A it .7 WW 'WE CO WHERE DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES POINT THE WAV J WHEN THEY CEASE TO LEAD, WE CEASE TO FOLLOW." BV ANDREW J. IUltiY. EBENSBURG, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 1851. VOL. 7. NO. 27. II II III V MISCELLANEOUS, From the Richmond Enquirer. THE NEGRO RACE. In the able and learned lectures of Mr. Gliddoit, our attention was particularly txcited by his accounts of the antiquities in the Egyptian province of Meroe; be cause those antiquities constitute flie most striking illustrations of negro civilization which history and archeology can pro duce. Meroe was a country on the Nile above Egypt. When the last named and most famous seat of ancient civilization was overrun by Cambyses and tho other cruel conquerors, a portion of the inhabi tants retreated up the river and etablished themselves in Meroe. Hither they trans ported their old forms of government and of worship, their old arts and theiraniique customs. They built temples and exca vated tombs; they erected obelisks; they covered them with inscriptions in their hieroglyphic alphabet, and the inscrip tions and sculptures which date with the first generations of this colony, are found to be as perfect as those of the Lower Nile. But the colony was cut oil' from the body of the nation by intervening de serts and fierce nomads. The number of emigrants was never increased from the old race. Necessarily, the men were in a great disproportion to the women and they were forced to take their wives and concubines Irom the captives whiuh they made in their wars with the surrounding and barbarous tribes. Now, the Egyp tians were white men, but these tribes were negroes. Hence the second genera tion of the Meroits were mulattoes. The proctss of amalgamation continued. They formed harems from their sable captives, and by their sable purchases; so that the third generation were Samboes. The next were still nearer the negro type; and the work proceeded until all traces of Cir cassian blood disappeared, and Meroe was inhabited by a pure black race like that of the vast regions on its boundaries. The interesting circumstance connected with these facts, is the continued deterior ation in the sculptural remains of the country, and their final cessation with the disappearance of the white blood. The inscriptions and portraits of the original emigrants as before said, are equal to those of the Old Empire. Hut in those of their mulatto children, there is a great differ ence. The sculpture is clumsy; the in scriptions in bad grammar and worse orthography. The next arc inferior even to these; and in the succeeding generation it becomes evident that they had wholly lost the language, and no longer under stood what they wrote. The inscriptions are nothing more than miserable copies from the earlier works; so that on a tomb which is evidently of a late date, will be found a badly executed copy of the in scription on the tomb of its owner's great grandfather even the date and name be ing unaltered. After that, they lost even the power of intelligible imitation, and a few scrawl on uncarved rocks are the la test remains that are found. The Meroe ites then cease to be Egyptians even in name and tradition. They have forgot ten language, government, religion and arts. They have no buildings, and no enduring tombs. The province is no longer distinguished from the country. The race has relapsed into absolute negro barbarism. This illustration of their incapacity, not merely to obtain civilization, but even to retain it when given them, is a type of the universal history of the negro race. The world has their history in its hands for a space of nearly five thousand years. Negroes appear on the sculptures of old Egypt. But in that mulxitudious country, they were utterly valuless. The Egyp tians considered them too stupid to be worth teaching even agricultural drudgery; and we only see their figures when led as captives in the triumph of some belliger ent Pharaoh. From that day until this, the negro has never appeared save in thre.e forms of existence; Captivity, Bar barism, or Slavery. The last is the high est form of social life of which experience at least, permits us to suppose him capa ble. Circumstances would never have kept down any race for five thousand years, on'Trf.ff rl9iS int c" timp barbarians'- K,r.lle races liave "een ,n time Daroanans, but an 1,0 w-.n..i., h ve m time left it, and attained their natural grades of civilization. But the ncro has never left the lowest type of barbarianism aave for captivity or slaery. jn lne vast continent of Africa they have always ex isted in millions, with no chenmstances to depress them. But there, we never hear of them save as cannibal savages. No such thing as a Hegro government has ver existed jn Africa. Petty kingdoms habanddo exist there, some with so ealled cities like Timbuctoo. But the tare-breeched ruleis in air these kingdoms are Moors or Fellahs a branch of the Arab family; and the people of Timbuc too are Arabs and Felhhs. The Repub lic of liberia can scarcely be called an ex ception, since it is watched and guided by the Colonization Society, supported on all sides by England and other govern ments, is reinforced every year from the United States, and is governed by mulat toes. Even with all this assistance it is evidently falling to pieces in the growing barbarism of the people. Dr. Mechlin", who lived in Liberia five jears, and for part of that time was Governor of the col ony, has declared the experiment to be a failure and died in Mobile with the dec laration that he saw no hope of ever ren dering the negro race fit for self-government. On tills continent they have re ceived the most signal trial- In Hay ti they achieved their freedom by the mid night murder of their masters. They were protected by civilized States. They possessed the richest Island on the globe, wiin me ricnesi commerce at their doors. The result is very notorious. Famine ravages often that fertile land. Petty, but hideous wars occupy its sections. The only government which subsists is that of a bloody and stupid beast who is emperor over one corner of the Island. Oft" from the seaports the people have lost arts, re ligion, industry, decency have relapsed into absolute cannibalism. Dr. Nott stares on the authority of an eye-witness, that on two occasions, while travelling in Hayti, he saw the negroes roasting and eating their Dominican prisoners by the road side. In the free States of this country, the negro race can reach every advantage which the white possesses. A large por tion of them are educated. But where have they evinced capacity to make use of our civilization? Where have their best classes achieved a higher destiny than that of tavern waiters? Where have their masses risen above the very lowest level of the worst population? Where has any individual ever attained, not to say dis tinction, but even respectability, in any profession? In England, many negroes who were supposed to exhibit talent when children, 'have been subjected to a hot bed process of culture, and two or three of these have been brought up to the mark of writing verses. These have been col lected in a volume; and Bishop Gregorie of Blois, has written a stupid book to prove therefrom the intellectual equality of the race. But any one who will take the trouble to read these verses will find them for the most part, a doggerel too poor to be called verse at all; and whenever a copy occurs of sufficient merit for the poet's corner of the smallest kind of coun try newspaper, its author is sure to turn 1 up a muiauo or quadroon when the ac companying biographies are referred to. By the history of the negro race, it is therefore incontrovertibly proven that thev are utterly incapable of civilization or de velopement beyond the point of slavery. When ihe starved barbarian is taken from the wilds of Africa, clothed well, fed well, and associated with the whites, he quickly acquires a certain degree of health, strength and intelligence. He will quickly ape the white. But there his developement ceases. Beyond that in no instance, has he ever gone. Without amalgamation with the white race, he remains where he began, and sinks so soon as the superior influence is withdrawn. These phenomena are peculiar to the black race. None of the diversified fam ilies of the white race exhibit them. To which one of the white races could the advantages be given which lie before the negroes of the Unitad States, without an immediate assertion and proof of its talent and its intellectual superiority, in hundiedo and hundreds of instances? All the white races have been civilized and developed in time, and where circumstances have thrown them back in barbarism, they all exhibit capacity for civilization again. But the exact contrary is the characteris tic of the negro. What deduction is to be drawn from the fact? The plain and inevitable de duction is this: That the negro is a to tally distinct and inferior animal or spe cies of animal from the Caucasian; that the negro is the connecting link between man and the brute creation; that the negro is intended by nature for a similar depen dance upon the Causasian man, in which only the ox, the ass, and the horse, fulfil the intent of their creation; that the negro race is the result ol a different act of the Creator from that which originated the Caucasian,- and is consequently beyond the scope of those abstract axioms of the white race which declare that all men have equal rights. GPThe sword worn by Napoleon at Merango has been bought by the Czar for fifty thousand roubles, (thirty two thousand dollars.") The buvernlrendv lias a large collection of the relics of the great soldier. j THE COUNTRY PRESS. Few of our readers, we apprehend, are in the habit of reflecting seriously on the moral, social, and political influences ex ercised by the conductors of the country press. They are aware, it .is true, that almost every village and hamlet within the extended borders of our free and hap py country has within itself one of those potent levers, and ffenerallv under the guidance of a single individual, who is often impelled to the performance of his duties more by the regard he entertains for his profession than by the encourage ment or the rewards that are bestowed. But they do not always fairly appreciate the control which that single individual holds over the opinions, and over the passions and the prejudices of whole com munities. They do not at all times fully recognize the importance of those rays of light and intelligence which emanate even from the most unpretending of the co workers and laborers in the wide field of letters, because it is not in their power to trace out, at one view, their effects upon the minds of numerous persons. When, however, they look abroad, and contrast the intellectual, social, moral, and religious, condition of the citizens of this entire re public, with the enslaved, ignorant, and degraded condition of the people of almost every other country on the face of the globe, they will not, they cannot hesitate to do justice to those who,by their eflbrts, have done so much in preserving within the bosoms of our people the pure spirit of liberty, and in establishing and main taining that regard for individual rights, j and that implicit obedience to the laws, j which lorm the true foundations of our national superstructure. It is in this view, if we would estimate them at all, that we must consider the po tent influences of the country press. And, j inns estimated, Avho then has an interest in the progress of intelligence, and in the preservation of constitutional liberty, will deny to the press in their . immediate cir cle, that support which can alone enhance its usefulness and extend those influences for good? How frequently are we pain ed and mortified by the perusal of appeals made throngh the columns of prudently and ably conducted papers, for the means of continuing labors which have for years been almost gratuitously performed for the benefit of the public! It is snd, in deed, to see men of genius, and men of industry and perseverance, in such a di lemma as this their pride of profession subdued; their intellectual energies yield ing under the pressure of neglect; their generous hopes, and their warm ambition to be useful and honorable, destroyed by political malice or sect.iri. nrpi'mi;! I Such Wrongs. We fr;ir nr tnn nf'tn;nfl,n ted upon the conductors of the country press, notwithstanding the professions of liberality we hear on every hand, and not withstanding the universally acknowledged importance of sustaining, in the midst of every community, an independent news paper. We may say, indeed, that we know, personally, several such cases as are here referred to; but we hope that they are all that ever have occurred or ever will occur. As, however, nearly all the country papers that come under our observation and they number some fifteen hundred, hailing from every quarter of the Union are conducted with a view to the in struction and the advancement of the fam ily circle in morality, literature, and sci ence; and, at the same time, present a synopsis of the stirring events of the times in which we live, we cannot imagine how any judicious parent can withhold his eupport from euch publications, struggling in his own vicinity, and, at the same time, bestow his patronage on papers from a distant State or city. If it js true that charity begins at home, our country friends are bound to support their country press first, and then, according to their means and the generosity of their dispo sitions, to extend their charity abroad, and render it as diffusive as possible. We have lately witnessed, in the rejuvenated and cheerful appearance of many of our old and valued country friends, the most gratifying evidences of the "march of im provement," as well as of the favorable estimate placed on their characters and services by their immediate neighbors. This speaks well for proprietors and pa trons; and wc hope to see these evidences of mutual confidence and of public spirit increase an hundredfold, until all our ex changes shall look as bright as a gold dollar. In conclusion, we do not believe that any well-conducted "eastern publication" entertains any other opinions, or would suggest any advice that would not fully accord with the sentiments here expressed. If there arc any who do not agree with us, we are happy to say we arc not on the list of their confidential friends. Godcy's Ladtfs Book. The. editor of the York Republican, haying no doubt taken lessons from an Allegheny county judge, says, although Pennsylvania has withdrawn her iocofo co Sturgeon, New York has sent a whio Fish to supply his place. It is only fair that the tenants of the water should 'have a Sena-ibr,' while the earth, has its ", Clay and Downs the trees' their Underwood the beasts their Badgerihe storms their Hale the sun its Bright-ncss the soldiers their Shields the mechanics their Cooper and Mason men their Foote and Soule sportsmen their Hunter and Chase churches their Bell manufacturers their Miller servants a Butler flour a Busk monarchs a King tricksters their Dod ges, and the man's wife who went to Cousin Sally Dilliard's party her Jfade. The birds have no Senator, unless it be Daw-son -as for the progressives they have a JValker. JTio Filled Tecumseh? At a recent meeting of the New York Historical So ciety, as we learn from the New York Commercial Advertiser, Major Richard son, formerly an officer in the British ar my, read a paper on the "incidents of the war of 1812, embracing particulars con nected with the death of Tecumseh." The Commercial Advertiser says: "Major R. having been an eve-witness of the most of the matters described, and a personal friend of the great warrior, his narrative was of more than ordinary inter est, and commanded almost breathless at tention throughout. He related many instances of generosity and chivalrous gal lantry on the part of the Indian chief which would have done no discredit to the knights of feudal times. In relation to the manner of his death, Major R. is of opin ion that he fell by the hand of Col. John ston. Such, he says, was the universal understanding on the night of the battle, when all the circumstances were fresh in in the minds of the witnesses, and he sees no reason to dispute the fact at this late day. The question, "Who killed Te cumseh?" may therefore be considered settled." Major Richardson is known to the read ing public as the author of "Wacousta," "Ecarte," and other novels. Terrible Scenes in New Mexico. Horrible Atrocities. Maj. Bartlett, com missary of the boundary commission, ar rived lately at New Orleans, and commu nicated to the Picayune the following fearful narrative : "Maj. B's. party, when about 224 miles this side of El Passo, discovered a smoke at some distance. They sent out a party to reconnoitre, and discovered a negro man and woman in the act of cooking food, and, on further search, the head of a ne gro was found in the fire. They said they had been compelled to kill one of their companions for food. They had been nine days out, their gun had burst, and they were in a state of starvation. The account they gave of themselves was this : they were all slaves of a man named Ow ens, near Holly Springs, Mississippi, and had run away together last corn-planting, making for Mexico. The boy killed was about 19 years of age, named Arthur; the other is a black, aged from twenty-seven to thirty, calling himself Henry; the girl, a bright mullatto, about twenty-one, named Malinda. "These last two were taken to San An tonio, and left in custody of one Antonio Navano. "Major Bartlett brings accounts of some horiible scenes of disorder, riot, murder and execution which tojk place at Socorro about the closing1 day of January. It seems that bands of armed ruffians dis charged teamsters and soldiers, and fron tier desperadoes had been over-awing the quiet inhabitants of Socorro, by para ding the streets armed and committing all manners of lawless acts.; They robbed and killed openly, without any provocation or remorse. Instances are given of their seizing an unoffending man, taking away his gun, and killing him with it, without the shadow of a cause, and brutally beat ing the women. Through the 28th and 29th of January they ranged like wild beasts, committing all sorts of crimes, when a party of the citizens sent an ex press to the United States troops at San Elezurio, about six miles off, asking for protection, which was declined, and the applicants referred to the civil power. "On the night of the 29th a most auda cious outrage was committed. The robber band, seeking a man named Clark, (E. C. Clark, said to be the son of J. W. Clark, United States Senator from Rhode Island,) went to the fandango or dancing party where he was, and maltreated the whole party of males and females. They placed sentinels at the entrance, and fired oil" pis tols at the candles, and otherwise terrified the women, threatening death to man or woman who should stir; and finally the leader, one Alexander Young, assisted by three others John Wade, Marcus Butler and William Craig fell upon Clark, and gave him nine or ten mortal wounds Another man named Charles Gates was badly shot. Next morning some members of the boundary commission who were present in town resolved to arrest the murderers at ell hazards and sent an ex press to the main body of the commission at San Elezario for help. In three hours a large party of Americans and Mexicans arrived, in such force as to be enabled to search for and seize eight or ten of the worst, including Wade, Butler and Craig. Young, the ring-leader, escaped. "These men were brought before Judge Berlhold on the 30th January, examined and committed, and tho next day they were tried by jury, and sentenced to be hung within one hour; and notwithstand ing the threats and preparations of their association, the sentence was enforced, and they were hung up to the branches of a tree on Friday morning. The bodies of the murderers were buried, and at 2 p. m., that of the murdered Clark was also bu ried. "A large reward ($100) was ofTcred for the arrest of Young. He was arrested on the 1 0th brought to Socorro on ;he 11th. He made full confession of his crime, but was nevertheless put on trial on the 12lh. His own written confession, which he re peated and signed, was added to the other testimony. He was found guilty, con demned, and executed on the same tree where his companions had been hung. "Major Bartlett repeats that since these examples Socorro has been perfectly quiet and orderly." Judicial Nominations. No ticket ever presented to the peopla ought more strictly to denote the lines of party, than the next State Judicial ticket. The Supreme Court is a part of our Gov ernment, and an essential and influential part of it. The Legislature has been at times in the hands of our adversaries; but I never the Supreme Court. If we look at the history of" Whig Legislatures, we may form some idea of what a Whig Supreme Court would be. The Democratic ma jority will be large for the Governor; and, we believe,as large for the Supreme Court. Any Democrat in the State who could so i far forget the great interests of the Com monwealth and of the Part', as to be be- 1 trayed into the support of schemes, if such j there be on foot, to put forth a mulatto j ticket, (an admixture of both parties,) will ( never cease to regret his mistake. It will j be of no use for Democratic Legislatures to enact good laws, if a Whig Supreme ' Court is to mould them by construction. We feel it to be our duty, thus early, to urge upon all our Democratic editorial brethren throughout the Slate, to take strong and manly ground upon this most j important question. If by any chance, ' or mischance, a Supreme Court should be j elected, composed entirely of Whigs, or what is worse, partly of Whigs and partly j of tishv Democrats, it will require three triennial contests nine years to gain what we would throw away. Pcnn sylvan ian . Arrest for Mail Robbery. Colonel Ottinger, the active U. S. Post Office agent, last week arrested William King, at Franklin, Venango county, under charge of robbing the mail. King W3S deputy under Larkin Turner, a former Postmaster at Brownington P. O. Butler county, Pa. The charge was, for purloining money from the mail about a year ago. After his arrest, he procured a habeas corpus, and had a hearing before Judge Plumnjer, by whom he was remanded. This arrest will probably lead to that of others, as a gang of depredators on the mail have existed in that direction, for some time, who have been exercising the vigilance of the Post Office agents. No cause from the direction of Union town, has we believe yet turned up for the May term. American. The Fugitives ix Canada. Our Can adian neighbors are beginning to be gorged by the influx of fugitive slaves among them and some of the people arc becom ing restless and disgusted vith. the sudden and overwhelming irruptions of such a homogeneous kind of population. A re cent Toronto paper states that he has "re ceived a letter fiom Chatham, complaining that the country in that vicinity is being inundated with negroes from the United States; that lhey.are allowed, equally with the white population, the right to vote, to be elected to office, and to sit as jurors. The writer complains that one fourth of the votes at the late municipal chictions, were polled by negroes; and that as Lord John Russel iutiniated in a late speech, that as the circumstauees of Colonics are different, and require different constitu tions, so provision should be made to de prive the colored race of the rights cn joyod by the white population of Canada." The same writer made the following significant suggestions: 3 "Might not a further influx of negroes be prevented, and reciprocal free trade ob tained, by our agreeing to give up Fugitive Slaves!" , So it seems, after all that this boasted British love of liberty and equality, and philanthropy, are.-ready to be exchanged for free trade in cotton and bread stuffs. And we should not be surprised if this should be the ultimate result of inundating the Canada3 with fugitive negroes. The white population will soon become cured of their theoretical philanthropy, when they find themselves equalled or likely to be out-numbered by a race whose nature, habits, and character are so little con genial to their own. Their love of the negro will vanish with thaf'distance wh!ci gives enchantment to the view." Iiodiester Advertiser. A letter to the North American, from London, says: The U. S. frigate St. Lawrence wa towed into the Southampton docks last Saturday. Her cargo was entirely dis charged on Tuesday last, and placed in a warehouse, where each package was weighed and the seal of the Customs at tached, after which the whole were for warded to London by the South-western railway. The goods were taken from tho station in vans, over Waterloo bridge, through the Strand to Hyde Parke. It is stated that the monster block of zinc ore from New Jersey attracted treat attention at Southampton. Seventy "men were employed thirty minutes in raising it from the hold of the frigate and landiug it on the quay. It was lifted by a capstan, worked by fifty-two men, and the scene is described as a curious sight. "The tramping of the men round the c3pst.u1, the music of a marine fifer, the creaking of the tackle, the hoarse bawljngs, and sounds of the silver whistles of the boat swain and his mates, in giving orders while the gigantic lump was imperceptibly rising from the hold of the ship, were very singular." One of the greatest curiosities among the American contributions is an air ex hausted coffin, which will, it is said, pre serve the human body for many years. This coffin contains a beautiful boquet ot natural flowers, which appeared as fresh as if the flowers had only just been gath ered. Mineral W'ealth of Pennsylvania. From authentic statistics of the mineral wealth of Pennsylvania, it appears siie possesses 504 iron works in the whole State, the capital of which, in land-, build ings and machinery, amounts to twentv and a half millions of dollars, not inclu ding in the estimate any of the mining capital daily employed; and that these 504 works furnish employment to 30,100 men, and 13,552 horses exclusive of coal lands, farms, grist and saw mills, and dwellings for workmen. The ore is bo't of the larmcrs in the vicinity, who dig it 011 their farms and haul it to the furnaces in the winter, when out t agricultural occupation. The value of these ors banks and the labor spent on them forms another distinct item of value. Forty-five counties ia the State contain iron works; of the seventeen that have no furnaces, nine contain abun dance of ore and coal; but have been neg lected, owing to the want of good reads to a market. Eight counties only are not suited to the manufacture of iron. In 1847, these works consumed 493,000 tons Anthracite coal, 1,007,600 bushels bitu minous, snd 1,490,252 cords of wood the total of which was $5,000,000. Penn sylvania has no nobler title than that of the "Iron State." Has a State a right to stci:p:: .' t a question which is just now very ablv discussed in some of the Southern paper. The Virginia Resolutions of 1798 have been supposed to favor such doctrines, but we are told that "it will appear from Mr. Madison's papers, now iu the pos session of the Government, but as vci unpublished, that Mr. Mad.son himself did not so consider them." Among the papers referred to, it is said", are several very able essays in strong opposition to the nullification and secession principles that have prevailed in South Carolina, and which have been advoc.ueJ to a con siderable extent in other State. !3?Carbonda!e, in this State, has becu made a City and has elected a May or, it. CsTIt is reported at Rome, that a lan: number of valuable MSS., relating to the early history of America, have been found in one of the Monasteries of the Domini can Friars. FSmilh O'Brien has accepted a ticket allowing him six month's absence.