The New York Herald Newspaper, January 4, 1857, Page 5

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NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, JANUARY 4, 1857. of Bnelavd others ip bayjng-uy cora, wheat, flour, &c., to sell it eeoin * Etreice OF 10 ‘or #0 pee cent in Cborch. This view is intere ps Lo is pew. The reason fdeed, both Mr Samper, in concluding, observed teat, sould the epint of Spain, reviewing ite own career, epesk 3 ral and MWosteat items, Concmmr To Mont —The Buckioy is, analy by Dode. oe Doren case the | piausibte and probable. 4 kieg would hardly feel | to other patio ald twit! reine of Worth's excellent band ‘wit wive thelr fourth aacroa oom jure of George Sumuer on Spain and her @ positive injury | bimeelf a king uf he bad not power over the lives wining, ‘bow vereiyt ioe me} tills the Gert annem wep Sees ening. ir Lutiontsts, Delivered at the Mercnatile that country. Wherever | aud pr ec of | the Without ths, | freed m af tiwogbt or the trecdom of eee : gett Somes Tee are cog Fi Association, on Tuesday Evening, an indi- | be would be nothing 9 limited monaroh, | serve » free pines; fear lews its occasional liceutious powerful charactar 6: liamn tomorow. ar. wus c 30, country in the world affords such a striking to modern nations as Spain. But nations, bo individuals, seem unwilling to take lessons, to ture to deny. if a few men had money enough they could buy up all America, for ail America is» always ready to sell out. Now the ago manufacturers in England have bought u England. It and its people all beiongs to Caer. rect because any other operation, raise exorbitant- those and all other commodities whiok Accordingly, kings in this day in Burope are bit- terly hostile to limited Pree and representa- tive governments, and jeave no acexercised to reduce all governments to the model of despotism or absolute monarchies. We should, however, be ness than the eternal license for wrong which fol- lows its slience; wateh every invasion ot your legia- lative assemblies and their rights, whaler by the stealthy warch of corruption o¢ by epee violence; makes bis desut an Pytbian la the after ptooe. Nimio’s Garou ~The charming opera entities “ The Bride of Lammermoor’ t+ to be performed by (oe Pyne ‘A Day afterthe Woduimg” krep ever in your hands the purse strings, whiok an Harrison troupe to morrow evening. Mast Pyoous Even those who are called rich Lelong to them, and quire daily. Also, such asum expended | rather inclined to suspect that instead of becoming | ambitious mers for their own wicked ends will tostve bir admirable version of Lacin instruction, to profit by salutary warnings ny their tenants at will, having barlowed latgely er supposed, would be an indireot taxa- | afterweads, as Mr, Sinaer stated, an instranemt Mie inmand devices todraw (hecho Bowary —‘ King John,’’ which eiisiot the hoartiers o hearken in time to advisers. Perhaps, even | of their manufactured money, au’ only bh ‘us stop fora moment to prove this posi- | of the priests, the two parties, tbe King and the | of everything which tends to degrade or depreciate appieuae from packnd audiencer ark woe, im 10 bo Fe day, England might have been saved from’| their property and houses and lands by the payment pricets, sealer conspired agsiuat the people and | iybor and kuowledge, the companions of livecty; and, peated to morrow nipbt, wil tow capita farce of “Grim, ondition of pauperism had she taken advantage of a rent to the usurers under the name of This was the ruin of 6; its ‘inthe increase of tion we go further. Let it be supposed that ‘eighty yoplions are iseued by any number of banking sto any number of merchants, at five per efected its cetablishment together, No doubt the King decired it for the pur Mr. Sumner stated, bur it is probable he could not effect it without the a8 yon would leave to your children the blessings of peace and eecurity for the future, beware of ali those Bay, and Bradshaw.’ Burtoy’s,—Mr. Burton it o# active ond ambitions ee je lesson to vations which Spain has given | money. Not its increase in the hands of industry | Cent. ‘Mis five ‘per ceat, amounting to forty thou- | by littering ploua of foreign corquest, which, while ever, ar 's well attested by the rounds of applause mighty others, herself, 4 b; e labor and co-extensive productions of in- | 882d doWars, falls upon the people, aud {s paid ulti- | aid and consent of the priesta. Also, no doubt, the inging ti norvele! ‘ 4 best’wed by the numerous frequenters of bis besauiab $0 sgh, 88 az enormpons ope tp uate, but its meee ol p: the hands of ad. mately by them. Now if Jl, that the indi- | priesta desired it. a8 9 moans of estavlishing their Sie oreain tor To ‘host erysba ren ines howe ‘Tbe play of “Fagctuation’ wiil be reposted te the reasons here stated, aud for many others, is a subject peculiarly adapted for a leeture, nnot fail, if judiciously treated, of exciting interest, and leading the public mind to sound vyenturers, Merchants and others, obtained , without labor and industay, and put into circulation without a correspondent increase of goods and commodities, ‘This creation of money without a correspondent and co-extengive increase of productions, puts it in viduels to whom this amount of eighty millions is disbursed, and who spread themselves or their agents over the country, buying tlour, \c., suppose they make only ten per cevt on their resale ot the commodities ‘purchased to sell power and of putting down even the breath of oppo- sitlop or censore; and they too could not effect it without the aid and consent of the king. Uhe two spired toge- do, and its institution wo may taal and joint am- parties, therefore, » it ali probability ther, as they usually " of lazy awaggerers, 109 proad to work if not slo igo igi orant, and therefore the fit tools for schemes | which may secure their advancement, even at the Price of those great principles cf justice aud right | ey by which alone individuals can be happy, nations giv- morrow night. VArlack’s —The amuring plese called ‘A Bncholor of to bo revived (0 morrow. The very popular a 28 of “Tilawatna,’? aud excetient eomicaltty of rire (-ater’? (0! !owa. wrens politictas of Pennsy!vanta, ov Tocaday, O¢th all, veen ‘sane. polid reflection, There are many various As } tne power of those who e nothing to become | again, chis «um is also paid by the people in the in- | believe was the effect of their rion ty durable, Lavua K freah extravagebze entitled “Yo 8 or points of view under which Spain may be Beer of al} that pees pertas produces. | (7eseed price, Horry to eighty thousand dollars, | bition and loat of power. That aferwards the as, Spa peerey tee | Beocbus, brought out to arrow evs ig ae ; . sing ii jests got it all in thei hands is 1; haa Bow musi Ko, | Th will be presededby ded. At one time, and we may say, but re- | Money produced ip this manner, withont | Therefore, Ageaking: in round acme ioe teeta 6e peteota 9 tr own natural; (Or | he Titel af Wan. S. Xuokermes, at Hostom | Srama of “Scond Love”! ts, within the infanoy of tes | ceases to be real money, that is, an instrament of t, the people would be taxed indirectly to | bo king or potentate ever assisted them to power {F om the Boston Davy Auvertiner, dau, & | tie The drematt at allevents, y of az antes | xchange. It becomes a power, like Aladdin’g | $0¢ amount of one hundred and twenty thousend | witout fuiling hiwsit under she power be had | the tralof Wu. & Turcormes tur orboo tomcat was | eee baba ond Wrones a ian life, that is,within less than 350 years—-Spain | jan p, which commands the nation.’ At its bidding |"@@lars ; for it is evident the merchant's prodta by | aived ia promoting. | continued in (he Munioipa’ Court yeviorday morning, | fir! tomorrow afiernrom, WOO. 8c .e grentest and the richest of modern nations, { all that the country produces is brought and laid at | B® speculations;and tho interest for themoney | — here is yet suother spect pre of view im | Evicerce tor goverment continved :—- “Hor eet Mukman’ during the 6¥e nit ¢ its feet. Itisa'process in’ which one part h which he operates, and which he pays to the which Spain presents large field for observation Henjamin 1 feed coilod~ Mr Tooi.erman handed moa a ais tall commerce Wi xtended than that of 8 lee pI party gives | ' 9 “4 , Geo Crsnay Axo Woon's Minsrams. © oe as More C: shat any potbing, butigets everything, .Itigmot tee. aaa , is all pala by the le in the increased | ond reficction, in ages pest Spain has been the | Yellow euvelope on the mening of Ue day of blu inter Pena ay! 'Yeee Calta)” fe four tr a people, her fleets were most numerous, he | money, the same instrament of exchange which the | Price, and ail ful ‘vpon the people, and is so much | countiy of revolutions and the theatre of politionl | VOW WUE My. Gooner. Aud ashed mo te sais ft in coat, | tractive co prevent His withdrawal trom ihe bile te wi ors most formidable, her soldiers most invinci } pecpie possess. For they have given labor, or J #Xation, so much money abstracted from the pro- | intrigocs and disturbances. ‘hese revolutions have | Siterwerds, nor oid 1 kecw' tte Contents wnel L beasa | be precoden by vonge, &e., morrow her manufactures most esteemed. Shecom | goods, Ac. in exchange for their money. It ia a | Ceeds of their labor and industry. Such is the dif- | indeed teen abortive conwnisions, springing out of | them « cp wine rt; the offer was made to me whem aw ipaits wil to rorrow evebing roviv Hed the world. Her nobles, dignified and hon: | inere naked power when it is introduced or manu- | ference in the issue or disbursement of large | little and unworthy causes, having bad no national | alone in my o.ce, belore Mr. Hooper caino wc. she pre: | urieeqae O0.Ahe opera of “Le Sonuau. were like kings, her mei were ‘ik | factored without its equivalent in da being | Sums. of money by a government amd by 8, porpeses, bor emanating from the united and en- | viour pybt, a Lyra, bo that he bad teanva money | pb: Mire Pitlert is to. emnnt the leading part, sod wie people were prosperous, industrious and | added at the same time to the consumable stock of | bavking instimution. In the one ase it] lightened will of the people. Her politions sate Of the corporsuon, and eubrequently be rait be nad | be well supported by the ireupe. aud the products of their industry were | the community, It takes away fcom that stock, it | employs and pays for labor; in the | tious have for the most part bogn the effeot of | lorned It to Or. Morton, snd would not bo ablo vo recover | quip Jovamse Coxwviaws, who were lately . on ani demand of the wor Al this | adds nothing to it, and therefore, even without | Otber Case it takesaway from lahor a great part of | foreign intrigues and interference, | Yet it is chiefly = i be steed no cum, aod mentired ro oer | vies et the Droidway Varioties, are remirin! Ww be F vc , mainly, before the discovery of America by | speculation, it increases the money force of the am- | its recerpts. It is addition in the one case, bu: it is | in view ot these dowestic troubles and changes that | ja0e te — Parties; oe fo _ to my = meak'ng both friends ead money 'at the How Athe- b increased atook: of ‘and provisions, It is | Subtraction in the other. How great this subtrac- Epain has of late engaged the public attention, and | geoarea by bis wile’s interest a Bie ral estatar bax | btm Boston. + + . Bumner did full justice to the subject he had | power which, like the wonderful lamp, places ‘ ticn is—bow great an amount of taxation is paid erehy made ker existence to be known. Probably | the proposition was decile, and {tod him tt Mr Finwisc was performing at Sacramento, Ouiforate, ) a for his lecture. He commenced by leading | that the industry of a count produces at the com- | by the people in this form, and by this means, would, | but for these little squabbles ‘and court in- | would bo better to give the company cyorsihing he | When last beard from. Lie wea to appear in San Venneieen uditors with himself across the Pyrennces into | mand of him who possesses the power. if calculated. amount to a sum almost exceeding | tigues gad. milliary propunciamentos, Spain | bad; 1 think thir subject was never imontioned | Ina tow weeks. . His description of the aspect of the Now, since ali the products of industry, ell the | ¢zedibility. We have shown that the people, ia the would be ae little known or heard of among | until the morning that Tockerman met Mr Hooper in my Mr W J. Fuonkxca wos tp a inst work ~~ youl ~ tr. andef the appeerance of people, as | food of the nation, thus comes into the hands of | Prices they pay, pay not only the fortune of the | us in this day as the Empire of Morocco. | office, He thonght thas i: was of great importance thut | for Barton, where ho pigs thik ile we Laod md ca the Alameda, at Burgos. those who manuf” <«, orfhold the lamp—by means omni, Wat also the interest, a3 it is called, or | or the kingdom of Abyssinia. Mr. Sumner discuss. | the vame of Dr Morton should not be mede ondiic ia cve- | wined by the Florenno Anaeation, ponsequence onthe road to w of their money—iiat is by means of the latap, how | the presents which he gives for the use of the instru- | ¢d this eat ject in his lectre in a clear and lucid | netiion mun biasitairs, an he cepnens at ak eumicwanle Tceto, ~The ony novelty of Me woek seems | lmawe udience—was 30 vivid and correct, that we, who | could the industry of ‘the nation live, bat by | ment whereby he operates. L’utting this interest at | mapner, and in a few sentonces succeeded in giving | SU0s his money from guvernmogt might be perilled by | peyp a ons ect comedy at the Moseem, ‘My Punnanie been the same journey before, could almost | buying back from them its own products with | five per cent only, though it is more frequently ten | a correct ides of the intricate history of (queen | in coudacnce. “He aaid that the Secretary of War bad de- ae MB oy ly be « Hine ourselves traasported there again for the | the money received,for them ? must bay | or fifteen, if we estimato the money without goods | Christina and ber troublesome career. Politically | termived to aive Dr. Moricn $5,00, and the Scoretary of | Jf. Ma. oF the Saurddy divwing Caccie, | Wi os wre back their own productions, for those who | °F productions poured into the country, in England, speaking, much was to be learned from Mr. Sum- | tho Interior at Washington, $35,000, ead thut the maiwor ineraees, sed She sone re ae jE em, —- e stranger who knows Spain, said Mr.&., only | now possess them by their money, their lamp, have | by copper-plate presses, at two hundred millions ster- | wer's lecture. The history of Spain and her great | wan contingent only oa the decision of Mr. Cushing: itis | O41, lous Zui he as conveyed a substantial moral past resorded in’ , and by ‘> | nothing else to give them for their money but the | ling, in a year the tax paid by the people in prices | fall, is a copious political lesson; it. affords 4 warn- | my impression thatwhat was eald by Mr Hooper to tucker | Kira" Delmaine (Mrs Skorr!) tm ludy who has sprusg imo ‘accounts which he receives o. a | very same they got from them, possess all | for interest ouly, without estimating the increase of | ing to all nations who are in a condition end dispo- | mae relative to confession, In substance wnd pn' trom neabing to the full bloom of a iedly of tasblon; amd out! e, who has come to regard that | that indust produced, but they bax produced | price paid to make the fortunes of ‘the great opere- sition to prolit by the lessons of the past. How | Want il'be made s clean breast in respect to the company’s | sithouzh sne ie not cepraver, ehe te snilicienily imbaet las ina chronic state of revolution, is curious Therefore the ‘of the , Would amount to ten millions sterling, or about | Spain lost her liberties, whieh, though not the | svete. be Tucker ft pi Sebo pre o yginoe iu | With the moserm quatity of spiritualiam waich sovs we ow who are its heroes and on what stage these fifty millions of dollars. This secret, unobserved, | cause of the impoverishment of her people, isthe | fears at the timo Mr Hooper talked “with hii impropriety in “‘sitinities.” She indulges in Fe " rd anthought of but tremendous taxation upon lasor | cause why they cannot remedy the evil, waa very | never. mace eatimatn of the amount of pro. | Babee tn dreee—wegiects ber household datien, iad oe of Ronceavall —this extraction of money from the pockets of the | bappily explained by Mr. 8. How the House ty he owned, but 1 understood {t to be $#0 000; | Pecially os sere eatiaahss hon thon GAs team. eg Chaghetnagne’s defeat in industrious man—of bread from his mouth—is | of Representatives of Spain lost ita power, | fworttema told for $29,000 I mover Inew Tuckormen Shot tnt seueahe Gunes of sowing, daraing or replay “peasants who never read a book ; he enough after afew years fo ingavemh and ruin apy | though it still for some time ed in | to make @ loan to any one of money belovging to the | tyeiiye ghirt buttons be conatitiiter a perfect potare land; finds a sombre cloud of me- ople, while it generally e1 few. pame—how the power and liberties of the people | company without orders from tue diroctors; so fer asl | orihat happily scarce portion of the falr rex who are A over it ; sees immense tracts un+ In this view of the question, we think it will be | were gradually cut short—what efforts the Executive | *u0W, when be made. loun it was reguiarty entered o€ | Dearly gli icy and vere little of woman, Mr. Detmatae ‘and depopulated ; its seaports deserted plain enough to the reader that it would be, as we | made to control the Cortes, and how it succeeded — | tue company hocks | have, bived. memes, aes t vers (Warren) having borne tho extravaganco and apd , pt. a few like the spokes of observed, al to attribute the impoverishment of | was sbown with clearness. Mr. Summer | jogn made by Mr. ‘Tucke?man to eny other party; Tack- domosteity o1 bit wife as jong as his outere borders ; finds a people to any expenditures of their goverment, | traced some of the important facta of this history | ¢rman told me, when at Lynn, that he bad been at Wor. | could tolerate, bus just gone = gent —. country into and however extravagant; provided, of course, that the | frem original documents in the Spanish archives. | cester to advise with Mr. Salsbury ceepooti bans Mgnt hare lle ig ME pg rd ‘and honters; their money again by selling, as it were, half the | Means of that expenditure are not obtained by op- | He showed, by the course of events, that when the | The next witness was br Ki, Neveranc Mies holla Witsban 00 retorts har baseente OME water, spanned by eo back again for all. the money with which | pression and exaction from the industry or labor of | representatives of the people allowed themselves to | of the Merchan'e’ Pan, whose tomtmony by thelr acoption In prectico Mr. Delmainesdopis this aye- the remark of a French am- ey first bought it. It is different when men | the people, ied into an abandonment of their control over | the 8th of June, 1566, Tuckerman’s account at the bank | ie, pra check mates bis wi'o's folb lo by the aseumy of Spain, that “it would ich they or their fathers e question, therefore, of the quantity of gold | the Army bill, the country began to decline, and bay Pods ig > 7 $3,907 =. teller of the Merchants’ | Of their counterparts He indulges in polttioal aspira' sPalge and with the n and prodaced by an equivalent given | and silver received from South America by the Span- | from that day went down to utter ruin. No sooner mat team to ine deperit of $6,000 by Teckertaen on | SOPPaboers in dreee, sud other things which blur the ae industry or labor; for then, ifa | Bish government, and expended as it was by it, is | had the representatives voted the Army bill, before | wie seis of June, 1805, = a y pecs of seher, discreet roe to the negicet of hie 4 the grand old drama Of | thousand ‘@ hundred thousand dollars, | immaterialto the question of the decadence of 3 grievances were redressed, than the king and nobles | “yr Samuel Hooper was reeniled, but testified to no “ ane emcee s by, rade lustry they add a hundred thousand | by theirruption and flood of money into her mi Planged Spain into a succession of foreign wars, the | point that bas pot before been preeentod, except that he | RPC may see her own folie itera. Mir Khanh cal eels Gillars worth of weofll or productions to | We have every reason to believe thatthe statistics | natural effcts of which were, in the course of time, | sewed that the Eastern road nover received aoy thing iu | \¥ S00 anciber jaurol 1) the, iarary wae Me ee be the country for the money which they possess and | of Mr. Sumner, founded on his own researches and | crime, debt, oppressive taxation, and the downfall | re payment of /uckorman’s joan to Dr Morton. Tack- | M4 oy 2 eacription he bas entrusted to the Castilian tongue, ec! d, -y have the money, but they have added | €xaminations, are perfectly correct, but it does not of inéustry. To these causes Mr. Samner attributes | ¢rman’s interest in Morton's claim was pow in the hands public. and betb baye bern more than favorably recotved. onl to the useful stock of the community something for | Decessarily follow that we believe the records he ex- | the decadence of Spain, which he sums up as fol- | of the corapany, but its vaiuo waa unknown to the | oO At cohicet «John cillbert and his Dangater,* and. it. But when, as in the case supposed, productions | amined to be correct, or that the archives of Seville, | lows:— First, the absorption by the Executive branch ie wut in the by-laws of the corporation. show. | Which was often performed tat songon at the ‘Boston thea- : increase at the same rate as increases, and | like a king, cannot lie or be defective. But even if | of the government of the powers of the popularand | ,,, ibe per Ady tnaelieee Of the troaswrer, aa there spe. | US and sways with acceptance. erty around him—men in | for all the money circulated there is added an | ¥e admit that the documents exammed by representative branch, which was consummated by | ciffoa, ae Tumapeirnia.—dayne’s sow Music Hall, Philadetphie, and of -patriotism, the | equivulent of prodactions, then the relative value | Mr.Somner at Seville are complete and accurate, | his obtaining the control over the Amny bill; and The District Attorney here stated that tbe case for the |'Wos ipeugurated an the evening of the 954 it. by y between money and good, «c., will remain unchang- | &bd we have no reason that we know of to call them | secondly, the policy of the court and of the laws, | goverument way clored, exoopt that ho wished to amend | grand erncert, onder tho direction of W. or e same. But why this saddening change ¢ What Then more money will procure mor in question, no such conclusions follow as those | which directly tended to make Inbor disgraceful; | the specidoation of tho indictment v0 fara to iaciute | E Among the vortormers wore a band of gevonty Bae has brought it so low / Is there any hope for Suereas iby tho incresse of money with- | Which bave been hastily drawn, namely, that the } and thirdly, to great, oppressive and unequal taxa- | the svm loaned by Tuckerman to Mr. vias. Il. Abbost as | mvsicis ps jp part coanencd Mie Guematle Ct goer ¢ These were points which Mw Samner pro- | out an equaland coextensive increase of prodnctioas, | amount of money introduced lav from her | tien. among his defalsations, Afer a bricf argument tne Court | mew tenor pened Glonene, Madame Velanie oe Teer ed to examine in his lecture. « food becomes proportionstely scarce as the money | Spanish possessions was not sufticient to produce No doubt Mr. Sumner is correct in his views in | lo sestior reled 7 tho soverameat A for the | Hetel it is capable of accxmmodating §,600 people. re could hardly be in the whole is more abundant, and vius more is required | the effects of which all the world is a witness in the | this respect, as far as he goes. To go further, i sas griomy aay haat gt ‘Dalous, Me Bolles | Canrourta —The Hullein, of Deo 6, taya:—Amuse- economy a more interesting than this | to ony even a leas quantity of food. tis, more | condition of the — people, and also that the | deed, wold hardly have been possible in t Prooeeded to aduress the jury. He remarked that much | mente ta the oity at ‘be ber olng of the (riaizht wore wh e causes of the declise and fall of Spain. ‘That | money and less food. Thus labor is defrauded, for | vviversal opinion is in error which has attributed | of ove tecture, and would have been incompatible | of the labor which the commonwoaith’s attorney had |, rather low ebb, Tho Atacreac Theatre, lv wevee, cow try affords a wide and large field of observa- | the more it earns the more it has to pay. It is a such an effect to this cause principally. The | with the programme of the topies Mr. 8. proposed | taken upon bime: I’, bad, by the ruling of tue Cour: beea | tinued ‘Oper. ands young gir!, Demed Susan Kobinaow, is for every one who directs his mind to an in- | system in which there is much deception, for labor | amount of money introduced into Spain by the his examination. They were large enough, and | rendered entirely + *. Witacsses bad veen arrayed | pow playirg thore wtb tolerébie susceas, Maguire's W into the canses of the prosperity or of the | seems to be well paid, and the laborer thinks he is | g0vertment must have been very small at any time, | he bondicd them with the knowledge and ability of | pom the stend 19 prove pecuiaions (extending thr | pew Opera Lovee, built on tho site of te old San F ranete- of nations and people. It ix a solution tobe | weil paid But when he comes to lay out his money compared with thet brought home by adventurers | a scholar, We do not for a moment suppose that | terice of yeart and charged {a no fori tu { | ¢o wae opened on Setaréoy eveping jest byt ccurate and careful | he pays tribute in high prices tothose who have got | aud cthers who tlocked to Nouth Anterica at those | im the enumeration of the causes he gives, it was | Mehl sue for which tho defendant could not now be | Sap Frore'vco Yiortiols, and bas bees crowded every pay’ gol - 7 ‘ . 5 tried, and this could Baye no other cileet than toprojadice | piphteince Mis wena Hayne ber remrned te the derati consla- | hold of everything by money without prodaction, | times, and returned laden with gold from the scenes | his intention to exclude all others. There are, the ¢eferdant in ihe minds of the | City. apd fe said to bo abc ut to ccmenen drawn from the facts. This stady, which is | aud.so he gives up his money to add to their wealth | Of their adventures. Spain was foil of gold. The | dced, many causes which tly operated ii sae goat | tots the eas tnappear ah ine tniepel of the priya’e life and means of living —that is | by his labor. sums brought by individuals were lent out at interest | the work of reducing Spain to a condition, perhaps | (yo wactmert. TL yim | the 2d inet, but it was wnexpeowedl he economy of nations and people—is pot per-| “By this increase of money, that is, of money with- | 1 merchants, and became, not the basis of | worse than if she had been by some great natural | ihe care, The n« t was, that bank bi'ls wore iu no | old lessee, who Lad annourced he ‘happily called “+ political economy "since out production, Spain bas fallen to what she is, and } 40 extended bavking business, but the whole | convulsion suddenly blotted out from existence for- | senre money—notling 9 money exoept legs tendor. | go right tocpen the ihenve tie is now taken in a more confined and limied | England too, and we have in the eofour mind’s | and only substance of the business of | ever on the earth, like the vast antediluyian people Mr. Bolles then wont op to explain tho reason why he | Gorrapy of actors at te American ptation, as if it were a branch or part cf mere © bations which are hurrying 1 away to the } usury. And whether the sharks who prey upon a | of old. But of oll the causes nnited, the greatest, | h* pL ded proof OF tbe legni extateres of the company | the \letropoltian for two months, merely, i & aie rain. Thus Spain pr ded peeguant lesson to | People and enrich themselves by icing the | most certain. most effective, and which also was | 18 he fret tpatance, and pubs: quently oe | ae and wnse cloreig It te apieipated sage is particularly in political economy that-Spain,| uations in political Prices of all consumable commoditics to an uniimit- | the porent of many of the minor helping causes, | t?d- | They had cemanded this beesuse het if the ev! ctors coming bere will tous be rowg6hd To mode- particularly y |.| aalions in pol economy. 0 vs “i , t *) cence of certain antecedent acts of embexsloment wat | pate terms of eneagen sites hey Willi nave no op- a loud and speaking n it Such are sume of the views ed extent, Obtain on Joan, at usury, in gold or in | wos demonstrably, we believe, that to which we admitted, then they might plond that tho defendant was | portop!ty of giy fog MF pocnraltous p Anage agains ook onishing how Ite this lesson has been read | in which Spain may be surveyedand exai paper, the money with which they are enabled to | have averted. Bos at AG ime of Commiasion the legal Weaaurer Of IDG | Fide The Abripbi theatre, fac Franclace bas heen lenwed political economists, and how useless the warn- | it would have Leen impossible in one evening's lec- | Pe:/orm their self-enriching, but to the people ruin- ‘Toe hopes of Spain for the future, as represented | compony. ~" by a Chinese oompap > will soon onea it for perfor - has proved to nations. Spain was once the | ture to go at apy length into those great questions, | o's operations, it is all the same thing in the result. | ly Mr. Sumner, may be comprised and summed up | Anciber point wea suggosted, that there had boon no | wancea We learn tbat & large chantity of pow and nation we have seen; her people were | and vanous views which are to the re- | The difference is that it is not 0 easy to carry on so | ‘a the :ollowing: — fvicence to ebow that the money which ts alleged to Lave | splondid dveasce and trappivgn have jnet been recetved prosperous people it has been aaid, uptil the " ind by the histor: tate of this wonder- | largely and extensively such uation-plundering and in her municipal organization. Deon crawn from the Merobaots’ Bank by the defendant, | frem China, and that the company ie compored of some wud silver of Suh America were poured into . Sumner judiciously | labor-rcbbing operations with gold as it is with Tn her quick witted peasants just beginning to | Wid felonious invent, was tbe money of the Kasiorn al | of the beat actors from the Empire The standard Ching p- From thet moment the commencement of which would have | Paper, — gold is not 80 easily prodaced as | liave en their children. onsen. Ly. ewer es at tdosn | pists are to be produced A thet trteal troupe, comorteta cadence of Spain may be dated. altered natur: ‘character of hi 4 4 copper plate press is more prolific than &. In ber industrial classes, who are now makin, - u Swong otbere, two young giris of the age of tea o ocndanee ot Seale ey is now a Pay aia uation to te Pera or Peon! acd pa meeae of, i thew 9 . Sera, ye felt, and asserting ane Gemy ota bey oe aly Arta mor hed } pueive yeors. eames ny. named 7 i ut ruin, from the same ca several topics which he forward. ms are carried on Poglan out, ' ~ fF woren—against whom Nata By orant }orocorda or any cf the oral evidence shows. another | that the girls bad boen invele : Jn connection, however, with the view we haye conceivable traveller has aimed his shaft of rastico—but who, to | poitt rained was, that the goverment moat show what | at Weaverville, by 2 mna_of the taken of the cause of the decadence of Spain, Mr. & rare degree, porsees grace with dignity, and affec- | coin or money we defendant had embeeziot. The Indic appears that same | Sumner has raised a question which bas excited tlon with constancy —-great native talent, patriotism, t charges in rome counts bark bills, in otbere gold pau- | some public atttion, and which well deserves to welf-eacrifice. comm, and if the government failed to ehow which of the o | bled for the purpore of iv /\ie the ex- | be fully canvased. We think it quite likely that From what we have obsorved, we need | bad been the gpbjecis of embexsiement. no copvictinn | ment on Browder The Vroiga Um ° 4 could be had, for it the jury cannot find in the frst Fnill- aif past ton o'clock. I. M , they oe ees mone in the Med he en of sg frond of ope forthe reviala ny cient ovidene rose li) eben temeat of gold coin | ikea wing bin wo be ae statements ¢ made, “ q ust find bun o y upon count, and 0 | \wn or three person much | fou his own examination of the records seem to us Inefficlent and inadequate. All that Mr. | ith ihe count charging tbe em! Of bank bills, | welly secure! b resses | in the Golden Tower of Seville, we cannot for a mo- Sumner gives as of hope appear to us only | The embrzziement of money in one or ihe other of tuore | (Tree was ston ped hre Tosti: Ment entertain a doubt. 8 na for lamentation. It is lamentable that a | speciiie forme muxt be proved beyond a reasonable douvt, | [Bin for the manufacture of money origin eguien the hasty deductions ‘ aqernene quick witted peasantry, that an industrious people, | Numerou- authorttics were stud te support of thia pro- | pr wap wowened by the lexcess has been different, bat that net's statements which a cotemporary of this city | enough to that fine and amiable women should be so unhappily | position, Af the jury find that bo ts guilty of emberlo- | an bor inter, no com) pint Bezes © countries is the canse. The cause is has made. It is rather too fast to siy,asan infer- | those sums be in gold or situated, 80 badly governed, 80 reduced to the avyas | eB ol money, consiating ee Dilla and im part of De wea effect is also the same in both ‘ence from Mr. Summer's statements, that the deca- | done wherever there are in which the people of Spain are plunged. But we | oe ae eee of ig We TT.) oon Wentinls fo" iy, the impoverishment of the dence of Spain is not to be in any way attributed to | their wits at other am inclined to fear that wit and industry, and | S/U77 Sad « Guilty Of ap indednite character, | ata were iidilied (n, for the porpe 0 ly way ui The jury must Mud that the defendant bas omoezslod the while impoverishment, thia poverty of the the quantivies of fe introduced into Spain fro to the honest, heanty, which, no doubt, do adorn the misery of ; pov t laced into Spain from Whole ot the bila oF the whole of the coin, oF rome del of people, in which the material rise apd fail | South America, Mr Sumner himself drew no such | was done in Spain poi afford very little hope of ever being uble | nite portion ot each or eltor, if they tind the defendant uw leave thie py — Cg ey fow at inference, and ‘ie showed his wisdom in leaving the Eee It bas _ a _ rer Ae Ka =a and aunty wt all. countey, Be made we s quini time, and, at last people in a coun ili never make a great | question pen. ning cotemporar: coun! to jn repder it the more TT l. and ma- Court then, at 1 o’clock—Yr Bollce not having | sp rstnyaP isdn ogmet Pit rich people, nor eveo a respectable cou le thie! too po <i S edeuios ry Z upon this system, hen, terial well-being with the working masses, the | concluded bis addresr—took s recore until 2 o'clock. | — sumuenetet hamancexunne — Dives Daudon in 1617 ad- n bas nover heen, nor Se she fe 3 calls the received opinion a “ popular error,” and cena of time, the possessions pever of fee? A KY command with ease ang cer. 7 wee bo A ate tg Me Opens corse pve for carrgteg on tho thos a ant, ‘2 her great ond wealthy people. ae egerlemain transferred froin man. tainty a com existence; such is, we believe, " - return, thet gentleman bound Plmee!? to pay him 12 499 uke of Medina Sidonia are as proverbial ag the firs and greatest element in notional proaperity. | **4s P< & railroad poo Figg’ mene? | france 9 yous Up Or 1601, ond to allow lise te ered! two of Crossns. England, too, isnot without her We place virtue along with well-being, becanse with- | $0664 10 Rave beep «mbexried. | e3 Sod to'te. | Doses sh aorrisin reduced root Ie 1804 the Em and wealthy people; bat in both countries | civilization in out) it, the utmost abundance, wealth wit rl " ne bocamé’ “operty | Peror decreed that (be rement of opera shoaid | Pifth avenue Pe on are few in number, the | centuries, is due to the sudden influx of vast suma et; onto nt, can never ensure heppiness to a: wc bas banhenthas nocnhind boomuine tat ha of tbe bo transferred to the and-bit) Mejoaty le are poor and wretched, and respectable as | of gold from her American jes. Roberteon and | employ, and the other half is hardly paid a nha one. Without it, panty iteelf can have no exis- | railroad company. ‘Tho government inust prove that the | Opemed ® eredit of 60 are—as riches always are--they do not make the | Prescott, among eminent historians, and all the | price for its labor. The Spaniards were 100 proud a | tence in a nation, for it Is a part of virtue to be in- | pritoner et her ttoleZor embe: led the money. . (At thie | 0D the eotablichment I countries respectable, nor the governnents oitical eccnomists from Adar Smith to our day, | people to be industrious for nothing; they soon left } dustiious. An industrious people are the wealth and ct Interpeaed, raid he shout hold | g and powerful. _ When the masses are poor— ve taken the fact of this greas influx for granted, | of producing. and Spain hecnate what she is. Peo | glory of auation, and so lung as a people are babi- | tt tbe money was in the posscesion of the Corporation, they can with difficulty live—when provisions, | and, like the members of the Royal Society over the ple us fleeced and robbed can barely live by indas- | tualiy inéustrions,so long are they comparative: | MF: Te'kerman being an ciicer of the Corporation. and | into the bards of the merchants and | (uiz of King Charles. s0 keeuly estirizgd by the | Ury: they soon learn that barely to live ts all they | ly. end. proportionately” virtuons Hoth indus. Tnrosey by bles, beh mig vember. | , are sold out to them at high prices, and in- | author of Hudibras, have proceeded to speculate | Can hope for by the hardest of labor, and that they | try and virtue, however, are undermined mont ) | Ary governinent ) itself 4 is seen to almoet useless, | upon it without it ever cecurring to to ques | can do this hess , or worse methods, without | ond destroyed when labor is robbed and | jent intent of the dete | clelon of the somir etrative authorities, aad thet the tt pit will do «little more than barely | tion the authenticity of the fact iteelf. The dogma | bard labor. ns industry 1s. driven nto degrada- | ploudered by the indirect taxation of harpies, | which tho jury mvet deo | Saeco oS ee Se rae. ure a ‘living—then it is that a people | bas even passed into the claasi¢ ‘y ot our | tion or crime,and gradually perishes in a country. o | who every week make the laborer of every degree | mort pesitiv For one person t) convertag. | Mentto thatefirct iarep |oucon appealed sgainst the loally abandon industry, which is rendered ne, Cowper having used it in poem on | itwas in Spain; so itis going on rapidly in England. | and kind pay to them balf the proceeds of his indos- | otber person's property to his ure was uo crime, wnlcat | decision, bet the court eonirmed it. ofitable by the cupidity of the gam! Charity to illustrate one of his noblest interpreta- | _ Mr. Sumner en ered into some highly i ing | try or bis‘\oil in prices which go to enrich and ag. | intre wae frauceient futent. It war not suitictent to | Tum Law ov Actous’ Bewkrrts a(t may bo remember- wpe pen gather Ug pene by F Lda tions of the mysterious ways of God to man :— the duced into — A = capes When the food of Pp te peta there ts a genera! deficion sy in tn Jaly Wot the ve ae) of Comores condemn. poseuete of Ge cenamiy. : Eixave 1% pods thus made an object of gambling, and | "Sp Choate here siaicd, and read suthoritice on tho tb rica) winger, 12431. B0e. ae the p le are brought to } ruin when, gomblers seize upon it by the instruments they bire Faved 5 * ba ; Ao oy By ban oe I sgeaed je pamer of money fumat aly increased and } wy ry wena) asain it from one to the either, Comat bog them when called \onr to seamen, meee ne | joonpas of bent dewben be tore ex the noes, soteaty vy rate » . is a of pte ret a, industry tribntary to them in the prices they «8 too crowded and the picture too confased. Mr. | mrons regularly to carry on these operations—ope- | but eomwe of the government tertimony. tnd musicians, On honeay M Oaryaibo appealed sgainet , and thus make the people work chiefly for Samner avoided this too common defect of rors; | retions by which they bleed every man, woman and Mr. Wi Tehon was called, and teatitied that be | thie decision to the linperial Court Wut toe tribune) laid benefit and profit, Industry becomes con It now turns ont that in all probability the wealth | he contented himself with stating the results of his | c..id in the community, and are literally enriched | *A* Séminateaior of thee atate of W.S. Tuckerman’s | it down that it was rigut in principle, it being contrary te tible when it is no guarantees against want and | which Spain received from her American posses | reeearches on this enbject. Having mentioned | with blood, in beaps upon heaps, extracted from the ey be bet Qe Com cs6 the custom hae my p ion to dedect rent sad ¥; & people throw it off when it ceases to be | sions bas pot only been greatly exaggerated, put | the ostentatious boastings of the Spanish rm- | people——when this is done in a nation, and the laws | actrseh the Youwit cf einem wae aot the wheses wes fo ryt dpe Ld gga P al ding Fon A Carvaibe nerative. In other words, when labor is ill paid | that it was incredibly small, and quite sufficient to | ment, Mr. Sumner adduced proofs, ‘erived from conspire against the people to sesist in destroying | qvested to stand dow hie ovidence was considored | to pay afariber om of uit. to-which it held thet Pore je wil! not care to labor; Or, which is the same | produce any rensiblo effict upon the mother coun- | the archives at Seville, of the falsehood of | them by creating those establishments which, for | incempetent, as entitiod, and which bud been ¢yericoned , when labor being we'l paid all ite proceeds are | try.” all that vannting with which Spain was in the | prof't ovt of the »peil, bire out the means of perpe- George W. Pratt testified that he hod dealt in stocks for 5 wed up by the merchont adventurer who taxes All that can be said from Mr. Sumner's interesting | habit of fright all Europe three centuries ago, | irating this tuin—no nation, however witty or in- 16 Oot. 10,—0n Moutay evening the prices every laboring man as much as he pos- | statements and valuable reeearches-—and we think it | leading Europe to believe that her supplies of gold | dustriousthe people, can long continue industrious | theatre 6! Metbou under the new tle can—ifty per cent and even more if he can pret | is all that be says himself—is that the quantity of | and silver were inexhaustible. According to Mr. | and viriuons. So we have scen it in Spain by the | & te hoval I pment of Che cineca hb. Lo such a ‘state of any nation industry old and silver received by the Spanish government | Sumner, all the gold and silver which the govern- | excess of money made of gold—so we see that it is Ixverestixe rrow Lipenta—The National In- | S0kFe® vod authore 2.6.5 x rm Sach aa ef Hetranded languisbes, and ianguishing, aoth aie, | from its trans-Atlantic has beea greatly | ment drew from the conquest of Mexico, and during | in Fnglond by am excose of money, wade of paper. | ieugererr ban the folww ing interesting eieence trom | {782,100 "Ne ture \o prove succesa(el \e hriog ing Wngeiber was the action of money in Spain, such is its We still think that Roberton and | thirty years, would, if coined at our mint, produce | If the wit cf the peasantry, ot the lsbor of the work: | Morrovia—The iiey. Jobm Seye, #pocial ages! of tho | Naykayurerrocnsoe prety portiew of the house eee in England.’ Prices rose as money increased fr only $502,000—a sum less than a single week's sup- | ing clasees, or the fine and lovely qualities of the | Am Colonization Bocrety, nad Feceotiy appotated | Leh mied snc the dress circle oremente’ tawouted bree ount. A few had the money, vnd these nataraliy aa! chietly—other ba, Sot d from California. women a‘’orded any hope whotever for the material | by Our goveroment ogent lor ptored Africans, under | linney (rom the largo nomber o: Is lee who were preromh, ‘h, care not for prices—they affect them not; | causes of course, assisting, tue decacence end mate- his is a surprising statement; but Mr. Sumner is | amclioretion of the conaition of a people, or of help | (De act of Congress of 16) for the supprosrion The performances opeved with Sbakepeare’s delentfall he people,who earn their money hy bard indus | rial ruin of Spain—in other words, the poverty and | gocd suthority in this matter. But if it be consider- | ing them out of general pauperiem and poverty, Ire- pegs At, Ma oe comedy “ Muck Avo \vout Nothing’ —ta which Mra, re ruined in the process of time by the conti- | degradation of her people—to the excess of the cur | ed tbat this araount i only wach specie as the Spa | land onght to be at this doy the richest tountry’ and ened dine Ga Eek eee Singlair enacted tho part of lentricn . acd Me. Heary very of high, artificia! and unnatoral prices. | rency which originated from the golden acquidtions | nish government received in ita fiscal capacity, the roost flourishing people in the whole world. Forher | for travelling, snd in two pours would be on bia wey to & youag Americas actor of great promi, thes money they used to gain will now a0 longe’ | of South America, We do not think as yet that i | statement, though surpnsing, and such as we were | peatontry are wit itself, and the very soul of wit and | jreinieer #10 report tbat our re. | Of Depedict. | re sine at ié weed to buy; itis no longer, therefore, | “ tnrns out,” as said above, that “the wealeh which | not prepated to mre, is neithor strange nor in- | keenne-s: her sons are labor iteelf, embodied in | ceptaeie at Kober jot entirely faithod, wae ‘ia toele roughoot Amerisn, and it cer. e money. Tf in England, by the banking | Spain received was quite insuilicient to produce any | credible. We apprehend that notwitustanding the | rough flesh and blood; and ber women—they aro | tvdeiently sot scmit of the removal into ite fine and otto pan the ocession of hew 3s of mnentbosesng Bente, it has p sentible ¢ upon the mother country.” The realth large pmagnt of gold brought from California into | passing ccmmendation for al! that is lovely and cap- | cemmodioun roome of one half ot our immigrants, those Melbourne audience, Mi in greater excess Shan it was in Spain by the | which Spain received (we ber pardon of our cotem- | the United States, if the amount which passes | tivating in woman. who were the mont weakened by their attacks of fever. very engaging person and @ of South American gold, the only difference ing his notice to this eimple fact throvgh the bands of the government were alone | We ore sorry that, for theae reasons, we pap ny Dy ee Pg Fh voloa is fuil, eh and me h ax naturally belongs to this excess The g trom the quantity of apecie re ccmpuced, #he amount would, like tha’ of the Spa- | coneur with Mr. Sumner in his bopes for Spa rouse of ihe garreon to ovr = Mentaia Tlouse,” wore how Wo dre tt 19 the Dew of England are poorer and more degraded ihe government or on government account. nish goverpment, be found to be comparatively in- however, for hoping: it 18 @ g004 | foc revives Uy ihe puro ait around It invigorated by ace her conception of the obaraser the ple of Spain now sre, or ever bare vonld be deservedly liable to the reprosch of much | significant. Be this as it may, the subject is ex- ontinue to hope for our fellow creatures. hiiul eee breeze, and so cheered up by the int. | Y77, muon Geesh poe Pi | thought to that is, there ia in amount more pauporisin yand some ignorance, it we were to attri- | tremely interesting, the light Mr. Summer has et that it is not possible ferns to do jus ‘ond sosnery that before the close of the ps ngs pO - Aney he whole pia sulfering, more ragged misery among the lecadence of Spain or any other people to | thrown upon it is valuable, and will tend to useful | tice to Mr. Sumner in this review. His lecture was | voy they walking about the he None Bave | fru were teuate ard mane ceurvedly & in Great Britain than there is or ever ina | the wealth received byt nent from foreign | reflection and profitable investigation. well delivered, replete with interest and entertain. | died stree A report, in which | informed you of t ‘wo venture to preaiet ber becoming a prime favorite ob in Spain. Spain hav bad no draining off of Nor co we think that hobertaun, Prescott, There ate many other questions, besides the one | ing instruction, and was received with marks of | t¥o that we t lost ; ono boy from worms, and a thir theatre. Mr. Sediey very eilicientiy rupported Mrs, pwlation, ont Logland has. And yet Kagiand, | or the others, bave ever been guilty of such an al | we have adverted to, of great interest connected | gr d evident satisfaction. Mr. intredneed, v bo died a few hours alter the birth of her chil! | singisir in bie character of “ Benedict,” aod contribavd of the millions of her poot who have come | surdity. ‘The expenditures of & government, how: | with Sain and her present coudition, which it was | #8 occasional illustrations, come amusing and lively | We have every reneon Wo anticipate tbe ‘ul! recovery ani | materially 10 the success of the plese, for nilhongh the work and bread in America, where they bave | ever farge avd even extravagant, never injure a | impossible for Mr. Sumner to discuss in the com: | incidents, with atone time an anecdotal aketch of Roverieport Nm OF the Clahty-cigh: men BOW Bt | Fe94 of the company were by no meane badly, b it, iw still, ws to her masses, the same ape sta- people. on the contrary they are of incalculable | pus of # lecture. Such, among others, is the re- | hie own adventures, all however, strictly pertinent | “bp. sey: further devomedty states that, belioving that | (NETE WS* Dot cne Among them who equld dave beggory and poverty, exceeding that of nefit, when the means of such expenditure are | ligious question. On this, aa well as on that of } to the subject. and ansonght for. These, while they | ali ovr POblis efforte to do good ehovld be commenced, | PAft with adequate suacens. He | ~ - 4 hot derived from oppression, or from unequal and | politics economy, Mr. Summer was predesty si- | helped to ilustrate the oiject and idea in view, and ended ip God. be bad cause! thie resents ‘same canse in beth countries has produced | onerous taxation. Let it be supposed thet the ent. Hut how. t¢ may be asked, would it be pos- | to give life to the picture portrayed, served at the Topriaiely dedicate by re mblagee to thls favorite me effect, but it has produced, it to,a greater isenes in disbursements eighty mil- | sible to discourse of Spain without referring to the | same time o# 4 pleasont relaxation to the gravity of | Dich he wae sided by the Rev Anthony he curtain Mra. Sinciar wae ic in that country where"the cause has had the *, apd that any bank or ka | Inquisition? Mr, 8. was not altogether silent ou | the subject, and as enlivening resting places for the | POW Supertotendeut of tie setuemont, and who bas + Mience After bowing her scknowielge t expansion and the most extensive action. | issue the came’ emount in discounts, here we | this subject, and stated a curious aad -interesting | minds of * ers. . ma Livers siace the aye @! Anan. mech | clivered a vey appropriate addr wrntch When’ put in the hands of a fow, by the | bave two issucs or _ disinirsemente sof.’ | fnet in reference to the *original establishment of | The concinding remarks Of Mr. Sumner | ,,/%'¢ nlao stated that the reeeptacie at Monrovia 18 oom a Greve present for Welr emensnaes, and Fe cfure of it by banks, pais the land, and the | large | amount, the effect: “and soperation | thet institution. 9 His,viewswus that towed its ori- | were exvecially valuable, and produced & | Piraemst tnere ur Deisig goer tee onite’ arebites,, | fretted sat cirrurartanons had prevented her being able nd the manufactures of a country, everything | ef each one of which are diametrically pposijes to inal nt to political and not to religious | great efect, being listened to with breathless ‘ During the neat foarteen ‘ays (rom ths | pyecwe Der arcrarancs Ch ete of veveras dromeus sin the handa of a few, and takes them, ia | each other. That of the government tende to enrich /in fact, according to Mr. Sumner's on and profound — interest. We should ir, Seye denigue to explore tho Queme | works of great merit, t ‘ttle Keown io Melbourne, a - of time, out, of sthethands of \the many, | the country and the people, ° It goes wholly to the | view, which he in some incasure anatained by histori- alter our «opinion if we had ever ries, and thew to proven’ to Bewe, and | p54 the cogsrementar ‘avwinble talent for (hate whom they,were,dists) ated. @Then it is that | employment of lator, directly ofeindirectly. "For if | cal references, originally contrived by Ferdinand aa | at any time been led to think that the people of this | rureey the Now Jersey tract of bigh laud east of that | Progucvonl na: ine safednens of the house "yuh Bot Bw le are roateria}ly, in'the matter of well | it goes to @ creat number of empl-ados and pen- f, financial engine. “The constitution of Aragen, | city are oniy ready to listen to folly and Joe Milier- | pitee, und decido vpn he sto and make ready for the | [ound g hindrance te #ucccas. ~ for then they, ‘the millions, must ‘work sioners, it is expended hy thera in,the employment | bbeerved Mr. S., forbade the king sto confiscate the | ism. Deeply attentive as the audience were through- | SmPeDy by ibe Jobo Sevene, destined to found the la: | id Ww. It is national rain, for when the indas | of Inbor. If, however, this sum *ot eighty. millions property of enidadonos, or sudjeota.” This ebeck | ont the whole course of this able lecture, the im- | ‘Or settlement. qveatbee bee laree » people fost 9 bene ra nh Aan pow Sietetiated in spaying fot eee npon ruval lust and cupidity was efféctnaily removed | pression produced sby+Mr. Sumper's concluding re- OMter: $0 the Sesice athe ™ J > rte y > a who are ii | rears tng *he engray for by the Inquisition, by means ‘of which property as same f wel) as lite was at the command of by adveaturers of Pthe ikipg. Afterwards it becuase oa merks was profound and marked, and they were de- Rean Pe an ncrving of the deep andl ing ailention Wish | died at tis rectde 's whic they were listened to, id hey please; the life of the it theie r and consime those productions which ia the they COR Cipploy oF ROL aa they Please, If Tapriozed. by event Wing-if iW were gppioyed thought, upwards of 925. Trane Ag wome weeks previous bo bad Lee. 6h,

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