Newspapers / The North-Carolina Star (Raleigh, … / Aug. 5, 1846, edition 1 / Page 1
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.-- i i ; , ; ' . . ; r'f:it. &tZm. r-' ' -v- 'wW-.y, am mm..rm,m THJ J, LfcMVV, Ebitob b PaeraiiToa. sear eiBeim: ewnvei ia Mobil. isTiitscTVti abb vattitai asswoBcsjra THREE DOLLARS A TEAR is mmi, ttALEIGO, IV. C .WEDNESDAY AUG- S, S46 It. 89 TOL $T EMORY & CO. THE WELL KNOWN AND FAR-FAMED LOTTERY FIRM, OPPOSITE BARNUM'S. CI money ta Uy p.."-8UkM7--Many whom torwoet loMere aa th ariek of baakraptey - V ki"I ?' mtmuiTAmorf k Co'i.-JSrnicl rwa a fclter GLORY ENOUGH FOR ONE DAY! Triumph after Triamph! Cheering JVWm far the State of S. Cmrotutm. Emm j U Co. Earhhtng the Ladiea Huita, Huzxa. 50,000 DOLLARS SoM iaa atkf of whole ticket to a elab af jeaag MaMrriM Uittet BaetMilen ake! aev bTOarohaaeefor aweelheartt! Comblnatioa IS W it, aaeknire Na 9. ia la. 'Mama" VJr- 5laia Uotlerr, elaM Si, whiak vaa inwu m ataf . the "h V lvm' "hi,h r9 lk " maiiaileaat wa, a are protrf la aaaeaaea to ""SO.OOO CORRESPONDENTS W c KJlby to a eliW Udie ia the gooa old State of South Carolina. Tbeie ladiea rental M tm ai that the ke to oAea hrard of oar treat ..--V. -...t-i. nl tiliinaiuil . l.u rv. l'' - ' ta Mr fcorie.a'alehg whether i WIDE SPREAD FAME U bated opea "multertbla irath" or Uka aale Mid ay a Uiot, fall of toaad and fury, liffaifyiaf BOthim." The remit, we rejoiot to eay, i truly (lorloai; ear r ride l fully fratiAedN Whea we Mae wkh gold the poekcti ol teata early old baehelor, we feel iMi imalm Ala to pleawtre, but to be the ate. diamof eapplyiag with ! loory' the laireat portioa of ereatioa, tkooe hrin arcataree waote iery exMeaea It (o eteeatial lo the happhtetaof bh, we baakly aoafeta eariy aptata war pailoao. phy' NOT A BAD PRIZE! Not 41 . whole tichet, the teaoed etpittl nf$tM,laawhole,watald too eeeilemaa rati, diiat Aaaaaol Md., ia the Mr,laad Lottery, eUtt 5, drawa Mty t. Emerj fc Co. ia a Mream TAKE NOTICE. Helf ticket. Not. T 10 64, ia the Marylaad Coa aolidMvd lottery, elate M, drawa Jane 1. '48, Ike eepitBlpriaa afjlO.000, aoM to a aatleataa, a atraaier la a. We therefore take thie taetned of ialoratiai hWe that there ie due hits i0, for which he eaa draw ea at at aicbt iho ataacy ie all ready. Betpoatfally, he. EMORY at Cy -;-.--5JlWeT ft--Haa-''ttirtt Net II 4J S6, t pritc f 9000, Iaa paakateaf SaartM, wat told ia the Md. Lottrry, ehut 90, raw Jaaa S, the laeky boMera aeatlaataa tram North Caroline, tad Emiwy at Co. the luekiett naa ia the vorid, picked tbetieket out aad marked It, three Not afare the Lottery wat drawa, Emory fc Co. the Lucky Sort. Clett 67 Nee IS 91 47, ...a prime ot $000, ft ieat to Harrnburg, Pa. We give yea above a aatalt lut of the Pnaet told by ae witbia a mv dtyt, the email pruni we do aot mentioa, at there are a boat af taern. AH I bote ia WMtt af Cath eaa tnelote to the Old Ettablitbed Moww way aiaoaat they ate proper, Poettgo paid oa all lettert by Emory k Co. All order ttrietly waatdaatial, aad meet with detpateh whea ad tret. ed to EMORY k CO., OppetiM Baraam't, Baltintnre, Mil. CAPITAL PRIZES IN EACH MONTH 60,000 DOLLARS! , 50,000 DOLLARS!! 40,000 DOLLARS!!! 90,000 DOLLARS!!!! 10,000 DOLLARS!!!'! lie. tie. tut, TickeU tod Sbatea and Paektfet In all the Lottariaa now Drawing-, ander the manag-emeni of Meeara, J. 0. Gregory It Co, eoaelaolly for tale at thie offiee. CNotiee. Paraoaa ml dittanee who do aot reeeiro Rehemoa ia lima lo aeod for .tieketa ia any particular Lottery, by remitting; Bay 6, 10, 15 or 9-30, ( more) it wilt be iovetteJ in the ftrat good Lottery to he drawn, 9, 3, and 4 daya after U.e receipt and mailing of the letter eneloainf the tieketa. If preferred. Certificate of the combination No of tinglf ticket or (hare will be eent to thoee who give inttrurliout aeeordiagly. A regular Package of Ticket eontain erery mmber plaeed in the wheel, Ineladee all the advantage of the lottery, and may eon lain font of the biffhrtt prix on the lit. The price of ticket will vary from $1 up lo 9J90 each, and Package from S5, 10, 15, 18, 35 to aa high aa 50 each. Be careful toaddree your Utter only to thoee Prise Tender EMORY fc CO. Baltimore, Md. . UNPARALLELED , ATTRACTION. The following Scheme will be drawa daring the month of July; Capital t. Ticket a. 8o Caaal elMt No 94 Jaly ft 90.000 ti Ucl-Air 7t S 1S.000 Fred Seminary Md. Coatel'd. Bel Air Bute, Caatl Md CoaaolM Md CeoaoTd Prod Kemmcry Md Cooenl'd BeUAlr bona aanal M4 eootofd Md eonaot'd Prod Seminary Mdoontol'd Rel-Air " Ht eanal MFeonaoI'd 4 wfsJlvmTrvm4 Prod Srmiaaty Md eoatoTd clel-Aie Hata taaal Mdooatot'd . SO tl 87 ts SS S3 27 S wf ss ss ss S7 89 V 86 , ' SS SS so so ss SI S 4.000 I is.ono 10xw 7 s.ooo 40,000 4 ol 10,000 10 000 to r.ooo It 4.000 13 S0.0U0 14 s.ooo II IS 000 10,000 it laouo I t 7000 IS 4000 SO 40000 woo s .4. . hi 4 of S VI N000 ISO00 toooo 17 7000 tw inoo SS 40011 87 WO0t ss boko 90 isnoo loooo SO IS. 14 sooo 6 J ?! a 4 Mdeoatol'd si rooo 84 Order for Tickets in any Lottery drawn in the United Stales, will be attended tp by e on the ssme terms as advertised by other dealers. Ci7"0ur correspondents sre never tax sd with pokUge. Please aiklreSs, in all cases. - EMORY & CO. Opposite Barnum,s, - ' Ballimore, Md , fr""! -. We are authorised ta aa not ore Mr ytflTWi;TLEYWbig , istfluidate for the Uowee of Uommeti ie'oi Couniy. . . , . y i Si M il.L. let of aMmseH releWed -di- s..ppm- JAg. LITCUFORO. ffm Powder Tee, N 1. V&l Browa Rniare Pulverised While, do. Beet Java and Laguira Coffee, jott to hand and for tale by J AS. UTCHfURU. Prime Moli IP RIME YINEGAR, foe Pickling. JAS. UTCHPORD. IB ROWN AND BLEACHED 8hirtingt and Sbeetiagt. Do do Drilling. JA. LtTCHFORD. RANDOLPH MACON COLLEGE. The eollegiate year at. thi tnttiiution cfotee anaoaliy apoa the Snd Wednetday of June, on. which da the Senior cltt i publicly graduated. The eollegiate year i divided into two Meat ion. The flrtt begin 8 week after, and the SnJ beoioa 91 waeka bo. fore the 9d Wedneeday of Jane. It ia beat for tudonte to eater College at the beginning of the firal eion; aad tor ad mi ion at that time into the Ftethmaa elate, they mjat atand an approved rxaminatioa on Engliah Gram mar, Geography, Arithmetie, Latin Reader, anar, KBiiYiireu. ,. . a ir a 'tlodent defrre entering the Freehmaa elaea until the beginning of the aeeond ee ioa, ia addition to the preceding eubjeete, he man tto atand an approved eumimtion up on Latin and Greek proeody, the Uecrgic of Virgil, Livy, Xaopboo,a Cyropedia, Ro man and Grecian Aqtiquitje, and. .Bourdon' Algebra,: (through quadratic.) It ie recom mended to etndente preparing for entranre in to tliia College) to nee Aadrew'a and Stod dart'i Latin Grammar, Sophoele' Greek Grammar, Leverett'e Latin Lexicon, Don nrgitn'e Larger Greek Lexicon, and Eechen burg' Manual of Claicl Literature. 1 Cere ere Btaoy yonag men who detire to etqttire aaeateaaive B.gihh aad c4ewti6e edueetioa, with out prntoetitiag the aaeirwt Laagaagei. . Oar eowrte of tttxly it to arraaged at to aaeet the waott nt ell tueh, providod they pretrat thecMelvet at the begin, aiag of the let aentoa, Aad the bearota V) be de irred from the uao of the Librariet tad from attta daaea a the Literary Soeieiiet wbieh a a attach ed to College, thoold lorm very uiong iaducenicati to ttwh yooag caen to proiceate titeii tladiet brrr. la order to enter nova the Enelith aad Scientific carle, the Blade at aiaat be ihoroithlT aeaoainted with Gramaaar. Ueot raptvy hM Ariihatetie. 1 te p the lactitwtioit tr er ronoWtt TaMiaa air the Collewiale rear 440 00 Board for 91 week 77 00. Bedding aad Waabiag $J 00. Wood and Urhtt Big 00. Iaeideaul exDeatet 190 00,, TOUII149 00. , ,-,,,v:,.,v,-,,,..:, lathehocaet ineidearai 'expeatet are included text book, aad 4 few article ol luraituie which the ttadeat itaaderllie aeoeaaily ofparekatiagwbea be trt eaters College 1 ae naat ccaeaoa will oemtaeaoc on Wrdaetriav. the 5th of Aagatt. la ennMeotiua with the IMIete it a nreoarttorr School mtder the eMp-raHradeiiac .of aa rffiaicM 1 he teaawnt el IhU school onrreanoad with thoee of the College. 1'ne trtt otjeet ol thlt School ia to pre pore Jmr mmm fop- Ooltrtrr chr arte of etudy h, however, each at to It them for lereaMilo aad aimilar profc talent. The rvgulatinat of ibie department are the mate bh thoee of the Unllete Brouer. The Stadeatt eoeapy a large betiding in wbieh tbey are faraiah- efl wna toiinkie reoatt lor tJeeping awl atiMly. The Prieeipel of the School ha hm reaMeaee ia I he ytrd .f ihe large building, aad tout bit pupilt are at all timet ander hit tare. The Oajoere end Board el Tratteet claim loeetal draotagea tor thi School, oa ihe arcaad that Ihe morale el lit ttodeatt ere gtmrded by all potaible mrnne, and that every ootoaragiimeat lo etody vkich can hetrren, iasfforded ky tie ergaaisaiini. At the Baboo! ie a Bert af ihe Cofltve Mac If. the Tratteet of ihe oae ere the Treatee f the other, tad all I be? arrangemeatt of both are wader their eoatrel. The eipeneetare the tame with tbote of Stadeatt b College, except Ihe lakion fee, which h lor Cltttieal tladratt, 90 00, end for Engliah $1S 00 pereetcioa L, C GARLANU. K. Mi voiicge, June IJih, IBM. iO-M 8500 Reward! VRREST TUB MURDERER. The above reward will be riven for the apprehension of WM. DANDRIDGE ErbS, the murderer of F. Adolphus Muir of the county of Dinwiddie. The said Epes was a resident ol Dinwiddie connty. is about rorty years of age, about Five feet ten inches hieh. of a florid complexion. it'i Blue eyes and dark Auburn Hair, with hisrh forehead, and of athlecie form. inclined to corpulency. lie is reserved in his manners, proud and haughty in his ren- eral demeanor. He is without doubt guil ty of one of the most atrocious murders e' er committed. The Governor will also offer a lares re ward for his apprehension. Jvnn aMUIRV , PETER BOISSEAU. Petersburg, Va , Juy is, 8i6. "Just step into the street and I'll rive yon a eownidmg," aaiu a rowdy to an I risbman. - Br my sowl, now,H replied Pat, "and I wouldn't do it if you d give me two of them.", .: A report, which prevailed s few wreks ago. of andawanlt meditated by tbeExecu live npon the Cattle San Juan ie Vltia, fthe senhrmrd defence of Vera Cruz.) but hush nsd spparenlly died swsr, has re vivea . wuhin a day or two It is now said that a Council of Naval Pot Captains had been summonetl by the head of the Na Department to Washington to decide upon the practieaWlitr -end expedie net of lbs meaeure. . Aattonl Mtltttneer. Gen. Scott. Kxvttti and respectable meeting wis held at Oettrshniy,' Pennsylvania, on ths lath inat. at which reoolulions were ado ted declaring he -continued eonfideneo tX the persons assembled in the valor of Gen. Scott, and (heir approval of his late corres pondence with the secretary r War. Wa learn from the Wilmington Com mereial, that the Bnrvey f Ihe rente lor their Rail Road Id South Caroline, was remmenred by competent Fnwineera on toe ntn insi. lay. uot. THE BODY FOUND. In the awful catalogue of individual eticne that have degraded thi the 10th century, illuslrioue aa it ia for more gen' eral diflunioe of civilisation and chrntinni' ly, there ie nol one more black more bra- tal or revolting than that which a Virginian editor now ha to record. In the name of humanity andju'lice, which have been alike ootraged and insulted, a are com pelled to notice, in what Ian?uaire we mav command, the perpetration of a deed which ie repugnant te every reeling mat ought to belong to the very loweet order of intellec tual being, which throws a dark aad heavy pall of grief over the heart of un offending but devoted kindred and friend, and which wUt cw ai In terminable and inappreciable as eternal night, the individual who was so base and cruel as taxommit it. Our reader have no doubt felt much interest in relation to the ntysteriout and. midden disappearance . of F, Adolphus muufH Hi., iiicai aiiim ui which appeared in our paper a lew nays ago. That publication ofitself wss enough to excite the suspicion of any Sensible man who would peruse it, and particularly of those who were more inumatfiy acquaint ed with Mr. Muir. Upon the reception of iiiuso iciirre, vuku ail now. o-liyrB 10 D spurious,, Mr. Moir'e brotlier and friends became very uneasy aa to his real fate, and made private and extensive enquiries, to which, however, no satisfactory answers were received. It was almost evident to their minds thai Mr. M. had neither gone to New York, New Orleans or St. Louis, it very doubtful whether he bail een got so far as Petersburg. With these doubts and fears, the publication referted to was made, directing public attention to the subject, snd asking for information. The citizens of Dinwiddie county were, by this time, very much excited, jnd determined to make a search for l ho body, which they did wivhoui any sBccessi A" jayrW'iTtrrJ since, Information wa received that a ne gro man belonging to Cnrrt. W. D. Eppes, of Dinwiddie, and who served him in the capacity of carriige i dnver, "was in po-nes- sion ol imporumt facts in relation to the matter. . Of course he was arrested imme diately, and thereupon he reyraJetl the in famous seere , pointed the wau fiwAe rrmoe at a distance of nbottt Ace hundred uarAt from the residence of hit mnttiri sou thtt HIS St AST t B BAD SHOT M. 9f t71 A NO TRAT'BTK'Tthe BSgfO HAB BBr-.V FORCKD to bobt hib! The body was disintered, ana reeognuea mt inat of the late F. Adol. racs Mvib! The stalements of this negro would not be so readily believed, but for other strong, corroborating ctrrumstances. Mr Eppes owed Mr. Muir three thousand dollars for a tract of land, for which amount Mr.-Muir bad his bond.- The time for payment had arrived, and Mr. Eppes, beins a neichbof. sent for Mr. Muir to go over to his boone and receive the money. Air. Muir went after first prooiing to return most certainly to his brother's house that night. Mr. Eppes as he afterwards said, did not bay the money that day, but made an engage, ment to pay it in Petetaburg. However, he and Muir went out to kill a deer. Eppes promising to give Muir' a fine chance.. They had only one gun; that was carried by. Eppes. 'lhis wss the lat that was heard ot Muir in the county. Then eim the singular snd spurious letters. Eppes told Muir's brother that he had paid the money, but if there was nny difficulty he would return the bond. He also said he paid the money to Muir at Jarratt's Tav ern, in reietsourg; but no trace or Man either at a tavern or private house could be found here. On the first of September, 1843, Mr. Gharles Lomsdcn. M alch ma ker und Jeweller in this place, repaired a gold lever Ws'ch for Mr. Muir at the same time putting down, as uunl, in hi memorandum book, tne nAm of the ma ker and the number of the watch. Pre. vious to Mr Muir's departure from his brother's on ths 2d of F.boary last, hs was known to have the same wa'ch. Oo the 23rd day of May last, Capt. W. I). Eppes traded thi identical watch with Mr. Lumsden for snother gold watch. . since . the particulars about the watoh have been msde public, Eppes has Itft ihe county, and no one can tell where he has Jone; and sin'.e his departure, the body ol . Adolphus Muir has been found and iden tities. . Fetertburg Hep. WHVT THE WAR WILL COST. We copy the following from the Phila aeipnta Ledger: Munition of ff'ar.Xotei of Preparation. i a preparation or the Uovernment lor prosecuting the present wai with Mexico, indicate vigirroua irnofyretracted hostilities. c rum appearances in tins cur slone, a per son would be led lo suppose that the force to be brought lot) the field, either at once or successively, would not be muck less than half a million of men, and experiments havebeen tried, arrangements made which show conclusively, that either the Uorern ment are led to expect a more obstinate earnest ew the part of Mexico than - what was anticipated, or 4hat, by. the gigantic character of oar preparafrantv the over. whelming lores to be employed, and the vigor pf our blows when ready lo act, it in- intends to crash that , power at omco, and renaer resistaaee to ns oat or tfce eaestiOB A contract has inat bean eomDleled .bT Mr. Thus. 8 Barnslead. of South wark, for supplying ths govetnment with from fifty to eighty thousand sell of tent poles. The United States army refutation Pre- scribes eight men lo a tent, snd at this rale provision ha been made in one contract alone for lodging en the field a force of about. 400,000 men. But it is unrea sonable to suppose that there are others in ihe country engaged in the same work. Kxclusire of this supposition. Mr. Barn- stead has had a number of contracts of a aimilar character since loot fall, and it i estimated that provision has been made in this wsy for about s million and half of troops. I his estimate, however, must be taken with considerable allowance for breakage and wear and tear, and for the quantity slwsys kept in reserve at the dif ferrat raiHtary-V first mentioned seems-Aeerest to the truth, snd indicates that our government is pla cing itself in s position to set with terrible effect should the blind stubbornness of our foe make it necessary. The (ents foi which the above poles are made have been manniacmra in an ino pimnpai an ioiis Oi l the city and county of Philadelphia and perhaps of the other cities of the Union. We have already noticed the construction of wagons for the army, and understand that a similar state of activity prevails throoghout nil- branches' tf the ' War De partment - A speech delivered recently in Congress by Mr. Brodhead of Pennsylvania contains some pusagt-s which we quote relating to the Tariff of 1812, and its operation, by which it may be seen how far monopoly or oppression cart .be predicated of that meas ure: "The representatives from ths south, snd some from the west, complain of the op pression under which they labor in conse quence of the. present system and deal in general denunciations about monopolies about one pottion of of the people being taxed for the beoefil : of anotheAMThit language is that of complaint snd menace. Now, gentlemep, come forward with your specifications. Yon say that the high duties under die act of 1642 make hth price; that your . rommeroe -is, destroyed, x. Show us what article of necessity or convenience has been increased, in price. Do you pay more for 4oUoa goodaf Whv no, you get them cheaper than ever. Do you pay any snore for hats, clothing, or shoes, than yon did before? Certainly nott you get tnem cneaper than ever 4..enade by our own mechanics. Do you pay more fer coal than you did before' Not because it can be obtaweii cheaper than ever, nol withstanding the duty was increased from 62 cents to 1 75 per ton.. And I think I can show that if it had not been for the passage of tba art of 1843 yon would have been obliged to pay .10 or 20 per eent more lor iron than-Tou driTr."Ar-ooir ss the act of 1842 was passed, without knowing that tliere was going to be so great a demand for the article in England, many i engaged in iu manufacture in' this country, and thus supplied the market; whereas, if we had depended, as before, on the English supply, the price must necessarily nsve greatly increased, because England could nol furnish a sufficient quantity for the eon sumption Of both countries. And yet al most every speaker from a certain quarter of the Union has something to eay against Pennsylvania about this duty on coal, anil iron. , Good iron ore is to be found in near ly every State of this Union: and if there ia so much money to be made in it mmufae. lure, why ta it that other States do not imi late ourexample? The iron establishments which have been , erected in Pensylvania since 1812 pny near 9150,000 per annum in the shape of tolls to that State. Those erected in tho rounly iu which I have the honor to tesiue, paid Ihe State for the transportation of die manufsctured article alone, the last year, over seven thousand dollars, as I am informed I ssy nothing of the train they consume. Ihe labor thev employ, ana the money they circulate.- inis grc" woreaae in tne iron onsiness has injured no class of people, and yet it wouiu (wiMiy Ncn uiu n u io do tnaae me lubiect or complaint against my nstive Q.l A Rim' i,lm mmm. kUH-A - chw vcwnw, an waiwiw. that lbs degree of civilization attained by any nation or people may be tested by the quanuty of iron iney - manufacture and eonsoms ttisoneolthe great necexsa ries of life, and in the great article with which we defend ourselves in time of war, and therefore we ouirht to do as all other civilized nslione have 4one, protect its manufacture. - It is more . valuable than mines of gold or silver, which only serve to gratify avarice und banish industry. It has been beautifully said, that TH "aeebm modales itself to all our Wants, our desires. and even out eaprieest it ie equally service able to tne an, the sciences, to sgneui ture, and war; tlte .ssme ore furnishes the sword, the ploughshsre, the scythe, the pruning hook, the needle, the spring of the walcn, or a carriage, the chisel, . tlia ehsio, the anchor, the compass, ths caonon, and the bombj k is a medicine of much virtue, and the only metal friendly, to tiie beman frame."., I alao deny that oar commerce has been injured; the commercial lablee do not show iu - But oven though our foreign trade should fall off a little nor internal and coasting trade has greatly increased, which' is much more profitable, and employs more ( on i people. , Gentlemen ought not to complain thai certain portions of tho Union engaged in manufactures are enterprising, snd thereby prosper. I recommend them t to go and do likewise; lo do as w do- To eorn ignoble eaae, and five laborious daysT The advice here iriven will htnllv be followed, we fear. There ire msny who find n es-ier to pull down ' anolhrr s hard earned proeperity than go to work by pa lieut industry lo advance their own V There are others who look upon politics ss sort or game in which the good oi the people is of no concern provided they can ahuflle through to some desired ends of their own If au Serins should come upon the people by their senseless or selfish policy, they truvt to the arts lo which they hare had recourse successfully before, to mskt peu pie believe that the distress hss been Clos ed by political adearies in spite oflheir eatneet efluiH to avert it. . FOUL MUUUEsC A fool murder was perpetrsjed in Jersey City, N : J., on Wednesday morning about two o'clock' A yonng man named Spen cer, said to be the cousin of the son of John C. Spencer hung on board the Somen, had iiTecrerw unjc, nitu imu trvaicu nor Tory badly so much so as to attract the stten-iiott-rf Hhe-neighbois.On-Wednesday night he was so rloient that she was Com pelled la call the assistance of the offieerst who took him Into custody. After going a lirtle way from the hodsr, 1i Ibid ths officer that he hat something Very partie' ular lo say lo his wife," and was permitted to return, when he Immediately on seeing his wife, snapped n pistol at her, and fired Brother which took effect in ber breast and she died in eight minutes. Jealous is the alleged provocation to this horrid deed, and Speneei ia said to have been the fourth husband or the muidered woman, who was but twenty four years old. Spencer has engaged David Graham Esq-, of New York, as his counsel, and tun uoronsr a inquest have returned n verdict of murder. The affair has crested the H roost intense exci'emeni in JerseyCtty, , J. The Union insists that the new bill ia n eompromUe, and that it favours Amencan manufactures, first because it does not tz ihem, whilst it does - tax . ths forftgn. Here," H saya,iB plainly sus of . compromut In favout of the protectionist!" Now, we should fike to know, by what sort of tariff on imports. Congress oould tax American manuftcf : I( tho free trade people will keep ep the present duties on foreign goods, we warrant tho maBufactor-j era will tell them, they may put what un tie they please on American fabrics, im ported from Europe or elsewhere into this -.j. . .t. . To make the mjrrteoTwrTlie-' Union urgea, in liie second place; .v'? ! MIa the wide range of tho bill, from fi per eent. to 100 per eent. taxatios, almost every discrimination ia directly and cogent- ly in wvor or Amerean manufactures, a tariff upon 'imports being always in so far a protection loneme asanufactures even if it be a horizontal tatia. ' Ono ' woubi ' ssy this waa a very fair com prom its espe- eiully where the parlies fail to agree npon toe lundamentai principles, constitutional and economical, en which the compromise This means, either that nny tariff, hori. sontal or otherwisev would be a fair com. promise, which is ridiculoust or it mesns. that in she new bill "every discrimination," irom 6 to low per eent ia made lor, the purpose' of protecting American manufae lures, in which case the whole principle of protection is distinctly . acknowledged and the doctiincs of free trade flatly disclaimed. Puis article, we suppose, was intended to catch gudgeons ji) Pennsylvania. DEMOCRATIC TARIFF MEETING. We learn from the Philadelphia Inqoir .a . r . an -a -S . . a er ma ms uemoerata oi ine vity and Connty of Philadelphia, who were odpob i ed to n change in the existing Tariff, as sem bled in great force at the Chiness Mos eium. on Saturday evening last, , Thou, ssnds wsre in altsndsnce, and the proceed, inire throughont were perfect! harmoni. ou . -The Hon. Calvin Blythe was called npon v previue, tana waa nssistsn by n number of Vice Preidenls, selected from the First, Second. Third and Fourth Con greasional District. - - ; The objects of the meeting were explain ed in a brief apd forcible manner by the Chairman, when a committee, consisting of ' Messrs. Whitacar, Kinsloe, " Rice, Rhodes, end Potts, were appointed to draft a series of resolutions. Thee were soon leported through the- Chairman, Vf, - A. v I - o- .l i a i tvinaioe, Mtj.nnu unanimously Biopiea. W give n few of the most prominent: ; Retolved, That the Democratic friends of the Tariff.' of the city and county ol Phil. artel phia max to wo senate or the U. B. their solemn protest against the McKay Bill, which ha recently pataed the House of Representatives, nnd which Is now: be fore the Sensle. - 1 - Ruolvtd, That thie meeting looks with smazement smon tho folljr of this second attempt to indict n system of low duties npon our soentry, when wo remember' trial under the 20 per cent, duty we were nna ble to meet the annual ezpensrs of govern ment r by aboot- 0,000,000 per annum! whii under tho present Turin wo have hot only been able to defray the expenses of government, bat hsve in addition paid off about 1 0,000,000 of Nations debt. Event the English themselves have acknowl edged the policy of our having n judicious tariff, which is rendered palpable fiom Uo fa. t that when we had a tariff ol 20 per cent, not a dollar could Je borrowed of them even at 0 percent interest," while under the Tariff of '42, they have been hogging ns to accept their money at 8 per eent. ' -r "". : "' Rttolvtd, That wa protest against ihe present Tsi iff Dill before the Senate, be- eaoes it asssils every species of industry in the country, and bases its alleged ad van tages on the increased amount of foreign manufactured articles that it is supposed it will bring into this country which increas ed itn port aiion can have ho oiher effect than Uj Send our money abroad, instead of purchasing at home from our own, woiking people. The McKiy Bill strikes dirocily . at the prosperity of the Tailor the Shoe maker the Papermaker the Bookbinder the Ship Carpenter- Weaver tho ter thaBUeli mI Whrleemitli-BrMiw ehmist-ihe Glsss-blower, and a host of other' occupations too tedious to enumerate, down to the children in the factories, and even to the. unprotected snd most generally widowed or parenlleis ' setmstrese, who labors IneesSantly for a pittance'that n now wareely sufficient to keep bodi arid sdul together nor does it stop here u Its course i . ti.. .u ... i. -r j nt uevaeiaHa a no uiuuaaiiue wi uur in- dustriou fellow citizens engaged Nitt our coe-l minss, oar furnace,' forges, rolling "' L!-- -t. - . milts, lounonre, macniue anops, otc.f aa well as the idtmense body of other persons engaged in transporting our eoal, iron. 'and other productions, will be materially injur ed, thrown oat h employment, ana thus the ruin will oxtentl until it reaches nil classes and conditions ol out' citizens, (ex. oept probably the 'office holders) ami oyeC woeim us in wieieueiineas ani ueauiuuou.. MtMlvtd,TMaetftpn pcrons or happy thai has not every branch of society fully n gaged in ' some utefnt occupation end in proportion ss wt send B,,Wl0.'f 1 ,,BIWJsririigfcM manufactures we injuts oor. own iMtoties ... detract from ths industry of out own looms,, and impovensn tne country. ' ;.iiCvieeuf nni uj pawng uia; aana - Bill of Mr. McKsy our fuciories will bs " stopped, onr Iron works closed, and (ho . exporting of our C'osl to oities on the . sea. , board greatly reduced if not absolulol sus- t ne inquirer buisi . . -... , - v The meeting was addrssssd in the course , of the evening, ably and eloquently, by the . Hon. J. B. Sutherland and W. A. Kinsloiv Eao. The demonstration was certalnlr an imposing one, but as the movement was . ezclusively Loco Foco, we have not deem- ed It necesssry to enter more lain the d- tails, v .v.:v -a 'A. ' ,,1. ': AN AMERICAN MOTHER.' We were shown.' the ether tiay, ssys . f Ihe Rio Grande Republican, , letter from (- V ' a mother to her sen, a yolanteer Irrtho. army and were so mqch snrsptsrtd with t . its style tne strains ars much like mosa which actssled oar Revolationary- mothers'" . and the affinity so grrst, that we . though tj uur readers conld not be served with any, thing they Would relish more. ' The eon ; . had left without advislni hit .mother of. the fact of volunteering until he had lett, for the teat or war, aad aha eminences her letter as rollews; , .. . , . Whet shall I ssy, my sonr Yet. write me that yen have left for .Teza.; Had yon written to me, Mother, shall l velunntterr I could have said: No, Texas hss cost, me .too mack already The bones of my first bora, for. aught know are . yet unborird on the, plains . Of Gnliad, and grief for his loss broke his faiUr's heart. , , I have hsd eoeugh oT ' Texas. Dst yon arc lighting for yonr own country, has chosen a path, and God r prosper yen in itland if a motherea pray r er's are ot any avail, you will pass na' harmed in Ihe thickest of the Hint, where I have oo'doubt you will bet nor do 1 wish otherwise, lor I would blush to own k, coward son.: Bat remember II rash ness is net brs very tlierefore, bo bra vo bnt prudent, It ;is yoar ebnntry;nd yon hsve n right yes, are in duty bound . to Ight ker battiest and I say to jon fight . for. yoar. country, right ar wrong: That , America will ultimately be victorins 1. have no doubtf yet I have not at eoatcmti bit , an "opinion of Mexican valor , aa onr newspaper editors havi. .There ia ' good Spanish blood Jn parts ofvMexice. sod Spaniards are not cowards, the Pen insula war will testify,. ' -(! . .-, : -A " M j esrnest prayer are ff your wel fare, whatever your lot may bej and that yon msy return ni harmed, a credit to yourself and country, is Ihe only hope of your devoted mother.". v.--t .'j,,.' ,. ' '. flOW TO KEEP COQL : ' I A correspondent pf the Journal Com sserce, reremmends persons to close their. doors and windows by 9 o'clock in the morning and thna keep the hot air out, II ssys be tried tho plan, and while thn thermometer outside wss 63 te 93 in tha, room it waa only, tt! t. m w ; Thli reminds of a worthy not of the Enuraldlslo, who oa being gtked 'why! -ho worq bh root buttoned, replied, why o keep cut $f hate to be snrcy . i t
The North-Carolina Star (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 5, 1846, edition 1
1
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