ar3 the only effectual one, of securing to us justice, peace, and "security, at home and a broad, and "with them that na tional power and renown, the love of which Providence has implanted, for wise purposes, so deeply in the human heart; in all of which great objects, eve ry portion of our country, wide ly extended and diversified as it is, has a common and identical interest. If we have the wis dom to place a proper relative estimate on these more eleva ted and durable blessings, the present and every other conflict of like character, may be readi ly terminated; but if, reversing the scale, each section should put a higher estimate on its im mediate and peculiar gains; and acting in that spirit, should push favorite measures of mere poli cy, without regard to peace, harmony or justice, our section- al con diets would then, indeed, without some constitutional i check, become interminable, except by the dissolution of the Union itself. That we have, in fact, so reversed the estimate is too certain to be doubted, and the result is our present dis tempered and dangerous condi tion. The cure must com mence in the correction of the error; and not to admit that we have erred, would be the worst possible symptom. It would prove the disease to be incura ble, through the regular and or dinary process of legislation; and would compel, finally, a re sort to extraordinary, but I still trust, not only constitutional, but safe remedies. No one would more sincerely rejoice than myself, to see the remedy applied from the quar ter where it could be most easi ly and regularly done. It is the only way by which those who think that it is the only quarter from which it can constitution ally come, can possibly sustain their opinion. To omit the ap plication by the General Gov ernment, would compel even them to admit the truth of the opposite opinion; or force them to abandon our political system in despair; while on the other hand all their enlightened and patriotic opponents would re joice at such evidence of mode ration and wisdom on the part of the General Government, ns would supersede a resort to what they believe to be the high er powers of our political sys tem, as indicating a sounder state of public sentiment than has ever heretofore existed in any country; and thus affording the highest possible assurance of the perpetuation of our glo rious institutions to the latest generation. For as a people advance in knowledge, in the same degree they may dispense with mere artificial restrictions in their government: and we may imagine, (but dare-not ex-i pect to see it,) a state of intelli gence so universal and high, that all the guards of liberty may be dispensed with, except an enlightened public opinion acting through the right of suf frage; but it pre-supposes a state where every class and ev ery section of the community aro capable of estimntinrr the effects of every measure, not on ly as it may afFect itself, but ev ery other class and section; and of fully realizing the sublime trutli, that the lushest and wis est policy consists in maintain- lug justice and promoting peace ana harmony; and that comna red to these, schemes of mere gain are but trash and dross. tear experience has already proved that we arc far removed from such a state, and that we must consequently rely on the old and clumsy, but approved mode of checking power in or der to prevent or correct abu ses; but i do trust that though far from perfect, we arc at least so much so as to be capable of remedying the present disorder in the ordinary way; and thus to prove that with us public opini on is so enlightened, and our political machine so perfect, as rarely to require for its preser vation, the intervention of the power that created it. How is this to be effected! The application maybe pain ful, but the remedy, I conceive, is certain and simple. There is but one effectual cure, an honest reduction of the duties to a fair system of revenue, adapted to the just and consti tutional wants of the Govern ment. Nothing short of this will restore the country to peace, harmony and mutual aiieeuon There is already a deep and growing conviction in a large section of the country, that the imposts, even as a revenue sys tem, is extremely unequal, and that it is mainly paid by those who furnish the means of pay ing the forei-gn exchanges of the country on which it is laid; and that the case is not varied, taking into estimate the entire action of the system, whether the producer or consumer pays in the first instance. I do not propose to enter for mally into the discussion of a point so complex and contest ed; but as it has necessarily a strong practical bearing on the subject under consideration, in all its relations, I cannot pass it without a few general and brief remarks. If the producer in reality pays, none will doubt but the burden would mainly fall on the section it is supposed to do. The theory that the consumer pays in the first instance, ren ders the proposition more com plex, and will require, in order to understand where the burden in reality ultimately falls, on that supposition to consider the pro tective, or, as its friends call it, the American Svstem, under its three-fold aspect of taxation, of protection, and of distribution; or, as performing at the same time the several functions of giving a revenue to the govern ment, of affording protection to certain branches of domestic in dustry, and lurmshiii" the means to Congress of distribu ting large sums through its ap propriations; all of which are so blended in their effects, that it is impossible to understand its true operation, without taking the whole into the estimate Admitting then, as supposed, that he who consumes the arti cle pays the tax in the increased price, and that the burden falls wholly on the consumers, with out affecting the producers as a class, (which, by the by, is far rom being true, except in the single case, if there be such a one, where the producers have a monopoly of an article, so in dispensable to lite, that the quantity consumed cannot be affected by any increase of price,) and that considered in the light of a tax merely, the impost duties tall equally on ev ery section in proportion to its population, still when combined with its other effects, the bur den it imposes, as a tax, may be so transferred from one section to the other, as to take it from one and place it wholly on the other. Let us apply the re mark first to its operation as a system ot protection. The tendency of the tax, or duty, on the imported article is, not only to raise its price, but al so, in the same proportion, that of the domestic article of the same kind, for which purpose, when intended for protection, it is in fact laid; and of course, in determining where the system ultimately places the burden in reality, this effect also must be taken into the estimate. If one of the sections exclusively pro duces such domestic articles, and the other purchases them from it, then it is clear that, to the amount of such increased prices, the tax or duty on the consumption of foreign articles, would be transferred from the section producing the domestic articles to the one that purcha sed and consumed them, unless the latter in turn, be indemni fied by the increased price of the objects of its industry, which none will venture to assert to be the case with tho great staples of the country, which form the basis of our exports, the price of which is regulated by the fo reign and not the domestic market. To those who grow them, the increased price of the foreign and domestic articles both, in consequence of the du ty on the former, is in reality, and in the strictest sense, a tax, while it is clear that the increa sed price of the latter acts as a bounty to the section producing them, and that as the amount of such increased price: on what it sells to the other sec tion, i3 greater or less than the duty it pays on the imported ar ticles, the system will in fact operatc as a bounty or tax; ifjther, yet as being a portion of greater, the difference would be a bounty; if less, a lax. Again, the operation may be equal in every other respect, and yet the pressure of the system, relatively, on the two sections, be rendered very unequal by the appropriations or distribu tion. If each section receives back what it paid into the trea sury, the equality if it previous ly existed will continue; but if one receives back less, and the other proportionally more than is paid, then the difference in re lation to the sections will be to the former a loss, and to the lat ter a gain; and the system in this aspect would operate to the amount of the difference, as a contribution from the one re ceiving less than it paid to the other that receives more. Such would be inconteslibly its gene ral effects, taken in all its differ ent aspects, even on the theory supposed to be most favorable to prove the equal action of the system, that the consumer pays in the first instance the whole amount of the tax. To show how, on this suppo sition, the burden and advanta ges of the system would actual ly distribute themselves between the sections, would carry me too far into details; but I feel assu red, after full and careful exam ination, that they are such as to explain what otherwise would seem inexplicable, that one sec tion should consider its repeal a calamity mid the other a bles - sing; and that such opposite pposite views should be taken by them, as to place them in a state of determined conflict in relation to the great fiscal and commer cial interests of the country. Indeed were there no satisfac tory explanation, the opposite views that prevail in the two sections, as to the effects of the system, ought to satisfy all of its unequal action. There can be no safer, or more certain rule, than to suppose each por tion of the country equally ca- pablc of understanding their re spective interests; and that each is a much better judge of the ef fects of any system of measures on its peculiar interest, than the other can possibly be. But whether the opinion of its unequal action be correct or er roneous, nothing can be more certain than that the impression is widely extending itself, that the system, under all its modi fications, is essentially unequal; and if to that be added a con viction still deeper, and more universal, that every duty impo sed for the purpose of protec tion, is not only unequal, but also unconstitutional, it would be a fatal error to suppose that any remedy, short of what I have stated, can heal our politi cal disorders. In order to understand more fully the difficulty of adjusting this unhappy contest on any oth er ground, it may not be impro per to present a general view of the constitutional objection, that it may be clearly seen how hopeless it is to expect that it can be yielded by those who have embraced it. They believe that all the pow ers, vested by the Constitution in Congress, are not only re stricted by the limitations ex pressly imposed, but also by the nature and object of the powers themselves. Thus though the power to impose duties on im ports be granted in general terms, without any other ex press limitations but that they shall be equal, and no prefer ence shall be given to the ports of one State over those of ano- the taxing power, given with the view of raising revenue, it is from its nature restricted to that object, as much so as if the Convention had expressly so limited it; and that to use it to effect any other purpose, not specified in the Constitution, is an infraction of the instrument in its most dangerous form; an an infraction by perversion, more easily made, and more difficult to resist than any other. The same view is believed to be applicable to the power of regulating commerce, as well as all the other powers. To surrender this important princi ple, it is conceived, would be to surrender all pow er, and to ren der the government unlimited and despotic; and to yield it up, in relation to the particular power in question, would be in fact to surrender the control of the whole industry and capital of the country to the General Government; and would end in placing the weaker section in a colonial relation with the stron ger. For nothing are more dis similar in their nature, or may be more unequally affected by the same laws, than different descriptions of labor and prop erty; and if taxes, by increasing the amount and changing the intent only, may be perverted, in fact, into a system of penal ties and rewards, it would give an tiie power that could be de sired to subject tho inhnr nml 1 property of the minority to the I will of the mi of the majority, to be regu lated without regarding the in terest of the former, in subser viency to the will of the latter. Thus thinking it would seem unreasonable to expect, that any adjustment based on the recognition of the correctness of a construction of the Consti tution, which would admit the exercise of such a power, would satisfy the weaker of the two sections, particularly with its pecuuar industry and property, which experience has shown may be so injuriously affected by its exercise. Thus much fur one side. The just claims of the other ought to be equally respected Whatever excitement the sys tem has justly caused, in certain portions of our country, 1 i,0pc and believe, all will conceit that the change should be made with the least possible detri ment to the interests of those who may be liable to be affect ed by it, consistently with what is justly due to others and the principles of the Constitution To effect this, will require the kindest spirit of conciliation, and the utmost skill; but, even with these, it will be impossible to make the transition, without a shock greater or less; though I trust, if judiciously effected, it will not be without many com pensating advantages. That there will be some such cannot be doubted. It will, at least be followed by greater stability, and will tend to harmonize the manufacturing with all of tho other great interests of the coun try, and bind the whole in mu tual affection. But these are not all. Another advantage of essential importance to the ulti mate prosperity of our manu facturing industry will follow. It tcilt cheapen production; and in that view, the loss of any one branch, will be nothing like in proportion to the reduction of duty on that particular branch. Every reduction will, in fact, operate as a bounty to every other branch, except the one reduced; and thus the effect of a general reduction will be to cheapen, universally, the price of production, by cheapening living, wages rvnd materials; so as to give, if not equal profits after the reduction, profits by no moans reduced proportion ally to the duties; an effect which, as it regards the foreign market, is of the utmost impor tance. continued on the last page.) TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1S31. In cen d ia ry Publico tic ns. The excitement produced a few months since, in ihe Southern country, by the discovery of several copies of the notorious viaiKer x-ampniei, is doubtless still fresh in the recollection , of most of our readers. Notwith standing the pointed rebukes which the publishers of that inflammatory production received from many of the well disposed and reflecting nart of our northern brethren, it appears that some misguided and deluded fan atics are still bent on excitinjr our co lored population to scenes at which the heart sickens on the bare recital, and which, instead of improving their moral or physical condition, cannot fail to overwhelm the actors in ruin, and curtail the privileges of all the other?. Let them view the first fruits of their diabolical projects in the Southampton massacre, and pause: an awful retribution awaits them. A letter from a gentleman in Washing ton City, dated 29th ult. to the Post master at this place, says: "An incendiary paper, "The Libe rator," is circulated openly among the free blacks of this city; and if you will search, it is very probable you will find it among the slaves of your county. It is published in Boston or Philadelphia by a white man, with the avowed purpose of inciting rebel lion in the South; and I am informed, is to be carried through your country by secret agents, who are to come amongst you underline pretext of peddling, &c. Keep a sharp look out for these villains, and if you catch them, by all that is sacred 'ou ought io barbacue them. Diffuse this inform ation amongst whom it may concern. "