Washington Daily Globe (Newspaper) - June 24, 1842, Washington, District Of Columbia from Half of 99. forming a North SIX * of um though production of Ith au undergrowth with tM reit adapted to 3 Jh Half of 9 m and all of feem Ion of tt is as on 3 9, the Soath Half It forming a tract AMD Section 91 37, the Half Half of HUNDRED all other townships lit a the county seat of and partly above Helena to Little of White i months in the i nearest landing on rays navigable for be world ia baiter which require no on the which sn. For corn gad it is probably the or near all upon the and White acis and Big it in sew 4 ACRES of of tha the highest very md more than one as fertile those in their irket is open oil at all within the and Upper produce may tets are act The produce te ^t of the early worth afora and to the to tgm ese are living als or quarter section and making a small the balance to their money to on a of the purlin the divided to ia or near those now owning able their estate will please to or by m a gentleman 1842, contains been immense tore than any I and Phillips ed at the no will be mora this last five in a few i the and Staple ship manufacturer thirty gross of ad it 4,8,16, and 39 he will sell to lbs tan purchase them United i improved writes with as on the finest frying or i mode of made by kith and ind retail at Starch 153aw3w the ladies for their children this that tune 1st, and tuition at liis and and i y 163iaw4w of % for sals Law from 4* and i and tha several i of the to or services may assured tha 19th BY FRANCIS P. P. BLAIR JOHN C. AND NM by the fot than a y per paper by Um i 00 for lest than per Weakly paper by the year m au daring a ta 00 00 00 for I Mi than to the fer tew than or M for law than six not ba may thair papara al any by paring w um tima they hara received for a and do noi at the Urna the papar tobe and pay or SI 00 In who fa n t ' remit by at our of auch tha ta tM bank attention will bt given to any or a thai it ktu been accompanies tt the with will of the Pitt AMERICAN REGISTER OF ENT of a at tha seat of devoted to the interests of has induced the undersigned to establish a periodical at Washington eity nader the above which will contain the earliest notices of painted in this or together with essays on the origin and progress of tha is needless to state that a work of this kind is mieh and if properly it may be made of great benefit to the inventive Tha Patent at the present a book to the Copies of the specifications on its and drawings ia its may be it is on pay meat of the regular bat these are never unless by persons interested in soma particular invention of devices are patented some of which are found but of which prove and of character of these tbe public never learn any Tbe result that tbe community is year after year injured by the sale of unless and trifling to which the teal of the Patent Office attaches a fictitious while those of merit pass Journal of the Franklin Institute has in some remedied this state of by a portion of its pages to tbe notice of inventions in this but as these notices mast necessarily be higher subjects to able Journal is not admitting of more extended is evident that a work exclusively dedicated to ibis and giving all tbe important details of like Newton's Journal or the Foreign will be of nse to will contain a review of all the inventions patented in this country after the date of its and will contain also notices of im foreign giving sketches of them whenever these mny become It will be published weekly in royal quarto of e ght at the low rate of two per payable in on tbe delivery of the first A remittance of one dollar Will secure tbe Register for six are authorized to frank letters containing if signed by The subscription the Register may be forward in this as the low price of the paper will not admit of the proprietor postage on letters containing person five and forwarding the amount of their will be entitled to a sixth copy 19. T. W. Fa o ELIZA R e late Maj. BLAIR OF of this 10. us 8 p. m. june 24, 1842. and most excellent water POWER FOR would inform the public generally that he at his own expense aad in the year 1840, a new Water which will act for the purpose for which it was He therefore deems it unnecessary to give an explanation of or the why be offers it for Water Power is offered for by aa with tbe Mr. W. Exchange He will make an on very moderate The Water Power is unfit for a heavy as the fall is not very The wheel is 10 feet in and 10 feei in aad depends on tbe of the There is a hoe dry Grindstone on tbe ground next to the wheel attached to of a on the first a Polishing which is multiplied five times for a very quick aad a fine light to with fiat emery and two parallel vertical emery pulleys been fitted up for three pulleys On tbe second there is only one with two by which I had my lathes and other machines On the second and third are five on which from 16 to 20 vices can be and one small for fitting ap tools On there is plenty of room for any business with a small power mtae or a gun or with or several undersigned has got a lease for twenty of two years expired on tbe 1st of for the surplus water of the level of the and Rock Creek from the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal which will with tbe Water B. Tbe Water Power is oa corner of Q and 37<fa at the stone west 933( l EMERAL POST OFFICE AND PATENT IJT OFFICE undersigned hss tbe honor to inform his friends that he has with the Postmaster an agency in for tbe transaction of all business with the Pont Office Department as those interested may see flt io intrust to his After a service of five years in the contract and ss a corresponding with ere dit to himself and satisfaction to his official tbe undersigned feels no hesitation in attending to any business that may be confided io before Land Marshal's and Mail Contractor's Ac. and Patents for Useful or other similar requiring an agent at the seat of will be attended to with to receive must be post and enclose a retaining fee five or a sum proportionate to the service to be undersigned refers to the members of Congress to the heads of bureaus at to bis late brother and to the principal mail contractors in the undersigned has blank and ready for and will them to those requiring When it is considered that a large of bids at every letting are set aside for some informality in the or he feels satisfied that the contractors will find account in procuring tbe blanks from A statement of the old pay and service on routes will also be forwarded with the undersigned having been formerly employed as a clerk in the Patent from his being familiar with the routine of business in said will attend to preparing and filing specifications and other papers including for procuring and will transact all such other business connected therewith as may require an agent at this To inventors residing at a it may be proper to it to save by furnishing the undei signed wi h a neat model of their invention oi or of the parts claimed as their the cubical dimensions of which not if 10 or 19 and the duplicate receipt for their patent the former of which in most be forwarded by private but if the cost of carriage to be whole business of procuring the patent may be transacted through tbe and the presence of the inventor or applicant here is thus rendered office of the is situated on 8th near the Patent and immediately opposite the northwest angle or corner of tbe General Post Office of the undersigned will be and when the application for a patent may prove in no case witi his charge exceed the reversionary interest of the applicant in the patent fee of already paid into the Treasury ot the United 17tf JE3SE E. LOTS FOR SALE Lots will be sold for or on a literal properly viz Square No. 6 Lois 3, 4, 5 17 9 18 and west half of 3 93,29 west half of 4 parts of 4, 5 19 of 7 17, and part of 13 140 17, and part of 16 158 3 90 of 1 931 14,15, 16, 17 7 6 39 16 6 determined to dispose of chasers will do well make early W. June 18law6w db of 1 Instance i 4CC HI the on As io lived refer ned procured in for me or my at onr and kept fat to room above Negro 1 d Chester D as a teacher If gives me pleasure to that in ' me yeats to the satisfaction of lessons and far if tak speaL ' ' te ' gray of Mr. La as a french OF Chair of Mathematics in this institution having became vacant the resignation of Professor the Board of Visiters will u fill the vacancy at their annual meeting on the 1st of July should be addressed to Doctor chairman of the University of H. University of 3SawtJolyl with him I bav out this and my conversed in JOHN him as study of of mr. a. v. In the of June 18, 1842 The House having resolved 1 self into Committee of the and the reported by the Committee of Ways and and that by the Committee on together with the amendment offered to the latter by Mr. being under Mr. AARON V. BROWN addressed the committee as I have searched most diligently for some redeeming virtue in the two bills reported by the which might so far reconcile me to their provisions as to excuse any participation on my part in their But I have searched in I can find rescue them from the and most unmitigated They both seek to revive the odious principle of direct and to repudiate the most solemn and sacred covenant ever entered into since the formation of the Federal But I mean to speak only to one of these the one reported by the Committee on is the one which the dominant party in this House mean by the mere power of to force upon the people of thls 1 will not speak to tbe Ways and K. speak to their own that AT taught the Freach port from the Nmy students to entire crior old Alexana highest 11th, 1841. bot c. do Agent for the has just by the a large supply of newly made incomparable for a speedy and certain remedy for whooping cough and The following few out of many of the virtues of the above article will be only safe and salutary remedy for colds and is Pease's clarified of Hoarhound children are afflicted with whooping parents will find Pease's Medicated candy an invaluable Henry A. Brighton will also join in praise of the clarified essence of Hoarhound Hardenbrook that be bas administered this compound witb unbounded success in severe cases of whooping and it bas proved 96 has just received direct from the Henry Stephens of a large supply of his unequalled and inimitable Instantaneous Black which has the property of writing immediately It is the purest black ink ever offered lo the it has no sediment and forms no incrustation about the pens or ink and with remarkable It ia put up in stone tbe smallest of which serves as an ink wholesale and retail snip at 10w3w SLAVE day received for rale by F. Report of the case of Edward against the Common wealth vf argued and adjudged in Supreme Court of the United States at January term 1849, in which it was decided that all tbe la its of the several relative to fugitive are unconstitutional and and that Congress has the exclusive power of legislation on tbv subject of fugitive slaves escaping into other Reported by Richard 19 Bi WILLIAM M. for publishing a new to be entitled E Or will A new edition of Short History of Paper Money and Banking in the United by M with corrections and bringing tbe narrative down to the present Essays on Exchanges and kindred in which efforts will be made to place these subjects in the clearest light A review of the tub embracing the most important especially those which relate to the money and produce and which affect the general operations Such miscellaneous matter as while it will add to the interests of the subserve its main which is that of showing the true character of our paper money and banking and the effect it has on the morals and happiness of the different classes of the Journal will be especially intended for Farmers and bot it is hoped it will not prove unuseful to Merchants and other productive members of will be published once every two Each number will contain sixteen pages double with the leaves stitched and thus uniting the advantages of the open sheet with a form convenient for will one one dollar and fifty cents a four five or one dollar and twenty-five cents ten ten or one dollar first number will be issued in the first week of 1841. all subscriptions must be paid in May 1841. B. ' my residence from E immediately opposite persons wishing to Vr i innic or to can be accommodated in e applying at my dwelling before 9 4 p. m. or at the school room duri 25 WM. ENGLISH imported by by the last voyage of the Great and this day 1 the Round a collection of essays by 1 of Sir 8amuel 9 all the werks of Dean complete in 9 with life by and many interesting and valuable papers not before the complete works of in 1 beautiful British from Chaucer selected by Thomas with notices critical and and an essay on English 1 vol. all tbe dramatic works of and complete in 1 octavo with biographical and critical notices by Leigh Songs of translated into 1 the poetical works of John 1 1841; and many other valuable works in all literature and of which the list will be May 6 said to be OR NO store enmon sense of the people of tbe United at 6 R. ol and clearly reasoned and uses of and the W. of a National Bank of discount a branches in the several until that men of good 5nse, and working would pro core a W. DYER and read it. It will the ] AuDich have been on- in this day of use of many good things is foundation of his subject deep and builds up tier upon r v His subject is divided twenty besides a ind an It is an admirable * to be of extensive 39 r by F. for the of than forty years 4- ' system w the not a blic office Tbe i before either of the present brought Price April 90 9,000 DOLLARS CLEVELAND A CITY persons are cautioned against receiving any of said boadS of the of and of of tbe date of June 15,1841, and numbered 1, 9, 7, 8, 9,10,11, 19,13, and 16, as they were or between Washington city aad New about the 151h of July information respecting them la AM it or B. Washington will be received and liberally May 7sw4w s Cleveland, AND COMMISSION in Sr. an designed wiH attend to ia the above with promptness and He will bay or sell and all kinds of collect and | and act as agent far His long residence and general acquaintance in the fs will secure to him i portion oi No. 51 Water St. Refer to the delegations In Congress from and April 91~-aawlnt BRANCH 13,1637. is respectfully made known that merchandise or other commodities received at this tor delivery in this or to be forwarded to Bal or to points on the line of tbe will be subject to the following of those interested will please take and charges on all goods consigned to individuals in this city or its vicinity must oe paid before their removal from the Commodities offered for transportation must Oe distinctly and be accompanied by a in of the number and description ol packages to be the name of the and of the party forwarding the otherwise they cannot be Company will not be responsible for damage irising from leakage or nor will they be responsible for damage alleged to have been received by any goods or commodities transported by them the claim shall be made before tbe removal of the goods from the if goods which shall have been transported on this road be not received or taken away by their consignee or owners on tbe day of their arrival at the the Company will not be responsible for or pay any for loss or damage which may be sustained by such in other it as above be permitted to remain in or on the ears on tbe or at the one or more after their they will remain so at the exclusive ruk of the owners or hour for and delivering goods antil further be from 9 a. m. until 4 p. Oct 13tf Agent. the formerly editor of tbe in Boh of the del iu of tbe de la in and of Correo in Mexico and New propose io edit in Washington a for the diffusion of general tbe title ot tbe editorial part of which will be both in the English and French A prospectus of this showing its will be and widely circulated in America and as soon as a co laborator is a good English both to correct my barbarous and to translate my French into good the principal object of this enterprise is by no means that ef making all or who may wish to take a share in will have a right to share also tbe profit which can possibly be derived from without reserving for myself the over that which might be obtained by each of rendent in tbe United States during 19 and a citizen since 1899,1 cannot be suspected o being wholly ignorant of the institutions of tht or indifferent in tbe cause of its social and political received at my present corner of Pennsylvania avenue and 10th lo D. Jane 2, 1849lm beautiful First SALAMANDER SA is lined or filled in is a of by any ordinary made in furnaces with and in no instance in preserve the contents DYER 4 a single have with equal annexed 1840, at the foot of Jiew upon one of J. and Scott's Patent Sa Jz a fair I to us a convincing proof of tbe Sale over all thai it was exposed to an eight while a by the same heat in liave no hesitation in ana intense hea of the other less than tn ing that we fire Proprietors of ihe DUD JL LEY lake this opportunity of acknowledging their to their friends for the bestowed upon their and feel pleasure in saying that they have their charges so as to correspond with the Their may rely apon their being as low as in justice could be establishment be comfortable in every and every attention paid to their GENERAL STAGE OFFICE ia kept ai the where seats may be secured for any part of the W. April 93, 1842. April 3012u having made arrangements with tbe most extensive dealer ia Materials in this country to be regularly supplied with any on Booh terms as will enable him to them at than my other person south of New e baa this day opened a complete and would solicit an inspect tan of at best quality No. 1 Boards of 35,40,45,50,55, aad 60, to the of SO best quality aad French Marble and eap Morocco Skivers of and cochineal large aad American Skivers for blank and printed Crimped Colored and for 97 ON CHURCH by j Caroline late Caroline 1 and evils of tbe and a plan for preserving tbe By William 1 published and this day received for sale by FISCHER bas just by tbe schooner a complete assortment of of superior in part. Canvass by the or stretched on frames from 8 by 10 to 29 by 36 Oil sable and hair French black and colored Miniature and Cases ef every best English and American Water in mahogany or by the single A full supply of the above articles is kept for sals at Stationers 17Sawflw LECTURES ON MODERN by Jared five volumes of the English edition reprinted in this day received from aad for sale by Dec 97 F. LBS. SUPERIOR SEALING WAX OlIU W. importer and dealer in fancy and staple has just received by the ship St. the above quantity of superior scarlet Dutch containing 8,10,16 and 90 sticks to the which he will sell to dealers at New York 18 HITE SULPHUR from the White Sulphur Greenbrier A supply of the above article received fresh from tbe and foe by 4 Mav 11enlw OF Mth by of the late I by 6,' Bini just Of FOR one of Jesse 15 100 do Safe perfect security We therefore take much the pub and in them Enos 8ala' holes l . 00 f as fully enti led to their ES H. and sold by tbe have been Dn made to C. * J V 139 Water st. New N. B. of other makes as have payment for the foi of Wholes 50 upon first Halves 3 20. day received from by the last voyage of the Urea q. Johnson 1 and 1 vol. Vaux on I fertilizing 1 4 do with which 1 ol Geological il J 1 vol. for the Diffusion of Useful Select on and Fattening Agricultural e Guide to S AN 50 Guide to 1 prize of 50 Guide to 15 do 50 The do its and do 1 with beautifully drawa fd Kitchen By Patrick Neilf 01 intent of with forty Huber can The to By H. Priess we have the Honeres is Witb of fons to and valuable collection of the best which on all the will Ac Aa to constantly atr rely upon periodicals imported from to thei May 3. in FISCHER BJ importer in fancy and staple sta is of They seem to have gotten it up on tne the and to rely on nothing for its support but the enormity of its and the poor device which they have labeled on its it is a the raising of by the act of 1833, all the duties above 20 per by whatever law were brought down to that by the act of 1841, all duties below 20 per were raised to that with the exceptions contained in the these two we have a and perfect tariff for the supply of the without further legislation on the Hence it is that I assumed the that beyond the correction of the error of last in regard to the list of free and the enactment of a few obvious provisions in relation to home we ought to have nothing to do with this delicate and exciting To take it up for thorough and the establishment of a higher rate of I hold to be an act of legislative which can find in the history of this To no member here can it be necessary to refer to the fierce collision of parties on the tariffs of 1816, 1824, and 1828. It is enough to say in every the doctrine of protection was What sort of Was it only or was it claimed as a distinctive and independent principle of the Let the father of the whole system tell Hear him in 1833, informs us that he had cherished it with paternal and that his affections even then he had been compelled to abandon were Replying to Mr. who was then separating from him on the compromise he that was settled in 1816, in 1824, and in 1W28, that protection should be afforded by high without regard to the amount of the revenue they would Mark the emphatic admission 01 without regard to It was on this very ground that all three of these acts had been so warmly but yet there was no declaration on their face that such was their The doctrine dared not to show itself lest the judicial tribunals of the country should pass sentence of condemnation upon it. it skulked behind the revenue meanly evading the just and manifest principles of the Such a device could not long be ncr its enormous exactions It disquieted and almost convulsed the It filled the land with apprehensions of ruin and disaster on the one and civil war on the Il became so abhorrent to the American he who had sustained it with pa ternal could sustain it no H came forward with the compromise act of 1833 He declared that the American system of protection must go He saw it in the deadly blows which President Jackson was dealing upon saw it in the solemn protestations of every southern State in the saw it in the determined spirit of resistance in South more than he both saw and JeU it in the then recent which had all gone against him and his Under this thorough that no argument of Mr. his great compeer in establishing the could shake or remove Mr. Clay came forward with the I pause Mr. in order that you may consider the position oi the two great parties of this country at that eventful Tne one was insisting on the permanent continuance of the protective the other was boldly demanding its instant repeal and total the compromise was to reconcile to find some middle ground on which both could and the Union be Mr. Clay himself remarked on the am anxious to find out some principle of mutual to as far as both to increase the stability of our at some distant not too when we take into view the magnitude of the interests which are to bring down the rate of duties to that revenue standard for which our opponents had so long is an open and distinct avowal of the objects and purposes of the That it was intended by him to be a permanent not of the but of the great principles of the future tariff legislation of the I for further to his arguments addressed to his manufacturing friends in favor ol its Uial can tM objected lo the by with whom he had co-operated to aupport the protective in of nine and one-half of and the relinquished which they now What principle which bad at been contended for in and in the other after the accumulation of capital and the minu fact are would able lo unaided by the in competition with the imported articles from any give ua all agitations for nine and the io every will them foreign If we can aee our way clearly for nine yean to we can leave posterity to provide for the If Um tariff be may be the case at the next lbs country will plunged into extreme distress and J Mr. Clay) want I wish to aee tha Maturation of lies which have carried ua triumphantly through two I delight not lo this perpetual Let ua have and become once more united aa a baud of i most articles of Il of which are offered oh at a Estive m X HE AMD C ft one for 0 R No. 61, ia St. office of TAYLO April 30-ents. Can 14 and E I have made these extracts and references in to remind this and this of the true object and extent of this It was When who had as strenuously as Mr. Clay had supported the rose up in his place in the Senate and accepted the galleries responded in tumultuous approbation The whole nation responded with joy and The assent of and the of the soon crowned this noble act of concession on both and the process of reduction It has progressed through all the stages of the until we are now within a few days of its entire and when the 30th of this month shall have ihe whole South and can rise up as one and proudly boast although their burdens were ana the process of alleviation slow and yet they have adhered to the not only in the but to the very letter of when that day shall and this shall nave been what can the North sayl Can she point to the same preservation of her plighted faith in vestal purity and I if this be she can do no such The itself would wring from her inmost soul the reluctant that she had adhered to the compromise only whilst it was and cast it oft the moment when tbe other party was to have entered on its present distinguished Governor of Massachusetts seems to have contemplated the possibility of something of this in tbe of Representatives abide by the she it to tbe tariff and lo ana When that period shall the friends of to what honorable man Wbo ffr Utl sustain such a measure 1 Would not Squib Carolina You hive no right 10 chani dria founded On you have had tl of your fide of 4m aad now I mine a 1 under such circum too wera to proceed to abolish the would no Carolina have much more just cause of complaint disaffection than aha now baa Governor then a Representative in said and asked in relation to South might have been said and asked of all ihe It was no between was tawen sections qf It a compromise i and it with until each has enjoyed it for at least an equal period of I the sentiment has left an indelible i on my that the North cannot repudiate this after having pocketed millions upon millions under it. Mr. Clay whatever he may do could not then submit to tne degrading In the speech which ushered the compromise act before the he mean re should be carried by the common consent of both we shall hare all History will faithfully record tae narrate under what th. waa that it was a pacify ing that it was as oil pound from the vessel of the to restore peace and har to the When all this waa what Can what Legislature would mar the What who is entitled to deserve the character of an American states up In his in either of aod disturb the treaty or peace and I know not how this can escape the stern and withering rebuke contained in these but by the denial that it does revive the protective so distinctly and solemnly re by the it is not x pressly in on the face of the ts like those who originally established are too sagacious thus to label its unconstitutionality on its Like they hide its protective character from judicial no man oan doubt the who will look either at the origin of the the evidence on which It was or the rate of duties it I pose to and test it in all these la the first it waa prepared and reported by and not by tbe Ways and It Is the of the latter committee to look after the condition of the and fo see that it is kept in condition to meet all the appropriations made by but the Committee on as its very name has no such duties assigned to it. Its whole for a long series of years evinces no purpose connected with the revenues of the Look at the constitution of the present Massachusetts has Ver mont New York New Jersey Penn sylvania and even little Rhode Island one whilst there were only three from the whole Union why this amazing disproportion in the Northern Evidently because they wers manufacturing deeply interested in the deliberations of the States of the and were agricultural and therefore were supplied only with two whilst the whole the ten or twelve States on the majestic Mississippi and its noble had only one member of the No one I will be so ungracious as to suppose that the Speaker ever constituted such a committee with the slightest reference to the raising of the Speaker could never nave had any such But the tariff party of this ever watchful of such looked over the after their and found in the structure of that on one more favorable to their views than the Committee of Ways and the closest concert of they wrested the President's message from the Committee of Ways and to whom it rightfully and transferred it to the Committee on So much for the geographical structure of the com I now upon whose and what sort of evidence was this Was it on the oral or written statements of the Secretary of the oi the wants and condition of the treasury or for years fo we heard not a word from Was any witness or statements on the Not one Even the report of the majority of the committee glances but slightly over the subject of revenue barely saying enough about it to save even a decent the information on which this was was derived wholly from the of them the same persons who were here in 18528. The majority of the committee have complained of the House on the subject of I now complain of The House refused to give them the power to send they determined they would have them without The House refused to give them power to qualify witnesses in the they determined to take their testimony without the House amended their by saying that none but disinterested witnesses should be and then laid their so on the In the face of this solemn decision of the by ayes and majority of the committee determined they would examine witnesses directly interested in the whose daily bread or annual profits on their capital depended on the answers wnich they were to Was anything like this ever heard ot in the of any of the courts of this coun receive testimony from those directly it was never before heard of in any investigation where truth was to be or justice to be Let me not be I was on a former when I had no to none can know the facts as well as the manufacturers and it often happens that no one knows some material fact so well as the plaintiff or defendant in a civil and yet you would never examine either oi them to prove such fact in his own in criminal none know the facts as well as the culprit but yet you never examine him on trial for his own But I go beyond these and maintain that this country is filled with persons who have discontinued or retired from manufacturing or who are otherwise well-informed and impartial on all the subjects within the range of our So far from having called on such as not a single person whose statement was received is now who was not deeply and directly are two important that six out oi nine of the committee were from manufacturing and the testimony on which the was furnished bv interested who have voluntarily left their and travelled great distances for that purpose And from both of them 1 infer that the protection of manufactures was the controlling consideration in the preparation of this I will now look into the itself for intrinsic evidence of the We have the evidence of Mr. Clay that that was settled in 1816, 1824, and 1828, that protection should be afforded by high without regard to test this by that of 1838, and see what a vast number of articles are now to pay the same as in 1828, or so nearly the same as not to change the protective character of the will present you with the following list of comparative 1828. Present Clothe and case 1 334 to 45 per 40 etc. sq. on woollen beyond tha rates agreed on in 1833, some cannot exist at others realize reasonable and satisfactory profits out it. In I do not hesitated say that soma of them ought to go One of the erring evils of this manufacturing system that can be attempted in foreign countries which to aoc soon to be imitated No matter what it might unsuited to our most under the that if fc be found that it cannot succeed in this country by its own we have only to insert a new in the tariff for its and thereby make it a profitable It were far for countrymen to betake themselves to the substantial aud useful branches of which can and will succeed by their own rather than be running after the many useless and silly inventions of the Old Lot me give you an Some years tbe manufacture of patent steel pens was commenced where it might have wall Hut straightway some of our Yankee friends took it into their heads that they could carry on the same business away they went at and succeeded in making quite a or article; they for a all dub patronage of the Northern the foreign article began tp come In cheaper in and quite aa good for in a great those manufactured here at a much higher All this has bant of recent at the present we had before the committee the American manufacturer begging for protection foreign article; in other asking Concrete to tax on all the poor and orphan and baises Clothes ready made Brown sugar tarred roda and bolts cablas and chaina anchors nails an Vila Castings sheet or hoop leather Boots and GO percent 3 per 5 3 2 2 do it 00 14 4 per those States for his ft have been better for those children to have by a sufficient sum to buy out this and to have cast it into the than for Congress to have granted his If a mechanical business of no more to the country than cannot support itself ihe aid of unjust and excessive let hgo and let those engaged in such betake to to or lo other employments of greater I could many such cases all a strong inclination to avoid the of and to resort to every light and trivial whether the situation of the or the price of will justify it or us not lose sight of tbe precise objection to the rate of duties established by the compromise which we are now I entertain no hostility to the manufactories of toe United I for the valuable and important the very highest bat the light and frivolous ones I am witling to see go down There are more noble and invigorating throughout this for ail who may be engaged in But to tha important I will give all the incidental advantages which the collection of the national revenue can Such incidental encouragement is given by the I Is entirely sufficient to sustain the chief interests of this as the the the the the act allows three distinct points of incidental It imposes a of 30 per ad or on the value of the goods It provides that that value shall be fixed in reference to our own instead of those of foreign as was case the That the duties shall be paid down in instead of being secured by on a as is the rate of and the extent of for which I and those with whom few I am politically We find this rate of duties already existing and established by law by those who established to be fixed and a which he who proposed it denominated treaty of amity and which no who was entitled to deserve the character of an American would dare stand up in either House of Congress and as to the ability of the manufacturing establishments to sustain themselves at the rate of duties which we are insisting rate of twenty per ad valorem on tho home including something for cash I estimate as at the to twenty-five per An article is purchased in Liverpool at a cost of But the same when brought to this may be fairly worth Now the duty is not to be laid on tbe its cost but on the 1120, its value a difference in favor of tbe manufacturers of four cent. Making some little for payment in instead of I assume five per as the actual rate or degree of protection incidentally afforded by the compromise act. In the allowance of twenty per as die difference between the foreign and home I estimate to be equal to about ten per and the other ten are allowed for The this duty of twenty-five per a sufficient protection to the manufacturers to sustain il must at the first exceedingly strange if they What I not when the Government grants them an advantage of over all foreign when the Government turns every 01 weir products into every and every into for is precisely the effect of the duty imposed on the foreign this advantage the statements laid before the insist if the compromise act as I bave to 24 or 25 per shall go into if not of our manufactories must Mr. I am free to declare that 1 do not believe these They are made by men deeply and directly wealth or poverty was at made without any sanction of an and with no direct responsibility like almost everything has been The high and exorbitant protection of former times has induced too many to rash into the on this I dare establishments will have to go not for the want of adequate bat for want of real capital All ube moneyed fictions of the day are now vanishing and none but the substantial capitalists can stand the Even some who had have lived in such or disregarded the wholesome suggestions of a prudent that they must and will be compelled to go So it is with all the other pursuits of Like causes of imprudence and extravagance have rained them in like But I do firmly believe that our aod all our important ean be sustained at a duty or 24 or 25 per that are located under favorable and are ducted with that industry and rigid economy which characterised this country before the late inundation of and Mane of them may realize the same extent of profit as but they must be content with all our occupations must be content with Tne and have long since become content to realize 3,4, or 5 per oft their investment in Ac. 25 per will not rather than the duty on the and thereby add to Ike burdens of those who are already sufficiently I would recommend the suggestion the minority valuable principle of our Government ia tnd equal protection to If you apoo tbe riens 00s for tha of 25 par 20 at 26 this list might be added a great number of other articles which are taxed at rates precisely the same as by the act of 1828, or so the same as to leave no doubt that this in its general is highly I beg leave to present another short can fail to convince the most of duty per on certain of British man calcula ttd upon the tf accenting to the and 1833. iron per ton do iron per ton do 40 100 60 47 88 which liea at tba vere of tba Why sacrifice Tho duty oa by tlM opposed is twenty-three per fun pom per pi rate of Mr tha wool factory of or five per on etili t* par egot ad aa a protection to iff a of tho duty 100 60 47 88 100 70 7 what plea or apology can m Intatte tables In the y ou add ta tha all in iros imm 1 Stair and tbe producer a frt off but from die duty or T and you at enable the shoe aad better compete with lite foreign dw a heavy Reduce on ail other used in manufactures to and you evidence of tbe ihe tbe on the raw material tbe we wUl rate to tha irf appears tabs 40 cents a poo TM would add about 8 U and to tha manufacturer here at that saving 9 cants par The in England atone in or nearly The doty V 1 be ia 23 per and 4 pec In England tha I tait iba The coat of Mew York is taO Tbe ia about m. The duty by die jm kM per or nearly the coat of the 06* By tbe or tanned skins and Mdas are to be to * duty varying to at and sola ana bond 8 par they an thi raw of admitted frae of and are to of Uta and ara fe oar te w glva them by 1 on raw t 1uty of a dwy of 1 ti addition to all it is veil feat an inflated baa abounded in this on the Inflated or rathar raised the oar and property frr above