111 * U ENE IV 0 1,t1:1FIE 17,.-;;Arol 14. • __• , --"' CARLISLE HERALD-Alen t:/cPCIRIT • *ill . ll issued at: TWO DOLL Alts per annurri; tit he nail hair yearly in advance. . . ••••• 41)PERT/SEMElNTSnotexceedinfra9o a rc •or'thrce: insertions, tfNi. DO,LI,Nit, and '6very • Obsegnent insertion, twentrfive Cents, limp , ones in proportion: „ .---Letters„addressed to the puldilthers "on 'htisi; oe'si„NtusT - tit-PO . 3'r PAW, TitliCirvii - fe' they rill not be attended to.. • . r . •-. • . . AGENTS. - • , . . , • 4'..The'folloglng• persons have been aopolizted Agents, I • ie-eqnSle Herald and Expositor to-who COs torsubscription a lii.l itt.l Y Ort i4C ., .. . fritES CO be made... - - - D...Stir:6hr; Esq. Sfilrenianstown, Comb. Co. SCOTT COYLE, Esq. Niwrille,, .., . ilo. P. KOONTZ, Esq: Newburg, •• •-• • do.- Tubs. W. IhinEg t Esq. Shippensburg, ilo. Joux Woko•lrten, Esq• - do. - do, • J. Nl' ATEER,• '*1.,..H0FT,1100 . 01V0, . - • do: " , . R. Wit.soN,_Esq: Aleclriniesburg, . . - do. IVILLT`A.M. itu.rsis,..t, Es( - Hopewell, . do. -. i - R. STURGEON, 145 q. urchtown, - do: - , - 7 -- Dr.' frisA. Wtit - Tc., Ne v Cumberland:.- do, 'riling: , B . I.:APE, Esq: lloOnitieldi:Perry .co unty A'..lk:Acii,dik , 1,. disburg, ~, , ilo. __., Z it c . 047t17 1..4:ti.0 . .... ,..t . A , map & . AcePITIM I' . ~ , ---. . , —. 7 . N . ,,_,- t V.-: .- - - -, 7 . -..' , ._ . :. . . l.y .. ,V,•.- .r.-. _ '''4: ;: _n • . #2. i . .. ir ms d b---.. 4 „ , --. 4 5 ' -.%-; i qv . • - • enrieled, Froiii various gardens eulrt r i %%WI cat 2 For the Herald Ee Expositor , • Thc_Paist-Tht raitifre. • A.' EItAGMEN . T. ' 'When we look backson hours long passed away, And every circumstance. of joy; or woe, That goes - to make this strange beguiling Short Called life; as though it 'were of yesterday; e itart=tvr letun'ourquieltness of decay.- , S tin Pies unwearied 'Time:—on still we go, • And wivithei?—unto endless%v.eal 'or woe,: As-we have wrought our; p:irts •in this b :jet' play. • Yet•rnitny have I seen, whose thin blanched locks I3ti -who hetving_rums!El the SWIM with all its shocks, :Had-nothing learn'd from Whatthey saw or felt: 'Emig spirits! that can look with - heelless eSre, On doom unchangeable, and fix'cl eternity. s twx.. 4 c or Cl/aI:2;EN .111 - 01. I•y • - AMA, On the'l9:ll imp ~ vi.o additional dq - - ' lid as - deposit gries, iiz cerium ca .se4.,. on• public 'ollieers delivered t in the I lonse. ol lerpresentatives of The. Uni/ed ,Vtedes Oct.' 1314 18 3 7. ' T7nhe hill,impnsing additional 'duties . n p lidie olheers Isohig - tinder consider , , ation in the Committee of the whole on the slate ortlie Union. . Mr. •NAYLn Tarr., of Pennsylvania, said, i Cv.--aS---wit-lt-ltrea ti---1-nc-fan ce-t-ha t_he_ for the ti,St: 'tinle,in' this 'hall:— rose ' •He j e lt-__liiiitriii,i_iigrd to rise ' es, jun. ) . ...`(-s • airl Mr. N..,; 1 am ,iqzpalled to speali., • I cannot. remit Silent. I-V led for 11 . 1 introduction . of this • o our de - 'liberations. some. days since-, •on pur pose • to• afford the honorable gitntle : m an — from — S ontli — earo 1 ill 2, 01r;-4,:j.cjj ens,) an .opptirtOity . to express his:views in relation to - it.. '" ... perceived his anx - iety•to speak and Ertl .a friendly clispo, .. • sition to gratify him. If' I were surpri, tied when I ft and him draw into the vor tex of diSeu; ;ion, The. expitivn topics of • abolition; I exas, slavery Sz.locof,, topics that hate 10: hing to do. vir'W - this subjeCt; what roost have been my• feel _ ings when ilinard - hirii:denntince the . : -- hrstitutiona of the North as mercenary and.slaVish, and exalt those - of - the - Sailor rarancient - , - .otratielial;Tan - ii almost per ,.. feeti .. hohlly .avow that the labourers of . : the tiorth more the .'subjects of the North • ern capitalists;..put the Northeiln work- . -men/ on a -footing with the ;Southern . ‘., slaves, and threaten to preach insurree .'tion.td- the - lahourers - of the NCirth': - Yes; - - : preach insnereetion:to the Northern la -borersi. .i.- . 1 I am a Northern.labO Aye, sir, it bas been my lot to -- 1. nited as my .only ,patrinfony, at y age of nine years ? ' nothing bui ,orphan . . 8c age titter.destittitioni .botiaelesa, home- less, fatherless . • ad pennykss,. 1 , .' was .....nbliiiii•Triont : thatillax foiwaid, to earn. •my daily bread - by my A"aily:Tahour.r--- And now:siri now sir, - when, I takeimy . seat in this hall as the freeicipietehta . •the.lota_ fre_et peOple, : _am-I, to - be sneer- , . .d at is, a Nortlibralabop r er,:.:and ,oe graded Intiaa. co,mpariaort With_the - ppar, - oppressed and, sUfferit*.negrci• - Aave?— , . -7-. • IS such the genius and—spirita—cinr ~ iii sti Int iori s? If. it bei then , :did•Curfath; ers' fight,: iind - hleetb , •tin - d :struggle - _aria . - - die - in,Vain!" * .. - ' • ' • • ' .-- -- But, Bu sithe gentleman' has rniacOn ,,r 11 • .... ceived the spirit and tendency of North -• ern institutions: - -,• He ' is ignorant_ of • Nor t hern_Cilaracter. . Ho. has forgotten ' , the history 'othis - country. Preach. in-, --• surrection, : to met Who.-are- the-North ern labourers? ''; The history of your _ . country ,is their bistory: ''' n The renown . 6fyotit . - ccuntry is . thei r renown. The' • :brightness of,their:doings la-Kcahlazon - ed on-its, every - page. Blot IFO'M your . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .' , 4 ' • • • . .* ‘ • - . .. . . . ;,.. . - ..... . . • -, . . . . . • . .--.. .........r..r....r. ........................- ........- ...... . . . . . . . . .. . t • . . - .. . , . . . . .r• . .. '1 . r . . . ... r „,. ,- ..,, .. ;. ~., • ;.... ... .. ( ... : ,... 14. . . . . . ..,,,„...,:. _... a .... . .. : .. .... 1 , , . I ( 11 . . L . • . . t' . .. . . . . , . . . 14 . . ' •'. - U . X . . . ... • .... .•.•• . ... .. ...,...._ . . . „..., BE t. Z'Jl~lllii` MUM PrSl o .ll o .lglf.- 7 11)1BINITIOP, 7io Ai7W 111fi,S,Iso-ipnriftes; nals the-de-oda inet . doings,of Norihern -Labourers, and the history .of yobr country..preserits:hut.uni__vereal.b.lank. Sir;':whO was he that- itieri. the Thunderer, wrested from his grasp the bolts of Jove, calmed the troubled ocean; became the central sun of. the' philoso sytem of . s age, shedding, his bright,ncis and effulgence on the whole civilized world—whom the great •and . miglity'a the earth-delighted to honor;. wlto participated in" the achievement of !.yourindepenclence;prominently assisted h moulding yoUr free institutions, and the beneficial effects al.:Whose wisdom ivili be felt to 'the last moment of Who,_sir - ,2.1 ask,. Was he?. A Niirthern - labourer,a Yankee tallow chandler'''s son,"—a printero.run c • Away boy ! • -:--SA-nd who, Ilet 'me ask-the-honorable .gentleman, ,wiio was he that in the clays of our - revolution led -forth - . a Northern • army,yes,An army bf Northern. laboor ers, and ::aidcd the chivalry - -of & - mtb Carolina in tli ir . defence against ish aggression,-drove - the _s_poilers.from Their .friOSides,r.and redeein eerher fair field's from foreign inv.aders;—wim was Ire? ,No - rth - ern—la trchrrr -- ; •Islatul blacksmith--the :galhcni Gen. Grecue r who left his hammer and his frit'ge and' went forth,conquerirg and to ean'quer,. in the batileS for our inclepen. -.deuce! And will you-preach insmec tion to men like these? - • glorious -achievements --of-.Northern - -' - labourers!' Where is Con oord; tki4 Lexington;;p9d P r i•in'eplon, andTE6nton, a - nd Saratoga, and thinker 11111; hut in,• the North? And what,, 4r.; has shed an imperishable reaown en, the : nov,er'qlying names- 6f , thosi; hallowed spots liiit'ilietlOod and the:strliggleS,- the" high- daring- and :pa trim ism; and, sublime courage of North= wimle North-is an: virtue, intelligehre and indomitabie,in, - dependent.c. of Northern . labourers!-- Go, air, go preach- insurrection to men like these! The fortitude of the men of the .North under___intense_ suffering for liberty's sake, has been almost God-like!.., His- , - tori has so-recorded it. • Wbo-cornpris- Kartiriffitairfood , without . pay, . -shOterless, shoeless,' pennyless,.and almost • naked, in' that dreadful winter,—the midnight of our revorution, whose wanderibgs could be .traced by their blood tracks in'the snow! —whom 'no arts could seduce, no - peal leil no suffering. disaffect,. hitt who, true to t noir country and its holy eau SC, continued-to fight the good fight of liberty, until it finally triuntlift ed. .Who, sir, were these men?, L Why, Sf9rthern labourers; yds sir, Northern !hirers! Who, sir, were:Roger :and =hilt it is' idle to enumerate. To, name the Northern kbourers who have dis , tiriguished. themselves • and illustrated the history of their counts, would re, _rtire days of_the_time_of_tliis.bais.e,' Nor is it ,neccessary. Posterity'W ill do theM justice. Their deeds, have been recorded in_ CharaeterS Of tire! _ • And such are the ‘vorking - men of the North at this' time. They have not degenerated ;. they • ire iu ali- respects worthy' of 'their intelligent and sturdy sires. :' WhoSe..biood. was so , profusely shed-during the last,war on the Canada liges,-,but that of Northern labour: - ers? Who 11.elleiVed - the •gloriqui vietcr -ries-of-Verry--and -IW-Donough T on-itho - 'La'kes-z- the Northern labourers Yes, 'they' 'met the enemy atol„. made them-4/1617'v? 'Who, sir, have made our -ships the models for alt•Etihre, - and sent forth in .the late war those gallant vesSels that gaveour• little 'navy the first-place in-the-tOrine annals cif tile world, and coveretr our arms on the •oceati --- itt a Uls+ee=of l k+t ; .—but hhc slaiF and pat6otiSril,okthe Northern labollr- 1 1 ers?- - -,Andwholgii;;:-was that noble ,wounded and bleeding. and mangled, and to all appearance. lifeless •on the deck of one Of our ships, en,hetir- - ing : tbat the 'flalitif the enemy 'had struck that- victory,, had. perched---our-the preud• banner of his eburitty, —raised up his feeble,. mangled form, opened. his languid "97.6 once•inore" to the.light - of heaven, raisedhis•palsicd 'hand around his token:el:joy ,and 'Tell hack -and died: - .Who,' sir„ was be'? •- •: ,..Why,_ a - Northern- labourer,a Northern labour,- - er! - And" yet these _men aiii7-016-.-sora .. of.tboNorth, - to able gentleman is about to :preach insurrec tion!. . : - - (Mr. Pickens „explained and said,_in substance,. that he Wad spoken only .of 1 the iendency of Northern Institutions to make the workingmen, of the North tributary to . the capitalist, and to pro vent them from rising from their 61)0- . 1 rious situation ..--That he had - not degaa. ded them into a comparison with the slaves but had said, that" if the people of the Nortb _would continue to interfere with the slaves of the South, Pkintegronit VVeekly,.by Geo. . 7 FI. s, in Carlisle, Cumberland, toinity, Pa. . . preach - ,i - nsurrsCtiort to the-Northern la: 'bereft.) • ••.• • IYlr.:Naylcir resumed and Said, I have_ not nib:Understood the honorable gen, demon. That the' honorable gentle- Man does treat the Northern workmen as Southern 'slaves is evideriefrom 'Mint 'he had just he - hairhot s in ten .ded to place them th•the same degraded situation of slaVes, hoW could . he flu-ea ten to preach insurrection amring them? Sir; the honorable-gentleman has .mis talfen the tendency of Northern institu, Lions, as much:aote has misconceived the worth arid Spirit of. Northern 'char acter. Our. institutions have do 'such tendency,—no, sir, but exactly the re yerse,- They raise up the laborer. = They, place every man up_en an eqiiolity. They.give-to.all equal-rights, and equal chances,and hold Out to all equal induce merits to action. Northern-institutions tend to ke;ep:dhivn the Northern labour ers! The -whole- history of the North from the landing Of the first.,Pilgrim on the . rock . of Plymbuth to this hotir; con tradicts this - position.' \/ • a . t tpeal to the Representatives froth PennAy, , ,lvarid. you, sirs, who is - 1 JOSEPH RITNER, that`distinguished mon, who, at this very-moment fills the' executive chii - r- of your great Stale; a. man, who, in all that:constitutes . high rribral and" intellectual worth hai, few superiors this conntry,eine who has all the valities Of-•head anti; heart ,tecessaryto_accomplish the great States• man; and who possesses, the inost• enlarged degree, all:the elements of Hu man - man graatness,—Who, tirs, iszhe?,. A Northern labourer,—a - Pennsylv:inia: wagoirer: ,- who; _fur years; drove his. t VIM) from RifistOirg to'.philailelplua,.: "ovei . the: mountain, and over the moor," not "Whistling he we-nt;"—no sir, but preparing , :hiniself then.; by deep cogita tionondeoynesrap4pationfor.the -high for him. - .And Who let me ask the same *gentlemen-, who- iS.,laines 'Todd, 'the present Attornef. General of Penoty vania,—,distingu)shcd for- the extent of his legal. acquirements, for the compre hensive energy .Of. hre mind, far his strength of argument, and vigorous de cution;. who, sir, is he? He too, is a I vania wood-chopper,—in _early childhood a destitute, desiolate orphan, bound out .by the.OVersters,of ttie Poor as anappren tice to a labobreri.These, sir, are some of the fruits of Northern institutions, some of the slaves to whom the honora ble gentleman .will- : have to -preach-in, surrection! _ • • But . if . the Northern i nsti to I ions •be hostile to equality, - and -have the (*.fleet th_o_t_the_henorable_gentlentan . contendS for, to keep down the -workinen,_:and make. them: tributary to the capitalists; how conies it, how comet. it, thatl ani now; at an early age, a represcotitive in this hall? .Sir,,the gentleman is tit, terly,- utterly deceived as to the - effect of our institutions;. and the character of public-sentiment in the North. -- - FellowTrcemeo of my oVvrr, - my tive district; bankers, .capitalists, and merchants - ,• (s 6 much denounced,,) man ufOetbrers, mechanics, and'ilaborersi' appeal to you all:=-Did it' ever oectir - tb any one of you to object to me'becausc poverty, orphanage, and destitutions had ohee roade•me a ldborer for my daily bread? . No sirs, no! I will do . you the justice to answer for - You, ifo'!"*" - YOut.. enquiry•yiraS not "is he rich or poor, a . chant.?"—ut ‘qs he a man,—has he ability' enough moderately to sustain otir : interests in the great. councils of the and nerve - and . moral courage enough fearlessly to defy the assaults of poWer, and to vindicate the outraged p6nciples4 our constitutions?" Ail& ,here, sir, I now am-rand what is there to-prevent-me-from - taking mrstand--by the,•kide Of the proudest, man in• this hall? Mr Chairman-,:it is - not the first time that lihave heard a parallel run between the slavell of the south; and the work= ing-men of. , the North. , For a . while,' sii,--that-parallel.waa made .as - to. the re- , : lative Ontlithin'"of the .frep negroes The Niarth,'.atidlhe,slaVesofjthe south. Recently, however, .seme4;those who ae tlid.::En excellence. of advoqa ,he'slave institutions of the South, have taken a bolder and, snore daring -stand. Racking their brains for arguments and illustrations to justify slavery as it pre vails among them, they have :hazarded r•.the bold ,proposition that Slavery exists in.every country; and that - its - the North, - the operatives,--though nominally free, ere; in faet, - the slaves Of the Capitalists. SuCheprofsesition_is monstrous. tell you, ii