Vincennes Gazette, Volume 14, Number 19, Vincennes, Knox County, 10 October 1844 — Page 1
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lb . ' - ert Polk and Tyler Pocy. A i JuKn lirmrn -Jn Polk (rottlie nomination. Poof liflU I Poof ILltU Jimmy Polk. (repeat) j y Poor little, vyeak Jittle, vain little Jimmy, Soft -tiHIo. rwm little, fkiispless Jimmy, J'roud little, bnjve little Jimmy. J.i3r"little Jimmy Polk. lim Polk the scourge of the nation Iicke.l up Martin Van; VVhaf a source of mortification " Tis to Matty Var; lnt lltt.M Mil lilfU l.fJM. , , .vf ...... 1 . n , null! UWV, I.ttv .MlTll , " . . r- . J(ip(Md up, tore up. uimi.l... iutetl . i r . .Pu(Sed little, atuffed little, blurted Poor little Matty Van " Poor JohrTliJ little pony; one utile i ex a hors
ill'? 4 W
Dried up, withered tip, slfnhhy litepoiWj' Xlfttkf WcoiitilCtiousl v palp-.Ms as thev are
Half .tari-ed. half grown, tch nyMeCu of every mn.
-u.7 Humpy ,.u,-. runty ,lRJt poF.? Poor little bony thing. Jim Polk he hookej a little pony I oor little, raw-honed thin With a hop and a step and soiaetimes a jump. He stumbles and frightens at every stump. And some of these limes he will give a quick jump And throw poor Jimmy ka-thump i4 m is 1 v i rv c: s-; a MONDAY, OUTOIJER 7, 1811. Tiie f!!owing, from the Louisville (Vurirr, a n.'iitra! paper, is of aome import. L-'t our readers peru it, and p unier we 1 the result of their votes in November next; for if thoy vote for Polk, they will be aisiin England, in breaking down American industrial enterprise; and on ihe other hand, by voting for Mr. Clay, they wiil be assisting to astablish ojr own eoitiiry independently of an nher nation, fostering American genius, promoting our own agricultural interests, and defeating Kngdsh interferance in out elections. The motto from the Clipper is a good one. A Slartliais' Tact. The liakitnore Clipper, an independnnt paper, says, wa have it from an indisputable source, that an agent of ; n lnjllish iron manufacturing eslaUlishmer t. staled a few days frgo, to a dealer in hariittiirc. of ibis citv. that he had recfieill positive instructions from his principals in England, to use all the means in his powerto procure the repeal of the American Tariff. The Agents reside in New York, and wiil comply with the instructions which he has received. So here is proof positive of English interference with our domestic concerns. The Clipper recommends thai the following sentiment (to which recommendation we most heartily subscribe) be inscribed upon the banners of all parties, as evincing the American Spirit which ehould animate all. 4ra!ii'd hv the Slant! WHICH RECEIVES ISritish Oold, To Vut I! oir n A.TSi:UlCA iSn'STJtV'' This will be much mote appropriate than many of the inscriptions on banners which are frequently paraded through our streets for, if there be English agents amongst us, it will inform them, that the People of the United Stales cannot be corrupted bv their "old or peruaded to sacrifice the best interests of ihe Union at British dictation. The following extract from the Baltimore Clipper, an Independent paper in addition to the above, we add to show, how this matter is viewed by those who are not engaged in this political contest: England is ia the Field. The most important item of intelligence received bv the late arrivals bom Europe, is the fal "which wa communicated yesterday, that England is in ihe Held against the Tariff of ihis country, and is openly endeavoring io procure its repeal by the iiiAucnce of her gold. Ha l we previously adouhled the propriety of a protective tariff, this single fact would cause us tu curefuliv le-examme our opinion, if not to e nounce it; for we ',ou!d feel assuu-J tht i;te interference of England to emmge .?'.. o opitdou in this country was not, ' the rite rests of ibe United States wi ght bo promoted. She h" twice nu-a-.,,.1 iron T'U with us m anus, and s":g- " ,i :i,r -.., I.... I, Imt we have I 11." 1 1 V ai ten 1 1 1 "' , - . i :...t...,n,!..n.. and nrotected !
our soil to little purpose, if we can be ing is asked lor them. 1 hey are urgec Lmi-'.t in'o the adoption of British prtr- noon all who will take them,and sent in all cinles and interests, thr wgh the agency of direction? gratuitously. . iJr-old Toaband- .i a protective tnrirn And now. ledo w-cttizens, what think Jh ' he u n e-.ure as iu.portrmt to En- yon of th: state of thtrgs! Are yon preZVuvl fWlto ,!,te country. , be H for this bold inter fence of England
subjugated by tier firmiee; and sliould-be
r.s stout! v ana as Iirrnl v resistO( bv everv man possessed of American principle, as J . j though he were called upon to repei her liufading forces. It would be a bloodless oQnquest to her; but it would be a con- ' truest of vital importance, for she would .reduce us to the mean and despicable cm - aiiion ot uepon-jents and t thatconmtiou , wo should, indeed, deserve to be br onght. (CO'.i!u wo permit ourselves In ciianje our ! national policy that polio v which l:as "' i rt Ti I s r- 1 !if vitror into the - r.i fr i ,"i ') . : irtMl .-t.unn or hv the iolluedce- ol' her go'd. We are not surprised that !he most desI - - ... j ; perate effrts should bo made by England j to destroy a system which aggrandizes this 'country and impoverishes her people; but V will be a matter of great astonishment sltould sho be able to succeed, either by 'tt,n :,.rt -w" I ,...1.1 - 1 J . (- i . Tliv Inn - in rihn un fit IPC Irfiim Ironlu P. I ft
edlit.lo MaU-.'lj81'. 1 o ste -the. hond of Log-
:j . luji. .w.. ... ....... ' " " n - i i . i . . . i t Ian I it: ine movement to. procure a rt i.'eai frrfarrtF, stiffuld be enj'th to taake Line j?asure, were lis oeneii-jial etieets the acclamation wa, un. verbal fefe .tL..;,n ..m ,n r.. jint not a cent lor tribute," and WThat the same spirit which then iAstil! prevails. Never, never will we cJmnt thai the um'ed State? shall become ir'tbiH&tfv to Great Uritain, or that our inantifacturecs, mechanics, and labor era shall give place- to vlu? paupers ol Europe. Our countrs' is to be inurTdaled with free-trade tracts, dictated in Euglan.4. and paid for by British gold and these are to convert us to a policy calculated, above all others, to exalt English interests and to depress those of our own country. Millions are to be spent in this desperate attempt to make Americans the destroyers of their own independence and p-operity. vVho amongst us will aid England in this !ae effort? If there be any let them bo marked and accursed as the enemies of their country. They should be spurned as ingrates, unworthy to enjoy the blessings of free government. We do not believe, we cannot believe, that any man, in whom beats an American heart, can look upon this attempt to control American legislation by a foreign power with other than feelings of indignation. If there be a drop of American blood in Ko body it is enough to set it in motion. We have the most perfect reliance that the impertinent interference of Great Britain in the matter of our Tariff will be most signally rebuked by the citizens of this country. If we entertained a different opinion we shot Id. indeed, despair of the K-p :d.c. -7 We Is1-! week give the proof of the fi-t, that English manufacturers, itc, were busily engaged with men and money in trying to control our Presidential election for the purpose of electing Polk, the Free Trade candidate, in order thereby to destroy our present excellent Tariff, and thereby bringing us agin under Btitish vassalsge. We this week continue extracts upon the name subject, and ask, if the American people, Sre already tired of that Independence of foreign control, purchased at the cost of 60 rfiuch blood and treasure in our Revolutionary struggle ? From the Albany Evening Journal Such is the nature of developments on the other side of the Atlantic. And the action of the Locofoco party in America harmonizes with that of their British friends and allies. They nominated a free-trade candidate for President. They have recently started a free trade paper with a purse of 020, COO, it is said, for us support, in the city of New York. Millions of 4 free-trade tracts' are printed in X. York for gratuitous circulation. They have nlao established, in New York, a Free-Trade Empire club,' to which the p-oHigate and despera'e belong, the support of which cannot fall short of an hundred dollars a day. The N. York Morning News, the new free-trada paper to which we have referred, frequently contains such notices as trite: 'THIS WEEK'S ' CAMPAIGN.' .'In Enormous Edition of this week's Campaign ' is now ooing through the press, with the aid of the steam-power we have been compelled to have recourse to. We republish in it Si las Wright's Watertown speech on the taliff, together with a biography of Mr. Wright, the Syracuse address and resolutions, and a gieat vartety'of othr matter. We ca'l on our friend to take them off our l ands. They will be sent in any quantities from one hundred to one hundred thousand, at the rate of a dollar a hundred. Iluri lre 'sr f thousand of Mr. Wrihgt's . eecli against the tariff, it is seen, are now 'croincr thrmuih the press The 'dol ... v , i lr a hundred is a mere cover. iNom
J with our elections? Will you permit the
ma tut . -turers o Man.-.hHstr ! ' --v.s,., I irinin?ham, Sheffield, Leed. ccc, to decide the Presidential quesiion? Will you permit your own tariff law to be desroyed by John Bu!'? Wiil you allow a party thus taint e l and corrupted by British gold to elevate .lames M. Polk and Si!a Wright to the two highest offices in your gift? Will you. in this inglorious manner, become mi instruments ol your own dishonor and ru: " .1 These are solemn questions. Reflect upon them seriously. The facts are before you. England has sent gold here to elect men who are pledged to destroy your tariff. The locofocoa are using the jfold lavishly Tim issue, with this new feature, is one of fearful import. It is a struggle, imt aione wit'i those who seek the extension of tdaver-,but with the moneyed power of Eiiglcnd ! The question. whethii we are to conduct wt prestden tail elituoi between oursnivef?, -or "whether EiigSn'i i!ia.i furnish gold to' aid the parly whio; is pledged in favor of freetrade, must be decided by the laborers, the farmers, the in -tchanics, the merchants iuu i.:e manutac; ;i ers, whose intereMi an 1 prosperity are to be prostated by the result. From the Baltimore Pat.bt. HitTtsii Go:,D Bribery.-We are gratified to !ern that the recent attempt of the British to titer fere in our elections to carry Ho'k by means of gold, in order, through him, that t!my may have the tariff rrpenlcd, Amricn i workshops and facto, ries broken up, and Enjlisli ones established in their nlaes. 'i;is created very "entrid i'nligiia'ton. We sav we are trratiiied t') larn t!ns, becamu it assures us th'af, however much wetl.ffer among o'irsf Ives, tnat there is too much American feeling in our people-Xo suffer a foreign power to attempt to break down our legislaliorrby. bribes. We will have established a free and independent Government to b'U little purpose, if England can successfully control our elections with her gold, and we ftull look to the issue of this impudent eff ,rt on her part to do ?o with no little anxtery, though we have too much confidence in the integrity of our people to entertain any fars that the masses can be thus corrupted, however willing the scurvy tribe of free trade leading politicians may be to pocket ihe 'spoils' in the shape of From the New Yoik ltepublic It is no idle suspicion, that the freetrade Polk partv are lo be liberally aided in the coining election by their friends and coadjutors in England. No one can deny that the British manufacturers would be the principal persons benefitted by the abolition of tie present tariff. Thh fact is so s di-evid. ut that it does not require :! lusiriition. We published a few days 3;.ice some account of the 4 Home League,' an asocition of manufacturers and others in Eng land, formed for the purpose of establish ing free-trade principles and the free-trade policy all over the world. The avowed object of Home League' is fre-trade universal free trade. 'Ihe first great step towards their objtct and they neither dis guise the means nor the end Ss money; and they aro now holding meetings all over England for the collections of funds. The amount of subscriptions at these meeting's indicate the vast wealth of the persons interested in the movement. We published, a few days since, a list of subscriptions at one of them, with the names of the donors. That list was a mere 4 circumstance ' to some, which we have in our possession, published in a weekly gazette called ' The League.' What is to be done with the money raised at these meetings Avowedly it is to be devoted to propagating the piiuciples of the part, not in England merely for the establishment of free-trade l.ir.re is comparatively of little consequence to tho manufacturers but in other parts of (he world, where a market for British goods is most likely .': he found. Can it be dotihtrd that a portion of this money this ' British gold ' is sent to the United States ? Hear what the London Times says: A subscription was recently opened lo raise funds to circulate free-trade tracts in .foreign countries. AlvU four hundred thousand pounds sterling were subscribed. Some cf these n.-ts a-o to be printed in New York, for circulation in the United States. Are furiher proof demanded ? We sre readv with them. A weekly gazette, cal led the Economist, is one of the principal organs of the 'Home Le-ague.' In a number of thai paper tor June 15, IS 11, which the curious may see at out otTiec. we find the following significant remark in regard' to the pro-p;cts of the Whig partv in the United States: 'The election of Henry Clay and a Whig Admi .lisrration. which seems the most probable, it n-ili be icell for oh-r English manufacturers to hear in irir.d. wiil probably render the American tariff stable for live years from this time, if any thing can be stable in such a country.' , Here the English manufacturers, if not directly, by most conclusive implication, when the circumstances of this case are considered, are called upon to interfere to
prevent the election ot Henry Clay ! What say you to this American freemen American mechanics American farmers ?
To the Editor's cf the Boston sit las : Bkt.fast, Me., Sept. 9, )8i4 Gentle a-ex : Wo are in the midst one
of the h-jnest battles that was e vcr j assailed. For his response, bearing tesbt. and Heaven only knows what wiii timonv to the correct deportment and
tout; le the result. O ur opponents ure Usui: TH07VV like water. They have no co-nfi. dence in their principles, but relyalmost en tirely on bribery and corruption. We h;ve a host of adverse influences to contend with, but the worst of them ail is money. If we are defeated it must not dishearten our friends elsewhere. They have only to work the harder. It is not possible that the Loccs should have money to use so prufuselyall through the countryas they have used it here, unless they carry the l3mp of Aladdin. If the Whigs are defasleU Th Maine. you "must pound the alarm and let it ring throughout the land, that it hae all been done by (he magic of .British goid. furnished bv' the New York agents of British capitalists and British manufacturers. Yours truly. I Hero ia raoro Tasthncny. The following letter from the Rev. Dr. Nash. Episcopal Clergyman, who resi led fr ten years at Lexington, Ky., speaks for itself. We wonder what our Locofoco opponents will do. Don't all bite yourselves, or you will certpiy g0 ma,j Now don't, for we have no Eunatjc Asy lum, unless the Golgotha will hold you all! Sr. Albans, 21th Aug., 1814. As a criterion of ihe estimation in which he is held at home, it will not be out of place to state here which 1 do unhesitatingly, having had ample opportunities for ascertaining ihe, truth that Mr. Clay has the confidence and political support o'lr a very large proportion of lift moral worth, and I may add, of a very large majority of the members of the different religious denominations in Kentucky. There- are twelve or fifteen clergymen of different denominations residing in Lexington. All of these, I believe, with one exception, are the. friends of Mr. Clay; and most of them are'frequent visiters ai his house. There are about twenty Epis copal cleigymen in Kentucky. AH of these are the friends of Mr. Clay. Of the one hundred and five or ten clergymen t tlo n- . Jicct the xct number composing the last conference or u Methodist church in Kentucky, all but three. as I was informed by a member of the conference, are the political friends of Mr. Clay. Ism not so accurately informed respecting the political opinions of the ministers of other denominations as I am respecting the opinions of the ministers of the Episcopal Church ar.l of the Methodist Church. I am confident, however, that there is nearly if not quite as large a niajorit) i f these friendly to the election of Mr. Clay as of those last mentioned. Out of the four or five hundred clergymen, of different denominations, in Kentucky, there are not, I am almost certain, fifty political opposers of Mr. Clay. The opinion of a great majority of the religious people, ministers and others, living in the neighborhood of, and intimately connected with, Mr. Clay, 1 am confident is, that if he is elected to the Presidency, there will be, while he continues President, a far healthier influence around the Presidential ehair tfiaii there has been since the close of J. Q. -Adams' Aministration. nof.4.:,. Loco foe oi.-m has teen exceedingly bitter and unprincipled in its incessant attacks upon Dr. iiascom, vhe distinguished divine, tiiouj.li well known, and universally respected for his mon.l and social character, has been subjected to the grossest personal abuse. lie wrote a private letter to Ur. uouie, it-siirv Ih n iWu moi al standing of Mr. Clay, among his neighbors. This was published and is m::de the occasion in i,lho party" organs, for holding him up to the world as everything vile! This wiil do him no harm where he is known. The elders and officers of the Christian Churches at Lexington, here put their seal cf reprobatio-t upon this conduct. Wo cony thefollowiiig. From the Lexington Observer of cp. ISlh, 1.S.11. The Eiders and ofi'cera of-tlie various vhnstian (harcai? the iitv cf Xii.gton, cf i ach poUkid party, however, have thought it flue to Dr. Bascom as well as to themselves, and io the claims, o: truth ad justice to vindicate the reputation of D. B. against the foal aspersions of the Locofoco newspapers, ly a public attestation to his worth s.?:d virtue a deni d of all the imputations and allegations made against him and by bearing them selves the same testimony in reference to the moral character of M-r. Ciay, as was borne by Dr. B. in his letter to Mr. Goble. We subjoin the statement as follows: REV. II. B. BASCOM. This distinguished divine, -urbane gentleman, and devoted christu-n, whose purity of life, b timing eloquence, high
intellectual end minerus, fervid zeal mi the danger which at this nmmni threatens his .Master's cause have spread his n3ine 'its existence. If Madison filled the E'-c -over our broad land, was recently up. uve Chair, he mght btt Indd into s me plied to by Dr. J. G. Goblc, to inform ; compromise. If Monroe was in niwer, ,.., ... .1- .1 l . .. 1
nnii-di cuttracier auu correei deportment of our distinguished neighbor, the Hon. Henry Clay, who, it w.is ofibelievei had been falsely and maliciously good moral character of Mr. Chv, r. Ba-coml has been denounced a 3 a hypocritical bar, a perjured blasphemer, n impious libeller, and other most de.;Tr.:i:v and dishonoring '-.ecusaUuns heaped upon mm: e, ms irien is and reiglibors ot all religious denominations", therefore, fef-i called on by considerations of justice to a idaudered and injured gentleman, to pronounce these charges grossly false and cruelly unjus'; without a shadow of foundation; and th hereby bear the same testimony contained in his left r, as J he moral ch iraeter of Mr. Clay, as far as we knojv nod Itrfievc. Mcthrlist. Ministers. Stephen Chipley and N. fleadington. Stewarts of th; Met hod "ut Char eh. Joseph Mi! ward, P. Swit, I. Rncke!. Nat. Shaw, L. P, Young, W. King, Wm. Rice, Jos. George. John Kinnartf. Hiram imv, B. T. Boalert, K. Unlet. Gtumvus Lilly, John L. Elbert. iMders in the. Christ Im Ckur-h D Warner, Wm. Van Pelt, I fvi T. Benton. Sam!. Fitch. Minister of the Baptist Church W. F. Broaddtis. Baptist Ministers. B. P. Drake J. M. Hewitt, U. Brent. rtocr nf the Protestant Episcopal Church. VA. F. ... 'it P. E. Minister.- - r,j'. Vestry of the ' Pi lnlf,:;t'-.). M. Craig, J. J. Hunter Bodlev, Thos. Huggins. Ja3. I tl.'flf TimberUi.. Win. Inclio. Maslin Smith Elders aud Deacons of the 2d Presbyterian Churches. R. Pindell, James C. Todd, David Bell, Jr., Wm. A. Leavy. Jas. C. Butler, John F. Leavy, Geo. W. Norton. Elders and Deacons of. 1st Presbyterian Church. J. L. McDowell, Abm. Van Meter, Jno. L Price, Thrrs. C. Orear, L. Carter, Isaac C. Van Meter. It is proper to say, that the Methodist Episcopal Conference being in session at Bowling-green, nearly all the Methodist Divines connected with the Church and the University, are absent, and conse quently, their names are not 'attached to the- foregoing ppor. Above is a refutation, thorough and complete, of every oaluminous charge of this nature, by men who are neighbors of Mr. Clav, who have known him and seen him in all his walks, for years, and whom the churches for his town have trusted with their highest places. The act on their part is voluntary, and untinctured with political or religious parlyism. i bey are of all religious denominations, and of each political party. There is no appeal. for a moral character, from t-uch a tribunal. It is conclusive and final. We know, that in th hearts of the mass of mankind the principles of Justice and truth pre dominate. It is a mall portion only, who abandoning these cardinal principles, rely upon fraud and falsehood for the e.ccomplishment of their designs, and by these, seek to delude and eeduce others to their support. It is not such that we would address ourselves, or make our appeal, we know them to be callous to nearly every obligation which should regulate human intercourse. From the Miirtiusbutg (Va ) Gazette. John Randolph and Henry Clay. Jin Interesting Incidztrf. ChariesJas. Eaulkner, Esq , in his speech at Gerardsiovvn on the ol int., while commenting in eloquent and indignant terms upon the rmvements of the Disur.ionist M the oii!?i, ruif-tcu an Hu nt in t: life of Jehu Randolph, so credi'tWe to t; magn,nimity of that celebrated man, and just and honorable to the fa sue of Henry Clav. that we h.3ve deemed it worthy of beinf preserved and pi-;i ii fciv-i .i.. public. It is well known that the personal relations between those two remarkable men was not of the kindest chrtac'.cr, but unfortunately the reverse. It h equal V novvn, that a politicians they v.cr. invariably arrayed at; the opposition of Mr. '. i n s . e--ich other .n to. n f i o , l;,.n-. ; assumed tue iu! t virv.i ut A'tiuraciet as in I' 12 l3--nrevi-His to and during the vv a r ami whilst Mr. Cl iv a Secretary ot Slate. And vet. i:i the last public dd;e r. er mao la by J.):ph. t) t:.c of B o m r. spet c.i :i. ttit; e i mi duriiiii the reii(.e:ii-y i tnr.l e, . i ' i I H 4T' H it-; .V -'11 . . C 4' i-i L J 4 . . 4 ' , . l. . C l ' .' ,:e d ' i-.O,,, ..i.! th.. : -.!r)-' t 4i ernine-nt 1. 14 ornn oito rasu ami muise: i : :. i s-4. av i f vi nis c..i:t;try in ice might have iuvolvtd ihe horrors ot civil war. and b.-u to Lie dismeiwbeinH ut of the Coub-der-iCy and 44 hen every patriotic .-ye watched the p;.:gre?s of evei-ts -m h the d-jcpest solicitude the opportunity occur rt d ' l.i-.h hut ge::i!m;:i availed t.i.uself of to !o justice to tiie cli.ir&cter -i hts great dialinguished opponent. Ia tiie course of his &-eech, he was reported to have sa!d: 'Gentlemen: I am filled with the most gloomy apprehensions fur th; fte of the Union. I cannot expres-i to oil how deeply I pene'.iti-ea -I ,, r it i
lie might be coaxed into some ailnis'.riVMit
of this difficulty. But Jackson i ob-tin?te, head-strong, and full of !i-;h. 1 fear miners must come to an open rupture. If so, this Union is gone." Then pausing for near a niiiuMe, raising his linger m that emphatic manner ?o uliar to his ;:ction as a .'-pecker, and seeming as it were to breathe in. re freely, he continued '1 here is one man. and one m m only j who can save this Union That nun is ...iii v I know he has th power i believ e he will be found io hava the patriotism and firmness equal to the occasion." Shortly afier this?. Mr. Randolph proceeded on through Washington to Piiiladelphia", where in the course of" a few mouths hedi:-d. lie arrived in the former city after the compromise bill had passed. Deeply impressed with the great ami valuable service which .Mr. Clav had Just rendered to the country. I c had himself conveyed to the .Senate Chamber, then too plarnlv exhibiting in his face and appesrwhieh he wa soon tof.l! a victim, where these two brilliant rival orator and pro)iraliv gifted favorites of nnturc met for it) last iune. Mr. Clay aoproai ei (o salute him, Mr. Randolph said: '.Mr ("lav, you perceive I am dying, but thank God, 1 have sirengt'i enough ve to rVurn to you my poor acknowN cdg?mMMs fOr having saveil tiie Union." This incident we understood .Mr. I'Va!'-:-ner to say he derived during a visit to the citv of Richmond, from Thomas Miller, of Pov. hatlan, a gentleman f high char acter one who lor many years enj n et! the intimacy and friendship, of Mr. iiV.'n-ulolp-lv, and upon wl-n?e nconracy the ut most rel'iniKje i:(Mil J be jln-ed. 1 ti rointion of this interesting incident in, .tVjS's life of Mr. Randolph by Mr. Ffftti'kirer, proiluced a marked effect upon the audience, and seemed to ir.qpiri the speaker himself with an increased love for the Union, and its defender, Henry Clay. Proteclon. What is inent by "Protection?" Brother mechanics, brother tradesmen, let us se if wc cannot help one another to understand. I kpen shoo; so do some of yon. All of us, thank God arc obliged to work for our living. Are we not always glad to get what wo want bv navimr for it in our way? Do wn not alwsvs try to persuade the people we owe, and those who inay"liappo have what we want, to take the pay out of the shop or, in other words, to take pay for their work in ouu works' Who thinks of buying where he his no hope of selling? And. though we were obliged t pay higher for what we wanted in store pay, or in work, would not even that he better tliHi) lying idle, or going without what we wanted, or always paying money lor it? Now, this happens to be just cur case with A roign manufactures. They won't take stork pay. They don't want our wors. Tiiey vv ou't swap labor with us, while our own countrymen will and are right glad to do so. The people over the sea want money of us, and nothing but money; and money they will have, or money's worth, in the shape of cotton or tobacco, and nothing edse. ;.: pay fr what they do for us, or in pry for what they have to sell. Not so with our countrymen. The farmers and mii'ers and cotton pjanters and tobacco growers are glad to sell us of New England their surplus crop, and take their pay out cf the shot. And we cf tlu North are glad to soli our potatoes, our cotton cloth, our bcot, shoes, and our so forth, to the people of the South, and to take our pay in what they : re glad to get rid of, in " order to" swat- wottic with them. Tbore's the whole storyiin a nut shell. "Ali vp, therefore, who like to deal with those who deal with you, to sell to those who buy of you, have the people take their pay out of t'.:.r simp, or to all who are not, not. Portland Tribune. "49 B a'1" j ; : Home Market. 'i he ".sew i ork ... -i .t Cerublie 'outh t-) pa ts an article, warning tuu more heed to the home markets and inquiry plainly upland is looking to other KOt, ui-cause that E snow sources than the United States, for a sup ply of cotton. Tue Republic says: "During ii.e past year, our own manufactures have taken for consumption about four, hunnred th-msand bales sf cotlon, at ! an average of about cents p r pound. t ti;te moment, our prices of all descriptions of cotton are above those of any market of this tonntry. Do n.it facts like like the' speik trumpet tongued in favor of ; r.oreetiug ocir manufacturing establishinertias f The N'r-.tiona! Intelligencer rmnounces the appoir-.lmei.t, by the President. (T A. J. D.inald.on, of Tenn- seo. ciinrge datfairJ to T--.t.3, in the place of Mr. Howard, deceased. 1?4Tie Whigs of New York hive nominated ti e Hon. Mli.L.ARO FlU.Mo Tit or Governor; and S.J. Wll.K NS, Esq., for Eienten m.t Governor. A noble ticket, and one that will call out the full whig strength-
