Carlisle herald. (Carlisle, Pa.) 1845-1881, July 08, 1846, Image 1

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-VOL
Pi:MI.18171BM EVERY WEDNESDAY,
OFFICE in the South . "West , angle of the public
iS4uarei ll& of the Coi6l-Roose
TERMSTOPIUBSOOIPTION, ----
One Dollar and Fitly cents a year„ta ADVANCE. -
`Two Dollitia,if paid within the year. •
•
One-polder for nix months. '~:. • . •
„These tame will be rigidly' adh e red to: •
•
...PATES OVADVERMSING,.
;Advertisements, making fifteen lines or less, will .be
elitifreillithrrate—of-Filly-cents,fer ode ineertion,--
three times for Ono-Dollar, and twenty-live ments'for ••
irary ophsequent insertion, Yearly advertisetd•"will
ttikeltarged - nt, the following rates: - ' • '
Cine eoltinin r With the paper, for one year, - ' 445`
Half trcoltnim, ' do. ;• do. • -4,4 : 1 13'.
TWO Squares, with q uarterly changes, $lO.
Denalnesi t eards, with the paper, n • 05
MR PRINTING, OF. EVERY DESCRIPTION,
Midi as Handbills, Blanks, Circulars and every other
other description of Printing, exeented Winsomely. and
nxneditionsig, and at the. LOWEST PRICES., ,
44arbo,
43)00TPU11',..4110o,`MIIBMDIN
r.iloineopathic Physician. , •
OFFICE: Main etreef,ln. the house for
, merliqieeepied by Dr.Vred. Ehrintui,
Carneje, April 9,1845. • •
.
IM Bo (IL E4CDOELM39
WILL perform all operations upon the
Teeth that arewrequired for their presCr
vationisucha4 Seating, Pains, Pluggiv,&c.,
or will restore the loos ofthem, by inserting Ar-
Oficial 'reetli„ . from a single Tooth, to n full
sett ( Office on.Pittstreet, a few doors South
t.
of the ailroatl Hotel..
N.. 13: Dr. Loomis will be absent from Car
lisle-tit-Mt fen clityil; i n each Month
June lt, 184.5.
JOSE'S ENOS,
-TTORNEY-V LAW,.(late of Pittsburg,
fa. Pa.; )will prttetiee .the Courts cd Cum
berland and the adjoining counties.' Offine
on West
: High street, next door tel. Hamilton,
Esq.
- Carlisle, debiber 8, 1845
CHARLES E. PENROSE, •
Late Solicitor of the Treasury of
. the. United States,_
•
• - , - ...
• .• WILL - procticolArw:.in the sei•ertil Courts of
NI( Lan.ster cbuirtyi:.Sirnee iirSoulliVen
- Sireet,lniely opOpiell ti , John- U. Mon an
ery-;--Fm.f---- -
-Juno IS, 184 S.
COLWELL &
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
I
l i i o L t lt e t attend
i t promptly o s o a r
e s s u e m n t l e r r ull
nil Ptoii Clin. Offices, one door weft of the Jail,
Bait High street, Carlisle, and next door - to
. Stumbaugh k Mover's Drug Store,. Shippens.;
burg.
April 24,18.14,
O.:DUNLAP k.`EMEIR D •
Attorney at . Law:
OOTICE in South Hanover street, a few doors
below 3. IL. Graham, Esq.
July 16,1845.
THE .MANSION HOUSE _HOTEL
Felling on ihe Ca§ittierlanil Valley Rail Road,
• kg_&3lllLo2o9 'Sao
ATELY kept.by Gen. Willis' Foul k, has jus
Li . been taken by the subscriber. It is newly
furnished and has been thoroughly repaired.
Fassiengers in ..the cars, strangers, travellers
and' visiters to Carlisle, are Invited to pall.
Terms-moderate, and every attention paid
to the comlort and convenience of those who
patronize the establishment.,
- J. A. WINROTT.
Carlisle, April 16, 1845.
LUII4I3MRI LUMBER 1
rnHE, subset:iber has now and willannstantly
J keep on band all kinds o LUMBER, Buell
of White Pine floards,Planks,Seaniling,Shingles
Shinglingluid Plastering Laths, Ike. 01 . '014w:11
will be sold ot the riser : prieesi'Avithrthe addition
obbaulbig, for CASIIj at the Warehouse of,
WILLIAM B.
•Oniiiidre 'November 5 111,15..
•
TO TORE -.KEEPERS: •
11UST rani ved the startler D. S. ARNOLD,
splendid !sitar cAarms, which will
totayld at the following - prieee: • •
Carpets 9 cease per yard; 1 yard wide
Ventitian Carpets, 25 and 31. Stair carpets 12
cents per yard; 1 rad wide Ingrain.- 314;45,
A6,.,75;•§5 •and $lOl l . Alen, Matting, Furniture,
and Flpor Oil Clothi.: "The above articlea' 'o4ra
~ „purchased at auction, and will lia',;suld . „§(l:Per
' cent. clieaOr than everoN,aii sold in,,Co,llaltif:
"V4.IfMLIpB.,II L9OIpAEREt
i.ii.ce)vcif 'a 11 - 3(4!Piiiity 'and
j'Mjitt%O'c,*lo.lllsll
::.Self-Sharpening
tvtlietet.wkil sell at Pliika , ilalp .
h!a prices, wittolie
:addition afthwiliiightq
MURRAY.
"Icitto,. 'dm Et : :' , i •MI! I:
--- 1,
„ .1:1g - i, Fulmer per, haysppe a jarge,appple tilliae
.:., ' L fjlear..:loE.:,:rieill lie, able o, sup*, fatuities,
ant otti. re.wiiloiiii ii,glilible irklelP thirling (4
ecrtaiefr seaferi; titiihe iiioat moderate trims,
..:, 1 , ,' ';' ' MAILY" . W.EAKLEY
''''ltii - icti'dk'ili4o: , t , '"'"-:. - . 4 ';''''''—'''' ' '
, ,
• - - GROPX 3 Rigg•
tee,' Aliqriais, SlReeptJuar rebel yefl
Ind for sale atlllo4:mflf , Navr r ;
!pia 'llll , 80; ; C. ••1!11
,tl4''''"''''slurriut*oAci ,-c,-..ii,
,FRtlstioemitint,.#llBo. together mith
..,1 1011,r*.d Lykoo.YaneY6o;4ll koPt ,
cEPiilita „tiJIY 4 O ll ll tkill rill lie 101 d.1 4 ilie I°wPit
c -A i rW i t tie l ' , r9r-Pi%iisit,,, slo ha IViielierne or •
I s . vir 1.8 6; 4 1:' ' ' - WM.II. sunitiot7-•
A. i C la ptil—f ". m -" s -- a
- ' - x
= " ‘, 0---
' l ' l l k ittv,Teaalut
er filil , ;:ap, , , ~:--;e:4' t .' ' '4l ''‘ 1 1
4 . A l.:; ,t RaPP;7:,9 YgTI?O,r,IFI, . 0 1Pn,t3",
4 . .,„ r4 . .,,,Ti1enir,...! - t - 74: - .5fri 3 0..,....ticif
, i L ,,, ,,.......,„,„,./ ~,,:,.., q - . 4,
—l O 'lP oll.— y '2 , ADIFIgi
-, - of Cue Vrliiid 4 ceeeti 44 , " the theif•riickleii;f
.4, 1 00013 f Pptv.:.rpoix , rii;poltolly.tiiell'ott_yoult
,voti t t i 1 hoult Ailt 014 eta worth 104, eke(
, mei eiii adeaver tiOhlatieriithe'detles 01 the
14tia,ylith Atlelilh • SAlVlgS?Moa4Elt• c '`?
reautlOtitattretan'teiniiittll4l ''A e•-,..'''' -: '
Ims: Afr +6.18465.:,,,e;,,Livr,„ (z,/ > ' , -,,,1 , - , i, ;,t.:,.. I,
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ENE
MEM
.').".,.,. - . 0 ; -,..;.;'4,.:. -6
EM=;EI
To . the Citizens Often - bEtland Co
(42 ENTLEMEN--roffer myna - ken a cand
%-P-r date for the ;
• OFRICE •OF •sinwturr._
of Curhbeiland county, at the next general
election, and Moat ieepectlielly atilt your sup
port:' Should you'elect • me, I pledge *myself to
diechargeflie - clutiee ofsaid - uffiecrwithAdelitr.
ROBERT ,McCARTNKY.
Carlisle, Apiil" 49, 189 G. •
To tlie Voters of C.umbeoandrounty
FELLOW CITIZENS:—I offer myself o
your coboideratiOn for the .
OFFICE OF SHERIFF,
of Cumbrrland'county at the next general. elec
tion. Should yob deem me worthy , of said
office, I will endeavor• to diicharge the duties
faithfully and impartially:
DAVID 6RISWELL;
Shiopensburg, April 30;1846.
To the Voter§ of Citmkleilend edunty.
FELLOW CITIZENS:LI offer myself to.
your consideration as a candidate for the
OFFICE OF 'SHERIFF .
deuitiberland county,-ai the ensuing Gone.
ral electionp and respectfully sullen your suf.
ferageu for the same. Should you elect me, I
pledge myself to 'discharge thp duties of said
office with fidelity and impartialiA. -
•JOHN VNIZOOP.
WEst ionnsborough towns.llll.
-- April 29; 1846. —te.;— .;1'
To the Voters of Cumberland county.
yl i gLLOW.CITIZENS :—. I offer myself
JL
_o_y_our corgadoration. aa_v_carididato.. for_
ire
OFFICE OF SHERIFF
of Cumberland county, at the election in Oc
tuber next. Should yoti elect me, I pledge my,
golf to discharge the duties of the office faith
fully, impartially; and according to law,
CHRISTIAN INIIOEF.
Carlisle, APril.29, 1846.—te.
To the Voters Of Cumberland county
TIF,LLo .c iTiztNs hereby offer my
self to your consideration air a.candiriate
ror t he OFFICE OF SHERIFF; at theeleatton
in October next, and most respectfully request
your votes for the same. Shoulll he elected,
you may . rest lasure4, I will, dO the duties of
the office faithßilly‘qd honestly, and will thank
_y.atvfor_lhe-honor-conTerred,---
Very respectfully, your ob't. serv't.
"Carllgle, April 15,
• To the Public Generally.
F.nLow.criNzENs AND, FRIENDS
I - reopeetfully inform you that I aidt a can
didate for the
OFFICE OF SHERIFF
of Cumberland county, find should you think
me worthy and elect -me Us such. at the next
general election, I pledge myself tp use my
best abilities to serve you faithfully.
JAMES lIQFFER:
Carlisle, April '24, 1846.—te. . •
11111
•
To the Voters of Cumberland comity.
ELLow-crtv.Exs:-1 offer mvself to your
r consideration non candidate.for the
OFFICE OF SHERIFF
of Cumberland county, at the , ensuing. General
Election, and respectllluy solicit
. your suffrages .
for the same'. Should you elect me, I pledge my
self to diliallayqp the duties of said office to the
best of my ability. JAMES KENNEDY.
Mifflin township,? '
April 22,1846..5
T'-
ro the Voters of Cumberland county
CA_ ENTLEMENI 'O'er myself a midi
tlateXer the •
OFFICE OF SHERIFF. .: -
of Cumberland county, and will he thankful to
you for your support.
' • MICHAEL HOLCOMB
Carlisle, April 22,1846.
To the Electors of Cumbeildirdco.:
ENT,I4E.AIreN s:—.l offer myself', tol,you . i. coif
-I_X sillOatipti'as a candidate for' the
in the nett Generul Election. Should you linikir‘
me with n majority of your suffrages, I plutlge
m)•self 16 discharge the duties of the office with
fidelity. WILLIAM B; MULLEN.
South Middleton township,
April 22, 1848—ie.
To
,the voters of:Cumberland county.
41 ErIow. CITIZENS • offei :inyeelt to
_ ydur coneiaeration oft a candidata fur the
'OFFICE OF-SHERIFF, •
of Cumberland County nt the next general election
apktlllss4xitteful to : your for cone euport,.
JAMES F. LidIBERION.
Dickinson 27,1846. • •
To tlig Yotpys oretimborlajid doutlty..
IDELL,QW-CITIZENS„:.-;.'o4r,mytiolf to
'it: ?you'i:cOnsidorutiOu for the •
OFFICE , OF.SIII]
a t.the approachiug .. alcutiotic, and - shell l)6 thank;
MAU. yiiur'iiptiort:'. Verrreppbel fully, yours,;
&4:1 • ' • r JO3l.T# A. Er
South liiidiPetniiuwinship',TL
',713 th'etotersco Cuip¢ rtana pun .
WELLOW-OITIZENS.- - -1
candidate, at the next: election for Ilia
end I b; 4 ' 4 ti l p ni
land
If I atn,elected,
will attend to the duties 'ol*
. • -
1 1 .41":1$?;;{ WooDs.
Frat t nun:e tclivnalti 'gay 18 `lB46'We.
1211
'
i 4. Ois ' ' ' .
WI ELL PW" O /TikENl3l=/ ' lltreilhyalif (0
• ID If yOUi CloneidentilittllS iiundictittiaor , th o o
'9 O # P EC Cg l r:Ofk i O ilt Y l '- fi l ? '.
4
- ; '64 oi tl i ' ir el AYjti• T 0 iiiiiA,; '-
e104; , i
'gre:4 . !ipn, Fici:ydfi, ratiNratelyl,to . I , , e ' , or yopr
au ppclit any. i i ) triAt
0,144 ie;-;7,
k4f, , . ' .
tho Yitittil'ol,Plloo.oo4.`s,PAtd,srt
coput.ovr,tcaTizEN4 P 14.1- offer. myself to
year ,coneldotation,qe oandidato„foi, , thi
c.11 ,4 0F
of ‘44,lusrAcinu:cool;ty.,A6 tile; approaching vloo.
lion. end" will be Attnkfel for, your,eepporw r ;
Should lee eleet mg. pledge myoeir to Petibith
the defies vf said clime, with fidelity.- •
' •1A btf,' , .t.DAVID MARTIN.
'“ ,, P i t i lkqe 'l4.ll l l LPllP 4 ( l 4.l,:,:- •
fri; l 7• `4 4;otA,L.; l i l s o ** l o ;
skiii443,:ei 'hand
F.miztaid roorakfiftr , atitie , oug.ahtlynkrie,
;roe o l. Af fet t7 lo, 4 4 z ,eb'ii L'o6
t, r• A , 5 . 9`. .F.ll
-
4,4110 /I.llPhr3',9trtal-' Twv7Tir
J sriNtritOoqiirre ij.*6 Iv 1 60!
40„ory 4 bw. 4000#1, gq.
, - fl -
=MI
I=iIIMM
Slyriffaltv I
°Oka OF
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. 4 11EMULD, • . 5 , 2 11 . - . 1e ; „ Ni 3 •- • • - / EM ri ": 7;1117 _
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The following. beautiful lines by the 'editorof,,the
Louisville; Journal, who • - 11,OOWfrora his liorni:''we
copy fronothelniper:.• , • .
TO. AN, AB ii 03 1 40
! i ris morn=-the lea Weed mein • •
Joy, 'mano
hod freshuetel hp 'taming . . •
Bright Howdy to ine.fill Strange and new,
' Are glittering In the early dew—c
And perfumeskise from every grit To,
-AS-incense to the-cleudethatinove
• . Like siiir l ta o'er you - Welk/it
But 1 urn stliV--thoudfkt not ; ' •
„ .
.
'Tim n00n.7- ealm,,unbroken . sleep,
la on the hi a
de wav es or the deep , -
A min haze, like a fairy dream;
Is floating over woo' and 'tenant
And many abroad magnolia flower,
Within-Its shadowy woodland bower s
is gleaming like a lovely•star—
Bat I am sad—thou art afar.
"Tie eve—un earth the sunset skies
.Are paintingo . heir own Eden dyes—
The stars come down, eatrembling glety
Like blossoms in the waves below;
And, like some unseen splite, the breeze
ffeems lingering 'mid the orange trees,
Breathing ils music round the spot— ,
But I am end—l see thee not::
'Tis . micinight—,with a soothing spell,
Thefar tones of the ocean swell,•
801 l as a mother's catienie mild
Low bending o'er'her slecning child—
/km' on each wandering breeze are heard
The rich notes of the mocking bird,
In many a wild and-wondrous lay— -
But Imu sadthou art aw7ty - - -
I sink In dreams—low, sweet, and clear,
Thy own dear voice is In my ear—
Around my neck thy tresses twine
Thy own loved hand la hasped In mine—
. Thy own soft lip to-mine he messed— e
Thy head is ',Mowed on my breast—
Oh: I have all my heart holds dear—
And I am kappy—rthou art here,
BiLost, May3l, 180,
Mitaaaltinuatz4.
Ethan Spike's . First and Last Viiit
to Portland.
"Portland is the all darmlest place I ever
seen.. I was down there — in -1 33, to see a lit
tle_ahout my goin" to the Legislatoor, and
such a rum time as I had, yon never heer'd
tell on. Did ever tell you about the lee
cream eerape I had I"
We answered In the negative and he re.
-sumed
'r Wall, I had heen down thar, two or three
• d4s, aboui in every hole an' tholt
__Pd_seed Pv_er_y_thitt_thatAvaa-lo_be-seed.—
But one day towards sun down I was going
--down by a shop in While stfeet that looked
Wonderful slick—there was 'all manner 61_
candy an' peppermints and , jessamints
what-now tit- the Windows. An' then thar
war signs with gold letters-on-them,-hang hangiri" •
round the doot:tellin' how they sold Soda
Mead, an' Ice cream thar. .1 says to myself, :
I have lieern a good deal about this 'Ore Joe
-cream, an' now I'll be darned if I won't see
what they are made of—So I puts my hands
into my pocket, an' walked in kinderearplem
an' says to a chap standing behiridilie'Ciittnl :
tor—
I , Do you keep any ice creams here'!" • •
p t Yes sir". says hb, 'how muoh'll you have?' ".l considered a ninth on't—says I—a gint,
sir."
The young feller'slaee swelled out, and he
liked to have laughed right out, but• arter a
while he asked—
"Did you say a dint, sir ?"
"Sunni" says . l, "but p'raps you don't re
tail;so I don't mind taken a quart"— •
" Wall, don't you think the .feller snorted
right Out. Tell yer what, it made me feel a
sort o'pisen an' I gave' him a look that MAO
him - look sober in a minis, an' when T
- Ibbkitil I° Or hint; •(liere - Mr.'
Spike 'favored us with a most diabolical-ex
pression) he-hauled in his horns the quick.
eat, an' handed ;no a pint of the stuff as per
lite as could be. Wall, I tasted a Moutliftil
of it, an'Tound it as•cold'as 'the mirth - tide o'
Bethel hill. in January. I'd half a Mind , to
spit it out; but jest then'T seep the confection
er chap grinning behind thedoor t .which riz
my spunk:- Goll,smash it 11,11, .:thinks I,
not let that white livered monkey think I'm
afeared eat the darned stuff- if it -freezes
my inards. I tell yer what, I'd rather skinn
ed a bear or whipped a wild cat, but I went
it. I oat the - whole in about a normit..
Wall, in obent . a quarter of an hour I-be
gun to feel kinder gripy about here," contin
ued Ethatypointing to the lower parts of his
stomach, "an' kept feelin' no better very
fast, till at last it seemed as though I'd got a
steam engine sawite shingles in me. I sot
doWn on a cheer an' bent myself up like a
nut cracker, titinkin' I ' d grin an'..boar it ; but
I couldn't set still— r l twisted and,squumed
aboutlike an angle worm, on a hook e till at
last the chap as 'gin ,me the cream, who had
,been lookin' on and suickerin' says, to=me . : .
"Mister," says he •,!: ; what ails yol '!"‘•,,..
''Ails : me,'' sa ys . T, .Sf That darned,stufl of
yonr'n,is treezin' ,up nly. t tlayl!ihts, bays 1.
1 , '.I, You - eat too much'," ,says, no., -,-.. , : ) -i
~,„(f. I tell you I didn!t,", screamed f,;..‘tkne*.
what's. ti"nutf:anlovhat's' too much, without
,askin' .3'nitr; BW:if ou don't,leave oil .snick
~ ,IlTrlpile.yout ace,,', ,t ...,`.; ,'/ ~ ti ;
:,, lie:oultuned inghfdown*,--aud : sai t fhe duV,nr
mean any hurt,.ani, askea.me it I hadn't 4ot.
Ater take aorne,gni. ~, ,I told hint,d• 'you'd. , SO
~Itook a puity good horn' andlell the shcip. :N ~
1-7-44, A - KWIT - ger. - eh r, l l - 0 - plitinliadTEthaiii!,l
felt better for, ego it, or 80, ,t)eA I: hadn'i,gopa .
,fueafore.the-gripetaph,Ra nin,?! t "tio Lwook
:,ificaiT':lllievishop an' took, sauleinloru,glii,.
theal• sot ,do we An the .Statoliouseitepti,,aad
there 4 pot and' sot,lbut; : didnl,t' NO a - darned
mita,bette,r4._ -. l . ,bagun tu,thinklyas,gainkt:46
'kjolc , tho)llllkot;'AllaihunifthOught ofxfailtei
.and otother,aril , ofol4 Spatillo,,P*4oo 4
', o te_lf,li.,
hosi4rstntlN'llo4 - 11tioudlif that I,Aotild. , Mor
l'aee Pubis agire A fairly .blub64rUcl.;" ; :.llo thon..l
liapPen.cd; n/ I Inok:Ap 404 t Age.fia9i9"rbwir
6111v4rekandlirfinluat:jrue,j..,tel ,srflr, what, it,
ritj nur dant' a f,•=that • had got
,Ido,w,Rl,balqo,
'flero; - ':'-titg iip' sqlm s ; Inrung,,, , et Nr ri ,, lit e
.1..
• wildiVatrhalleStpl' 7 l"Oal - Jirokifr iliiiiiir thOxr
tarnal ! - g!z;ards 'oilf, aud'the way.'th.orlittle
431evila. soatnporacliwtoi4ii:Juihthifl_hk-Ap* . f,'
But alter tlilfoltuinfultafttke..tao,o7aa o'yFr;
liitelk , ,TAlVßitlallji9,o . 6 't .- 1 10. 1 1',arg r iji?
anirsonteeanfn as, i',WpAtiliSifi: '" ~
nit ia
' At, last I tholb, I,3',B*tothe tliaatrobut
atom Itaj there , e,ffripas got id strung that,
rrhiax ,Alk.bilaijo ta i iileigint liiiiise'itna',lo
'Ainfil haliedlti,K,',YAiiiir'aJwhilti',l4iit tip
I'dh 7 4,hld' irdii!ii'likop OW 'hat it' hill .ii'dbllittl
'whilfor boiled isters with'fouiPiakled'eaW.'
I ,ifillfilliifOoßtliiiiiiiii(tipl*BitiViiiiihnittlit
dOlTtteml 4 WeiitYinto thalhaattO'4iit4 abed:
:thy p_al yil n uitili_)# . :too,paidprabditi o ni l hes,
,10,04 - t - 01:y Sit ram, t*ution. twottb6;ititeil
'anal)* NociimbefsAim i11t5tny46,4, 1, 4 1 60-
'.iiiiiil44dfdkiWllitilEttcif43lP,;bo,4l4tif**
%,./ioppi4liPe. , l;/tOstred all tbe, thee Dal' ,
„)..
feeoo4o(liv r .h . killfftebleegetlto'dOietiell ,
ittildeCeNki,k , 011 Allh'i stared" lltlile int
ifei4 43l o, r t . 4 ', 41116 ' Ili A lifltllfiltn *IP" " Once,:
"• 4 EPlJOg l i•t l i•Blt ' t l 4,-. •• ‘344l,4' sl 4 ll orlfhiat-grk•
ke R l4-r44l l , X l4o: % 4 Mk i • 4 4'"l gis 'l 4l q
. `,,f;',, c?,41 7, ,r4'7;"•,... , ':f ,, "- ' l '.!•''' i ''''•,':l•" .. Th', f
, • '-', - , :'"',, t* , '„, ',,,,. • 4 • ,%, .r. ~ ~ , ~ ,
"
rn, sy~4 r ~ ~3:~.x
c -'.j
•
.
-• - i 8.184-
lace tp smother her t thece turn:atea twinge
really ihought3'Wes boo
th)? tilt arid I'yelled deaf! 0.11
soranroo. loucl , that the old theatre
=III
Subh.,a,retriou thaniggarfirop'd
the and Deritercnionfyor what you
wife;liimPed oil' her bed
isiid run; while every body: in - the-theinte was
all up; : in - a; : .iinnsa,,some c ilarling „and Slime.
swear nre. ,Thy. upshet,of It wayhe perlice
carried'ine Cift of thellleatre'rfird told 'rife - to
7 tritilte4eyeelfeeurce: ---- •" • . 7
-Wall;•'as I didn't feel any. betted. wept in
to a'shop. Close by, and called 1r two glasses
of branrity;,:ititer 'it,'lOff -Wye 6-
qthe•tatoern; I,aot dant - by:ilia Window, and
trieillo. think I felt , better,. but • 'ttirar ito go ;
that blessed.„Oldlngine stvallowin'
away . I went out Oa- a quar
ter's worth ol,isters ati' a pieoe-of mince pie,
Then I went back and told the tavern keeper
'I felt kinder sick, an' thought I'd •take some
Castoirtile, a , mouthful,. of cold, meat an':. a
strong glass.of whiskey
,punch, an' then go
to, bed., He got the &iris; which took an'
went to bed. •
•Butoell - yer whati had rather a poor ifirlg if: -
Sometimes I was awake groanin! an' holler
in' an' when I was. asleep Pa better bin
awake; for I had sinh powerful •areams.
Somejimes I thought I was skint& .a.bear,
and then by some hoeuspocusAwnttld•change
to ['other side, an' the Carnal critter would be_
a'skinin' ine
Then, agin; I'd dream that I 'Wes Collin'
logs with the boys and jest- as I'd ticica Shout
in' out—"now, 'then!—here
everything would get reversed agin I was a
lon . an'. the boys, Were prying rrie up with
their handspikes. Then I'd wake up tin'
screech an' roar—then off to sleep agin—to
dream that Spanker And run otkwith me, or,
that father was .whopping rilq.,qsscime other
plaggy tiltniorninJ.J . fa"
When got up rhadnitoani appetite for
breakfasyan' the .tavern keeper' cid me that
if I was : goinlio .carry on; screaming and
as [had the night, aforcory room
Was better the my company. „ ' -
"I hain't," said Mr. Spike in , Citniclusion,.
a I hain't bin to Portland since, biffif I live to
be as old as Methusalem, I shallneyer forget
that all-fired Ice Cream." •
G. 1). p
--- Balm for a Broken Hart.'
A broken hearted woman. as she calls
herself; Airs. Laura-Hunt, .of Montgomery
county, N. Y. notifies the
.publielheough`the
-Amsterdam. bitelligeneer, -- threher - dearhus- -
bond,-Joslitia Want, has left her- betbarid board
and strayed to partS unknevin . ; sand she
for
bids all girlsreld inniilsoltd-widor, to
meddle. with-or - marry, hi ar_undeolte;penalty
of the law. •-glieetinieStlY entreats - ell editors
`throughout the world to lay the foregoing in-'
formation before their' readers.
will perceive that we have-complied with
-her request.—Courior and Enquirer:
And -we two.—N. Y. Transcript. ' -
-And we three,Chiciniutti
And we
~ • And we fiSr"ti:4:lYeeteirf a .Metlrißist. =
And we eis....Ziori"trllitiald.
And We.seVem—Meine‘ Free Press
And we eight—Missouri Free Press.
And we nine.—Woodstock
Lealie her bed and board ! the villian, and
we ten —'
!And strayed to parts unknown, the vaga
bond, and we eleven.—Albany Advertiser.
And we make up .the dozcii.—New York
Commercial Advertiser.
He tell her bed! 0! the va7rarif, and we
are a baker's dozen.PittsburgStatesman.
And we start him again.—Miner's Journal.
Keep him a niovinvcSalt River is too
good-for him.--Jackson Courier. '•••
May he have corns "oh , his toes, and pains
in his - ribs all the days of his life. • 'Leave a
woman's bed and board, the gracelesS knave l
We'll give him.theifix - teentd kiek.—Carlisle
Republican.:- 1 • :„.,.., ,.. •.! ..
- Oh! ~t he
-vagabond;! - .lle, deserves an ,ad-
Ationtil kick, and,well,,give him, die seven
teenth.-=:Cleaieimid Hertild - .' - '". - ' '•'' -
• Brealeni_ivoirian'iihea4-tliki• , finstkr- Take
that too.—Painsville' Telegraph.' -- ,T.
We underwrite.his eighteenth endorser.—
Courier and Inquirer. - -- - -
And we give the scoundrel the nineteenth
. shove.—Eastern Argus.
And here goes the 20th.--Ameriean Sent'.
• And we repeat her wrongs and her shame
to our 20,000 readers.—Sat.Couriero: .
Pass him rptimi.l, Start him again, the scotin
dud, and here ones the 2lstlickt-Utica News: •
. We ,give• hit, ,the 22nd::Brethren, add
your,mite,--Verogennett Vermonter, ..,--,,,,
..-. Merles egi - kick,-;Nor.23;r-, Put it into ,the
scamp,thiek anti .last:—Coneord 'Fteeman. - .
We'll:bitaktisliaek if he entries thiti,way:
~,N. IL -clazetler: :4...'.!" ••••• , - . • , ,
lleing It hacheler r w 'll,llmyr the?resealto
the end of the..eartli.,-SstoldesSeqger......st'4!..q'i
-,,Go7it, .INlessenge,e,.:o4l4(o,l**ti.digh•Xecl.
a business 'a& an ~ oldVhelotz=wenla;, l ole. enj.
zaond in :.,,, ,Nci . -,;27.:45iqu1Y:,,q41,116'014-.w
~,, ,. .pie„,thiNi•6igiqiiiir.6q,liiipc.*tiAjl6
gettirii , 27;•'/kiwis,itii•llo'ihtd4.l*A'a":.qqaa - ;art.
—N. A r ...Argaall-Zi,n,.lf , '- ,, : .. ..-:7' ' , 'o,ts:?t
r ' I . - - 9:shati-40;:,; ,. ,0'.e....._ uq: , ~,,
laura,‘ . v ithotiCa ...‘i ? l, 4r, i , ,,014T - ,!itrtiyAo;pai•ti;
tdikmitnii - ktlinfik - W: 'tf ', f.t ' !:ygiAtin‘ve4 ,
ilokard;o4 , :_tiugig;;k ll ol'oo,nd.!,rfpr; . kiOr.
,28v4,-,WealiV.,ithickrer IN'. lifir;,:'..i ,, L . :.ir. _, t i,, ,l)oet,yoq, 01.4: tOukli*.a l AP:Yo- 01 -V't IMO.
.itick m ed;enough,7o.m
and-running
like:, IC logannotive,•,twittii.a :o , ; tendge. band,
.4VatthinksLitural,datiety,O.o , a tapat fitiokliiving
-1 NUt, ofl4:aci,Luuratir4ro!i;No:l-1,.f0t:y01i4.4
take that . --Baltiinare.-gun. %;-: 1 . e.: 1 .:. tXt...
',,-,
~!
-----". 77..' ‘,„,;.2.,..,„;
vl.-.., .7Zl,izitopitPllo,77.4,4!•`ttB,:;
..a.muigulo.-791',„ i,. itioarrioras, owila ,
'of cotton 8000 1 °- t,l kli i. ,
~ , §e tqtl 4,
Mc° •T t ifr is well _ 0 %. 1 -4.2'- . j r,
tliolga2o,o,a.lll-11 - 1 1 44 y ~.sittE6Gla. tilv P ,
`e!ilarfifiS,lN ~ t, Y 4FI 1; ottillicityiptivAarap,r;
,tit,i take* P9s.sPAPP', iirprAfio,l4o)fing ifq9co
iid ki;" - OJA9lie9 4 at co 47,4couq..thydogAtie
olt-ef:cfi4P,OPCMePlq:Ac4aitlii; tkuutsing
Its?vit,#ll.3xlPf•sen 'igi.fl'4ov4 . i.cf , rbßP(l4.oo§9 . ,
4'6l ^ t-ci':l'2)- 1 3 ` 'f there i494:0 - ecTl9, CA the
7 . t 3 f(41 3 i 1 ; PI.OIVP 4406)4117 01/04e1P8/..414C:"
OitY.'ll"itSe'll- '''4' • Weiliief.'l,9"PdlitT3lllB!
g4 ll‘ / 41 /ttil s an t i lqilßP ' 4 4 bad aad pdiftql;et
oods - raja) sling,' R?° , al l "g to a
p,, t su'aila is*wittiAtlei.44Y.• truly, , VP•1: P • , ~
pilLe' '' - ti ''A'' lo' 44101'194N 'f? I''' , Wl'• .'i.:. 1 %.",',,
grt,,,,,1.mng..,." i''• ' ', ; .,,,c "I,7lAit
' -'l4-0 "Tkalifgyps.-,4)ovißg u i,A,R
_,
, 4: Morn t s , . ',. ii ri'obild .Itmf,gava
' ' ' ' 'ir i'4 . 6Witer a., ,), .., , ‘
tie '*tkg • - - Pa - a '"" `rt' fi cliifif OK''hor,,if IRO f 9 l'"3
'filili'1 116 :0 11 #1119g-i'!';'",*ifl''09!A„kt"
414; ta'? hid' catching Vt4sfliilitvo9. 41 1 914, "' 1
'-iyhicjoie',l4.v illi,e l ., ii , Ifuelipp,i ',;+.14,-,1.,7,1
'ir W4t1,7.,4 IVIrt!F th 1 4.f0,,rf1Y 0AL#1....41 4 ?'
It_
ig"fl i is' &la. (1:0:t: ii'v `t,a4.109-I*-vrffo
iiiiviiii`±klV-t-r-g 431... ,Tfiitiffb.l.A;':°liri
,tfiki•gften,A44oLlK;r,4:l*4 ~-!,,ixt 1000;','
1 6 )nti 1 7,10 F, Ya*A'rsrA‘PlP"4,.;*44-T,l'l
4,. / xtV, ? ,..i Z -r..„
~..i t, ,, t ,t2. ,.., i ,,,S i iii /0 4, 10
k. 4,14 . 4 .
... yfill
~"p pd., , „,,.. ~...
7
~ 0407,1,1,01, tbs'OhPr aV.7 1Y"."'117;r4
.69,t11 99'1, ,‘Ptu§44,TEAO2OIIO9E-RneAue'l t•
I NA, -‘lll.,ur''' Y l, ; , ,Aftelo'.ilip ' 9teankw44o,,tl/:
,t4143*1ir0.4140116-wM4d.bi l i :. 4 4 4 l,A u glli f i rl ' ,
Air vPur,,,iti. „lii,,,ttiyinigitklii:pii .v. , Q , 4 ,1
=;;:.,.lpiye.plim ,;.
~,;9;,,,,...,,,,,,f,,,,,,7,y;-,.,
• , ;
. Man.
?hie . Varit, -and the Poo Ma
Extract from alate'spoch of thellon. AN
• ..
, ' -: • CREW StFwAn, Of Pa. •
•
I'lr.. S's. stem wasihis. Seleel the arti
cle you can manufacture to the full extenkif
'Our - own Wants. 'thee, in the. languagilof
Thomas•JeffeesO'n, "impose on thew Milk , :
lighter at -first„ and "afterwards heavier an .
heavier as theehannels of supply werippe,n: ,
ed."- „ . This was Jefferson's plan; die:reverse ,
- ofrnoiliiii - deino - Miltic "free trade?'' • ext ,
;Mr. S; went for levying 'the highest :ride of
duty en, the luxuries of the rici and not on
the necessaries of the. poor.. -• Encourage
American manufactures, and while on' the
one hand the poor man found plenty of ern
.ployment, on the other he got his goods
cheap. He could-clothe himself decently for
a mere trifle. He wanted no foreign corn
'Oddities but his . tea entrhis, coffeeiand they
were
. free and should re m ain free. The
poor man could now buy cloth. for a full suit
from,,,head to. foot for less than one dollar oh
substargarAMeliCan - inanufdcture. He had
_himself won: fn this hall p garment of this,
,carne goods, at 10 cents per. yard, and it wait
so much admired that more than a dozen
'members had applied for similar garmentS;
and they had been supplied to Senators and
lathers, yet we are told the tariff taxes and
oppresses the poor. Put high revenue duties
on wines, on brandies, on sAks, on laces, on
jewelry, on all - that which the. rich alone con
sumed, and which the poor man did not
want. Take off the duties from , the poor
`Hair's necessaries pod give him high wages.
for his work. That is t he way to diffusd hap
piness and prhspet ay among the great body
of the people. That was good sound demo
cratic policy. Ile was for lifting-1m the poor.
Ile was for " levelling upward," for increa
sing the,,domestic comfort of,_our own labor
ing population—the true democracy of the
country, The rich could pay, and ought to
'be made to pay, and they should pay; the
poor man could not, and should not, w ith: his
consent: - Al r. S. Went for the system which
elevated the poor men iii the scale of society,
that promoted equality; that essentiaL_ele
ment in all free Governments, not. by pulling
down thehigher, but by lifting up the lmf er
classes to their level. : 'rho gentleman from
Alabama and his frietiLle advocated a pulley
which would liaVe.precisely the opposite el.
feet. Their system would truly make ,the
" rich richer and the pbor poorer.'' The
gentleman advocated'a system whose direct
- and-undeniable -Lendency-was-to-deStro
competition, and thereby me a monopoly to . ,
'the heavy eapitalisti. lie would •beitelk
those vet) , "millionaires'' -of whose pies-•
-ence here he complained so loudly.
Labor ' productive, labor, was the great
• source of national wealtli, its importance
was incalculable. Compared, with - this all
other interests dwindled into perfect insig
nificance. What is all other Capital combi
nod compared to the capital of tabor—hard- I
handed. honest labor "l—the toiling millions f
• „Supposing.Veliavebut two millions of work.,
frig men in the Onlied'StateS, Whose wagea',
average $lBO per • yeae—thie iS equal to the
interest of *3,000. at six Per cent. Each la
borer's
capital, then, is equal to $3,000 at-in
terest. Multiply this by two millions, the
number of laborers, and it gives you a capi
lal amounting to the enormous' sum of six
thousand millions of dollars, producing, at 0
per cent. three hundred and sixty millions of
dollars -a year. This was the "labor capital" .
he wished to sustain and uphold. This was
the great national indastrirhe wished to pl'o
tem and defend against the ruinous and de.,
grading effects. of. a free and unrestricted
competition with the pauper, labor of foreign
lands._ He Went' to secure the American.
market . for 'A meriean - labor. • ' In ' the great
struggle for the Americattmarkethelook Jiro
Atherican side. Qn the other jrand, the gen.
tleman from Alaba m a anti his friends went
for "free - trade;"'for Opening our Pats" for
•the-manufactulers of alhtlityworlil, fur. bring ! .
ing.in,freely,,therparrperpreduptions of Great'
Britain, to . oyerWhelm the; rising: prosperity
df-'our oiiii:-rpoor but---indnitiletts citizens,
They went tor crushing American enterprise,
grinding - down American labo r: and putting
tlieirpountrymen.on a footing with the very
sweepings of the poor houses of Europe, and
would, ii re end, bring them down to their
political, as well as their pecuniary- and moral
'condition; •Mr. S. was for cherishing Aliter
•iden 'labor; for giving high' IVages; foe 'stie
'rouindirigic with all the:substantial cilia:Me'
Prlife:? 'Wlirehh'Wed the' true' frrehnif 'the ,
"PEOPLE?' And yet thesd""freOrade" art-
ve,teatet;„'..Eintitlie 7 Seereiary down; professed
'to-be the exclusive friends of_theepooe man,'
and 'we aro deniiiniced'aq i ihe friends'ot 4 1n il
.llohdires and monopolists. 'We b iiw lin pert
:ed fifty inillioni'orth of 13ritieh agricultural
-products,r 01 1 ' English wool;' English grain,'
Tmglieh beef anti" mutton, English; ax, ' Eng-:
lisp' ag,rictiltutar productions . ot.:ev "kind.
•J'And.,yet geoiloinow wodld rise - lei lnd talk,
.of a British market fin; our Wads' • s:'' . ; Why;
I
. . - hotel much of Oils Aid - .England fake ?- - Noy a'
' lifatter Id h'inillioiOnitill'iti fiiiiiis I'.- , '. 4 .
I f - :fliire wt*a::bda - utifiil reel tocit y.LL.J . I . , ,
::,,,
~,, . ;/''..au tee' ; ¢ roe tradey, ;Mere - w ets,
: , Vutr,f3iinalitv',4hefiefite,. • ~ ,, We'leoleLtift4inil..,
Iblit*i l r - girtploopoii; - 60.1iwt it kt ogl ittu,
i'al';poiltief,‘rhilaselke, ,, :t:Olik:OnOrliOartet,4 It:
Akiiticaf Air pur,:lireastii Ella:: ',l',lpa ' 4iiii, our :'
liclaileir 4 r-itiol-3 1 . 1 "46:L ',
W44,:).v,ittli l W,Bri -, -
tieli'MarkektoOSl' .., Tl:te,Anierican;!niarkei
bOtisained'..annualli - neerlfaillipusiinkalill-'
-ions - rOt-'±Atherieak , _gruiti-;-29iippiitilh'Strktirltit:
one c.luarfiii a . One',Million., - 'Gr:eiti,'Britains
rook 'of z , oar, lloue!,:ricit'itt"tentgr.:ollll , :feVthi3,.
;ainountltaken . ;:thy . thelEriat.atittilyesplinlies,,
iika4l4l; part aajmueh,4:ll - ipAittleD M l,slaodi:
.Cuba;; .p.na, net triOhiiMmlban:liall.4ooolV;
4iit l -14inetiPilin'i=ittitielablii - ohgrivi.layli,leeht
. i'lintisiiiar 4 ,l;l4ll:sfriels:6l%, l flenit...oiiileitg 7 ;
,;littidk , Scothineli'Middieltini,lloillier . .........p
s:3soo.6lbarrela and iiilitltati4o4,"tionikneal.;,-.
. 0 1:i'pvi - iArq•V?14):,i 6 404 1 4 . 4A 411. 9! , °-.94 1 e40
lacte",.b_li:the peer - 407,4g Ihst; Tibapur;y:,„ th at
fiiiotiitigtllikik:o4.ll4GlV:g4ilCoillintiiiia.
wicfiiiith.haie'tOquii*,t,c(ish!PP6l*tiPihift.
',3l4iiiiisit.,ji,itiiiiiet , x:tpilireftihtittiill,hee'bby its:
3finteit'Ottetti , zetitttieol - MtittujahrifithitiliU.
.4 1 X1i451 . u 1 K40 8 "1,..ti4 i:a 1 :1 1 9000*
rm i migt , i , olOttilts i ;; or' hia"reen4t ion *ieri BOOOktptiif
Binge. far t hitAn Setittp :
;hirghificativhe-tttiti . ;iiii6i,"iit lird'iitiibigfaitt!
.iiioptiodiAltiv - ssi r cUtillilithi'VOiiiite44)tyintiMiP
ilfirekoffirilms*Rdoltrid;444ohtos 61444hred, - ,
tiORtOR:• I 2O, O3. e.tlßift : l 4oo4ooligc.i.4si#,
, . 3 0 :kV' Vp . fis 0 P,9447,.W lAPPNatc-S;#
Pe 'OP t'l -01 41 3 ,Y). xao/1!/gtolird1 11 " OW:
'dijotipiaihttigno , _: "ool'Oniiiiiiiii . V%tiotriire ;
tih.lodooniyoetiOillyAittweikSyfitiool444-.,i
.:0!!"..-;104.4010TOItiftY019.1kki104 ; 10*
_trailo(. 3 ,:AvyvAitkiiio. IlWiilillOtringvh
. Eia•
,!tr„ik, t:t rie z ,ooutd:rieiieVOit i l levet. iyitli the
i'Affitiheitila : 'll,itiolifif 7- 011`ti,' , h,liAlir Of qoAtiibt4.
tiltriii , piettittitoheiilhettittiiiet ; a iii:ini,aif Ri46.t.:
thithhititt,Moett;itititilti.theif-kityittte.r, , M:f:EAti:::,
,; '; ..l ?" l "l4s oll .o l o l6 lll.loll•Alti*ntigyillitotatibb
Nii*O o 4/MOthatiik,fe#StitilTytOliO . llo4lll
§ ( 'lgtatiktmaxte9i64o43,litito*isioto:*
*44oiNet*coitrovioluatimea n 'yq,the f
' ',,' , ,' ' '' , :' . ..''/: ' :', ' 'iW , ": ':'.':. ,': .': '< .,:' ' ' ; ' ;:'''.; '' '' ' •;f.•'; ' ' ' '''
.; :',.V:::.! : ;. '.:!,''. '':'. ~ "'' iP:',l'K,::.':l'; . : '. -, ': : 7, t:', • ' '' ' ' -
country in the world. Yet it is strictly and.
undernably.trite.
_Exported, not in its original
farm, but worked: up grid converted into goods
iron, cloths &c. consisting of raw materials
and breadstufls.• Great Britain exported, on
an average, more that two hundred and fifty
milli Qs o f dollars worth of manufactures, one
halfrtllwhole value of which consisted of
he prod eof the soil. The 'United Slates
took ab ti 3 O one-fifth part of all - the exports of
Gfeat BrUainA-being more than all Europe
pittrtgelher. fu a report:of - a cornmatee in!
the British Pilitament, made some years ago,
it appel'red. thin .the, British goods consumed
ty the people of the different countries of
Europe, Prance, Russia, Prussia ) 'Austria,
Spain, Belgium, &c. amounted fourteen awls
wort per, head, while the people . .of the
U e '. totes .in the same'time. consumea
thl it' 41 red, tflid yly four .ents' worth per
hex ! hiaSh d the im ease importance
tt l
y
of the America rigarleet to ;real Britain, and
accounted"f2r herogreat so - icikde to retain it.
Ti also shAled the superior Ati. iOlll of the
European flq/dmmen* in-exel ipg British
goods byinghtand .ptoltibilory IRAS; thns
1
developing and relying NMI II irliwit re
sources, eneouragirigattl sustaitti g ihei wn
national industry, prKnotirtheir ow los,
perity : and thus establish. ( we shou r lo)
their own national indedonellion the roost
staind and lastingToun ns. r,
Mr. S. invited smut' into the its he ha
iri gh
stated; he challenge contradi ions. He
put them before gentlemefi, ifild begged them
to examine and disprove them it they could
He invited them to reflect upon them fit a
Oirit of candor. To dismiss from their minds
all party. bias , to rise for once superior to the
low grovelling prejudice of party; to wake
tip to the great interest . and feel tor the teal
strength and true glory and independence of
their native land. .
A LETTER vitom CLA Y.—We find
in the New York Courier and .ntpiirer of:yes
terday, the toll Owing letter from I lenry Clay.
It will stir up the deep Feelings of admiration
in the nation for its great Statesman, and his
timely advice, in the' present crisis, will hare
additional value now, for its simple and 'lucid
presentation of the policy of protection to
Home Industry, when the fate of that policy
has become a matter of doubt. It is sorne-
thing' inexpressibly intelesting to hear from
Henry Clay, and gratifying, to know that his
great Mind still revOlyes scireme's . for his
country's good. He is still in the nation, and
Senatetre — c iG e t
counsel is . not . the less heard or the less potent
tO direct and ensure good consiiquenees:
- • • Asowo. June . sth, 13tn.
G ENTLEM EN: T
-4 postponed answering your
favor - cm - firth& artival ofthe.artieles to which
it refers, which you have been kind enough
to premt to me. They reached'here yes
terday In safety, and I request your 'accep
tance of my thanks for them. The pleastue
. which we shall derive horn using awn), will
be melt increased by the feet, that both the
raw material and the fabrie,pre American.
Their excellence attests the perfection which
thisimportant pranch ..61'woolert manufac
tures has attained in the U.'States, and it is
the more gratifying because ofthe great diffi
culties, with which they bare constantly had
to contend.
On both sides of. the Atlantic, the policy
of affording protection to domestic manufac
tures appears to be under consideration in
the national Legislature. The British Minis
ter has brough forward a measure embra
cing the doctrines of free trade, nut however
without exceptions of several, and some ve
ry important articles. The( manufactures of
Gloat Britain have reaLhed a very high de
-gree of- perfection,- by -means of her-great
capital, her improved skill and' machinery,
her chimp labor, and under, a system tlf pre
'lectiorc long, .perseveringly and rigorously
enforced:-'-' filienioreover posseSSes im'metise
,adyaßtitges for the 4iale , !tind Ifistriblition of
,her.numerens manufactures ) in her vast co—
,
loniel, p,oisessMns. From whieh • those of
foiehM powers-are either entirely excluded, or
admitted on terms gory unequal with her own.
- Lam riot, therefore surprised that under
these favorable circumstances, Great Britain
should herself be desirous to adopt and to
prevairciii other nations to adopt, the prinei
pies of Free Trade. I shall be, if any of the
.great nations of Me; continent, should foilow
AR example,. the
,practical effects ,of,whieli
will.be so, to ! .beneficial to her • and se Min;
riOnS, , . ~
'to them: -" •
The - propriety of affording protection to
Domestic • manufactdrcis,;its.degree and ifs
fltwation,,clapetal.upon the national condition
am: the actual progress which- they have
made. 'Each nation, of right; ought to judge.
for itself.• • I believe that nistory records no,
imam - ices of any great and prosp.eroufination,..
which did not dra,w its _essentk / al supplies of
food and rairrietif froth Atitixin It'ziwn . limits.
If all nations viceie just cominoriele,, , i'their
career i iiat JEtheirmanufactureslad -made'
,equal prograps n it perhaps be, wise to
tlwow„open the intit:kets,of tho,Wer,htto ; the,
'freeSt And .
thia4ihile:tliettingtfidaebi-, 1
• sewer sdrne.liateriadquired all4hcabltliWifY
; t ntl,perfection 914 , iViiia4 ;411; sPsellti)s o l'
thooo - 01 - .are ypi. in their iujuog
`‘titru'l . inifha4 fot:Viistencei'freb
betWeenthetn, most redound
Ave :of
Alt - ,kegi - r , in
naturalize and the an ti I
-no earthly . _to_ thTt f►oKrl~io ;a
Statesman bo'grinter, than' than:if Inn , /hi)
::contributed to",the. adoption Of grout system
Of', utkial, i rolipx,„apil - Of ettomarda
complote sucet3Ss in jte•prneticrtf
oxidistion: 'lltat s gratilicriiititi esti enjiiie s tl
Irthose wito.were instrnmOntulin establiSh•
ing,,tbd" protooting our ..11ornestio.
...,ll,4ritkft(Opri*ty PpYerr,P,4°T.W...Atlah-148.Y.
,thado bus' 'been, Jairw:do
they huntdity htid
quality of the' Dont natio:supply sn'to the•."o l ,
,euctiori-of.,:pricee t :es (a 0113i040060G.ClbillPe•
4t t ii i V a tj l i9 M 9o4l l ,4* l 4 l .l lo :4o- '13b 4514. 4 1:4r 6 r
:the.revejuL,n
_kg) beers fill:l:Lisa izedY
n..it coollidortifrninitablo tat 6/Ivan&
?We litellictitionNitbcfainten'otier,ti!ot , the op-.
ponents cif tho,polioy, has, ill' the segitel,beon:
, nntifely ,
4thould:tliteplylegeetan yabandoninentotitte.
iptAipy,orpotelmion,,,or, any, lip inlNitliral
upp„Of.tho 'feria:of . I§.4.l;:wlng haN)Y.Olt.qd(
veglh'::-
doubtful, .would it not•bo wiser
thef developerit eon' from f exporienot
•W 43 &ugh ,into ti:neykiiturmaeiPltil
y:t•,-Sdainelpttny'znig!ottettirkle-Ank,
the. builtiiuts enttPtifinu4l9f 1 , 41 0 0 1 11 0'
olperpetuiLthaugsi , r344{o.aikiwair
.skttamisonsiblig.titsfalikoYeeiXtOlfg
letter to a moittumtattalittNalettgth't
you nip* end, to,'l
` ll fdPfulltrOtt 10 0 64 1 .4 a d'Olter
e(4l4o,l.4yists/nop4rstlnt u
tit 4.
NUMBER
.
Cortespondence ofthe No Atherican:':
Gen. Scott and the War.
,•NoVON, Jung
•
. General Taylor was nominated yesterday.
as Major General in full under the Supple
mentary Army:bill—so, that' atter is dispo
sed oh - There was considerable - diScussion
in cabinet; bet Ween his claim's and those of
General Houston, whose. pretensions were
- urged•With -- mteh - zeal - by - ceriain;membersi- -
who WeM ready to saerifice the-gallant "Tay
lorjn order to serie a more .pliable - partizad .
It hi equally tortenate for - the: honor and the
interest of, the country; that. wiser counsels
prevailed, for Geri. Taylor would never have
consented to serve under a commander, who
is willing to - wear thelauiels Which he never
wen•-,tlibse of the battle of San Jacinto . : 1-lad
the President been as prompt in sustaining ,
Gen. Taylor at the time when the first intelli
gence of-his critical situation reached Wash
ington, as he tills willing to award him hon
or, when he could
„not resist it, public judg.:
ment would not have-been-dividedas to
intlnence which cironmstances exerted over
us conduct. •
The management of the war is now corn
tined to the hands of Gen. Taylor, whose
rogress thus -far has shown him to be emi
t ently
.werthy of the destination and costi
mre. The plan of operations is exceeding
ly extensive. The force under Gen. Taylor
is ..march to the city of Mexico, that under .
Gen. Wool is to subdue, should there be re
sistance, the piovinces of Chilitiliahim and
Coahula, and to co-operate with Gen. Taylor,
and that - under Col .Kearney is to take posses
sion et Santa he and to be independent in its •
sphere,. A very large discretion is necessa
rily entrusted to the commander-in-chief:—
II ninon orders to this effect were issued to
Gen. Taylor on the 16th• inst. the_ first, it is
said, of much moment that have been trans
• mined to' him for three •months past. They
were drawn up by Gen. Scott.., What now
becomes of all the contemptible subterfuges
to which the supple friends of the Adminis
tration have resorted, to misrepresent the pq. ,
sition,of Gen. Scott! It the. President eve
intended in good faith lie should lead the -
war against Mexico, Why not have issued
orders to him, as has now been done-to Geri.
Taylor s foi the identicaL position? jf the
necessity existed inthe ene case, surely it •
held good in the other—the change has only
been one of men. Who everheard of a vast
military-undertaking like the-invasion-of-- -
another canary, being begun without. tho
general-in-chief being possessed of the formal
instructions of hiS Government'?
itlfout 'then, there Arould be no immedi
ate responsibility ? In all the' great:enter ,- -
prices in which Gen. SCott has been engaged,
since he attained high rank in the army, un
der various administrations, Whig and Dem
ocratic, his instructions have "been drawn by
himself at the request of the President and,
Secretary of War, So it was when he went
to the Black Hawk War. • So in the delicate
and critical juncture in SQuth Carolina. So
•of the North Eastern Boundary, and so in the
McLeod affair. These precedents were all
familiar to Mr. Polk and his Secretary of
War, and the President would have given
the world a more convincing testimonial of
his sincerity, if after his proposal to shikrsetle
General Taylor, which Scott respectfully- -
,
declined, •he had said to -him when tie inti
mated to him the command of the army or
dered by Congress,- " - General - Scott - prepare.
Your orders." That would have put the in
tentions of the Executive beyond controversy
and prevented an issue which reflects any..
thing but honor upon his integrity in this re
spect.. There is an :unwritten history eon
-fleeted- With 'the' ecirrespondence between
.Gen. Scott and the Department, which fully
justifies every syllable he has uttered. Nay,
more, I undertake to say that none brit a so&
dierxof pratlenceand propriety, would have
f)ornit• whittle submitted to,. in 'deference, to
.the, Chief Magistracy of the country. ,It may
.e sport, for the yul , rar anif ,the vicious to
expend ridicule . oh Se' frankhdis andlerfest
phraseology of this gallant soldier, tut the
upright and intelligent discover in it the .
ellort . hide - the broken faith of the admin
istration and the violence ,of 'partisan Iwo
scriptitid.: It has 'been My fcirldneliot to be
among those who advocated .thin. Scott for •
the Presidency, but l-have tiever , been want
ing in respect ,or hitiyaluable and disihigaish
edsorvicea to the country, hor of r pthpriir ap- '
proCiation Of : his:Virtues as' a eitizenNow•
that the Work, of calumny and illiberal criti
cism is. done, I. shall take an early ocasion
to review the Whole eorresponderfEe in a
spirit of candor arid' calmness.-' Seott has
been Shamefully assailed by his enemiei:and
-meanly 'deserted by his • friends. I mean
those who,iverathe most fawning ti hen•he
was wafted on by the winds of popular favor. .
Bo the result What it may, he hai 'learned
,fltitt• ipsspAl Men muet,expetience
souiterAWiaTer7=ilill'iorlOti profess /Gest, •
: • z-7.
eatorte r isusciaalreTtliteuringllttr.herri=
bardment of Yort.ltrown there, was e: - ..Woman
in the, fort, the. wire pi one., or the privates,
Who an a regularly atteritiiely, the vhole time,
plied the 'men .at the guns' -with 'coffee and,
.other refreshments, while they plted,;he ltre%-
_ivans.ty ; illl t , h0t.,,,
S he gave trnele,Stun!s boys..._
guirpowdes (tea) while they helix& thellex
teens tO'graPe. ' tho 'shot (lOW Alia
-esti-01.001w Lical re - Fuliali 037 - frequently :lit
mild lei I s - eigaTfroKlarreg.Riodail;o B l l .7.7FShct
is a large athletic ;woman, . having Ripthrur
-well proportioned to her big, geneyeltsiternit.
She is now • tine fitverite(.os.the'AvWtrip • loy r
Apo}, bring, a natixo tridiun ,the;soifhttquet
c-tril'A pre nltacji co her ....?f r ...titt?l!,lstazs _ .
Af the tl inn& givehle the.
igittiolinfroat; the.. Stele, tegiiilafure, the Great
IVVliitiothilittaillcbstral , with all, the:honorts,l at.
ritlktbakfrlßl34t9 tbe
1 1 )00; . " •
rAbtae" . G oh. '1 rripiidiii ram h
freFalatit4fiiliisigroxeroireat from Res-
AcotEdl4lp3ibiTokitetwaiitjfiii - Soilopi.of
c4rwas-lbefugt,.lcoyruitit Igy rtlon",), he
said ;• '' ntadarri ipoixklieof his
vormsoula i r,lo,:rny.,moo.hay.o 411414 from the
Mille ,saith drOking I .her
&Wiwi thiitg. l7 '4?, 4 :1"
1 ".
@P, of
•
.•
,•
. .
,~;. -
ry '._^F',`z,.;.r+~~-! '.~„ 'fix' ~i~ti~~,
_7~ . _ex,;,-:v im ..