Setters o ni an tt qmblican. Thursday, May 27, 1S52. FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER, Jacob Hoffman, oi JJerks county. FOR PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS. SENATORIAL, A. E. Brown, James Pollock. Samuel A. Purviancc. REPRESENTATIVE. 1. William F. Hughes, 2. James Tntqnair, 3. John W. Stokes, 1. John P. Vcnee, 5. Spencer Mclhaine, G. James W. Fuller, 7. James Penrose, 8. John Shadier, J. Jacob Man-hall, 10. Oharles P. Waller, 11 Davis Alton, 12. M. C. Mcrcur, 13. Ner Middlc&uarlh. M. James H. Cainpbell, 15. James 1). Paxlon, 10. James K. Davidson, 17. Dr. John McCullock, 18. Ralph Dr.tke, 10. Sohn Linion, 20. Archibald Robertson, 21. Thomas J. Digham, 22. Lewis L. Lord 23. Christian Meyers, 21. Dornian Phelps, Whig SSale Couvciiiioia. At a meeting of the Whig State Central committee, held at Ilarrisburg on Tuesday, the 4th inst, it was resolved that the Dele- gates to the late Whig State Convention be remie.ted to assemble in Philadelphia on the NINETEENTH DAY OF JUNE next, at 9 o'clock, A. M. for the purpose of nominating thoritics for protection against her rebcl a candidate for Judge of the Supreme Court, . . . .. . , to till the vae saucy occasioned by ihc death of the IIoq. Richard Coulter. J. TAGGART, Chairman C. Thompson Jones, Secretary. Locofoco Meeting. . The meeting of our Locofoco friends held at the Court Ilouse, in this place, on Monday evening last, was rather poorly attended. J. II. Eylenberger, Esq., was called upon to preside, and Eesolutions friendly to James Buchanan forPresideut, and approbatoryofWm.Bigler,as Govern or, were passed. During the absence of the Committee, the assemblage was addressed by Hon. M. M. Dimmick. The usual committees to hold Delegate Elections iu the fall, were also appointed. JKSf We call the attention of the read er to the card of John. II. Melick, in serted in the llepublican of to-day. His house is large and well adapted for a Ho tel, and visitors will find the accommoda tions of a very superior order. Go (ley's Lady's Book. The June number of this 3Iagazine is already out, and a beautiful one it is too. 'Friendship's Offering," and the "Dcbar- & dour's First Love," are truly well execu ted engravings and the reading matter excellent. " The Massachusetts Teacher' for May has been received. This work, which should be in the hands of erery teacher and friend of education in our country, is edited ly a committee of the 1 Massachusetts Teach ers Association.1 It contains much valuable information, both in the theory and practice of teaching. It is published monthly for 1 a year, by fcamuel Loohdge, 10 Devonshire street, Boston. 41'J lies upon our table. CONyE.VTS. Sir Roger de Coverly, The Naturalist in Jamaica, Physical Constitution of the Sun, Jjord Holland's "Domestic" Reminiscences, Mediaeval Hymjns, Cruskshanks1 Comic Almanac, Edgar Poe, Foreign Refugees in London, American Ships, Prison Scene during the Reign of Terror, Ice, Snow, &c. Poetry: The Stepmother, Short Articles: Harper & Dickens Literary Circles of London ; Rising iu the World Where does Wood come from Vi- lality of Seeds Origin of the Eskimos Question for the Bench and the Bar Thun der of Wnterfalls A Parsee Lady Dissipa tion. A glance at the above will show the reader its quality. Well may it be called the best ATntrjirmp rf nnr rvmntrv nnnrnvorl nc Jt line . . . rr . it rJ been by such men as btorv, Kent, and J. Qf Adams. It is published weekly by E. Lit- Itell &. Co. Boston. Terms: Six Dollars a : a year. 1'rospectus win oe puDiisncu next : week. 2tSad Accident. Elizabeth Jane, i daughter of Mr. Thomas Smiley, aged about two years, fell into his spring on ' ; Monday last, and was drowned: A Convention of Mechanices, 'we learn from the Scieniiic American, met at i Rochester on the 20th inst., to take meas ures for the establishment of a People's College, to be entirely free from sectional influences. The obiect of the Collere is a complete and thorough education for the sons and daughters of working-men inenofoil. It is designed to make the College, iu part,, self-supporting, and to teach science and art in a true and profitable manner. Engineering and machine making will be taught, as far as it is practicable it is intendeduhat prac- lical mechanics, in combination with sci- ence, shall be thoroughly drilled into the sixity sheep which Mr. Jewett, of Yer students. This-will ive it an advantage mont, has just imported from Spain, liave for reaLpractical life over many Colleges arrivedj in charge of a Spanish shepherd. in our land. , . Gov. Boutwell has vetoed the Maine law "m massed by the liugielature of Mass. ! fullest from California. New York, May 17. The" steamship ' Illinois, with the California mails to the ! 18th ult, 325 passengers, and $1,252, 300 in gold dust on freight, and 250,000 ' in the hands of passengers, arrived here ' this morning, at an early hour. , J The Panama Railroad is progressing, and will be opened within five -miles of I Gorgona during the present mouth. A piece of pure gold, weighing 300 ounces, was recently found near Soclora. "The Fugitive Slave bill has passed both! branches of the State Legislature, and the Senate has passed a .bill to give the public printing to the lewest bidder. There has been marked improvement in all kinds of business throughout the ! ican Congress had rejected the treaty with . beginning of the public business, a curi gtate. ! extraordinary .unanimity. Only two men j ous question might arise as to the proba- Two men, charged with the commission j i the two Ilouses had voted for it. The , ble length of time requisite for the full of a theft, were recently taken from the Mexican people are as unanimously op- ' transaction of it. We know not any rule authorities of Coloma, by a mob, and hung. The papers contain notices of sev crafothcr acts of mob violence. Accounts from the Society Islands rep resent that the revolt there is progressing, and that Queen Pomare had applied to j the English, American and French au- 1UU3 "jeci, uud an uecnueu. ihe weather at ban JJraucisco has been extremely hot. General Anderson, formerly of Ten nessee, has been .appointed to a vacant seat on the bench of the Supreme Court. Eleven hundred Chinese emigrants landed at San Francisco, during the last fortnight. A line of electric telegraph is about be ing constructed from San Francisco to Marysville. The steamer Sierra Nevada has brought San Francisco dates to the 18th of April. The news was brought down to Panama by the steamer Northerner, which brought at the same time $1,520,000 in gold. The Sierra Nevada brought on nearly 3400,000 in gold dust. At the manicipal election at Sacramen to, on the 5th ult. the Whigs carried eve rything. A recent arrival as San Francisco brought several gentlemen with slaves one with 12, another 6, another 7, anoth- er o , and so on. Of course, they expect to hold them in the free State by the strong hand, as the organic law makes the bondmen frcethe moment their feet press the soil of California. By a copy of the Panama Star, of the oth instant, we have the information that : xt v p . - of a treaty with the State of Ecuador, made in 1832, have felt themselves obli- j I irated to assist that State against the ! machinations of Florcs and all others aiding and abetting him in his entcrprsie, and l All AllO UiUVl UlJlUt UI1U i r i i i accordingly proclaimed ; , a. r i volun tary or forced, of the President has lor a loan, either two millions oi dollars, and called tor a 11 1 11 1 force of 20 000 men to serve with arms, to assist the sister republic. This is con- . sidereu to amount to a declaration or war against both Peru and Chili, which States are accused of fitting out vessels for the assisstancc of Flores. Foreign Itvs. By the arrival of the Africa at New York, we have Liverpool dates to the ISth inst. The report that Meagher, the Irish ex ile, had escaped, was false. A " Crystal Palaco" is about to be erected in Paris Lord John Ilussell stated in the Ilouse of Commons that there is no reason what ever to apprehend hostile intentions on the part of France toward's England. The anniversary of Emperor Napoleons death was commemorated in Paris on the 5th instant with great pomp, closing with a grand banquet. Paris is crowded with strangers, attracted thither to witness the b 1 ' trio Tfr nr tin Mini I (urninnsnnn ivna of admission, to witness the .ceremony of distributing tlfe eagles to the troops have been issued. The 'rumor is still un that the troons on this occasio make a formal re qucst of the Presidcnt t0 the titlc 0f Emperor. The Cotton and Gram , market? were without change. f TWO DAYS LATER By the arriv al of the Humboldt, at New York, we have news two days later. - The cotton and grain markets remained without niat- erial change. No news of importance from England. Iu France it was anticipated that a ; proclamation would be issued on the 10th : establishing the Empire notwithstanding the President's former declarations that , he would not assume that position, j The Emperor of Austria is soon to be , married to a Princess of Saxony. Choice Sheep. One hundred and Mr. Jewett paid 824,000 for the flock. Thorc was one buck which cost S900,nd would shear twenty -four pounds of wool. J fP1. T T..t:.il PlrtriTrnnf inn I JQy XU12 JJUUUlUtU illlUllt" uuuri-uwuu wilbmeetvat Baltimore -on Tuesday next, fhe-lst of June. " Trouble Willi Mexico. The Washington correspondent of the New York Herald states that our Minister to Mexico, Mr. It. P. Letcher, has ad dressed to theMexican$Govcrnnient, a communication declaring that that govern ment must confirm theTehuautepee treaty, recognizing the validity oi me uaray grant, and that no other . arrangement would tor a moment be listcneu to. . This warlike communication is said to have produced, as it well might, no little , alarm in the Mexican cabinet. llieiUex- ' posed to the treaty or rather' the Garay grant as their Beprcsentatives in con- gress. " The " Garay grant," which is the sub ject of controversy, is oue of great niagni- tuue so great tnat it is wonaeriui tuat the Mexican government should have been so imprudent as to make it. It was made in 1842, and conveyed to a Mexican citi zen named Garay and his assigns, the right to construct a rairoad across the Isthmus of TYhuantepce, to connect the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, and also the lands on both sides of the road, to the width of ten leagues, for the purpose of coloniza tion. By the terms of the grant, the con struction or the road was to begin, by a certain day. This time has since expired but was extended when Salas was m pow er in Mexico. Garay sold his right to the English house of Manning & Mcintosh and they transferred it to Mr. Hargous an American citizen, now residing in New York. Others, citizens of the United States, have become associates -with Mr. Hargous, and all the rights granted by Mexico are at this day held by citizens of the United States, united in N. Orleans in a company known as the Tehuautepec Railroad Co. of N. Orleans. The com pany, within the extended time allowed by- Mexico, began the work in good faith. They sent a large scientific party under Major Barnard, of the United States Engineers, with passports for protection, issuea oy iviexican authority, ana tnat party has made a survey. About the time their survey was completed, fhey were ordered out of the country. Meanwhile a treaty had been negotia ted between our government and that of Mexico, confirming this Garay grant, which treaty the Mexican Congress re fuses to confirm. It is stated that some time ago, Mr. Letuhcr wrote to Mr. Ben jamin, the President of the Tehuantepec Co., requesting him to come to Mexico . 1 ., , , and try to arrange the matter, by a ban uoni"s 11 eruara f l ni auu 1 ecePun ,a ?ew grant for a right of way alone. Mr. Kiini mmn rlit rn-ir rrr filial iiln I nfrthnf juu i u. ti j. in uiu iivu iai ojotijiiVi now demands that the Mexican govern ment shall acknowledge the Garay grant 1.1 1 nil f 1 and the claims of the company formed , ,T .. , -.. J under it, in the United Mates, ' Outt Country. In 1702, the corner stone of the present capitol at Washington was laid. At that time, General Wash ington, in whose honor the new seat of government was named, officiated. Fifty eight .years afterwards, viz: on the 4th of July, 1851, the corner stone of an exten sion of the buildings was laid, and the Sccreatry of the State made an address, in the course of which he presented a sketch of the comparative condition of our country at the two periods. 1 Then we had fifteen States, now we have thirty-one. Then our whole population was three millions, nowjjffis twenty-three: Then Boston had 18j000 people, now it has 130,000. Philadelphia had 42,000, now it has 409,000. ' New York had 33.000, now it has 515,-! 000. Then our exports were 831 they are now 8151,000,000. The area of our territory was then 800,000 square miles, it is now3,300, 000. Then we had no railroads, now we have 8,500 miles, of railroad. Then we had no telegraph, now we have 12.000 miles of it. Then we had' 200, post-offices, now we have 21,000. The revenue from postage then was 8100,000. Now it is 85,090,000. Mongrel TIarriaffe in Alabama. By a curious omission in the statute of Alabama, relating to marriages, it ap-j I pears that marriages between whites and celebrated Venitian Countess, nowresid blacks are lawful in the Stato. Licenses ' ing in Paris, fonns a fruitful 'subject for are directed to be issued to authorize mar- ; scandal ihthe salons of Ic beau made. riages 'between any free persons in the j She is a lady of surpassing personal at State' not any free "white' person. The tractions, and is said to have been mar question was raised only last session, in 1 "eoto an England nobleman at the age Montgomery county, where a free negro ?f fiffceen bufc her spouse soon supposed man applied for a Iscense to marry a white . w characteristio of -the ,ftf girl, and the officer, taking counsel, war sunny Italy and obtained a, divorce obliged to issue it. The penalties for re-1 At present she is almost twenty-five and fusal are very severe. Tlie omission of whatever doubt there mav exist rnsnpoflnr. the word was evidently an inadvertence, ! but the 'letter of the law is plain. The j rare case of an application for such a li- ! cense has disUlosGd .thcdefcct, and it will ' probably be omcuxlcd. j What Congress is Doing. Almost the only ,new business of the. pfitVweek,',says the National Ihtelligen cer;'oyesterray, "has been the proposition, -intone House, to adjourn for a few days to alltfw the adaption of the Legislative Chamber to the summer heat, before the main business of the session begins ; and 'even into the consideration of such a mat ter as that the interest of the Presidential question found its way, an'd prevented a decision, upon it." Congress, it will be noted, is now in the sixth month ,of its session, and it is just preparing, it would, seem, for begin- incr the. main business of the session. If it requires six months to get fairly at a of three adequate to the solution of tins proposition. When the business of ma king Presidential candidates shall be fin- ished the country may then perhaps ex- pect some .attention to its own. Prolif.ic. Isaac Nathan, a negro, now 67 years of age, born a slave to J ohn Cochran, sen.-, of Middletown, Del., was first married, or what he says was consid ered among the colored people as matri mony, at the age of 17 and has multiplied and replenished the earth as follows : 14 children by the first wife, 4 boys and 10 girls twins twice ; 14 children by. the second wife, all girls twins twice j 23 children by the third wife, 6 boys and 17 girls twins five times, making in all 51. These children all reside in New Castle county, ton. eight of whom are in Wilming- Democracy and Abolitionism. Mr. Chase, the Abolition Democratic Senator from Ohio, now in full commu nion with both the Abolition party and the Democratic party, is exerting himself, by correspondence and other means, to keep up the coalition between these two parties in that State in view of the next Presidential election. Mr. Sumner and Mr. Kantoul, the Abolition Democratic Senator and Representative from Massa chusetts, are doing all in their power to keep up the coalition between the same parties of that State. And the Wilmots of "Pennsylvania, and the Preston Kings, Van Burcns, &c, of New York, are labor ing day and night to accomplish a similar purpose there. Yet in the South, where Democracy opposed, with a nearly unbro ken front the adoption of the Compromise, Democracy claims to be as a national par ity perfectly free from all Abolition alli ances. Tito Chances of Life. Anion" the interesting facts developed ' Peiin standard, with a view to obviate the cities are full of young women, unemploy the recent census, are some in relation j D,eceS3ity fo Protective Tariff. Shall ed or most meagerly paid, who would xl , , , , ' they succeed is a momentous question nn(l abundant Avork and good wages it They are based upon returns from the State of Maryland, and a comparson.ifith previous ones. The calculation it is unne cessary to explain, but the result is actable from which we gather the following illus tration: 10,!368 infants are born on the same day and enter upon life simultaneously. Of these, 1243 never reach the anniversa- ry of their bjrth. 9,025 commence the j second year, but the proportion of deaths ; still continues to be so great, that at the ' end of the third only 8.183. or about : - CM . . ' ' . four-ntths of the original number, survive. i3ut during the tourth year, the system seems to acquire more strength, and thc number of deaths rapidly decreases. It 0 :v , , f'OeS On rlOfimjlSlllfr nnf.il twnnfv.ftnn flin 1 commencement of maturity and the per- of manhood ; 6,302 have reached it. Twenty years more and the ranks are thinned. Only 4,727, or less than half of those who entered life fifty-five years ago ' a i are fett. And now death comes more c . , frequently. Every year the ratio of mor- tality increases, and at seventy there aro not a thousand survivors. A scattered few live on to the closo of thn nf.nrv nnrl j, to the age of one hundred and six, the drama is ended. The last man is dead. An intrigue, which is carried on at pre sent, between Louis Napoleon, and a the existence of the intricrue. it sppms fn be a certain fact, that the mostablv writ- ten communications Louis Napoleon has issued to his government have emanated from her pen. inn nr ninrtinor. nnnirh i : nntnit -.-vk . - - , . . xi. ii a i i. -bv ujyuu before the operation, the young lady's jaw wu- olur ay, ailu empiuyuieiu .mei um- 000 000 v ixu negan to pain her, and the tormation en-, r-v- -r - - ,uuujuuu i , , . , i o x ; tracted. The Ci far-makers. Glass-blow- " : """" U" U1 r .Uai I raPldly untU lfc s removed ;shc era. Pino-iuaker Fur-dressers. &e. &c. i nil in iut i in rr.ir-mm nnm r tiiA vi s-vmi s-j x -j m ( v wvrAAAWtJj UWV UiViiUlUU SU 110 Till Minnesota. A correspondent of the Albany Itegister, writing from Monnesota, says : 'It is a singular fact that the ordinary field birds and songsters, so common in old settlements, and also the honey-bee, unknown here before, have migrated hith er with civilized man. The Indians say that the rattlesnakes follow in his wake also. But be that as it may, while they are numerous further down the Mississp pi, they have not yet made their debut in this locality. In the neighboorhood of Sauk ltapids, 'however, some have boon killed, where, it is said, they were ner seen till recently. Divorce in Oincinnti. We have be fore noticed the rage for divorce which prevails in Cincinnati, and. the frequency and ease with which it is obtained Our former account was that twelve divorces were wanted in one week: the latest in- telligence-from Cincinnati, however, in forms us that thirteen were "iast week o - - granted in one day. It will soon be hard to tell which will carry the day in Cincin nati, the divorce or the pork trade. Calomel is said to be an infallible re medy for the bite of a mad dog. Cleanse the wound as soon as possible with soft water and castile soap, then apply a plas ter of mercurial ointment. Lioxv Wages. A letter in the New York Courier, al luding to a market day in Cambridge, England, and the crowd it brought to town, says : "Some of those with whom I conversed told me that they were farm hands, and complained of the want of employment, ' developenient and diversification of our stating that when they could get work, National industry. It has already crush they seldom earned ovr seven shillings ' ed the production of Raw Silk in this per week, and that-did not support their country and" nearly paralyzed the Silk families ; and at this season, when they Manufacture, both so vigorous and hope have but little or nothing to do, it is with ful but a few years ago. No country in difficulty that they manage to live. A the world is better adapted by nature i shilling a day is the usual wages, and not the growth and manufacture of Silk than one of every jive luis constant employment large portions of our own ; our consuuip at tiat miserable pittance, during the win- tion of silk is immense and rapidly exten tcr. One man told me he had not eaten ding, and the Labor required in this branch a piece of meat for four months, and liv- of industry may in great part be perform ed on oatmeal bread, cheese and ale. cd by aged, decrepit persons and young He did not have a healthy look, nor cau children, who are now reluctantly idle it be expected that he would, under such and burthensome because they can find a regimen. The wealthy student or nothing to do. We might produce Thir contended tradesman jays but little at- ty Millions' worth of Silk per annum teution to the starving rustic, and while without diminishing the production of our enjoying the superfluities of life, never present staples to one half that extent. dreams that his rural neighbors are suf- By naturalizing the Silk Culture and fering for the common necessaries of ex- manufacture, we should insure the train istence, and although called freemen, are ing of tens of thousands of children to in- m reality the veriest slaves. Cambridge, Jf a market day, presents a contrast of poverty and wealth not to be forgotten." $ How would American Laborers like to be on a par with these miserable Slaves of the Money Power of England X It is the policy of the Locofoco partj', with u ten cent Jimmy" at their head to bring wages in this country down to the Euro ! to ever v man who thinks flmf, LiWprs have a right to live as men, and not as starving and degraded serfs. 1 Succcssfssl removal of au.Osseous Tumor from the Under Jaw. We were yesterday shown, by Dr. Swayze, the large bony tumor which he i. t e -m . . , . , , T ,ni vocations previously unknown here or young lady of this borough. It was formed almost desertC(l. we speak not now of i in and upon the posterior part of the un- dor ;aw immediately at the base of tlfe Goronoid process; bein" perhaps, the very laracst dei)0sit of ivon, tak. a. I T. . uwiu uiu iuuum i anj puisuu. xi is full thc sizc of a viQ01is es and ,vei!rhs more than two of thc largest size teeth In shapo it is rou h and irrc-ular, of a w fiftn f(1n " f tl , hard, dense texture of a yellowish htic. -i i . r n anu peautiruiiy oeset with pearly white globules of tooth enamel. Two months g in the mean time indescribable painr We were shown at the same time, a- mong many other specimens, a remarka- b.lc casc ot'.tlie exfpliation of 11 lurSe Por" i.: c ii. : i.: 1. j c c o L ago, from a gentleman of Sussex county, N. j. Wo arc also informed by Dr. Swayze, that, in the large and valuable collection of morbid formations in the Museum of the Baltimore College of Den- ,1 - r Dental Exostosis more than a fourth as largo, and none of the same beautiful and remarkable appearance, as the one he now has, and which may be seen at any time -at his office. The removal of such an irregular formation of bono must havo been a painful operation, but the lady learning the necessity of having it re moved fiefore any more was caused to the jaw, led her to submit to the operation with much resignation. Dr. Swayze is but yet a young man, but his knowledge of the science of Den tal Surgery, seems only equal to tho care and skill with which he operates. Bas ton Whig. Tho Southern Era notice the marriage of Mr. John H. Strange to Miss Elizabeth A. Strange, all of Albermale county, Ya. An Qxohange thinks that it is very strange but says, no doubt the next event will be a little stra'nscr ' v Why Change the Tariff! This question is often asked by men who love tranquility and are not familiar with the practical influences, in general and in detail, of our fiscal and commer cial regulations. They are anxious to con cede something for peace sake, and there fore would like an agreement for stabili ty on the basis of the present Tariff as a half-and-half measure, neither consistent ly affirming the doctrines of Protection nor those of Free Trade, but embodying something of each. We answer that cannot acquiesce in the present Tariff a.s a finality, for the following among 'other reasons. 1. Because under its auspices the Coun try is now sinking rapidly and very deep ly in debt. Our easy Money Market caused by the present choice of our for eign creditors to invest their balance here rather than draw them in specie, (from which they could only obtain lower in terest in Europe than they are now se- I curing here byinvestment in Public Stocks, railroad i5onus, mortgages, xc.,i are Mortgages, &c.,) subjecting us to the payment of heavy sums annually in interest and exposing us to the chances the almost certainty, of a terrible revulsion, if we should go on ' fifty years as we are now going, the Coin- mercial and Feudal Aristocracy of .Eu rope would at the end be receiving in comes from this country barely less gi gantia than those they now draw from the over-taxed, bayonet-governed, priest-ridden, pauperized Millions of Europe. But the present system cannot work smoothly for fifty years, nor anything near it. It tends directly to disruptions, convulsions, explosions : and a commercial crisis or panic, no matter where it may begin, will be sure to fall with double force and des olating consequences here. .Unless we mean to sail blindly and passively into i the very jaws of destruction, we must pre ; pare for a storm. 'I. Because our present lariu is power- , fully adverse in its operation to the due dusuy, efficiency and virtue, who, in its absence, will grow up to indolence, inoa- pacity, destitution and vice. And this is but one among many branches of industry, now foreign to us, which a true and be- neficent National Policy would naturalize, Nurture and develop on our own soil, t the signal and lasting advantage of every department of Productive Labor. Our our Tariff were so adiusted as to seciuv the productions at home of articles now m r 1 1 1.1 1 ; lavishly imported, which migiit De maue j here aS cheaply (that is, with as little la- bor) as anywhere else. 1 We do not speak from theory but from experience. The Tariff of 1842- gave immediate employment and good wages to thousands after thousands of workmen flip urndnpfioiis of Tmn nnrl Rihrlps. t. which the term Manufactures is most corn- luomV thouSh "accurately restricted. Ihe production ot Glass btarch Cutlery, . 1 .ins' 1 r,Pes .a a.n 1lmmt7 01 artI.Ci.es -which up to that time had been mainlv : imported opened new avenues to iudepen- cncc to laborers who for months had ione 1jttlor n?fchinS- T1 : ?urs (or 1JtGr.s c o ocr aha rF miiii' i i. ' t n x j . . . . J . in this country by that Tariff. Since its ! overthrow, the tendency has been exactly can bear witness to this. 3. Because the injur thus done to cer tain branches of industry extends gradu ally, though slowly and not always pal pably, to all. The Mason, Carpenter and Plasterer found ready employment and good wages all over the land, in erecting the new factories and workshops required by the creation or rapid expansion of manufacturing pursuits after 1842. La bor in every existing employment found relief and benefit from the constant draw ing off of workmen to the newly opened vocations as opportunity was afforded and better prospects invited ; now the tenden cy is exactly reversed. Men are being driven back from the successively crippled pursuits into thoso still active for which they are less fitted. The effect on em ployment and wages is very obvious. 4. Because the present Tariff discrimi nates in some instances against American and in favor of Foreign Labor. For in stance : it charges thirty per cent, on im ported Wood of all kinds, but udmits that same Wool, when fabricated into Blank ets, at twenty per cent, and other manu factures at twenty per cent. It charges thirty per cent, on Hemp of Russia, but admits thatN8ame Hemp, when manufac tured by British labor into Cables and Cordage at twenty-five per cent. Sd with several other descriptions of staples and manufactures. And for this discrimina tion against American Industry we can-