.them on the Ameri
can platform,,he:4l not see w, h},
not embrace., He,expected, he,,sa id, to stump
the Siaie next "fall' Fos' 'the Republican 'rhea-
General Williamson; :of Pa.,:_saidithatf::he
hoped they would not be puthefore the, pea ,
pre , wrongfully', ffe. , thought: that - if -they
protested against - the - NebraSya bill, 'and
against the man whobadeigtied t he irifailiiiuS
Fugitive Slave : Billi:it-.w,ould ,be :enough.-L»
He wanted. the, body to go. before the,: people
as A.meqea,:ni, notes Reptiblicans.. , said
--
lie,yOUpneus 'before' the people as Repttbli-,
cans Sou destroy-us, is, intich We are - de. ,
stroyed by the ection,..of the. Bother • - !botiy i :: ire
refusing to, repudiatejlie ; Nettraelca -
After, deme further diSctissior, tbe, : mot ion
to - appoint -a Committee prevailed,' and - the
following named were.sselected:—GoVerner
Colby N H E •Niuhtingale,.R. ;M.:
S. Thurston, Mass; Edmund Perkins,, Conn
R. M. Riddle, Pa; W. B. Allison, 'Oble ;L.
H. - WebSter; Hi.
l'he:.Bott6ra-liien,..tuljourtiedlo.meet at •8 6'
clock, P.
XV F.IgX;CG §ESSIODTt
The seceding b
delegates met at. 2 o'clock, at
the same place-4 h eAle rehO t 4/. Hotel.
There - vvere . "ciuite a - Min - 11)er present "who
were. not; at.the afternoon • session. - "-Among
them was Gavernor!Johnston, of Pa.:
The following protest was presented: by
the committee , appointed ih • the afternoon,
through the-Chairmanf_Mri-Riddle; of Pa:.
• To the American, Party of the Union:—
The' under Signed 'delegates, ..to th e Natiiiiied
Nominating Convention, now' Iry session at
Philadelphia,• find .thernselVes compelled :to
dissent ,from,,the.,,,principles -avowedrby that
body. , And hololpgtheopinion i as they do s
that the resfOration - of file MisSouri compro
mise, denianded by' the freenien. Of the North . ;
is,reclress of atvupdeniabiaiwrting, and - the
insertion of it in spirit at : leastiindiepensable
to. ,the c vepose ,ofequintr3l' theY_ bate re
garded the .refiisa f, t fiat Convention. to , fec
ogniFe.the well-defined opinions of the. Northh,
and of, the. Americans of the free States ,upon.
thfit . question as a deniat,of 'their rights ands
tebuke of • their sentiments. .
„
.
_ ,They,have therefoire withdrawn from 'the
Norninatfng Convention, refusing, to : partici,"
pate in . .theproposell rior,niriations, and, now
address themselves to.the Americans of the
country, especially of the. States they.repie-:
sent, to justify and; approve; their action ; and
to the end that nominations conforming_ ,to
the overruling' sentiments of 'the donut Or ; on
the. great issue may be .regularly and au
ciously,made„ the undersigned propose to. the ;
Americans in all the - Stated to assertible in
their several State organizations, end 'that
delegate,be scritto the Convention to meet
in the city:Or N'eis***ltink: On' Thursday, - the,
15th of Jtirre".'iiext; for the =purpose 'a nonik
riming candidates for President' 'and- -Yicrie
President of the Ilitiled:Sto4eo:
The above wasiadopted as herewith
pre
sented:
=EI
. ,
. ,
"The - discussion was confined to a feW tie
those .present / arid was of a rather .4iay char..;
actes. . ~ ' , ~. : . - . . ,
'Some of ,the idelegales decided, in favor. of.
uniting tvitli,the RepUhlicans,, wiiile others
said,that if that were dope they could not-re, .
main in the,organization. .Adjourned; :li.-- ,
- (1-:.IAT,ha.t. ' is tha t dog twitinikat 3"• asked r
a fop,. whose boots were more, .polished than
his ideas. • , -.•' : •
.of7r"-Why;" said a. •bystander, "he •sees.
another. puppy in your boots:'? ,
tom . did Adam, use a walking-stibk-1
When Eve presented him with a Cain.
=il
KI
tea... ,
*
EMI
MGM