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Huron Signal, 1848-11-10, Page 1y ims.sormlosss ammo imenere lied lerdaktelle Me lerf ' ' ' ' veistysiv. et :,.... : ea 14. ' -Ow tio"..44•• See., eTriarto - - • ii •• . ' .0 ..t.J ' . al Genes* sill issa Week So.....tv Wit , AS* 0 ei 101$01.41‘ ONO., 0111 if :111 h. 'S•4 ' ., *weeded seeetweet"• les nolli, e v,..,, t, edit% • iik .. i :iiii.,•-•••• . , ... to .04 0, . ( 4.41 sreeirse al i.e. ' Attld 101B Sov4o $ $ tro.11",44 ttI f ) , 01.• 10,64110RINMPI4.1 .t ;Igat•h$0 $ taaJ .sb eta $ •1511 , eeeireerrei are cern • -tit sieene • •- : her: • 1- - . . , mewareileeee- ; a 44, rf .$ 'Al "cf ItekAiMil• L. 14.14116 . 'a "TUE talk tTEST POseteLE 0000 TO TUE GLOATEST P00111110ILE NUMBER. GOD F. RIC H , HURON DISTRICT, (C. W.) FR/PAT, NOVEMBER 10, 1846. AN!) SVC PENCH AT Ten see oe Mies NUMBER 41. s; 1,400118 ACRES OF LAND b A NIIA8A121k3' E S T . TnICANADA COMPANY bare for tepodel, about 1,500,000 ACRES OF LAND dispersed throughotte most of the Towson*, is Upper ththada--nearly 600,- 810 Ames are situated -in the Herm Tract, veal hums as o0..4 tbe moat fertile parts of the Provinces -it has trebled its minde- n°, tides yam, and now contains up - eerie of 20,000 ialtabitants, The LANDS ore offered by way of LrAmr, fee 'Fen Years, or for Nett, C A ir II DOW N--ake plan oweldfas Coal, end the Wenn in Instal - mesas teeing dose enemy with. That Beats payable lat February each year, are about the Interest at biz Per ConeePon the price of the Land. Upon most ofthe Lots, when LEASED, NO MONEY IS IUMQVIRETt DOWN—whilst upon the others, aecordieg to locality, one, two, or them years Rent, newt be paid is advance, —het these psyments will free the Settler frees farther calls metal 8*4 hed or 4114 year WILOW. _ . The right to Ptractrog the -VIM - HOLD during the term, is secured to the Lessee .i. flied /um named in lean, and an allowance te mole according to antici- pated papoose Lists of Leeds, tied any further informs• tion cam be °braised, (by applIcatittn, if by letter peet-paul) at tbe C011r•Nef4 Orrices, Toroseto and Goderirk. ; of R. BIRDSALL, Zoe, .dspeestet, Colburoe Dretect ; 1)r. ALLarre, Graph, or .1. C. W. D•eir, Stratford, Huron Distinct. Godericb, March 17;1114111. . . • . -- STRACHAV & IAZARS, J3ARRISTERS and Attorniem at law, teoliciton le Chancery, and Ban'erupt- cy, Notary Politic and Conveyancere,Gode- Irish cad tltratford, Huron District, C. W. lone Sramestur, Goderich. Dunne Hone LIJ.41.11, tit ratford. Gedericb, April 20, 1848. NOTICE. A PPLICATION will be made to the Next rh. Seeseas of the Proviseral Lerrialature, for leave to brut, irt a Hie to 1.141.41i ore and torsi the following n' -lops and Gore, and Block of Lied. viz :—North Easthope, South Euthepe,Dowoie and Gore,—Ellice, Blanshard, Fullerton, Logan and Ilibbert,— Weffeeley, Monangton and Maryborough, and Weasteru belfef Wilmot, and the Block of Land Mined Lopes—tato a .ow Dee urea. AL.14X. 111.1'11.7 See'y of Committee. Statford, [Huron], t 1s1 of April, 1848. 10036 FARM FOR SALE. Frieles le the seventh Concession of the Selmeriber offers for este Lot No. Teepairhip of Colborne, West Division. There se Da the premises a etnall Log Barn with 15 scree under good cultivation, and wen booed. The Land is of excellent Vaeitiym;haod withia 6 mile. of the Town of et:retaining 100 acres. TERMS of Sole will be made knows by amines, to William Robertson, Esq., Can- ada Company's Office, Godericb, or to the subscriber. DAVID SMITH. Goderielt, Ketch lel, 1348. 614 TO THOM MAY CONCERN. Rif ii: OLIVER, having left the whole of IT -I- his unsettled accounts with the Clerk of the 1a1 Division Court, Goderich, advises all parties Indebted to htm to see that go - Seems before the 2nth of next month.— Airy isetweetten reqtrireil, will be gime at Use oleo only, where a permit will be al- w=schateereierees. Alpe 110, 134.1. •-•sestoetailletheimainiegra 1131$011'1.' LINT011, i T eunetc, Quales Balch, •. • AMP EY ANGER. . 41111MAT F ORD •"*""Oevem...e.- 'NOTICE. rbelttta&:i‘i%ts Iowa efOederich will at* die ea Mt Mr lame - raw dowel www. filedeinshi iely *hi nee. DAR. If AM 'LIME, • 1st er ni•; • • wirer e?*virret-1- ' .6 0 Ir10-111 1 c • Li • C . S 0 N , eikiNVI14.411.4.,OLAZIER, 4,4,16164/41/1..4e. 41411141 4-10-14 . --vtrossos.--vro100~--$. D. WATMON,; BAIllt/ISTffIl SSD yrremerev AT idle, seuettee.t &view, suntuerrty, Mc. OtnitXtli isittret (30DLR.Tcn. t rp. RED. JACKET. A chief of die Irian Tribes, the Tuscaroras. Cooper, whose aame is with Ite country's worm First in her file*, her ?Willa& of stied, A outdone sow in other Mums, has proves His ler foe the yrs, lead 14. 1.1* beitirdt And throsed her ie the Senate Hall of Nelms, Robed like the deluge rainbow, heaven - wrought, Magnificent as his own mind's creatioss, And beautiful u its green world of thought. Aid faithful to the Act of Cos quoted As 1aw-autherity--4 pawed . con.— He writes that we are, as ourselves hare voted, The inset enlighteaSI people ever keowa. That all oar week is happy, as a Sandie fa Paris, full drag, and dance, and laugh; And that, faun Orlesna to the Hey of Fundy, There's not • bailiffnor an epitaph. And. halthermore, in fifiy years or sooner, We rail expert out poetry and nine ; Asti our brave deft, eight frigates and a schooner, Mill sweep the iseu from Zenabla to the Line. 1( 14. were with ine, Eieg of Tesseren, eleshrt as -I. epee ere purrs* sow, - IA 111 its medall'd, Erioevd, mid beaded glory, It s eyes dark beauty, and its thoughtful Sow— Its brow, half martial and half diplornatic, lts eye, upeoaring like an ettgle's wings; Well might he boast rhat we, the Demeerstie, Outriral Europe—even u. oar kings. For thou wert monarch kora. Tradi tiona's pages Tell act the planting 11( thy parent tree, But that the forest uibrs leave bent for ages, To throe, and to thy sires, the subject knee.. Thy name is princely. Though no poet'. magic j Could make Rest JACEIT grace aft Foetal& 1 rhyme, • Unless be herd a gesies for the tragic, And introduced it is &pantomime ; Tet it is music is the language spoken Of thine ewe lead ; and on her herald -roll, As nobly fosght for, sod as proud a token As Cava ler box's, of • warrior's 'tool. • Thy gene -though Aestria's beismestax would frigitee . That medal pale, r diamonds the dark mine, And George the Fourth wore, in the dazce at Br gluon, A MOTe becoming erelong dues titan thine; Tet 'tie • brave one, scones( wind and weather, And fitted for thy camel os field aad deed, Al Rob Reye tarsal for the Highland heather, Or forest green for Eoglastke R010111 Hood. Is strength a mourch's merit 7 (like • whaler's) Thea art as tale as sinewy, sod &sequin As earth's first kings --the Argo's gallant sailers, Heroes in history, and gods in song. Is eloquence ? Her spell is thine that reaches The heart, .ad makes the wisest head its sport; And there's one rare, Mange Virtue in thy speeches, Th. secret of their mastery—they are short. Is beauty? Thiee has with thy youth departed, Bat the hive -legends et thy manhood's years, And atm who perish'd, young and broken-hearted, Are—bat I rhyme for eneles, and not for team. Th. monarch taied--the mystery of croatrimediog, The godlike power, the art Napoleon, Of winniug, fettering, mouldiag, wielding, bead- ing The hearts of =those till try more as or: k Seer otk EXTRACT OF A SPEECH OF HONOURABLE DANIEL WEBSTER, FANEUIL Dat.teitatee th; mesa 24 tie 1818. And instead of going into general princi- ples and statements. I have thought It wouad be wont weriefectosy to you, and inure convenient to mysele to preseat to you the operation of this eub-Treagury eye - tem in the great state of New Turk; be. cause we know that New Yeik si the great centre of the money market, as well is the e mporium of forolgfreonuneree. Ascesow I have bees at mese pains to temente° +his, and I will &tate the moults as thine learned them. Tue trutb the; a hen money iv plenty the sub -Treasury only a ludicrous, liZ! ij:r!andrD°1jnghng'forcibg en ofss to :uorabaetlas kegof specie, when the busatteee would be just a• well dune by the passing of emu/ aotes.—. ventive In the much abused Independent When money ie pleat y, it ie only expensive, Treasury." bunglrog, useless, &wee mg and ridiculous; ! Tbe independent Treasury, then, is a but the moment that by the exportation of preventive against expantions end fluctua- specie, or trues whatever cam*, money be- eons in the country, against the course of comes scarce, and the extgencies ise the things that makes money easy to -day and business community begin to press, then it hard to -morrow. "While this mittens is not merely a hamlet* and ludicrous so- veld speculation and over -trading on the gioe; it becomes a means of torture and res- part of banks and individuals, it Las at the true, because its inevitable effect, when same titne afforded tbe beet and sureet pro - mews speekgeeek eo _41,44, tearesteekiml tcctiun to douesect manufectures—a great wheo It ie difficult to be bad, to increase and growing interest wbich must be ever that difficulty. 1 dear to the country." Now if the commer- Now, 1 dad that on the -35th day a An. ' cm! interest and manufacturing interest see business, Isere in the capital of New Eng- lead—web souse degree uf acesainteitee atel istercouree with won of business in the commercial emporium of the country— New York- let me •liow you how tar I •differ from the great authority to which I have juat alluded—Mr. Duchene°. In his speech four or five days ago be said, Where, since the Almighty firat placed man upon the earth, has there been any natio° to CoMparet with ours in rapid and subrtantial improvement 1" I say nowhere —I &newel that question readily. •• It his now ileum° the wonder as well as the model ot the world;" and I hope it will cen- time toe be so. 'Our prosperity has kotiwn iro ebb in its sweeping course, . ex- cept froin the expansions and contractions of our paper currency. and the individual ruin which this has occasioned. For theve teinporary revulsions we are _indebted' to Whig policy. And even fur them, to a great extent, Democracy has found a pre - urt last th ial barks in the eit I these things as Mr. Buchanan seem them e COMMISTC Y of New York bed in their vaulu $5,800,000 1 then nobody has a right to complain; if they In coin. That was tbo base upon which , oee that the sub -Treasury prevents fluctua- they made their issues for the accummoda-; woes inatead of producing them; If they sec. eon at the mercantile world. The sub- that thts sub -Treasury has protected the Treasury had at that time in its vaults, 1., intereats ot manufactures; lf they see that, the course of events, v. ittiin one month lliat I under the operatton of this sub -Treasury relation was greatly chaneed, tor on thel tariff of '46, the Iron roills are flourislortg,— affth of September the Uanks bad but fatty.; the tic:ellen reills going an, everywhere, in six hnedred thousand (Maass, whtie the sob- great prospentv—if they see all that, then Treasury had increased :is autoeut to , Mr. -Buchanan is entirely eget. twenty-four hundrea' thousand. Thins in a ' There remarks of Mr. Buchanan contain few days more than a month, tho banke! two propositions. One isi, that the sub - parted with twelve hundred thtusand dollars 'Treasury ku, to fact, pveveated ductuations. of ipecte, and the sub -Treasury obtaised Now, for one, 1 should say that, wIthin wyl the additional sum of One million. dillPtes 1 recoltection, there has never been so great change In the relation between the mouses la fluctuation is the money market as we of muney ta these respective depositeo 11. have witnessed for the last twu years; once created a great 6cm-city of money, lar , many of you have memories long enough teinry Leidy knowa that the specie or cum lel to go back and review, in your own minds, the banks id the only •afe ham for their ' the transactions of tbe past fifteen years. — circulation; and as in this case the banks in Del you ever know such great fluctuations one meth last tseelve hundred thatemed . of the money market -as yeu have witnessed dollars of coin, they niust, of emirs*, 4Durg in the last two ycars, with the exception in their circulation, not merely to reef:ace that es fluctuations have generally been the twelvohulidred thousand dollars, hot 10: between.priees alweye legh replace all that portion of their cirouLatihn The next proposition is, that protection ,epre.euted by 0" amuual. A!! owic,ea. ' to ,nianutactures Is afforded by the sub_ a Treasury. So Mr. Buchanan sap; but I tile practical. men understaed this. bank loses a certain quantity of .pecIt• can harefy think it is quiteeespecifel to the, must curtail rts discount, not to the same intelligence aed understanding of thts cone extent, but te three s sem tones tea; ex. muerte to 48110110re such a doctrine. 1 tent. 16110(11cl think he supposed us ready to •wal- - I know that t,h proportIon may be elated low camels of any size. The sub -Treasury Thou hut it. At thy bidding men have crowded The road to death as to • festival ; Aod ministrel mind', without a blush, have shrouded iVith banner -folds of glory their dark pall. Who *di beline—not I -,for in deceiving Lies the.dear charm of life's delightfal dream: cannot -spare the luxury of tethering That all thisp beautiful are what they seem. Wlei will bereave Wes trAttelt mile whims Mum Wog Weald, libe the patriash's, moth a dyne' her s With voice as low, as esetbt, sad mummies . As Wer woa meadow's hp ia moonligh bower: With look, like patient iett•e, metvairing ; Wtth mote:tea graceful se • birde is air Tire art, is saber troth, the eerier devil That e'er clisehed fingers ia a captives bar That is tby Telma there sprinp a poison Ewa - fah. Deadlier thee shm erbien bathes die Ups - 0..; Aad. Ms era:11, a nevaing Cat e' Mimi* Is rine as bet Dse'.*_lWait eriA thee? I10bflIPIh alma fame MIN ISsisaadediosires les lop as nvosvelidal, 054 15. shoats elm. Illemehere • etheetwish a reseth Les. e4,f, hgehetheee. metre few. • !.1 firee---ter aby ins& sail she were 1114, deieslieer. the pirate pease. her ItseashewIt is writ Hewed—elf setenetures sad odd hoer Pthise-ie thy ride trophies sot ileyeerher,;'. Nem- -Mat My wrests, sell be big -OS Ibmineelaeri ered Ihreard 111Z;I:leelt, dr! feser, eAy 1111, tam yew •r• left thtteeelt ielk Waft •aesertimari1. seerwesse cense, that it is not quite half so !meth.— Therefore a man of beefless in the United 1 States, at the moment, who has Rome rapi• tal, and 51 the same time, like most men, I las necadion emsetenes for bank face Jere and to borrow money, pays twice ae much se a man of the risme cireamstanen fer the like facilities in England. Every man can dee Hie result et e . .r11;0111 VIE MONTREAL TRII.MataleT. PHRENOLOGY'—N�. XII. TOR lin$117$1, A COT.tiV.RIES OP ORGANS. " Ali truths are severeally independent, yet, they mutually elucidate each other." Much more might be advanced to sup - pert uf the proposition maintained in the three precedIng artieles,'Tiz., The brain is the organ of the mind; but as every argu- I :tient which will be brought forward to aubstentiate the two other great principles of Phrenology, -wilt necessarily have as strong a bearing ii?on the lint, I will leave ertictical application of that. proposition un- til I hare considered the others also. The second principle of Phrenology vet., ges upon a question about which philciers• phers have cesputed from time immetnortal, viz., Is the mind a timid* power, aliogriker uccupte.d upon every ineptal operation; or is it • plurality of faculties, each of which has its own sphere of operittrons to ceette4io? it ? One class of philosophers conthoded, that the mind was a seli-existine Intelligeneei using the brain and The senses for the at - :1a of its purpose.% as a niechanie uses his tools. Another cis a, with much more reason from analogy, have maintained see with the ears, or hear with the MOS, as to stypode that we could Mel the senti- ments of pride, venerairen, pity or auger, the rice portion til brain. From the cemederatien, then, of oar abili- ty to attend to lllll re thee one thing at ouce—irow the philusopy of dreaming rid inurinambuhein.—froni the different kart of no awry—from th• pertiality of geniam•- I turn the gradual develepment of the raental of cleldren. end twirl the fact, that each external tees° 1.1 manifes ted. by qa own appropriate organ, in connection with, the brasm—the inference is clear, thaeletslitain is leongcricis of organs, each hating Its own special mental function tu perform. G. R. _ PERIODICAL PIT MURDERS. Those of our reailers in the mining die- trict who retain any recellectiOn of their juvenile tecreations ia literature, may re- ineniber the exeiteutent produced in their feehngs by the ei,"ficeirey horrtblo romance of the Wood Demon." For the posses- sion of ruperhuman potter, the here was doomed to sacrifice a human being annually ; failing prompt, povinent, ht, soul expiated reanisnees. ii,dh what interest did we, ie. the unsophisticated innocence of our heart, wstch the faseinatious employed to draw another and another victim into the Is; and bow, with hated breath, tad we wigwam the monstefa fi antic zeal no the limits of the year drew near; and how our maul sickened al the helpless boy Or girl— be was partial to giro—was handed over to the shaggy timelier of the insatiate cannibal. That intemeity uf sympatity was fit only for the nursery; a little acquaintance With the world fuareiltiee the feeliage; and by and bye the eacrifice o(. human being, especial- ly as itis net dose quite: so ntelodrantati- cally, seems a matter of course, an awkward eves's, certainly, yet incident to the com- plicated ramifications of truciety. Jute. about two year.. ago, we called the attentioe uf our readers in South Stafford- ehite to the sacrifice uf human Liu which the ut wines were to tbe habit of making to the ideation of careleneesa, per - bap* in smite ineianose et avarice. Twelve menthe ago, the pliflUaleAl unatoiation of another victim Was duly chronicled re thus paper; and again we asked it lite sacrifice was cremated to the preservative: of proper- ty front treapass, ur the owsers of unpro- tected pite were not, legally as viell as morally gullty of the murder of those who tnet their deaths through wilful careleses nese ? Juries said " tin" to the last portion of the query, and fautiliareied to the fearful inode el death, they attributed to accident' 1Ashat ekii beyond all question criminal ne- gligence. These worthy men Were no doubt very much shocked at our extrava- gant nOtitilli. The two victims had really no businees near the pits. l'here was a right anted in ono instance certainly, but tees the girl. who wee running an tier buoyancy aspires picking up Hewers along the field, had positively nu right to leave tho path, and if ehe did surely the worthy proprietor of the used up pit:, not to blame if she did fall Into the yawking chasm. -- certainly imitotsvate. 417.1.1.4r. 1 es no more the murderer of that chili! than the inaO who places prussic raid in -a nuriery, and disguise,' its deadly qvalities ith sugar, is elmrgeable with the100111.. bre CUOIICqUCCICc. And then in the second instance the aufferer was a very little oor, • and morei.ser Le would play in the raegb- bourhood 04the pit, *lamellas:tea keabodwd,o atilt/alai barely to crawl, ought to it was highly Improper and d•ngerous to indulge hei infantine propensities fur tun in such • locality. This reasoning is ju.t strong enough to hang a verdict of 'Acci- dental Death" upon; though we are`Wei- 'tenable enough to question it bother 11 is not an evasion of the truth. ▪ Well, another year has passed and.the demon must have another victim. In the worship of mammon we can spare no tbotight for aught beyond the sacredness of self .— There is now rto opportunity of bartering salvation 0/1 the teens of the old rumanre, but a human being is of less aceonnt than twenty shillings veorth *fold tiniber, and wo sacrifice the one to save the other. The last victim was a boy eight year* of age, sent one morning with tits father's break- fast to the works whereat he latemred. Ile never reached Me de-thintah7mn,otehnedr watched :0 Ilnon,gaiiiiiettoturdtho ef aretniii°rnntof her so,,, Al length be was found floating on the surface of the water in a pir, htteen yardn from the top of 0.0 .haft, which of course wile nnproteeted. • 'l'ho boy was aectivInmed to take II Short cut through the field, and probably, on this occaaton, stooping Aver tge fenceless pit sounJing the depth of the water with a atone, overbalanced himaeff, met periehed e accidentally." Did it not r+eenr to the jury In this case that a reecrrnmesidation tram them that pits should be fenced, might be the mean,. of preventing • recurreent 01 theae " aseseental deaths," Tweety pets eg,dsz oiroth leo otiurzlit.tr,oilindd ,ftnalefetthuaatileyeimneeuL the prevention of these accidents; but we e re very much incl:ised to believe that eyes this outlay will uot made until a verdict et manelaughter be recorded agates' the criminally thoughtleu i.ffenders• Accord- ing to the intervals we ha•e marked, thee have • year oll grace whereto to guard against • recurrence of these periodical mu:dere, they neglect the opportunity may the fat* elf the hero of the roulettes be thelw—the, sastzl court being eubstitut- fee for • wellhead' tribusal.—Liirsuaghun Award. that the mental phenomena are not somer- added to matter, in the process uf organizs-. tion, bht, are the result ut the peculiar come buiations and arrangement of, the ultimate molecules of the organized enure, develop - erg properties previoutly existing In there molecules, and modified in their manifests - non, by the nature and. complexity the or- ganization manifesting them: ap in the phy- sical aciencee, the experiments in electro- inagnetiern have satiValtonly eetablished the identity of the electric, the galvanic, and the magnetic agencies. From s lung course of analogical reason- ing, I have &tweet given my aliment to the Lauer of these opinions, as being eubstan- tially correct; but as these two propositions are metaphysical apiesoons either el thern may be true or false, wahout materially I affecting the evidence of Phrenology. That there are clifferent mental faculties ! tnituanysto:n_proved•by the ing cons:delta- ' If the mind were only a single facility,. it !could oily be occupied with one idea or feebly at a time, wlech ts inconsistent eels j our every day'. experieece. liVho has not I witnessed a mechanic busily engaged in al I piece of work, while at the same time he • would be singIng some favorite song. tir e know thaewe can walk, talk, see, hear, feel pain, aod love a friend, all simultanemisly. I each of „which are mental manifestaticins,1 and depend upon the integnty of the brats I for their exhitetton, which sitnultaneous ex- hibition could not exist if the naiad were a , burgle power, or the brain' a single organ. I II the mind were only a stogie power,' there could be no such thing as dreaming, in whtch state it is evident some faculttes are awake and others dormant. Somnam- bulism, or sleep -walking, can only he ac- I ! counted for by a plurality ot mental powers.' Many instances might be cited, whereencli- ! Ivictuals have ventured on the tops of houses I , and ridges of precipices in thts state, *-herr !it would be utterly inapossible for them to ' go while awake, which evidently show,, ! that the organ of cautiousness—beg your ! pardon, Mr. Skepec—the feeling ot tear, I must have' been dormant, while other men. tal power, must ban been preternaturally active, under such circumstances. Sometimes tn our nocturnal vision we will imagine that we see and converse with fnends or relations that have been long since deed, without feeling any of that •we and elorder welt which a carcumatance would naturally inspire us, we e possib!e to occur while we wore swake. The or- gan of niarvellourtnee, or the feeling of wonder, must be dormant during such dreams. If the bra in is 10 11 different state when wo are asleep, from what it is when wo are awake, as every physiologist most know to be the case, when the evidence of / some faculties being awake, and °there dor- mant at the same tune, proves that different menial facelties meet be manifested by dif- ferent portions of the brain. II the mind were a single faculty a person with a good memory for one thing, would have a good niemory for everything. which is also contrary to fact; for One Man may have a goad memory for names, aisvl • bol memory for faces; another may be gifted Dice verse—one may hum a good memory for eelors—onother for tunes, another fart numbers, ke. while their memery for other thine may be deficient; sloth facts . can only be recoseited with the exietence of a rewrite, of mental feettittes. Aeain " Geneve re always partial," hair become • proverb, from the feet that • nein may hen a pima for mintier, poetry, Mitre, mettle,- matiee, Of anyttong Mae; end Ton allay ems- 1 pare bits wIto tre disieiguished in any oe• or therm departments; of art or literature, •nJ you veil vetil find him 'purported ta other ! department* by wersoes of tbe sismt ordl "%rlItties7Perprivrellpter. toseueltilly illostritee that gradual development of facultie• of Aileron: they do sot exhibit all their UMW- I Oil powers st mac" but they appear one bg ea three to u it :a more likely to 0,1t- foster manufactures ! The tariff of '46 coed that proportion than to 1.11 short alt.foster roandllactures ! Then why do they ! Then this withdrawal of BO large a surn as • not prosper ? Thus fostered aod protected, twelve hundred thous -and dollars would ' how many of them have, within the list aix naturally lead to a curtailment by the Metre I months, sunk away and come to nothing 7I That is one tern of the sub -Treasury ttinong our moat important inanufactures I screw, and bow many tepee emelt turns will , here at the north, essential to the prosper'. ! it take to put the patient to perfect torture 1, ty of the country and employing large cape The depression of butanes' MI the cep or tat, do we sot see them milking away every New York, resulting front Oita curtaiknent, ' day? What, then is the result of that fue- led, I supposeeto the order or the Seere • ! tering care sad the operation of these (ea- tery of the Treasury, by which, by a ter- ! (entertain's/ taut lend of habeas corpora writ, he should! Gentlemen, there le another conaidere. free from the ebb -Treasury eight hundred Lion connected with this sub -Treasury .— theorised doilars, tied is its place put In con- , Three-fourths of all the importations trum fineatent a quanuty of Treasury notes. I , Europe are carte -ewe account; our import - have not examined the question, and wdt tog merchants know nothing about them. not therefore say that tho proceedings are If you go to State street, in Boston, or illegal. But it seems that this Secretary ! NVall street, in New York, and ask what of the Treasury foetid thatehe Governante Importations are coming, tbey tell ou they were net masters of the machinery, or else! do not know. It is ascertained, and I be- lt tree sot a mactune that my master could hey. it is true beyond question, that three - work. If this be so, thle very operation led to fourths of our importations from Europe are sent to this country on foreign account, the necessary curtailment et three anJ a coosigoed to commission inerchares. They half or four millions of dollars, from the are sold, aud their proceeds are remitted, commercial business of the city of New and our merchants know no more of their York. Now, this demand of the sub-Trea- probable coining, or their amount, than any miry could be made in • day, and whoa body else. Therefore there is uo knowledge n ude in one day, or one week, I1 must be among us, and can be no knowledge among answered iv one day or one week. But us, of what will be the-strate of the money thee so banks could make the curtailment market; for when they arrive the duties in one day or one week, or one month, to 'nest be paid immediately, thus placing it such an extent, without bankrup' ing the in the power of foreign consignors ur goods community—sithat is the consequence of cowing to tine country to depress the that!! The consequence is inevitably to inoney market at pleasure. TItey may laapiee nifereest see apprehenmen among traoster from the hanks into the ault-Trea- Ahem whet iiiimaget there tostimuess: to fury, there to be locked up. an amount of *strain them from what, they would other- amoey, respoesive to soy importations they wets dor for fear that events should show may- make. that they have, tf not acted imprudently, In- 1 kayo spokes' of the eub-Treasury of dared great danger of ruin. Now the New York. I have not inquired particular - merchants and dealers of the country, the ly tato the state of the batiks and the ope- auperintendenta of banks, here and else- ration of the si.tb-Treasury in this city. I where, keep an *cravat', amount of the im• suppose it probable that .there may be four ports of spode, the imports and exports of or five bundled thousand dotter* now locked goodie Mete balance ea trade, so can pre- up in the sub -Treasury 10 Balton, say balf 44) for • champ, because ,• she of that a Hellion. Well sow, 14 114.1 were retained 1 pe does not. come like lightn g—tbey as the basis of bank circulation, under that bat .owe premonition 0( 11. But who can ordievary term@ and censhtions which make calculate what will be the policy of the such a easoutatioa sale, it would ertable the thovernreent, or whit, tri a particular day or basks to make aa issue of a roil:los and a week, will be the motet of importe, rf half hello( mousy, hosed.. what is Doe re emu. • doter merle 01,14141 10 a day—wba can Ulan. As it is, it aurora Do useful per- fuming° s1! Wes thee out (meow, tout of pose in society, but rattier inspire terror tbiaammay now to the vaults of tbe banks, and distrust, &eel foe all tee %Wel of coin - what quantity can be 4emanded in an hour? mecca it would be jest as well that it did Tbtrefore, there is a constant apprehen- not exist 11 .71. e gn see fear. I have said that I supposed that money Why, as I have szlif, r. youreelves are haaaot bees keowe to be dearer for • long Oritareeeee *b9.4.y es slim to the cones- I nine. I suppose that if we take the litiantt- quer* el Ws. frclitmosuos from day to 1 Ly loaned by the banks at the rate of tote es, ea theme**, isailiaL; .01 (7.10 good te , rest to which they are halted, mid if we bad, het twat bed to worn. Then, per- , then toke fhe rates kauwe to have been bap. down VIM u frow week, to not gltel ! paid by private borrower* to private lenders au had, but cinema, 6p still fartlier, to • de- !last year, the rate of iatereat 1,..r the lut pee of scarcity white% le quite eietternoted t twelve months Do the whole min hardly be fit tbe bieterry of this- mem try. considered (larder tee per cent. Now we deeeleemees, epos We inheeet let me sheer here to carry aa the busimies of the frown - blew i• with If Ieteeee of inierrioettos, try—.1 rinse the 'see of besiaess—with lanmel eilit****qe with men of (Dee" et Sue rate, while In igland ft is e * !tee.. , , e..! -..1 ies te. one, en they nu severest maturity. 1 This (Merest seores are manifested by deforesti argue and we never see the teem of one performed by the other; aad it , appears to en* pat es 'swivel that woollen's! to pad 4 reeled Amps, ash reheat vr Bieck 111-aer Jar : ..1111.J oteeeemon. " W bee I an. making up a plan of eria• e erpiesce," say+ 1.0rd Bohogitruke, " I al- ways like to cuseutt with • senehle wie • bord Helingbruke wen a great Ni, 020 ' see-lese; • e