The New York Herald Newspaper, March 3, 1842, Page 1

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Wel. VIL—we, 947 —Wnele He. 2015 NEW YORK, THURSDAY MORNING, MARCH 3, 1842. pre = , ry) t tools. 1 that 4 be weathers: a q To vatfrom New Took opthessih, sad Livergsol'en thotate Seber. NM, Pee ALAS Meee, ing for hon and. ; Dding convictions. A tract distributor passed | tablish will be, it is cheaper to educate the infant | to poor peoph providing such moderate ‘waste ofeach months Library, point recede No! but a prospero me a few day ee and banded a sailor atract eaitads hs to wee Yr i abaleepe erin oS when the times shM nh alee ‘ BS eS Linus sap Gawrtziex,— "| i Seople, with {per pilitewn: Of ohiterentecberedee'y Foe caller farmed. it oven and npnide dows, snd blaine lone repented) “Give: vont, vesce (0 com jon to an “Irish Wake,” whieh Nuw Youu. We have assembled this evening for the improve- cated. There have always been two empires in | eaid “I can't read,” and dropped the track on the | mon schools an; aan ¥ P gee hema ial Ary 6 of the kind in this city. It Bhip ROSCIUS, Captain Jol ling, 95th Nov. ment of the Common School—a schoo] that we call rld—one of force, and the other of reason ; ‘ound. “ Has our whole duty been discharged by ae ere Jom, Pie we. nu ies uate zeae prom inn eeeel les, and will afford ample Bu BbboNs Capiain E. no eS common; not asinferior; not as the school for poor n be governed only in these two ways. | handiog the eailor a tract? pri Bots ahah acute Biber teleer edeuneae Faithfa'h sing and interesting letter. Pann ‘ikiday, aoth Feb. men’s children; but the I ght S28 the att pre Consequently, there must be ei soldiers or } man to ae, now three years since, an inst to sen! P 3 'u'ly yours, Curonicren. ane, From Liverroe.. common, And wha common to all, should be | .-noojmasters— books or bayonets — e: and | completed a tour for distributing the Bible unde _—_ ip SH IAN, Captain yA err Dee the best of all. We have met under those per- campaigns, or schools and churchée2 e ballot | the direction of the American Bible Bottety ie (Gredt laughter) Pulanteelt to'prevent trimé, tors Tea en ae ath r%q Vading, though, perhaps, unexpressed convictions, box, of the cartridge box. Now the first hundred and two Bibles have been left by tlement It eves’ like the phys c pondence of the Herald. | up DDONS, Captain £. B. Cobb, 13th Feb. that without incessant watchtulness—without an buildings of our forefathers were the Schoo! me, but unless teachersfare sent to teach the | gen na Aanatods tab Bites Ge Harnissunc, March 1, 1841. 7 t clas erreraa gs jovetene heallt paper ie e nti ever over public institu ions, d the Church. Their united. instractior one. a spud then, . ie ba gp. ang tion at the eens pdr, atpusl Whigs the tee e The Resumption Bill—B » e. rH 2 casts . EN u com: Wastes’and commons— open ap; ar. iri ‘ing back at least five hun o ie copies. ie ts n yest a Hannan eae of thetraccornmnodations, *% ly fa all, arate ti seiredarryos nene P Weave ‘The wea'th and energies of the land are exhausted 8 the muscles; crime springs | aeae mid the Senate took up the amendmeuts s been tamsagehence i $100,for which ample stores ile | come toyether, not to say whether a rail.oad shalt tosend the printed page. Should not the frien e faculties and over pes ive Mel cae ted 2 the House to the Senate, amendments to price ph ae Code Ne geacral satisine’ | be made from this to syave other place, nor whether | (optained b invest for the last eleveay the Bible take adeeper inter»st in the impr Would you use an argnment to turn ov: ter) | (h¢ Bank Bill, and after some time spent in thei Me i Rigg pel oa Ain vi one of your citizens shall be elected to some office; | which prove, that from a1 those taught to rea of the Common Schools? To give the acrow bar to convince aman? (General laughter ) pe wn OR cher the captains or owners ofthese ships consideration, non-coneu; three unimportant ones. Senate yesterday, lous affair, i i i iti dut: ducate a democracy—to w nineteen out of twenty, receive all | asked, to the ignorant, and those merely able to | But it is our duty vefor. morrow’s society for children are to. morrow's 40- | tae: trustion in the {Common chocls. This preno is like filling a blind man’s house its faith — 0 ts hope—to iy its morale ine will hereafter go armed, and theirpeeu | ciety. Our object is to ask your at important iaformation shows us that, as is the Com- | with the tings of the masters, or casting the | and to ect ale stg — “ pnd construction « them aneusite petp by any other | infinite worth of this inward being — mon School, so is the education of the people. Te | seed wheat in the woods, or building a granite tem- | sacred o| pee = ow sligl in bay owe sonable vessela of war. ‘ Thought—this boundless Capacity. Epietetus was | ¢ jycation of the American people, taken asa whole, | ple im the forest for the benefit of the roaming sa- | ed this subject, when, pyar, whe Bit fe pela jo, be CREE SPR'UG, 4 Sout at, New York, orto | wont (0 that «it was much better fora people | 1, just what the Common Sohools are prepared ta | Yage. The Palpit also, “that most impertant and | the first end leaitimate uta SEtaS tate pe de BLK CAYN, KJAS, BROWN & CO, Liverpool. | to meet, to see how they might clevate the souls uf | give. How many in this large assembly Mave re | effeetual guard, support, and ornament of virtue’s judges and hangmen forthe Labuarar apetrd coal Letters by, the packet Ti ee Sates ra their citizens than the roofs of their ho It | evived any other education thun that fromthe Com: | cause,” stands on Common Schools. When the | provide the om m8 e P pre ie sl seine sheet: 60 cents per ounce. an pewnpepere - is for this better parpose that we con- | mon Schools? If these schools had been better, | messenger of truth »; peaks to the congregation, | 1# the aay ibe tate fe le oy yun veinge, AND NRW YORK LINE OF PACKETS | vened. And, befure I proceed further, 1 will re-| the cdueation would have becn better Although |-he addresses mind; his arguments Br suppose living seep thet bear a impr sa Of the Glace Lou ae quest the rrivilege of being jamiliar and conversa-| ali here have been impioved by education, every d, and, unless the people's schools have |. wor tiie ip, owever | aes 6 pad west Eine tonal in my manner this evening. It is my wish} one of reflection is conscious, when he begine | raised the audience up to the pulpit, where is this, itis held asa duty ne este ve Beir be bn ta use the cvlloquial style, for [ have found that if | to reason and compare, of many defeets in his | the minister's influence? As I have listened to a | man beings in dungeons, to deprive the :red in all exeept: two or ‘ As the bill came into the: it was certainly a most ridicu- and deserved their disapprobaticn,.— bec you may form some idea of the master. we have among us, | se: he House of "Re pestetalinca en tha Fesnlenatil ours, where, if they insist 1 it will be referred to a ¢ _ You will readily pe since, that our Solons m ‘ify its morals wo! m = mech pS eresponsi | no, we have met to advance the best good of te-| (hi. oun: reaee now | all probability they will, ‘ommittee of conlerence. eive, if you chave not long For iter accominodation of shippers, pr reel Eee ath ia tath 30s | wloke nven fouk Mariadeide if I exnke then tale 7 ient and | good consecutive argument from the sacred desk, | jects of the external wor'd, and of God's creation ; | with a subject which they. fe savoring to grappe Wot'eath month, commencing the 10th Octoberand | Shout it when they go home, and act forit hereafter ere icra at eee Sf might. have. been | aad have seen the pecple, with wandering looksand | to ereete for them a living death, to turn the mind | this fact | indeed “has byony rie ee w Mealy tee be ayn and disap | I must taik to them while they are with me—as a] prevented, or remidied, by a better eatly eduea- | Vacant countenances, ready to turn to the door if | into 7 b’ank, esata alga bic hg tere bt He Pe eee tineata will be prevented during the summer months. ‘The | man tal aman, as a lawyer talks to his jury. Yet the Common Seb ols, whatever may | any one should happen to piss through it, at the | man a a 75a ein the duty of the State ts vento fades nd at Mowing shi will co amence this arrangement >— In explanation of my object, it you will permit me ition, teach the natio ‘Th very moment, too, when the speader was educing a chaos. d forth f tat tetbatinn. te, baste we) ieee IPP, ‘ship A200, ‘Capt. Cornell, nny Seed to bring in'conj anction two great names,! will repeat mers, they educate the an important conclusion, I have felt as I have done | punish erime, to send fort! og re ri vee c A all Penpaylyv; w OCONE! ‘20th Get. that beautiful and forcible eri of mus,on tors,the mothers. | whil 8 person thrust his hand into a small | those who break the law. But hith Sactal ‘oe OF Bankrupt vine. ‘26th Oct. the manner and effect ef the speaking of Cicero and aperti ler something loose, but whieh he was | civilization of Congress, and the s py — ° doutaiy: upt LI ner N "age enaad Demonthenes. He tells us that when the people able to reach only with the ends cf his fingers, and | the State Legislatures — (laughter)— Ly the divine ‘RN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK. Gapt. Mumford, 10th Nov. went from one of Cicero's erations, they always fiom his being able ta touch it, he only pushed it | Fight of demagogues havenot thought it adutyto | Alonzo P Smith, New York, to be declared bankrupt apt . 16th Nov. id “What a beautiful speaker! whata rich fine further from him. So with the preacher; be was | Provide for the people, protended tobe govern- | April; George D Davis, do, April 9; Engene McCarty, bangn pat Now, voice! what loquent man Cicero is! ‘The laboring to get hold of the attention of the people, | ed, the means of religious and intellectual ad- | do; John Themson, do, April 9; Griff Brundage. do. ar ie Decseaber, talked of Cicero, Buk when the iegate) ok Demi hat reared up these maj but’ the mind was so feeble, so wandering, so va- | Yancement, to enable them to know and under. | April; Cyrus P Boyd, Fishkill, do; Henry Bort wore t iu the city of New York, * . . 4 ry “ as regards this life and the life were iy been | thenes, they said to each other, let us fight Phi ip.’ | the empire and liberty of these States will stand or | cant, that there was no grasp, and the great truth 2 d ty for packels. ref alight raft of water, have recently hen (Applause.) Ladies and gentlemen, if | shall fall wot Common Schools: for liberty under law, | fell ‘powerless To wake ‘an abiding impres-| (0 Se Ae CN ae Ail ad ET: perry coppered and pit ii wr contort. They are commanied | ceed to-night in making you says as you go home. | caxnot exist without the schoolmaster. Whoever | sion on an empty-headed audience is as hope: | rearcely ever heard of, the aliowed’to plead lg: experienced mastert ae it at all times be towed upand | '¢t.Ws fight igaoranco, I ‘shall have gained the only | builds school honse, or teaches a good school. is | Jess as to make a mark on the ocean — | they of, those. law u general eats action. | Pelessseseiat ks ° object [have in del:veriog this lecture. ‘The less | erceting tne fairest monument io freedom. Blow (Laughter and spplanse)—We are told by pdonkear Se halev ce U6 the lawn ‘rtadichtcene ane aowntre ov captains of these ships will be responsi- | the epeakerand his mauner is noticed or thought | out the light of these institutions, gentlemen—lock | the historians of the French Egyptian eam P Ng ‘the owners or cay F4 > Be 7 tho bitter retribution of fellows. The law is Leajewelrs, wullion,precious stones, silver, orpla apt to | up t © doorsof the school house let darkness rest | psicn, that Bonaparte found, and attempted to re- | the bitter retributio di a re i SY eta DALE ne ee ates fort c Upon iiese roofs, and agriculture is forgotten, manu: | Cuce a garrison, sh-Itered by a huge mud fort. Had | severe to punish crimes; it can kill the poor offend- cel or oe ; taken fc h \ f : r d majo Sv cceecens 1 Secor sar factures shut down their gate-,and commerce casts | the wall been of timber, the besiegers might have | ing wretch, and send him before his Maker when it York, April 9; Charles Dennison Birdseyé and Syives. ter G Langdon, do, April 2; Daniel C Ket bey re , do, Api ; Daniel ‘chum, New NORTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK. Lewis Foster, 8cio, to be declared bankrupt 5 Samuel Gunsav}, Schenectady, March 34, He Jr. do; Dewitt C Gridley, Watertown, M ch 21; Shuba- el Gallup, Buffalo, March 21; E Gordon Mndot | ofthe bett r. The friends of education ame, aod | €Xpectieverything from the goodness of the! and therefore do but lit.le tor it themselves. leas:s. Bowexful but impotent law, it judgos of | pamelin,dor Willen: danny arch 28; HH’ George, a corti oes one, ol Wie vecpeera lomematien. ip 60 n00u . Sti i int: lectual | burnt them. Hadthey been of stone,eventblocks | pleas:s. Boweiful bu sit tinelin doy William A Gilat, Sakon ea Oeaeme : > ERE sco, seseuthet on, A td good . und c ably good — h but very fe foun Re Gad CH nee eens of granite, they might have breached them by their | the act, it thinks that it knows the motive that led | Grove 8 Gilbert, Rochester, March 2 John W Hadden, who will promptly forward all goods to hig addresa. care any thio; , ? r ri i toit; but here it stop: 4 Yet each one hasnot only a | savage state. But, fellow ci'izens, to neglect these | Cannon. But the vast passive mound received the | ¢ ’ 3 Orig ahtpeot this ne art wars Fenl punctuety asadt Pablie, but a private interest in the subject. He | schools, is worse than to destroy tens Mal in- | iron mi-siles without effect—they just elored in hal uireterest gre -erar bay papal ail wertised, and great care will be taken fo have osety. that attends to his interior > thst has a heart,and | formation is worse than no infermation—hunger is | and were dead. And the mighty engines of attack ‘shes daily; bat ida pet at gpellgs pane =e JEW YORK AND HAVRE PACKETS. mind that hung uppliesit; who | better than poisoned food. The worse people on | and demolition were paralyzed and powerlees. So Thwente Who ‘dia Thay avapteanee ihe een: i (SECOND LINE. , not @ worthless has a deep in- | the whole earth to govern is a balf-educated peo-| it is with the preacher when he preaches to ened Sllandec®., They ‘cearce the body to con. terest in the subject of education; for he is some- | ple—educated enough to read what the demagogue | the igncrant, (a strong sensation in the Sugieare ) |: vite! thacaalaths faire dott the ineeet practical thing less than a man who does not daily educate says, but not enough te know whether it be true | “ seeing they sce not, neither do they understand.’ in al t 4 Wayne co, March 21; Asa Howard, Albion, March 26; Daniel $ Hulitt, Schenectady, March 24; Jas Harkni Albany, March Henry A Hatch, Utica, March 2 R Hunt, Rensselaer co, March Henry Huntz, Brown- ville, March 28; Eben F Humphrey, Galen, co; William Hart, Deerfield, March 25: Benjamin House, Perrington, March 26; James Kelsey, Ripley, do; Stephen A Ketch- uum, Schenectady, do; Walter Kimball, Sackett's Harbor, ships of this Tine wi leave New York onthe | himselfto the utmost ‘And who Would suppose | or not. Gentlemen, as I have passed through this | And I most respectfully beg leave to remind the Pinner af Raman society iS ailaenens end Je, a ee mdese seg gf ia Stine ieee Astand Havre on the véth of cach month aa follows: 17, | that education were athing which bad to be adve- | city, I have said we may pile our hill-tops with | learned clergymen present,in the quaint language of revert ag to ‘punish crime? how murderously un- | Montgemery co. March 17; Avron G Lyons, Alben ip ONEWA, “Ciet Marae i. ested on the grouad of individual or national good; | Grecian architecture, but let the plain setool | Sou'h, the English sermonizer, “the schoo PRT er ttolpautalscccre te aalalit srovent! Tenot the | March 23; Joseph Rt Lee, Pultney. April 1; Joba T Lac: ‘The new Hin ON of, indeed, on any ground? As ood not on | house go down ant where is our foundation. | often mars what the preacher never mencs.” ‘The | Justto pun posal sbbelash fi Chili, March 26; George F Moss, Aurelius, March 21; James Fuvck. the basis of everlasting duty—a e necessity | (Strony applause ) If the time sballever come | preacher should not only see that the truth falls | depravity of hnman nature revealed to us from | cob Monk, Schenectady, March 24; Rufus O Merrill, Ship BALTIMORE, and birthright of man’ It isa thing that should | Ghee this great government will totter, the cai from his lips, but also that the people are capable of | heuven? is it mot written on the heart of man? | prockport’ March Erastus H Mix, Rochester, do; A Cc i i ; areetigote: > ‘ i a lo Aad should not human efforts be means of grace? | MeMitlen’ Onon: March 91; Jou t. Ba. HH: ‘ receiving it. Now, we ring the Sabbath bell long 4 * « ch 21; ph Mecullent, Ba- Edward Funk. tS ee 5 atapten as it ray Merges. uieesonad io ine jpppeance of: the people, en ber load bet tataction wines thaveburvh'deor Statesmen, legislators, how long will you dare to hip UTICA, need. Toimpart gift of thinking se who | the people per sh for lack of knowledge. wil p rge re arch 30; Jasper Murdock, Buffalo, March 98; In- Miller, do.March 26; Isaac F Mack, Rochester, Merch 26; Henry F McGlackin, do. do; Alfred $ Mellen’, Jefferson co, March 31; Chester Mellen, do, M AB McGouigel,do; Wm P Mellen, Fredonie, James Norton, Jr. do; Walter Peck, Oswego ¢o; Presser) Albany, Mareh 21; Danforth Petty, do; W Patten, Manlius, March 29; Henry D Palmer, Rochest Merch 26; Ebenezer W Page, do; George W Pow. Jefferson co. March 31; im P Potter, Cooperstown, March 26; Jeremiah D Quackenbush, Cicero, March Samuel Rice, Mentz, March 17; Ch Ramedell, But- falo, March 26; Robert Russell, do: Carthage, March 23; Peter Scherme: March 24; Myron Sears, Sennett, Rochester, March 24; Fred A Spalding,do, March 26; James Sillick, Schenectady. do; Daniel Spencer, Albany, March 21; Jacob Sattle, Albany co. do; Wm H Snow, Elmira, March 26; Edward Sackett, Sackett’s Harbor, March 21: Lyman A Spaulding, Lockport, March 26; Charles Sexton, Auburn, March 32; Wm W Sanford,Ly- ons, March 23; Wm A Spooner, Queensbury, March 28; Seth J Tice, Rensselaer co. March 26; Timothy M Tay- lor, Manlius, March 22, George ‘Thurger, Hechester, March 26; Leonard W Treat, Dunkirk, March B Treadwell. Albany, Merch'22; Jai ford, March 26; Nichol March 24; Jeseph Rankin, Troy, Moreh 92; Gardiner Vincent, Clayton, March 28; Galen O Weed, Aurelia, March 21; John W Woodburn, Cherry Valley, March '17; Nathaniel Wilgus, Buffalo, March 26; TT Woodruff, Brewnville, March 28; Eli: phalet Welch, Salina, March 22; Re den, March 26; Thos Warren, Fredoni Woodworth, White , do; Henry JC Walker, Au- burn, do; Josiah L ¥ i ; i itati ult both heaven and man? how long will ye trust not think, and yet have the capacity for thought, | now ask yo ion to the connection between | (the mind.) The invitation goes out tothe people | m* H one would evel go's the 3 very fist fanction ot Common Schools and the higher literary sastiva. | to come-and hear, bat the bolted door of iguorance | € penal atstu'es, uulics sxpentions,» duagsont, & government to discharge. Would it not be a crue! ji tiling to see the inhabitsate of this eity, Lviog ail Ifthe children all over the land, in their | Frees are also dependant on good CommonSehools, | Weetual and moray in dbasyeiWes never ets mutilated in their limbs, each strong man wiih hools can receive a love of knowled My friends, what isthe American newspaper pr leds. (pukid cen oleh hatdiae Toniaint right arm broken? How much more so, to find the | desire for a higher improvement—i Fifteen huodred in number; oe annually upon | You ere are pti ed ay ecg mr strong soul, with its eyes still sealed, ita pulse gone, | these first steps in knowled the of the wind; to bide frona us the cum of | FON my cals weather of Pree ie idtelans gon so thatit beats not, trebs not. Light has come into | their delight, if they shall associate with the im. | trat millions of pricted sheets; and these Lue made nen hind shall bead ribs age this world, gnorant soul it bas come in ement of their minds every thing that is agree- | dampsheets are falling upon us every morning as | ™g! and your times—(cheering and cries vain. For six thousand years the sons of (dam, in they wi'l go from the Common School to the | thick as snowflakes in a enow-storm; and the peo- ight,”” from several voices)—while sleepless effort h: ing, doing, diseo- | neademy,and from the academy to the college and | ple are eagerly gazing upward, with mouth, and ouleave untonched those mighty means withwhich i ittle band of brothers, against | professional seminary ; poverty nor parents connot | ¢yes,and hands, wide open, remdy} to swallo the sthouy arnk’of power invests ‘you, of giving to And they have made anoble| keep them down. And thus will the Common | Venously every thing that drops. (Applau dab ecbolsannsain tit, pacplepadieait.seli eens conquest. Buttothis man, itis all asifithad not | School give the college its best support. But let led After a citi: i 3 pon this free soil, a perfect been. The thoughts that millions of intel! the Common Schools remain neglected ; let the @ made an ac duty to God and man, and Pare reduced to #5 cents. have lived by, and that now live on, in everlasting | children in them learn to cipher to the Rule «f | amusement; see detailed crim. eon Attn on the fall and free develope. From the foot of Courtland sirest, New eek. t to him. He passes by on the other | Three, and hate knowledge all the rest of their | ¢wes—with demoralizing adverticements—with toot olinade had’ which ben bedebere. fy ae vo Newark, that rich mental kingdom, the foil-worm con: | lives, and yon will scarcely be able to drive | partystrife, for the object of the press now is, te but sball blossoms in eternal freedom hereafter. AtVA.M. Ata P.M. ate A.M. Ati} FM. | quest of his own brothers, is a boon not for him— | them to the Common Sehoo 3 they will never | te partisans, not patriots—with persenali Circam ad to Crime, and it ie the office of 1 is ae 4o | an invisible empire—heknows it not. Who would | desire to enter the academy or college |-slander, and unbiusbing profligacy. Oh, wale the legitlature and the edacator to correct the de 10 de | think itto be necessary to advocate an education | Take careof the primary schools and they will | the peeple are intelligent enough to rp ite ‘te | cireumstances, as well as to punish the criminal, N SUNDAYS. fe brother?” It is encouraging te see this | take care of the colleges; attend to the fountaing, | Tors, and virtuous envugh to be untouche: an But we are more willing to execute the law, than pte. bf ead Semper oem % ce to man’s higher noble pature fast pass- | and you will haveariver. The most valuable aid | correption, the pr. rere p ye been a to prevent its infraciion. Yet we should remember we PM. Atif M. mr Es ingaway. Europe is covering herself with Com | we ean give to the college, is, to improve the | 28s of the press has prostituted it 4 Hives, hinge | thaccoustabulary lorces and courts wew tone BETHTOWN: RAHWA) mon Schools, and thrones are in a contest to en- | Common Schools, Some have said the Common | circulation of poisonou:§ prints i ae 8 T @ pence, we spend por be ME capt hey a lighten ignorance. The most perfect school Schoolacan never edneate the peoples knowledge, | mara fatal and daadly te she erind o we eodian pence—we reduce the school-m the tot Liberty atregt daily. system in the world, is that ao ly fox. | ony must descen {fromonrhijheriastitations | Tot, exe Over geapowder was to their bodies. | S10) Pent ee an hoc en Lene ee york: Leave New tered by the despotic So perfect, | down among the people. But, gentlemen, k.ow- | The old and noble monuments of thought and in- penitentiar But this is not only expensive and ats A.M ' ate in theor and practice ni Bi eon 7 siam CES lodge Mee mere seanind, thas heat wall disses, aicaek atecactiorhartany aacsyi onvee sing ruinous, it is cruelty, for we, by neglecting the 1 ith these ° a it educates every c the ki jou. ree of | If you wished to warm the lower stratum of air, 'y ae ; ‘? ish it; ct gal- eet tee : “toorat ite aot atriki: ‘A peculiar fe dawedte worthy whelt you heat the upper stratum first? No; | dulness, the spirit of the age is tossed hither and | child, produce vice, and then punishit; ere he gents. | of a short notice from us. , colleges and professional semi- | forbids them to enter. The blessings of a Free | Chains, and treadmil! NEW YORK AND NEW. i j i lows, and then supply them with victims. And first, whatever re- | warm the lower stratum, and yeu cannot keep the | thither, and net without danger of entirely losin i : neq Sreenig, | lates to the system has impreesed a it the bigh- | upper cold —-(Applausc )—-Would. the Prudent | sight of the compass of truth, and the pole star 0 marco retest apse, pacenection vetwnes crime DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS. ere te the 7 A, M.train from New Bruvewiek, sada | est respect. The Minister of Publie etion is | house-wife build the fire on the top of the pot, to pg scare Prep Loe ald beconvinced that ‘iors ia be trae eradionter of Bh chap Meter ts be declared bankrupt in e a eon Cand New Branewick to vo eens SS age post = tte the Kinpe lh etter Ue ks he roe cl eaataeation present day? Does it not strive to make the | Crime, but a well principled educition. Penal ier, Worcester; Moses Abbott, fe he:s are educated for their profession. Noman| Why are not the people their own lowed to teach a school, 31 | ‘‘ worse the better reason,” and the rogue the bet- | Codes, active police, poor houses on the most li- the “Art of Teaching,” and i terman? What can prepare the public for such a| beralscale, are all but substitutes and palliatives. eke tt ailue ths oer aerate hetanas Panetigera reapers presst How shall ike ‘people ‘pecans a sound, | Theeye of the law is not all seeing; the mostac: er, Boston; Chi do; ‘Joseph Briggs, Hanover: At ampton; William H Brown, Salem; Arno way te rt Fildciphia mailime Pues through New Brunrwichfor we ee TTA, trpftom Now Brnswickis omit. ; r A * sah wate i i id in all | Lowell; Charles A Butterficl), Andover; E: ir tich he tick Hi ; rr ife. Prussia b a A thinking, comparing mind, capable of discrimina | tive legislation cannot be at all times, an ; aries A A Dver; ry Teke gratis r Ricketsare received by hecontucter ie" eae) schreale, = seniotiae to aaa pide aaa PAR Mase ‘he cabins ¢ rocess | ting and ‘of ju ging. of probabi 1 By improv- Ulsan, write thes it ay = meena _ ‘peohedy egies 7 Dpanlel Buffar, Densleies eons eee on the day when purchased. feb 11_ | school teachers. These twe features we should | ofa self-education, because the Common Schools | ing their Common Schoo!s, where nineteen out of | Check the disposition cert eG necidg i i i acts, we must create an omnipresent control over borrow; forthe glory of a people does not censist in | hav yi gi gt aad gh Rh re re the hense--et up the man in fla Sree plate editor wili always bring just such goods to market | 42d make conscie:ce the universel preventive. (Ap- andthe only way we can improve the please? Bet mee it tere person nad piseneiaety i i - | and our minds and morals afterwards. e latter 14, is to improve the. purchaser. (Ap shall follow we are pleased with the news; but un- Lowell; Stephen Chard, Boston; William E @urricr, Newburyport; John F Golba Natick; Edw Chamber: lin, Jr. Brighton; Wm P Dutton, Boston; Geor, De- merritt, Haverhill; Enoch Karle, Worceste Everett, Milton, Simon Fol: Sonthbrid Holden; Joseph 8 Frye, Salem; Eliphaz G Gle reatboro’; Alfred Goodwin, Lowell; Daniel Go rill; Joseph Gerry, Fitchburg; George Gi bez F Hewes, Boston; Reuben Hodgmen,Jr- Ashby; Stiles Hannum, Belchertown; James L Holmes, Plympton; Willis Harden, Abington; Joseph Johnson, Wm R Johnson, Boston; Samuel W Johnson, Milbury; John Knowlton, Boston; Oliver King, Methuen; Wm S Knowlton, Southbridge; Calvin Kuowlton, Southbridge; Calvin Knowlton, Grafton; Benjamin Kimball 34, Methu. en; Elon A Lee, Wm. and Charles H Lathrop, Alonzo Marshall, Francis McKenna, Boston; Elward B Morse, Haverhill; Darius Messer, ‘Methuen; Nathl 8 Moore, Montgomery; Wm C Martin, Lowell; Aaron R Merri- z FEOFLE, eithe: given them the desire or abilit, never borrowing any thing, but in perfecting every | ucate themselves They left the miseral ye thing they borrow. The third feature we, perhaps, if knowing and not half knowing, wit! few York and Alban} a id not introduce, You me thought and vacant, uncertain parsabaons ud | article sory nature is tontrary to our fe: there isnow nothing to stand upon or to work with. A Poirit ef cur Jastitation. If the Prassian parent | But one thing well LA Be cab Pet excellent start- | Plause.) And, before I the thi part of pe a der all cireumstances, and at all hazards, our purses neglects to send his children to school, the police | ing point for everything else. The great mathema. | Je¢t, I will ask the piper ral ther fant, the | and our prisons! Give the children of the poor ” Bnd mage! 7 offteer takes him te prison, and the cbildren to | tieian, Edmund Sione, the son of a gardener of | P' » that the tt sp rothy ran ‘u" © | that education which will le them to see, ho- snd Friday, at 8 o'clock AM. sckool. We ht improve a little on the Duke of Argyle; and when Edmund was but | ™ S Bet. Will Bo COWS 89 98) AA he d resources; whieh ing, leaves Red Bank every Monday mornmeg; nt 10 | tale the parent t. school also (langhter)— seventeen yeara old, the Dake was one da the best argument ? Bec use, sirs,jina vacuum, e in them an onward-looking hope— Pig, Tueadsy, Wedvesday, and Friday, at hall-past | 5 citizen needs as much instruction as the ebil - | ing in his garden spa a feather go down with equal rapidity. ive them in theirleicure houre, rational "xe boat will runas above until further notice.navigation | Many have said to me,” “ the has no right | laying on the gra We will now examine the coanection between ix- eithis, and thi only, will work out that weather permit ot6m" | to compel parents to send their children to scheol.” | 1i oung Stone appeared and claimed it. and crime; not, however, we ining, Tevolution, the legislators noblest ambition. ‘OW 78 LINE. What! bas the state a right to send a man to the aid the Duke, “do you read geometry, writers have done, th otha er of tong he “Neitheris mana human poor box, into whose he POINT Ni SOLB gallows and,no right to send him to school? Shall | and Latin, and. Newion?” WA little,” anewered in our Prisons who noses aaa e wlio Tataivoucoee drepenioe bent oly’ ire te SPRING— the boy, who being furiher questioned, excited ¢ ot read. 9 i pill eery te fost arzen stcest gee Deked auaxemest sull move ara hog came | nothing important. "The mere ability (o read does | # for edacation and useful known only as the jailor, the exe id not the educator? I say the Stat field, Northampton; Jefferson Noyes, Wm B Nason, Bos- i ji houses and prisons, me 4 poe it) ore acing the High, taser will eave weerebons | Rasa right to compel parents to educate their | you with all this knowledget® the Duke at last im, { 20t prevent erime. It may prompt the individual Tot ai by sdacation opec the doors of thece Eaijlieug | ton; Frederick R Newell, Cambridge; Cady Osgood,Me- we eta ae ofock: ana Tuesday and Free children, or let them be educated. This compul- quired. ‘‘A servant,” said Stone, “taught me ten | into ite t, and the eta tee eee of ition houses of ignorance. hilly diphe Bresby’Dedhers, Joatm ltchantanes Galaten, EoFelock: sion, however, cannot be felt in statute law, but in| years since my letters. Doesa man need to know | are weak, an so. Sb bi. John Russ, Lowell; George Roberts, Andover; Caleb lap tierra ee el ightened public sentiment—so pervading; so | anything more than his twenty-six letters in order be Bi Ds Ao ill ae al a ae ‘The abe Boston. Richardson, Jr. Danvers; Jeseph Raynes, Lowell; Cal- varapecte, pal os board this boots mast be st ibe riskot ig upon every man, that he who will let his | to know everything else?” Let the schools teach | Which will only corrupt and demoralize. al di dence of the Herald) vin Richardson. Chelsea, Joseph Ray, Franklin; Hiram wr thoreel enlese a tit ofladiag serecctisclaned he children remain in ignorance, will be looked upon, | the people theirtwenty-six letiers as they ought to lity te read is 5 mplys means to rola ae bends (Correspondenc: : “s Smith, Boston; Wm Souther! Jr. Upton; Benjemin Siete TAL Paty, | and pointed ont to passers by, as afelon. With us| be thught; with delight—with certainty, and they | °F pollute and debase. To teach a man his letters Boston, March 1, 1342. | p Smith, South Hadley; Daniel Sabin, Douglass, John KAS 2 01 CIAL LINE | oublie opinion is omnipotent; more despotie and | would afterwards educate themselves. A great | barely is not to educate him, or insure industry or Caledonia—Unicorn— Fourth of March—Dickens Din- Hanover; Isaiah M Small, Topstield; Elbridge a cae iceepalieamatons the mostabsolute throne in Europe. | truth, which the mass have yet to learn, is, that all | integr Ee to ly im rtant Md Shea: ner—Aristc eracy vt. Democracy—and Things in Ge- | & Shelae ne TL afer, 3 jecway; Sil The friends of education must goto this greatsouree | school education is valuable #0 far, and so far only, | ject, I w' apie Nel got se ytaber wade tcnaranee ta; 7 PT gy et lag ml Nenkecpeniaaiey ‘0,4 ML) NL, ¥. | of action for improvement. Since the School Sys- | asit has prepared us to educate ourselves. Man’s | Phe single “eg oretgmnrtbeg lane ademad ts ts Waters, Douglass. a ? = STAB HED PASSAGE OFFICE, * | tem of Prussia has been adopted, crime and pau- | great concern on earth is education,aud the labor of | that from the very nature of man, “uneduca Dear Sin:— 0 No. few Yor! ind is educated vice.’ (od made man to ‘ ‘ Eabw; he is thecreature of education, made to be A true-born Yankee would fain be registered as educated; and if he is not educated, he does not | one of your correspondents, and though he may not fulfil bis being, aud must be miserable. Now, the | be as learned or witty as many who now cater for mibocabie mom, Govily: Liesomes the criminal. All your numerous readers, he is at least as honest and Cp fs a Ae ACI Ls BCS aie devoted to the interest of whatever cause he may LIS! 61 South street erism, according to governmental reperts, have | sehools te simply to fit him ti THE, scbveiber. in ant ular he arangcinent forthe your feereased 38 percent. ‘This result is sufficient, in| with truth and effect. Look the able support he has received for many years | itself, to convince us of the value of a religiou: State, wringing from the soil ¢ Lil ia as uation. The Prussian government, by timely edu- They have powe: le Uienwion wishes case Penis cation,eonverts the materials which go to make the | by an early se! ales, that they can at a felon and the polluter, into the industrious citizen among the fi ¥ mes iti ell istian; jail- line erekly oF aegy Leal Lge pb te and true christian; and thus saves the fees of jail-| after their c U. 8. Clreult) Court. Before Judge Betts. Marcu 2—The Grad Jnry came into Cout with bills of ind etment against Heary Scriever illiam Harding, master and mate of the statesmen of the age. But now, : . | equally certain that misery leads to wickednes: p schools and penury of instruc D Toh i ship Henry Clay, for cruel conduct towards Wm. Dacke men ; ¥ was once asked, “Who is the most | espouse. Bonell—also against Patrick C Martin, for stab- LN as ymuaeaeln habs Seesgnee Sy suidibo a deepitie reversions Sei iieiorra dda beep Sate 6 peasant ghave* Sista ste, aide That an ree The all-absorbing topic of conversation in the bing the captain of the brig Cicero with a sheath aan shown civility, and’ Sepatchel withoct delay’ and | Proving the influence of that monarehical ice Siare Repiotiod. tie sheet anit ont Mer tad | abate Fag on oe eV aval wea aeediogy and publie places of resort is the probable | Knife, while Iring at the port of Carding. on the those who send for their friends may reat satisfied that every 0 hfe ing tythlon by the is lest noth ic Tare Cote one ace deprived of truth.” Yes, fellow-citizens, youmay | fate of the steamship Caledonia; while many give Sosata waredrrittncd; plead Hot y, andtheir ffacata to thowe tent for, ull ag allwhomey embark with | for the people ‘The King ist the heed of the eye place man where you please—you may diy up| up all hopes of her safety, and would go into | trisis act down for Monday next, to which time QS eed chetht ony of ease, whone pareaee bas Pave. seat, tebe) andine ees well to it, that the divine right of observes, fo the uttermost ihe fountains of his. fecling, | mourning for the loss of her passengers, others | the petit jary was discharged. scenery Demeery ill be without any King rant partofche dail ee ade into wa the spri of his thought; and the idea tha 1 ano tion’ Russia hey lately ado, fed thi Prassian Sehosl he was to know and; learn, will survive | eling to the fond hope that all will yet be well, and Court of Oyer and Terminer. bas strse gree a deliv mew et Bt Pola en it all. jed to his hope of immortality—it tion of weleoming | fefore Judge Kent and Aldermen Purdy and Lee. extended aut educating three hi is the divine part of his nature which barren “s ‘ival into port. Mancu 2. —The bill of exceptions in the case of following is a list of shi yous, men to teach common And, ladies and gentlemen, if: Favcecannotreach. Th ina right educ: rth of Mar is close at hand, and many William B. Wiley, wasacted upon aud admitted, after which the Court adjourned sine die. © The Circuit Court stands adjourned to the 9th inst., when the Staten Island case in relation to the note said to have been given by the officers of church, and, on whieh the jury everal t could not agree, (reported some time since) will be brought up. wi : i i which turns all the baser parts of the triumph of the bible, we must begin ; divine al yey roid, tes Gheete tal ny hes shieen hundred and thirty: oig ring the triumph of C School man’s nat igh and thirty- e tri of Common ‘ols. e snarked to kim by one of the courtiers, that “his | Rey Dr. Du, Missionary to India, told the Gene. | when the first rays of the morning sun fell upon the ot sufficiently enlightened to re-| eral Acsembly that, from a want of knowledge and | #tatae ——_ he pet date je. em of instruction,” Francis nobly | science, the Triadoos were not capable of estima- | the first rays of knowledge 3 a arned to read | ting the evidence of the gospel, whieh, to their | nature discourses harmon: our 8) . dark, patie iatt, appeared ure an old wit f ’s far betas raged . Cousin, the sc! hiloso| aad} ble. Dr. ropesed that the Board of Missions é pre oe depnted by the French ote: should Hireto the Hindoos aperwetop inthe va- sa ad yor : A friend who was with me i id mak: rt of jaea-| rious branches of a common education, that their U fa apetent' OF Prawli. Hie ‘regent appeared in minds might be able to see the trath and importance pretty, badly off here. 4 laugh cited God | edge in the art of 7 a Se ecden oaaraie thiny-two, and being immediately followed by the | of the peneearen. Beibre the sower pone fon alg a te — ge eis tae saeco th They Ss tepaal ng Pd sates templation ;.aed from the tench saute My 3g ie Tie wi ‘vot 4 swan Sehouts eat pong for the. ible. ‘The seed | are above us and beneath us, on our right, | amount of Tunds already subscribed, I should Sven) low us to dweil any longer with these foreign sys- | will not take root if the ground be not ploughed; | 204 on our left, and if man is not able to read, | jt hardly possible for ek ern ieee tems of edueation. Such as wish to study cor-| neither can the bible be understood if Common | heis pretty badly off here—worse off than the dog, | the most sple h SCkarlen Dickesoeas yet’had reetly and fully, the sheory and workings eof the Schoey have not a wonite 1S The bible, ed — he ny rng oe ay ey 4 Dieter ivteves ics saan > 8 ti fer to en, that charter of liberty—the a Chai ne mast P President Bashe's Report to the Trustees of the | of, world's: freedom. shina in darkaese, | maxim of moretruth and fore than any Rta pet when « set of simpletons, styling them- Girard College. This i2'4 volume of more ability, | and the darkness comprehendeth it not” if Common US serps vi 5 pee enh oad ~ win se siete Of ehe city, trying tore af then, aud one'aflording more , ivid, varied and philosophical, and who in con- | you see meanness and ignorance in abundance. ance than any work that has been published vivid, varied and philosophical, x ia im this dity, end believe more this country. "I ry difiieult abd laborious versation threw out more gems, a. There is in this city, an vi to se secu tions for the faithful celebration of jay ; balls, parties, and all f fashionable amusements are talked of, and must that day be with the “ carryings-on” in the “city of notions.” Your humble servant will be ‘a chiel among them,” to take no‘es—aud faith, it will be at your option whether they are printed or ne ot. j late Dickens dinner in this city was con- gs can read, they are dated with so much meanness, and want of knowl- iy WI! my people they will cease to stab.” In eighteen hundred and U. States District Court, Before Jndge Betts. Manca 2 —Thirty-on- cases of heap nce the notice in h matured to day, w called up. following were objected to: Cox, George Brown, Thomas D. Lee, and C dra Frisbee. Brown was opposed by Stephen J Field, on th ig debts to latter, b ll went on collecti tion of them; since January, vored certai pei eferred creditor: th hai ‘he others were obje bry: firaality, and dei ba i ny other, a dispesition to transact tara conferred on = vaca . ertat age. ie i Ms Sennban aur e "aetatoctatle principles—and when “ ‘cad the home, pendent | part of the reading with the majority of the people | the cheap defence ‘oom Poredioien wt he Meee cen eety | Cuatuast Tiearae.—The sitnetians or pean bare mi states. Here is nation unarmed! The wordy, so mechanical, so feeble, that the ain tun trom sae (omens the proud cement: Le veccstagOuntantevinde of Twitcher are proot WT ster dn Ghats i sri Has le Som kad Pa | meh mae ne raommen, toe tree cumule | oa pyramita of tuereege, wily OF one Aust bo | may yotvich vale Now York Derpitetheinclemency ofthe weather + there! " } that port. ‘One of ‘comin i a \¢ re J) enw power and protection is, not in a mi itary, posted | must precede the school.master with his Bil wil Fensia duriug they eee ites, tones that all f Nears | at very corner of our streete, passing our wim-| There are in the United State very hour with waving pinmes tad glen, thrown to earth in atom last evening again reverberated to the applause of an overflowing audience. The rain poured and the ay ahr sean a ainsatteas | take wt this Taber paid here “Change, ind deep, and silently performed our city a ia ; ba i! ‘overnment taken in 1840, This cad, shall ‘witness foreign notions, there agreed come d, but the lovers of {un exclaimed Sed ‘ tion—and that is streets overflowed, but i he illbe | ing blades, and tra th " hite adults ever twenty years of age, From cultare, exclusively bestowed, serves honorable me: site of it.” This evening the “Golden Far- hia tueesionteny still ad sabre; no! ~ the boys and iris of the bag to pode wand 672,442 chi ren Wetwene Expect these mighty issues : from the pains the so-| «vel, vot of i hy | tRadestahvieh del da a gelen todos their homes to their s car | the of five and sixteen without the in- And faithful care of unambitious schools mer” is agaia presented, also ‘* Roderick vich alpia oe ee ft, ef pelling book: fa © jon Sehool t ‘ oo e veoult alte {" Q ' | Dhu,” by J. R. Scott, accompanied by Mrs. Thorne ‘ toyaand se of oir Comms teal bd ire sécation " ina ie recive te Py, te leon yo alate jails, prisons. BL enig on roe sevarwit gioeoo lise the as the “ Lady of the Lake,” who looks the part ad- £ 8 ite Peele. Great applause.) | Bible to every child and youth in the United hat is our nee 1— 5 5 a eall silly men | mirably well brone, crown- | States—a good reso! H lows. edacation is the cheap de | managers. This presente a warning A , , i teca rev -, se not i ciead relotis that Pathe ved omb te the bm de ce tll aa if we shall over learn te Je | never to undertake the of a Theatre. For ne'er did Grecian cuisel trace fort but 50, citadels and management reas Each | ‘The as been doi tolerable business An , & naied, or a grace, = Commen ited States shall be read of | gislate afar of, and upon « great, system—prepar- National h age sct.oola Sentinel of ibertyaLight Hones of Flee Oe Bible Tes tence thatrecenes many scods " fog the public’ mind While obeying it—masters of in the “respectable” line. With tacer

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