17- _ _ -, 4 •1. .• e I t _ 1 _ • • 0 a intuit') Retoopaper-73ctiotar to Gritrvat Entellificnrc, Minytioittg, /Iota( ono U 9 S3l runttsutu as JAMES CLARK. The “Jounxii." will be published every Wed nesday morning, at $2 00 a year, if paid in advance, and if not paid within six months, $2 60. No subscription received for a shorter period than six mouths, nor any paper discontinued till all ar rearages are paid. Advertisements not exceeding one square, will be inserted three times for $1 00, and for every subse quent insertion 25 cents. If no definite orders are given as to the time an advertisement is to be continu ed, it will be kept in till ordered out, and charged ac cordingly. (IC V. B. PALMER, Esq., is authorized to act as Agent for this paper, to procure subscriptions and advertisements in Philadelphia, New York, Balti more and Boston. OFFICES: Philadelphia—Number 59 Pine street. Bakimore—S. E. corner of Baltimore and Cal. vert streets. Nem York—Number 160 Nassau street. , Boston—Number 16 State street. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL PREMIUM HAT STINE, BIEitTRAND ROSS, No. 120 Chestnut St., suuth side, 4 doors below Fourth st., P II ILADELP II I A &I Respectfully informs the citizens .of Huntingdon County, that he has refitted and opened the above establishment, where he is pre pared at m all, times, to furnish Bea ver, Nut Moleskin Hats, equal to any manufactured in this country. Also, a Lill , perior quality of Caps, for officers of the Army and Navy, together with bress, Ri ding and Sporting Caps : is new and splen did style of Childress and Boys' Caps, with a great variety of Rich Fancy Furs for La dies. Just received, per Steam Ship Great Western, the • approved style of LADIES.' RIDING HAIS; also, a beautiful assort ment of ChiWrens' Frem.i Caps. I am determined that my hats, in point of beauty and quality, shall not be surpassed by those of any other Establishmeet in any City in the Union. Philadelphia, Dec. 24, 1845. GREAT gIASAIG+II,3EN Can be had at the Chair Shop of Thos. Adams, at his old stand, opposite Gen. Jackson's Hotel, where he intends keep ing CHAIRS of different kinds and qual ities, warranted good, and cheaper than ever has been_sold in Huntingdon. Call.and See! THOMAS ADAMS: NB . Wanted to learn the Chair Ma king business, a boy about 15 or 10 years of age, of good moral character, and to come on or before the 10th day of April neat. . T. A. Huntingdon, March 4, 1846. :Vallee to the heirs of David' Johns, deed. Tire heirs of said dec'd will take notice, that the Orphans' Court of Huntingdon county, on the 16th day of January, A. D. 1846, granted a Rule on the heirs and legal representatives of the said David Johns, late of s.‘irl,y, - in dec'd., t -,,,PL , 11 at the next Orphans' Court to he held at Huntingdon on the SC (; raid Monday of April noct, to show cause, if any they have,' why the real estate of the said dec'd. should nnt be sold. JACOB MILLER, Clerk. Feb. 18, 1846.-6 t. A Card. CLEMENS & EtAKER, 'Wholesale Druggists and Manufacturers of Copa Varnish; also, sole Agents for the Franklin Window Glass IVorkt. TEI AVING been long engaged in the man ufacture of Copal Varnish, as well as other kinds,. we are now prepared to offer to , purchasers an article which in quality can pot be surpasSed in the Union. Alsc, receiving weekly, from the above - celebrated works, WindoW Glass of every size. . . Constantly on hand, a full assortment of White Lead of the most approved brands; I together with a large stock of Drugs, Med-1 Paints, Oils, Indigo, Dye Stuffs, C ol ors, Bronzes, Guld Leaf, Dutch Metal, Cam els' Hair Pencils, Paint Brushes, Pallet Knives, Bcc,, comprising every article in this line. All which will lie sold at the lowest possi• ble prices, by CLEMENS & BAKER, No 187, North 3d st., one door above Wood ; Philadelphia. Sept. 10,1845. arj_onte tasto and try, 4,1 am sure you will buy, some very superior molasses, at the cheap CASH STORE of JOHK.N. PROWELL. Huntingdon, March 11, 1846. TriERSONS w ishing to purchase any kind 4,1 - (if WOOLLEN Goons, will find that they can he had at very reduced prices, at almost cost, at the Cheap Cash Store of JOHN N. PROWELL. Huntingdon, March 11, 1846. _ 0 TICE. L L those hiving nnsettled accounts in "Huntingdon Mill," will please cell and settle them bele' e the first of April, as nu lodger time C3ll he gi,en. M. CROW NOV E R. 18, 1940. EA:3 u)lmictaz:FLL- HON, ANDREW STEWART, OF PENNSYLVANIA, THE TARIFF AND FARMERS. I had not intended, said Mr. S., to say one word' about the Tariff; but I am strongly tempted to state a fact or two in reply to the gentleman from Vir ginia. That gentleman dwelt entirely on the ben efits of foreign trade. He went altogether iv favor of importing foreign goods, and creating a market for the benefit of foreigners. Would our own ag- ricutture be be matted by a process like this? No thing could moreaffestually divert the benefit from our own people and pour it in a constant stream upon foreign labor. No American interest was so much benefitted by a protective system as that of agriculture. The foreign market was nothing, the home market was everything, to them; it was as one hundred to one. The Tariff gave us the great home market, while the gentleman's scheme was to secure us, at best, but the chance of a market abroad, while it effectually destroyed our secure and invaluable market at home. The gentleman soya he is very anxious to compete with the pauper labor of Europe. I will tell him one fact: With all the protection we now enjoy, Great Britain sends into this country eight dollars' worth of her agri ricultural productions to one dollar's worth of all our agricultural productions (save cotton and to. bacco) that she taks from us. Mr. Beyr,r. Does the gentleman assert that Mr. BrEwAnx. I do—and will prove it. Mr. BATLT• Then you will prove the returns false which are made by our own Government. No, sir ; I will prove it by the returns furnished by Mr. Walker himself in support of the bill whicli lie has laid before the Committee of Ways and Moans. Now, I assert, and can prove, that more than half the value of all the British gocids torpor- ted into this country consist of agricultural pro duct., changed in form, converted and manufac tured into goods. And I invite a thorough analysde of the facts. I challenge the gentlemen to the scrutiny. Take down all the articles in a More, one after another—estimate the value of the raw material, the bread and meat, and other agricultural products which have entered into their fabrication, and it will be found that one-half and more of their ricultu;;;;rtaull Alt..Pl9.bdiece.nt.the Now, by reference to Mr. Walker's report, it will be seen that, for twelve years back, we have impor ted from Great Britain and her dependencies anna- ally 523. millions of dollars worth Of goods, hut call it 50 millions, while she took of all agricultur al products, save cotton and tobacco, less than two and shelf millions of dollars worth. Thus, then, assuming one-half the value of her goods to be agricultural, it gives ug'2s millions of her agricul tural produce to 2i millions of ours taken by her, which is just ten to one; to avoid cavil, I put it at eight to one. To teat the truth of his position, he ' was prepared, if time permitted, to refer to numer ous facts. But for the information of the gentle. man from Virginia, who is so great a friend to the poor and oppressed farmers, I will tell him that we have imported yearly, for twenty-six years, (so says Mr. Walker's report,) morn than ten millions of dollars worth of woolen goods. Last year we im ported $10,666,176 worth. Now, one-half and more of the value of thi.: cloth woe made up of wool, the subsistence of labor and other agricultur al productions. The general estimate is, that the wool alone is half. Tho Universal custom among farmers, when they had their wool manufactured on the shares, was to give the manufacturer half the cloth. Thus wo import, and our farmers have to pay, for jive millions of dollars .worth of foreign wool every year in thq form of cloth, mostly the production of sheep feeding on the gross and grain of Great Britain, while our own wool is worthless, for want of a market; and this is tho policy the , gentleman recommends to American farmers. Yes, 1 air; the gentleman Is not satisfied with five millions, but wishes to increase it to ten millions a year for ' foreign wool. Will the gentlemen deny this? He dare not. He has declared for Mr. Walker's bill, reducing the duties on woollens nearly one-half, with a view to increase the revenue ; of course, the imports must bo doubled, making, the import of cloth twenty millions instead of tell, and of wool ten instead of five millions of dollars per annum.. This was the gentleman's plan to favor the far mers, British farmers, by giving them the Amcri,' can market. His plan woe to buy everything, sell nothing, and get rich. (A laugh.) What was true as to cloth was eqUally true as to everything else. Take a hat, a pair of shoes, a yard of silk or lace, analyze it, resolve it into its constituent ele ments, and you will find that the raw material, and the substance of labor, and other agricultural pro duct', constituted more than one-half its entire' value. The pauper labor of Europe employed in manulacturing silk and lace got what it eat, to more ; and this is what you pay for when you pur chase their goods. Break up your home manufac tures ar.d home markets, import everything you eat and drink and wear, for the benefit of the farmers. Oh, what friend,' these gentlemen are to the far mem and mechanics and laborers of this country-- j no, air, I am wrong, of Great Britain. Now, I ask Whether wool is not, in the strictest sense, an agricultural production? And if we im port ten millions in cloth, is not five millions of that sum paid for the wool alone—a product of 'British farmersl As a still stronger illustration of his ar. vorrent, Mr. S -,terred to the article of iron. Lalt )al - - year, according to Mr. Walker's' Report, we impor ted $0,043,396 worth of foreign iron, and its man ufactures, mostly from Great Britain, four-fifths of the value of which, on every practical man knew, conaisted of agricultural produce—nothing else.— Iron is made of ore and coal; and what is the ore and coal buried in your mountains worth I No thing—nothing at all, tfnused. What gives it value The labor of horses, oxen, mules, and men. And what sustained his labor but corn and oats, hay and straw for the one, and Lread and meat and vegetables of every kind for the ether? These o a n g d ric t u h l i t o u rn ra o l d p o re n d p u n c e ts o w r i y er i c h p o u w rc h h o a l s o edanti consumed, 1 Baltic and the Black sea. Repeal the corn laws— priceof theiron I put them on an equal footing with us, and i not that would startle the American people. and supply the market, and thereby diminish line • the manufacturer received end paid over tor the question settled, and the arket lost ' 1 ports and revenue, this is evidence that the duty is the farmers again and again, as often as thea The British manufacturers have, at this me the foreign rival productions; but let the President Pm' and flour in all time'. come Nothing!o"rgrabin I la too high and ought to be reduced, so as to let in speak for himself--here is his revenue standard in cess was repeated. Well, is not iron made in Eng, mene possession of this Cepitol. Yes, sir, clearer. And et gentlemen exult i 1 can a 4., , you and the country—one of the principal cont. land of the same materials that it is made of hero? the repeal of the corn I Certainly ; then is not four-fifths of the value of ' fl ee tee ni I° p ros p ect ' ! mitten rooms in this house is now, and has been I ties " The precise point in the ascending scale of du• am ' an e ! for weeks pant, occupied by a gentleman formerly I his own wards ' whole of and home d are read y to seers i i , v ii h u ie c h is it g i r s ea rt i s e e s e i tt i a s i t n h e o tl in te a olex perience that British iron made up of British agricaltund Fee kale to beliiii ma ' I residing in Manchester, England, who has a vast . Medi can be laid ler the buns tide upanurrpaotese'offilcuolii duce? and if we purcluise nine millions of dollars therepeal of the corn laws on Ameri ti c l a7 Per ' ati l ci t n 'f I number, perhaps hundreds of specimens of goods , the r r e t v war:l . o . M . , British iron a year, do wo not pay six or and such is the statement of Lord Ashburton , r t : i n . 1 ' sent from Manchester (priced to suit the occasion ) seven farmers --grain, millions of this sum for tho produce of Bri- perhaps knows air touch about the matter' w h o to be exhibited to members of Congress to enlighten l'eting mono} for the support of GurerummL7e arid in the language of hie letter ' tliereliy diminish the ernonnt collectedeie to levy rmers—graM, hay, grass, bread, meat, and the learned gentleman from Virg in ia. as ove n their judgment., otheeprovisions for man and beast —eent.hero for i n ln e in t :dll.by ro raise the deli. higher than that .point, and 'I theio i e ni o o p . i t n i t o o , : I i o i of Lord din merchants Ashburton B ut n i n i t his os.: l : :t f o.. in a e rr tr iv u . : t:,:n from Manchester :if the 3d January, d iem for protection merely, and not for revenue:-- P• in the term of iron , He punt to the gentle-'4U, acco mp anying these Specimens to enable them As long , then, as Congress may gradually increa man from Virgini the rate of duty on n given article, and the rover u s : a (Me• Dee Le) to nay if this wee Britain. Such is the g just conclusions in regar d to the I true M the letter, Ile challenged him 4o den ny recent, before uniform tenor of the testimo- ' , posed alterations in the present war' Yes , !s increasrd by such Mere:tee of duty, they are with notHo f y , fatten a select committee of the ! sir, . ,in the mvenne etandunl. When th ey go beyond it, et disprove it if he heat h gentleman'. plan ogents, s eci nens and letters f p . , tont Great . Britain ! that point.. and they increase the duties, the rev use o Commons on this subject. Henry Cie- ; . . was to break down the. g and growing markets in rucung . how to make a tariff to nit th e mi. is d iminished or destroyed, the act ceases to vet Chapnimi, one of the witnesses and one of for our own farmers, and give our marketshave for its i* • ' ! el Jed the raising of money to to thy the must ollia s i ntell i gent men i n the kingdora, says:— , . Government , but is fir protection merelv." supp ort British; and yet he professed to be a friend to people of doe North would mod on 'specimens of , • ' °Repeal the corn tare, and the growing find American fanners!! 5 Fr le hat la tbie but a rule to favor foreiguere, and • •ne such fr ibmis g'el Canada and the le" ; ' — ----° with American, manufactures to be also exhibited in th Lord deliver them.' ' One remade more on this II : o o . h es o t en Strsof America will break down Americans? The moment the A mere Capitol, not only to show their perfection and e: be.cruehed by c yet pro du cti ons of the Baltic ' lean by Its superior industry and skill begins to topic: Secretary Walker informs us that the pro- no the Black tent, but to correct on the spot the fI e r 0 ' sea; consequently," he adds, . . - le ' ' e. res e nt - ' succeed, then the duty must come down so as to sent duty on iron is 73 per cent., which lie propose. eme •.. , alms made by these Manchester men and each meet, Canada, and Breish s hippi n g , to reduce to 30 per cent., to increase the revenue. receive a sever. and decisive Llow,, Wouiti agents irt regard to the cluteactee and .. cs (1. increase foreign imports and revenue. 'fide is the plain and inevitable operation of the rule, end who To do ti n s, must he net double the imports of ircn? bythere r al British and American goods. SpWe l :Of the of the corn law, But Still thewould ga into inanufaceuring under such an .enti- Clearly he must. Then tee artist add ten or twelve gentleman from President's message, this Manchester letter writer Virginia exults in thepro spect f o th e repeal of the "'enteric. rule as this, making it death by the law millions per year to our present imports of iron, an dexclaims "a second Daniel corn l aws , rind b oosts , o fthe market it w i ll open I Como to judgment, a see- —certain and inevitable. As an illustration, take of course destroy the amount of our domestic 00P - to our w : e nd Richar d Western farmers, to whom, however, he will t ° "den ''" and sotelighted were they ply to make mom for it. Thus at a blow, in the ! iron for instance. Owing to the mph! increase of not give one dollar for their rivers an d improve- in England with Mr. Walker's celebrated fee trade iron works in the United States, import single article of iron, ibis bill is intended to destrothe of t rots Y meats — not a cen t—butis• anxious to seduce them s ordered to • report that it was be printed by the House has been greatly reduced; then the Executive rule the American markets for at least eight millions of into this British free trade trap; but he would any lof Lords. After all this, having our President and , dollars worth of domestic agricultural produce to to applies—down with the duties, so as to increase the W est , us times donaos " t rust ' Secretary on their side, theyought to• ' • , year friends, I , base been Imports and revenue. Accordingly, Mr. Walker be supplied from abroad ! . and this is the American end beware of your enemies. Look at the boasted I content , without sending their letters of Mantle- : ' , von ., t o re d uce the eut, which, ee says , •n o te' —no! the Bri t ' sh—PYßClTl of policy which is now . len bign market, whet ie it? Comparatively no- ! lions here to direct . what hied of a tariff they 73 . attempted to be imposed upon this country by this 1 • per cont. M3O per cent., .as to increase the thing. Look at facts. The agricultural produce I wish ue to pass. But if their chancellor had sent ! - British-h t irl • • l • a eng .1 mans ration ! Let them do it, c one r the U nited • u bill, revenue. Vt ell, to do this, he must more than e 'r _ Stat e s, ‘us exclusive of cotton and ;s a revenue he could not have furnished ono I double the imports, now amounting * and in Icon than two years there will not be a ape- to more than people j tebac ee _ _ _, _ 1 _ _ _ ts2e works i m ictitens e r r ;to suit Great Britain better than the ono furnished 'eight millions s year, and thus tie, must import 16 cis-paying bank in the country . The and l yea r, J ;fri 1,19a,5 5. , Of this , .....- Un cu . lie , ' the Secretary of the Treasury. Parliament scenes and sufterings Or anon will return; and with about about two and a half. All the rest was e'en- ' ' duties off breadstu ff s and raw Materiale of nines eons Si e e.,,„,„ ..,,,.... _„. 4 .e.... „ :...c.„,,,,v,.. t‘.. it, as a necessary consequence, the political revolu- sumed at home. So the foreign markets of the need by their manufacturers, and remove every bur- : grain and other produce used in the manufacture of lions of that period. . world amounted to 11 millions, and the home mar- den so as to enable them to meet us and beat us in this iron ; for the fact is incotttestible, that more The home maaket, Mr. S. 'contended; was every I tel to 989 millions. Yet the gentleman had just 1 car own markets soden the markets of the world, I than three fourths of the value of iron is made up thing to the farmer, and the foreign market cont. pronounced the foreign markets everything to the ' poratively nothing. Massechtisetts alone purchased I farmers, and the home markets comparatively no- ;where Yankee competition is beginning to give of the produce of the soil!. And this is the policy and consumed fourteen times. Blue!' of tho grain, thing. But another fact. Our exports of mane- I.lhm° great uneasiness. Last year, we exported to favor American farmers and American laborers! flour, and meat of the other States as the United factures last year, including those of wood, amoun- hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of cotton Throw the plough out of the furrow, and turn labor Kingdom of Great Britain .d Ireland, from whore led to $13,429,166. Assuming, as in the case of : goods into the BIM. East Indies, and beat the out to starve—to make way for British goods, and we took fifty millions of dollars worth of manufac- British manufactures, that one-half their value i 3 :British in their own markets, after paying discrim- increase revenue! ;looting duties imposed to keep us out, first 8, then Mr. S. said he had not time at p er but ho totes yearly. 'Massachusetts took 35 millions worth, matleup of American agricultural produce, then we 10, fi nally 15 per cent. In this great struggle, Sir I would avail himself of the first proper occasion, to (exclusive of cotton and tobacco) while Great export nearly seven millions of dollars worth of Robert Peel comes to the rescue; he repeals the I sheer, as lie thought he could most clearly, that all Britain took but two and a half !! Yet, according I agricultural produce in the form of manufactures; duty on cotton and wool, and bread and meat, and the theories of the Seen:gay and his followers in to the gentlemen from 'Virginia, the foreign market I which does not glut or injure the foreign markets thing aged by 13ritish manufacturer. to en- favor of their free trade policy were trot only false was vastly the most important ! ! for cur-flour and grain, in its original tetra. To use ' I every Mr. LEAKS. here put the question to Mr. S.:— - a familiar illustration: Western farmers send their I able them to go ahead in this struggle with the and unfounded, but that exactly the revolve of those and what does Mr. Walker do I Just theories was true. lie referred to the theories that Whether cotton and tobacco were not agncultural I corn, hay, and oats, thousaude of dollars worth, 1 Aenerican " , , the reverse. He proposes to take off all protective . "protection was for the benefit of manufacturers at products? • 1 every year to the Eastern market, not in its rude duties, and imposes heavy burdens on the raw nun- the expense of the fanners and laborers of the coon- Mr. S. Certainly ;- but they or not our only t end original form, lint in the form of hogs and • 1 finials, dyerentee, &c., used by our manufacturers, t r y;" that "protection increased the price a man agricultural products. There were other interests I horses; they give their hny-stacks life and legs, and so as effectually to prostrote and break them down. ufactured goods, and reduced the price of labor and in this country worth looking after and preserving ! moke them trot to market with the farmer on their ' air Robert Peel takes burdens off his steed, while ' protium;" that it " favored monopoly and wealth besides rotten and tobacco. But, no doubt. the . Nee. (A hough.) So the British conceded their Sir Robert Walker piles bags of sand on hie then at the expel). of the pout" that " reducing duties gentleman concurs with Mr. reecretnry Walker, who I produce, not into hogs or horses, but into cloth and crack their whips—clear the road—a fair race ! ' would increase revenue," ite. He could scarcely tells us, in his free trade report, which has so de- iron, and send it here for sole. And, viewing the Such is the difference bettveen 13riti3e • 'meek of stich grose nesurdities in reepectful terms. lighted England, and no wonder it has, for lie 111. e. subject in this light, he could demonstrate that there 1 laugh.) l and American policy. Sir Robert Peel's present ! What? Favor invested capital by building up says we must take mere British goods, because, If was not a State in the Union that did not now con , we do not, "England must pay for oar ' bread- , some fire dollars worth of Britielo agricultural Isystem furnishes powerful arguments fur adhering competition, and increasing the supply of the stuffs' " in ePeefeoted "trot haring ill() spare, produce to one dollar's worth she consumes of Ito our protective system—his object is not to favor, I articles they had to sell? Injure the farmers by ' I but to beat us ; and our course is not to defeat but I doubling the demand for their produce, raw mate she will bring down to even a greater extent the theirs. Time would not permit him to go into de price of our cotton." Yes, "our cotton"—Lie" ' tails; but he would furnish the °temente from Ito favor his puma.. This will not. only be rho ' rials and bread-stuffs of every kind ? Oppress and I effect of the tariff proposed by our Secretary, but it ' rob the consumer by giving him goods at one-fourth is the rub. The North and West must gild work, which any one could make the calculation. A. i sell nothing, and tiring every thing from England, . etnn i ng Shut emtsumpi : eo end „ peri , o ,i on ere in s its open and avowed purpose and design; is it of their runner price? Reduce wage by doubling .; the demand for labor—lahor of men, women, and and send them our epecie as lon,g as it lasts, se that ' proportion to population, then we import 50 mil- ; not 'lie Ineeleitnel purpose of the Ineesetre end the . report to incise. the importation of British goods, children? Yes, Mr, increase the price of goods by England may have e specie to spare" fie -Southern lions of British goods, and 25 millions—one-half is i I and of course, Io that extent, destroy American 'doubling the supply, and reduce the price of agri cotton—that's the plan thus openly and boldly pre- agricultural produce. We export to Englund og supply? Does not the Secretary propose to reduce cultural produce by doubling the demand 1 Favor claimed by the Secretary and his followers. \Ste of . ricultural produce, (excluding cotton and tobacco) I the protective duties more than one haw for the ' monopolies by building, up competition, the only the North and West must send our lost dollar to 2i millions. Divide there eums, 25 and 23 mil purpose of increasing revenue; and if the revenue ; thing to destroy it? Such are the absurd theories; England to buy'bread and Meat, and ramie, nnd lions, hy 223, the number of Represeetatives, and , is increased by reducing duties one half, must not lof free trade. But gentlemen :nue' first reverse all groin, in the form of iron ee cloth, to increase the , it gives $112,108 as the amount of British 'en, i „ the imports be more than doubled ? 'rids is self- the laws of trade—the great and universal law thid price of "our eaten." . We must be "hewers of ; fatal produce consumed M the form of evident, and if you double your imports of foreign . "demand nml supply regulate prices; '—a taw as wood and drawers of water" for Great Britain— !tech Congressio n al district ; and $11,210 as their , goods, must you not destroy to that. extent Ault, universal and itivarinble in its operation, as the law paupers, slaves, and beggars, that England 'may I export to Great 13ritain of agricultural produce.-- , icon supply? Most certainly, unless the Secretary ' that Rover. the solar systmn, must not only be re lieve " specie to spare" for Southern cotton. This I , rhia gives the proportion of ten to one. Yet gen • can, in his wisdom, devise a plan to make people ' pealed but reversed in its operation., before gentle. is the undisguised policy and purpose of the T een- 1 Omen are not satiated, and with 'till further to , eat, drink, mod wear double ns muds as tlic e now : risen could suetain any of these abrunieres. eery Report. But Mr. S. would any to the. Sett. I increase the Moped a goods, and still further Pros. them gentlemen i Don't be afraid. You will have ! trate Ind destroy the American farmer and median- do. Dut where will we end money to pay fur : The clock admonished liim that his time wa. out ! them 1 There's the rub. But startling and extra- : —he would avail himself of the moment left to your cotton market still. England must have cot- iu and laboring man to favor foreigners. To chow , ordinary as it may appear, our Secretary, foe the warn gentleinen—if they would allow him to proph ton--she can't do without It at present: But be-1 the effect upon currency, . well as agriculture, foot time in tits history of the world, has boldly and ery,-ha would any—gentlemen, pass this Treasury ware; the time may come when Engemid would I suppose the gentleman frotn Virginia (Mr. Beer.v) openly avowed it as the object of Government to brie approved, Os he understood, by the ca6iact— not want .. our cotton," and the South, in turn, I wants a new coat; he goes to a Brinell importer , break down and destroy its own manufactures for bring back the 'cones of 1840—reetore.your twen would cry out for protection. But the tentieman I and pays him $"0 hard money, and haul to got.— I I the purpose of making way for those of foreigners.. ty per. cent. tariff—bankrupt your treasury—pata congratulates the West with the prormeet-of en I England takes none of yourragmcney. (A laugh.) In the very first paragraph of his argumentative lyze your nationel industry--break dawn your far early repeal of the corn laws. But, in his opinion, I Awoe it goes, in quick tittle. We see no more of I report he sets out with stating that the revenue of , mere, manufacturers, and nom:harries, hy imparting if the corn laws were repealed, the people df the I it, se ter as circulation is concerned, the gentlemen the Ist quarter of this year is two mittens , less than greets and s apr.rting money—pass Ibis hill, and in West would scarcely get a bushel of their grain into I might se well hove thrown it into the flee. I want . the Ist quarter'of the feet, and that this has been eigidoen months you will ecarcely have a specie- England on say terms. ' I a coat. I go to the American manufacturer and , occasioned by the substitution of highly protected , paying bunk, or a specie dollar left in the ['slr. Be vi e r. Do you mean what yen any, that ' buy $2O worth of .American broadcloth. (He wears not one Inwhel will go there'll I ...thee. end he would compare coats with the gen. : American manufactures for foreskin imports ; country. Pa. this bill, mid you will not only bring Mr. Sr het I Will answer the gratleman, by I demau on the epee) (A laugh.) %I'd, the man- ' end this evil, this terrible ovil, this American *cc- back the scenes, but I ',peat, you will bring with giviughim Lord Abhburtores speech ie tee Hee. I ulaourer, Oh; next day, gave it to the farmer for , rotary p.p... to remedy by reducing the protee- them the pinks{ revolutions of 1840. 'Si,zahi will of Lords a few days ago. He btutes that nine- ! wool; he gave it to the shoemaker, the hatter, and ! rive dune., end thus breaking up this abominable be heard throughout tlutlend thnory of treea,,ge ! tenths of the grain now imported in Greet Britein 1 blacksmith : they gave it back to the fanner fur ', husine. of "Pthlituti rig domestic products,"tuade change ! any change must be for the better." Po is supplied from the north of Europe. a lilimigh they I meat and bread; and here it went to one another. ,by American labor, out of American produce, for lineal revolutions are the fruits of popular suffering goy a tax of fifteen shillings the oueeer ; while You might perhnis see his busy and bustling $2O I British goods, made by Bread; labor, out of Uri t- and discontent; in prosperity the cry iS ''/et teeli c that from Canada and the United Steles, pav-ing note five or six threes in the come° of a day. 'Phis iig produce. Oh! but he hates tee British. lipw,'''' ( l,l `,`: , i ; c ' e lf .', ' ~,,, ori. ~ . , Vt hie , you ought to go through Canada, pays but fourethillineee ' Repeal . made money plenty. But . where was the,gentle- 1 1 sir, Ilea hi not only the doctrine of hie lea, but it 1,„ I t ien „ v ' t „ r iff‘ the duty of Bacon ahillings, Mod will they not sup. I nean'o had mcnsy 7 Vsnts%ed ; gene to rervar,l run-, through his whole eermon cf 951 lees. No Yte, tale el , . te .If 1 wan like some y 121023.3 Afteraturr, f i goretlit9., 3rto, 55riencto o linvintitti re, Muntionent, tic., kr. . a ~~ ~? s?~ ~~ D ~E3~C~3~ ply the whole 1 Most clearly they will. The fact ht notorious, that most of our grain and flour now goes to England through her colonial ports, and at colonial duties, thus evading the operation of the corn laws, while the grain and flour from the north of Europe must always pay the highest duties im posed by the corn laws. Hence Lord Ashburton very justly argues, that we must be overwhelmed if the corn laws are repealed ; and this great ad- vantage now enjoyed by Canada and the United Staten, of importing flour and grain at about one- fourth of the duty paid by the importer. from the and enrich the wool-growers and farmer; shoema kers, better; and blacksmiths of England. Now, I go for supporting the American farmers and me chanics, and the gentleman goes fur the Eritiah--- that's the difference. Can the gentleman deny it? There ale but two sides in this matter, the British and the American aide ; and the simple question is, which aide shell we take? The great struggle is between the British and American far. mars and mechanics for the American tnarket, and we must decide which shall have it. Mr. S. would here take occasion to state a fact '7'ar2. Ti.CD S:ftqs). ebeoeu. wonder it was printed by the House of Lords: and lot our Secretary carry through this bill, and , Queen Victoria would gladly transfer the seals from Sir Robert Peel to Sir Robert Walker, for he will have tendered her a greater service then any other man, dead or living. But this is not only the doctrine of the Treasury report, but of the message itself. The revenue Standard laid down in the message aims a death blow at all American industry. It suggests a kind of ~ .sliding scale," so that whenever arty branch of American industry begins to beat tho foreigner,