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THE NEWYORK HERALD. . =. WHOLE NO. 7697. MORNING EDITION—MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1857. PRICE TWO CENTS. such as it is, will be seized by the looofooos. and, | locefccos, and natives; and unfiedged charlatans, belonging present terrible revolation ts every depa-tment of | The great body of the Maronio Hall mesting were honor- THR STATH FINANCES. THE FINANCIAL CRISIS. a8 the Arabian conquerors did wih [P< frendorrpee ‘Maho’ | to thore fonr divizions, get op in pon meep {ife mey be made & vreful lesson, if we use it with profi | abla, intelligent, suifertog man. But thelr loaders and in- [From the Philadalpaia fmes, seat. 25.) be shadow, entirety break | ont, im cuckvo notes, “fur our slde—gur side”? and discretion. Migators arc the same *iiqne of epecalaiors by whos am- In the midet of ocr Mosuctal diMouliies, wo still havo ‘poor deorepit, suuiily ol: | vislune and separaic boties are nomias! and ridioulous [From the New York Herald, May 3, 1887.) aryl avarice, opposing the ambition and avarios of | painful facte to record Br the last Leg'slatare a inw wa ‘The Crash of 1837 and the Bevalsion of 1857 ‘Tammany Ball. The grea: contest row going on in socis!, political, com. THE TIMBe. ‘Mr Van Baren and his f: lends, #€e country has been hur- | parsed approvrisiing $60,000 or upwards to the payment ie r') an b . ¥. 16 looofo: victory, A triumph | mercial life, x a conters Dstween mind and ignorance—ve- ‘The present evils whinh afflict the ‘fare the joint | Pied tnto the present oriis, Wo despise all partion, all | of # certain clase of ceoal clatma These olaime have been poe mew jhas will rally the whoo | tween science and folly—hei ween morals and corruption— | production of all parties and all classes, y have beou | Sects, alchquesahke. Ftanting our stantard on the eter. | perfected by the boldars, aud prepared lpally for seltle- banal Board, ween tho great spirit of | produced by overbavking, overtrading, overapending, | 2a! peine'ples of practical good sense, public good, and | mept. They havo also boon presanted to tho begin country. A revolution in commerce will also goon at the | between intellectant pas ton. tame oi and ‘and the expenses | civilization and the grov prices: og, overdriving, overreaching, over: the sentimente cf an cnlichienet phifosopby anda pure | by whom they musi be aporoyed, mm the ranks of Tammany crowds will flock | lees Intelieotaa) peouie, i foversarrcwing, overoaling, overdrinking, over. | civilisation, wa shall never hasitateto give merit ite due, | Ove day Inst woek, the Cacal Commissionars mot to dis- demon of party. Were we | over! ould be a revclution of blood | cheatin; Teachings of the Herald in 1837 Appli- cable to 1857, hi known that they | We aro a commercis! and olvilized race, and our weapons | praying, overtinning, overthinking, averpiaying, cver. | folly ite acting, and chariataniem tts coup de grace. TRO | obsrge iho duty thus imposed upon Muoh are to be the ralors of this country horcaftor. TessoD, argument, iast, and mestal anergy, driven wo f, OVertippiing, overfiddiing, orang every country bas been brovght 0 its present ovnciien by the | to tke surprise of every one, tuey suddenly atjoarsad a [From the New York Herald, March 20, 1837.) desperation iad such » oriela as the present taken plane | kind ano desor'ption, except over ploughing, alone ig | Ambition, the pr de, t bape and the avarice of both | without sny action, ap4 started from Harrisburg wo Phils. THE PRESENT PANIC. DANGLNOUS STATE OF THE COUNTRY rex OxLy | 12 the palmy days cfihe Roman opubiio, Martin Van Bu | the foundation °f socety and the cormer-sisue of owvilaa, | Patties. “Martin Nan Baroa and Nicholas Bidaio, in thotr | delphi, in company with the ate Treaca er. fe unas, ren would hay ished unter thousand daggers, On | tion, In such @ country a thiv, with millions of d counterp'o'7, are the authors of the & ut re- jaa the cause of this sudden adjouramoni? Had ween vy ted Tam EDLATS Lape Beg con a a like feions from their corrupt aud | scree ef fine rick land, and plenty cf room to move ta, we iu stalaibg over tho world, rty epirit, | they howd floancial news whish alarmed them? dad the sae Danes tren mere. Sever te pA ge py distipetion, tho Legisiamre won'd | capnos cverniough, and by a very natural coptequence we | Paper money, credit, apeculaiion, avarioe, ambition, car Tunda of the Siate which they bad boas specalming uso faepension ef Banks in Philadelphia, Balth | tion as they are ai this moment We are fh s @ been thrown inty the Hutson river, and fammany | cenrot overmurry, unless a man is mad enough to take | ‘ed to oxlpabie excess, are tho origin and fountain of ihe | been swamped in sonte of the Musncial failuree which bed Wash Pittabi Pies Commeroial panic which threatens to hat phe foley _ Ball rezed 'o iis four’ation, and an otarnel column of | two wives and ip that case the crimo always carries tts | {ervible disasters now overwhelming the whole nation. | been going on? Wi funda of the State 20 deeply in- more, ington, ars ean of seclety—to rain whole Saiee—to lay waste larce | granite, high as tha} whioa hanvs don iho deeds of So. | own pur isbment tt Neither dan weovoriows the | Fartin Van Buren came before the world and tamoted one | yolvedthal it would have embarrassed tha oparations of caster, Harrlburg, Reading cer harper iors ghee Ay Hl my Mudtocrente | 20tfis four thousand years to posterity, with thia in| beaulecus sex, if we educate them propery, dross inem | Party with offizcs— Nicholas Biddle tho there gentry (0 have insued drat s for the $60,00C? Are tho land—to excite the moat in ~ Lay ae) p ription — up ¢l-gapily and simply, tesch them jfety and love, and | Pocket leave of $62,(00each. The fonds to banks in this ofiy now kao vm 10 be insoi- and Wheeling. ‘8 revulsion thas will retard the country for years. Erected to be memory of the American patriots who deliv | make thea fit companions for Immortal beluge, oliher in | 7¢os” which the two master spirite—the two grand ma | vert contrary to law? Ato thos fastitutions umadis to Ik widle vow to talk apd mcurn over the lamentable | cred the R public from tbe Nule red Raired demon of Party | thie worid or ip tbat which is to come, gicians—made ‘be pecple eat, and thus caused the mania | refund at once, and moss the honest orediors of the alo SRSDAAARRAAR MANS O folly and madness which bave onan ioe brink of | foe and loro ve fo lis foundation the Grand Femple waer® | " Rrgr cinco she your 1830 the cooniry has boon rapidly | of the times For six years, tno whole coantry hasbeen | awalt the will cf‘ one of vnese insvivout beaks” for the Call for an Extra Session of the Penne | eee eee eee ee one eee are ee cran 10, 1), Ik 1801. rupoirg Ino ‘le present coudilon. One thing alone has | 10 8.cortinval spitation Under tho Influences of these two | ray ment of tholr just claim ? Will tnusa 70 have walted the hands of the Bask Ls Fo gage Pg le Rac ec PREP proouced it, and that iavndorploagbtag Toasts the great | £7¢a! men. LA¥6 the two principles of tho ancient Porsien | patiently for years have sill to waitlonger, because goa- sylvania Legislature, water who are controlled by on. We have [From ihe New Yer! }, April 19, 1887.) Beil of tha day. Mililona of ‘ores have bean buugns, bat | Felglea, these rivale for power haveoonyulzed the world | tlemen who are intrumed with tho dasucise of tbe Saio been precipitated into this oe ndition 1 A pn generat poliag DA*N OF & NEW CIVILIZATION, it was not pu’ chased to plough, only io sell again, make a | fom centro to circumference. Not only ts tho United | choose to speculate upon thi &o. &. &. iene, tne onknsen eee ige: jon—ihe madnous Rvwit be amusing, wera tt not melancholy, to witnom | gesh and cut oD 7 Staten gaeplog under (he exaltement of their contests, bot ‘This is w question that demands and must havo aq Of the whole community at larg the folly, be ed the prejudice, and the general et sy mptoms of the Kania which has produredtha | 'be blow rv aches to tho centro of the civilized world, even | answer. Ere long the cry will 0 up from all parte of the oo [From the New York Hera'd. Apmil 1, 1837.) quackery of Wail street p ints, woen they attempt io ‘sent re olution, developed themselves in the spriug of | SFOs ® Waste Of waters to Another contnent. Tho whole | State, “ Whet has become of the sirpine funds in the TH REVOLUTION: 1825 ano 1837. explain or ¢: te on the Canres sac woRequences of the 20, when Mr. Von Boren, ® common country iawyor, | orld ‘x stending aghast waiting for the i-sue ofthe | treasury?’ Are wo to havo annthor * Bvostin-Gitsoa’? THE REVULSION OF 1837. We are in the most of a great revola ton, b-ch oommer- rolar cviele, Surrounded with an etmosphera, | whobegus ilfe ty to marketin Kinder: | present wer cavr.ed on between two parties !n the United | operation? Let the poople look to 1 aol. Wo are already SERRA ARAAKRAR AAAS etal pd political. Io cach exiremity of ie mighiy 5 Baby Compored or no bea} heonth of ignorits sad Clee book, fumed with Cologne ler, aad bis yoilw a ene headed by Van Buren, tho other by bo beerily enough. shout having wo pay fetare den. original elem are ‘o0me it ‘J financier ti ore aren; a iri, presemiod the famous Safety e mey or’ om mismanagement. Look (Yrom the New York Herald, Warch 18, 1837 ] tte businees ueighborhoo’, from river to river, has been | Wore Jo ripe ero only capable of talking a abort siguted end csheme of banking iu A}bany. -Ab‘jan Wanp, of Her- Wher, In the years 1828, ’29, ’0, Van Buren stimula'e’ | to i, FAR OMISI8 COME—GREAT COMMERCIAL OALAMITY— | for 9 week tn a terrible convulsion. The banks, the mr 6 Prosent stato of the commercial world equally | bimer, took wp the scheme and pressed {ts adoption In tne | the attack in this tate upon the svecit and sotvency of the THY MONBY PANIC—KUN UPON THR BANKS, PAILURE OF TES MRBARS. JORRPHS. chants, the drokers, the speoulators have been roiling | DAr70W and equally erroneous The Courier shakes it8 | Ascembiy, on the ground of opposition to tue Untied Statos | United Sister Bonk—when he encourtged the illegal re [From the Philadelpiis Ledger Sept 26 | ‘Yesterday was the *‘egioning of thoend’? in New York. | opwardtogethor in one undistinguishable mass cown iho | Pb/sbors, and talks nonsense abont the #vecie olrrular,the | Bank, aud in order to take t26 place of that inatiiution, | moval cf the deposits ku 1823, bo was laying tho forts Tho cl y was ina fever of excitement yesterday, owing ‘The failure of the banking house of tho Merers Josephs & | stream of bankruptcy and ruin By prodigious effort, es ite head, but only si then preparing so get ® eoharier from Congres, From | tion of the present terrible revulsion, ar far ag his soparate | to the curpension of speote caym: pte by the Sauk of Peon- of the banks was announced | by the magic wand of one man, the orlsia has been post may ‘yon’? today, that moment the adv cates of banks ia geuoral were ui. | action conld produce suck an issco = When Nichotas Bid { aylvanis, ard to the ee ra! aporehousion that othe To » few, the apprehen- Eerie prevenied. Nioholas Biddle has only patched | W!th ® long prayer, while pioxing your pocket; but net one | vised into two hostile partes, ao. lpg on“ polition’ princt | dle bired a patr of blookhosds fu Wall atrost at $57,767, @ | banka would do likew vr an early beur in the mora & fow days past, in | op an old festering sore—not healed {t Of these pripta apvear to be imbued with the spirit of | oles aud goiced by po'ilizal motives, Tho same spirit of | Dvnch of whlekers and old clothos included when he con- | ing, crowds gathored in the vivinity of many of these ina. Orleans of several Yet the excitement in the business and banking affars of | Pbilosephy sufficient 10 see the nature of the revolution | hostility ai pearec sovn in Congress. Toe democrats op | tracted and expanded hiv loans, without order or soienre— | tutions, aud telr doora ware Dot tong open before th Wall street has not been greater, deeper, more fieroe ant which ls now begon We wili eniighten them. posed al banking in Congress, but carried it io all leagths | When be ret the whole opposition machine in motion, he | became apparent that there would bo a run upon them. threatening, than the excitement in po'ltios and perty in Toe strvggio now going on inthe commercial world (6 | jn ihe -tates. © COMREqUENnO Was the protracted coattict | Was ccntribullng as mush to tem t aud to destroy our | The auncuncement of tre suspension of eecie pay meng * the Park, in the Military Hall, {0 Masonic Hall, in Tam | SDparently a struggie for toe ape between General Jackson ard the United States Bank, | Merchants as bir rival apd competitor at Albany or Wash. | by the Bank of Pennsylvania wae ealy made, and tho portion of good. There | many Hall A deep and radical revolation for a year pest | *¢0t poiliioal snd commeroial systems hi which, singu'arly enough gave a groter develonement to Even the preeent revulsion might havo beon | policemen wore siatiooéd at the gales 'o preven: the en- ya nredioted thet eur pre | has been ripening and ripening in politics ax well as oom. | Pver einoo the close of the great Enropran war the wild, unreguated banking principles han if the United | Moderated, bur for the pernicious {nfinence of both there | vane of all who had not business with the officers The interest, deranged onr- | merce. The daring madness of the groat Park meoting | ‘ms of France, Exgiand and the Untud ‘ates wore eys- | sinice Bevk bud been renewed ‘en times over. [athe | £rest men snd greater charlatans. In August, September, | following, signed by ie oaehier, was coneptougusly dis- Feecy, Was unnaturaland unstable The general crash of | the attack apon the flour stores, the apgry pastions cf tne | ‘ms of creait or paper currency, otherwise called puhl'c | micat of be curfiic the old notions of » hard money car- | %Dd Octeber last, the groat fabric of creeit began to give | piayo:! at different polzta along the raill:g surrounding the bye change In our system of | multitude, the trembiings of tho merchants, the alarms | "ck In oomsequence of tho great capabilities of this | revey were called into action by tue government to auatain | \#Y, sxd 8 fow Crastor, recorded at the thao, alarmed the | building -— try, and the renolisr bustnees talents of tte people, the | \telf with the mob. Tho people, or the mob, seized upon | publia mind in Oxoher, What was done? Instead Of | Resolved, That thie bank suspend specie paymente until to aayaterm of pay- | of the banks, theortoa cf Tammany Hall the flerce shouts ing distrostfal. Yhe revvl- | of the locofecos, apd tho peals of the whige, are oaly paris | Unie S ates isthe firs: ant of debt, and to possess | this idea wit groater avidity than was inteniod, Tho in | ten leting cif the steam, which might have been done | 4, f ihe H yy Rpeculations in cotton, the | or aymptyms of the great revolution tothe politiceand | Heei of & treasare Any miltioba of guriae | Crease of banks and tho spread of the banking principls | ¥ \b Jers injury than the tresent ¢aily explosions produoe, | “tbe orowa tha’ sineas about the Pennsylvania Bank glot of the markets and scarcity of money. The | con merce of 1837. revenue, which ts tn gold and silvor, imported | gave a wonderful impulse to all kinds of trada andapem | Pob Van Buen and Biddlo cried to tne top of the'r Inngs, | goon protacinde Aa mas scr mls ce ne anaaean } sate different from any that has proceded it In the year 1825 such another, bat a lesser revolation, | frm Eorope = By the best calculators, 18 ap | lation, while at the very same moment begen tho orrront | “no depger’’—‘puton more steam”’—\‘go ahead”’—'tdatnm | Goring ihe real of the “ay. Tn va neiganorhond of Ube Ge Prosperity, prices | took place in the same relations of life apa society. Who | Pears that the whrie amount of ihe specie cur | of hosii'ty to banks which is now daily d wining thow of | your rouln’~ ‘go ahead”—‘‘ntealy boys’’—‘thst’s your ; & Fusing, tatorest rising, apd every one madder than suoiber, | bas forgoiter thatday ? Are there any now inthe @.tc | fency of Frarce. Engiand and the United Matos, has | theirsprcie, Prices rove at the rate of teers por cout | sort’? Van Boren's rafety fucd enka eotually tecreased een al caine Ga ee aan ae hen making fertunes and getting rich. We nave been Mile | thai can remember and profs by the experience of tae two handred aud | Ser annum, pnd thousands who vegan ike yoar poor ended | ‘helr Icanr, when they ovght to have contracted them, ant Se cpamen 2 tho ue hone eniaon with a grandpapwe Pire— blowing np ® besutifal | pact ? mount of current gold and | it rich aud seucy, Biddle tried out that, the specie ctroviar revoked, sil | So junced in te oparreror the morning that aheokm would Dabble, which floats for a few minutes, showing forth its | "In 1828 a revolution took place in oxmmerce, which pros- been she pasts cf the oredits of the commercial | thie unnaiu/al and artificial incroiso of wealth pro | would be well, The bankersof bits parties—the Nan: | Foi he paid unbl afer 1 o'clock. We wary tha’ thoy wero warlegvted hnes end then burs’s into nothingness with a | trated a busdred large honves in our oriucipal cities, dash. duced by the uncalural aud heclic !noreaxe of vaper mo | Clers, wb'g arc Cemoores siike, sald and swore <shero 1 | noe paid, though the notes were redeomed up to the ise Jamen'ation of Oh 1”? ah 1”? “ah 1? fon |? €0 to atome Irnvme nil traders, ano laid the foun b ney, cated all kincs of extravagance, elegance, refing | FO overtrading”—Ctho banks were —“prices were In the midrt of yearly accessions to our nominal banking | dation of that po jution which swept Joba Quincy Doves, bills of exchaug med}, licertloutnest, splordor and show. Everybody set | not tco bigh'’— ‘all's we'l”’— no dar ger””—“put on mors AT the Glas bound. ueek te toe eapttal re are without real capital The derangemen's | Adume and his f o the presidency in 3828 The noy. In the aietribution of the specie about | up his coach—the very clerks in Poarl street kept tuotr | #team”—"go aheat”’—-'damn your + g? abrad”— oes ‘the hold: : y wa men's in our currency have thrown every #p>- | jepisiatien of Cor ‘(be action of the government, hordreo milions hae fownd ite wav to this country, | torses and gigs A iniveraal passion seized all reuks to | ‘tteedy bey, eteady”—Mtbat s yonr sort.” " Ubder thin potgde: be vee te Jaae, me ~ et ineee ont of he haaeee, A om borg from 1818 to 182¢ fomtered speculation, and given ba _— eget song [pang il beocme rlob—rob by work, mot by Industry, not by fru. | new ae — eee Laced Aegan: i Ronee i pe pad run upon the Farmer: ’ and pte Hw gdetecg toc we Dave always rai? wat the only iy; ani care, | birth to a too gren\ en's cement of trate. seoar’ pare! . tit) og ret New Orleans or elsewhere, con tpaed to extend and to en . Eneorer bens, wenus quence or totes batwoliowed. We | orok hums ben thes woreased, the price of perkeg nearly | more equal ais'ribuiion of gnlity, Dut by operating to skoks, baying and selitug real ‘There was e continual stream golog (nto the bask, and in the basis of credit, igh, In | estate, projecting tow: yatting out villa, or planting | large their epgegements, to pay weuricus rates cf interest, ook for more failures. more trouble, a genoral curtailmant | Gonoled, and mechavice’ wages risen beyond proviove | Teality, the approaching orisis In the general system of | Co ton'and cabling ruagroas Toe ee actos toaoft | and to live on exol'ement and impulse afow month: lorg. | ‘We beng po | 1 orecnal tena die tn oe ree of bosipess, a fall of prices, anda diminution of the wages | rates Originating in Ergland ibe revulsion in rade and | modern commercial society will inevitanly kat toa gene *| trades uvious, paraded tho streets, recied round cornors, | ©°—from Oolcber, 1876, anit! March, 1837. Then camo tho | Song, Beluretau o'siork the enaiteme v4 Wo of isbor. tito bee now turned, and nothing can stop | oommerce segan in 1825, which ewept ip one year from | 7@! revolution throughout all sbe civilized countries of the frequented grog ahoos, and asked for double wages Tuc | ‘rrible, long-protracted, | ng-tuspended orssh; and here ~ i. Let those who beve money keep it firmly in thelr | the bigber walks of business one half the leadiag mer. | World. bepks founa similar secret unions to shave the community | We are In ‘he midet of ruin, dovastation, quackery, nos pookew. neh is cash—money is money. chats and capitalists of ibe land. The American government, betng out of debt, can gerd and increase the tpterest of mouey. Clerg:men became | tums, feolery, inaurrcotion, madaess, from all parties aud * e Ld * ‘This singular disruption of confidence in commerce ran, | retela the speole now in its coffers, ani thus place infected with the disorder, aud every clorgyman’s wife | 4)! men slike. roial and Bans of Commerce It was ‘The astounding failcre of the great house of Josephs,and | ike fire in the mouniains, into the elora'ions of poli:ical | Frarce anc Hoglend, In lees then six months, in the midst | musi havo e new church or'a sew pair of breecues covery We, tberefore, charge Martic Vam Buren and Nicholas | understood that all cf these re: eemed sbelr novee end paid their connections in New Orleans, have thrown everytalng | I1fe, In this city we had then just commenced ou- carecr | Of @ terrible polaical revolution, brought on and preceded | seocnd or ibird year In winter, balla, soiries, Jame, par. | wiih belrg the autnors and ipat'cators of tho present scia | Gopeshore. The run upon the Oiy Bask wae prebubty ‘mto confusion, and almost suspended business, Stocks | —we mixed with the oenes—wo knew the men—and we | by the terrible commercial revalaton, Symptoms of these | \jes, at a thousand dollars each, followed with the rapiiiiy | upon the country. ° Of tne others. All day there was & Yontorcay fell 8 to 10 per cent at the first bound, and fow | marked the overpowering eilvo: which te commercial | evens are now beginning t> appear, hore and thare, in | ofsicem power, In summer, tho sea shore, saratoga, tho | We cha'ge the onderstrappers and fanciers of both nesd UaK tee ee would touch, laste or handle. In another part of Our paper | crisis of 1846 bad in laying the foundaitan of a political re- | those countries. like the bubbles on tho enrfaco, or the ead | Cetekill mountains, Niagara—the whole couatry was over. | there evil master spirits with baying oorrap'ly abuned the p - ‘we have given a foll account of this calamity. Althcngh | yolntion, which changed the whole face of the government | reps of rain before the burricsne. In the largo many | run with silly men, silly women, and silly bandboxes The | “Toney power” of the people to their own advantage, but long. Polinemen were stationed om the we did not altogether expect the revelsion to begin in that | in less than three years The numerous b:nsru,toics, | facturing towns, Manchester in E>giaud, Lyons in Franco, | railroad cars, the steamboats, the post coaches, and al! | t0 tre ruta of the letier. steps of ibe bank to prevent persone from entering, all ot wo must say that we s]ways expected sudh & | tbo fali of cobion, the blowing up of bank and tne bord | the workmen ere beginning to be dlacharged. The failure | apecice of conveyance were filed with both cexer, Iauga: | We chargo the dcmoo-atio party with belte & oorrapt, ing Oompelied to tako their places in line, While we in our commercial affairs. Confcosoe ts oom | compacies, the tt*goalion of trade, tho agitailon among | ard disaster among the merchante will lead to failaro and | irg talking, firing, kising, sighing and spending paper | ‘snorant. tobe ming, darteg, imvol-mt, ellqas of aon, wh>, | wore at the Dapk an ol: lady oame up pletel; shaken in the Southern trade, and when the atmos- | the working classes, the general breach of coafdence, | d'ssster spose! Doma pmol The specie now in Eogland | money, The moet expensive habits were Indniged in by | waver the came of “democracy,” have created 200 now | was about to her way in, whea a contider bla rush throachcut gne day, phere wi! clear up no one can tell, The strect is fall of | commuri-ated iteelf wit the rapidity of a shock of elec | 1s not balt is to sapport their present ereditsystem. | ali clases. The man’s wife must have a barks in ix yearn, and walled toe liabilities of the ooua re Fumors, every ono more frightful than another, We have | tricity to the politiosl parties of those days, and laid the | 4 general and universal rout from. the Bank of Eng’and | and a silk dress, Ryrey wife m carrisge and a fae of try from $260,0€0,400 10 $800,6¢0,000 in the samo period | Foe rean bon conaidersble. but bet wo hvavy at ue Norts, an awfal time before us. foundation for the great Gown wili be the consequence of the polisy of the Ameri- | bloods, and the traders and manufacturors filled | of time. ern Liberties, Manufscturera aod Mecnanice’, and Peno in 1838, [Fr:m the New York Horald, Maroh 20, 1837 } ‘Thus was the commercial aevuleion of 1825 the mothar | can government to retain the specie; benoe ageneral revo | inrir baniiations wih splendid bedsteads $2,600 cach, Na, | We cbarg> the whi party wi'h equal folly, heat pom Township. fhe Southwark and Tratesmen’s had very \- or ‘The money market is getting easier. [t ls true 1 of the political revolution of 1828, by which Generel Jack- | lution will be generated over the whole civilized world Jeon workatends $100 each, and statues of bnavery, ond all kinds of speculation in their leaders » Qalisie who shaved at 2, nal’ per cent @ month have got pel reeched 70st be De and thus also wili the commer. teak cee & retorn to the prices and values of the six. emus Go Mediote rechping in the moat isevrow ahs seente—ia Fo plone gibeeyn ra in seats tah tarts nen Gr take eee A ravers ie most cares There revulsion sation for a similar revolu- prove! imag" 1th the visions of he gemere! fraud, rewitg the wor extrave pe mga tn yg yd : {ion im the government and the 7a tas i The great revolution now in is not in the break. | he or 8 bine ty aud o eott aren Has and | gence and folly as much as they could. Subject of comversation—in the stores, counting roome, kebops and market places In all the croeds abont There can ve xo wisiake inthis opinioa. We speak from | ing up of a few cotton houses in New Orleans, a few job- 4. aimiling exterior, the groseest licen. | We charge the loosfoco pany with hypocrisy in the | tne, exporionce--we p-int 4 undenlaole facta-we hear the | bers or Importers in New York, or a fow bankers in Loa. Some of the great now, Like Magtern | bead and heart, and foly tn the tail—wi'h making a foot | the banks gl gala 4 ‘votoe of ard we know thai yoloo as wellas we do | don It is the begirning of @ genera! revolution ia the | Parbas, Kept heir harems in diffe sections of tre city | ish war on all credit end all bavks, when a mode. the eccents of a mother’s lips whole artifcialframe of modern society—in their thoughts, | — splendid establishments, fitted up with costly farniiure | ration fr the use of the system is absolutely noocw At this moment there are three parties tn the field, | !p their heaps im thetr babite, as well as in the prices | and cous vaintings of Venus and Adonis, Ariedne in | ery for a new and growing country like the United candidate--the government the ber States, each havin ¥ and values of all commodities means of the abases of or the beautiful Qaeen of ‘bething in the 5 2 Geena Toe ary nich supports | We paper symem, gold and sliver, lta beaie have been tn. | tvol irasalccent Orndos, designations runaway watchor, | We charge all the editors of Wall street with after folly imud~u <a." matzed fee'ing—plty, od henrtuutbayepuaey Tor ioe | the government tein the last sgoaice of deatr. Tre pub. | derrated and undervaited The specie of the wrrld is now | Grim. cons , breaking up ail vac ties of Pte Arcee mos and ignorance, in ascribing te the specie rirsular the origia ‘usfortunaic par wo LD ‘who have failed—some of them the | lic measures which have sided in producing the present seeking and will f-roe an adjustment By one of those dis- | ments became as plenty a4 blackberries in a ripe garden. | cf the present ruin, when they are as guilty of the rosult BCENBA IN PHILADELPHIA. Gleverest men in the world. On the othor hand thero is a | state of excttement—thore ridiculous commercial laws of | Pensations of Providence, @ republican government, the | The marriage tle, after tho zeat of novelty had oalied upon | a8 say other body of mon in the pat!os. [From the Philadelphia Bulletin, sept. 26. } general joy eridently stealing over tho whole city at tae | Congress, which are te origin of tho great mischief, aro | most ignorant of any that ever rosched power in the | tne evpetite, was broken as easily and unooncernediy as | And, finally, wo chargo all mos, women, and hodics, oF ‘The excitement sont tee cliy monetary tamitations, Freapect of reef aid return to moderation ‘an the good equally ¥0 be ascribed to all parties. | They were the joint | U infted tates, bas blondered upon & measure that pro | you would break pipe stem; and clorg) mea wn4 moral. Sesto Ss ee Sikes Bis Sad exwavegeses te | VIE Oeire anne! can en tos beainenmanees result cf miseravie U over! an re jucy sim and economy — re oa von that ihe} aa ld steady wale systems of commerce. We expect, how party epiris, government both France lute were found to palliate and excuse the disruption of Baya oe Benepe pegged ge Balm yng poked thie morning; but ike lervorl.te this morsing belonged ‘more additional fallares—then a sosso! the opposiiion alike. But the government aione will | Fngland—a revolution which will most Itkely destray for- | thore sscrod principles of religion and virwue under the | "10 yet in pmaay more additional failaroy then & wosoa O | suitor ibe puutahment and pay'tne penalty. Nothing that | ever ihe existenee of mona.chy im both countries.” The | rertme of ine new pllewophy. © braven—to recollect that though credit Is gone, end fine | toa different olage from tbat which wee prom'neut oa ‘anothor scene of speculation—then a evalaon, tilts: the goverumens can do can stop the revelation. In auch s | #pecie policy of Andrew Jeckson, and bis looofreo obsti- |."“uon ia opty & feeble pictore of the terrible distolatenses | furnitare if gone, all tre char! lee of It'e » et remaia—iore, | Friday. Tho rua npn ok shoat « mi ton ands ‘us up to 1860 before we explode again. coumtry as the United ates or Eaglana, the oor Bacy still cop‘inued by bis successor, will produce the | of manners, Aho subversion of moral principle, the do. | sfleoticn, industry, good senso and obee fulness are yet | Dalf of dollars out of tho vaaits of the <ifferent iastivations, ‘From the New York Herald, March 24, 1827. Moercial class, ike Sameon under the portico Oger same effect upon the civi ization of the Cee! atruotion of truth, and the general corraption of ihe mind | among vs [+t us not dorair- tur only pot down ali | Snd the prealdents of the various banks met yesterday ee ee ee eee say mye | Handle, canned be struck down wittovt pulling the iduis- | which the derangement of the finances of Lovie XV1. did | and beart, which bave followed the foarfal augwentation | 1arty—let ue pat up reason good sense and mderatinn. | SMernocn and determined to rodeom thelr emal er notes a iy vere: o ow Los ae robe mg jee | Hous fano with bim in the general crash Miserable, igno | 1n the latter part of the cighieenth. By retaining the spocle | of speculation and overtrading, stimulated by overbank. | Let our benatifel young married women play love on tho | Only, today. Thie devermisation was gone ally koown il bring own, prices of everything Lop = rant, dirty, rum-drinking policians may tak aod jeer at | Dere, the whole form of socioty will recetve a blow tha: | ing, and set in motion by the Overaction of political gue ‘snd look offener into tho long deserted ktoben. Let | last night, amd to-day it was announced in all the news- | sonal vattorings lead em g ree months. the first mi thunder ‘ the mercan:ile classes as taey please. Lei the political | will to revolatioa, and perhaps to war, in Eu Wo ties. The great source of the evils we now feel, is flvt lowe with tye dandies, and carn ofterer their | papers. So ie ee eerie Tr, | power at Washington sirike to ‘ab carth the apts Gf coe | have passed throegh & loog seasca of peach. ‘Too elellined | Peeitre kaso reed” ‘cnderplonghing--noih'ng bat un. | buabend’s stockings, or try to make a pudding o a home Fuis morning the people who 40 net rend the afterncen beck ‘ow York By & natural process—a revulsion | Gerce andin afew months that unchalced spirit will start | World is changed to what is was. Men’s minds aro waking | derploug ing. ther underploughing. Wo bave aban. | made cake Let our young men goto work. { they can | DOwsPepers Orat learnec of the rug, ani overy indteidoal tm commerco—we shall agein see mederate prices = up, in tenfold strength, and tear the miscrabie democratic | vp s#frem adream They are rubbing their oyoe, ask- | doned the grees fel the sft river banks, the farm- | not get work in town, g», ye lazy rogues, into the country, | Of this class who bad a five dollar bill stowed away for & the Altay back of power, and kick tt to perci- at ie the matter ’’’—and woadering at the notions {be healthy ploogh, for rpeculation, banking, bey. | and turn plougtmen. Ii 's ‘eligbtful to kiss one’s sweet | reny Cay, became uneasy for fear of tho consequences, A b 7s iteo? Ib 1s the saprem 007 of mind, g-nius, Mitecateuned for = rn Seay pw. ‘ Meg, talking polidos, flirting and making » oney a 8 green tree, with ihe happy virds ating = Pedy Bin yh oi Bhn g and Deed to the neigndor- an justry, over avarice, fanatt stem, pooria} iv 1 carcel reyoln'ion to | The whole publ 4 bas beco diseased, and Mat vi e ranches, cl for very joy, au ae "8 locate: Toese events aro ditier but salutary. We must meet | Gronsennees and folly. Democracy and the power the governments of France and Ragland should lead to fe ate ~ eer ee ncal | ol bsovee ching Cows eat Otaied Gs’ kaneoed anem THE 8CR#G ANOUT THE HANK DOORS them. The revolation bes come, and we must go through | berg ip an enlightened age are mi erable deluaions— war, it will be one of tbe mort original and mighty evente | causes of ibe terrible morsl, political, and commercial | impria’ed op ihe calm wife's rosy !pa, Let ihe voung ia | Long before business hours crowds of parsons gathered Bit is idle, as the Wail — ee than ibe fata pr ord tbat ever yet opened upon ap artoniahed world. It will bo | ceeclation which apreads ‘over the country. Marim Van | dice of fashion only tske Wak toes 6 ween ie brentiway upon tho steps of the principal backs and bared ap tempt to throw the whole blame on late —., and telent, boat will r le atinet. Among tho great oom. | ® war of steam powor—it will bo a war of scien against d bie aasoctates Srat introduced the union of poit- | —<Crena trem: elves In rarrow sleeves, if toy say #0—at nat the doors as (hoogh they wore improved with the te. ia no more guilty than Nioholss | orcial c'ast—and by this term we mian the merchant, | !gnorence—of pew thoughts and fresh feelings agatast ola Dank Hitine and speculation in thie Stale He | lot the fabrios do cheap as beanbful, and by no moans gaze | COnvictin thatthere were Parely funds inside #uMolrn\ to Biddle that was made on the system that | poor banke: , broker, or mecbanic, who ts edacatci, | withered prejudices Napoleons will start uo at atthe loafers on Boycen’s ateps. And above all, iat an | mest their demands, end unices they ware quick gown, Ll intelligent, and understands the principles of doing busi’ | every point. In euch a state of conflict, the paper curren stem, whieh Orat agitated | -ot np and eiash up Martin Van Buren and Nicholas @iddie | lnride, some fortunate ‘adividual would obtala ihe cove, “ breeches DesB—among the great commercial class is the ultimate | cles sna banking systems will be the first to vanish like Je elements of banking throng! for (heir /pflaence t» producing the crisiy, but let usesieem | sold. dorsemen' ‘end sovereign power of this grea} counters, Charlaans | the palace of Aladdin Gold and aftver will be the ouly ibem—bdoth for iheir ene: ity .p private their genile Moat of thoes eager todividcals were either Lrish or Ger- Brarce and fools may overpower ai a time, for business men pre | Currency-—kings, priests and empe ore, bankers aud peo manly (raite in general soolety, and onsider them only ag | ™&Ds, and tee latter, particularly, appeared wrrified at the (wo berowe of desiraction wih which tho Almighty | te fear of meetirg with a los. Among she throng vore rouse them to action at now they are roused, let the rade | will be Presidents, Congresamen, generals, engineers, ei! bas soourged us for our wickedness. numerous women, oo, who were alar.ned at the reports band of government aitempt to strike them vo the ground, | tors, and pretly women. 1 in heaven—Martin Vi 3 which were flying about thick and fast, Ie several ower Jet the spirit of democracy brace iteelf to the contest wi.h {From the New York Herald, April 2t, 1837.) y isoover colled wp jn any the doors of the banks were opened before the usual ten th d barrels of whiskey, and they cannot send FROG RES OF REVOLUTION. burning corner In the other place: — THD RBVULSION OF 1857. by ibe re beeps Ting Mh ped wore Invited laside for minding thetr own wffaire jdtivg in poliser. Bot | ulatore, will be no more—and the great spirits of the oarth to be Ccngrese—sbors sigh teat with Intelligent and jo mind ‘The general rovolution tn the social Wig on a th WAL niata, which f Fee Tan blame for tale. tn consequence of this aw | ‘hevran ino multade could moet ihe cohorts of Uswar or | inthe commercial Tevuhiony advances, with = tapiny tities tb woah JP Oem of In — rhea \en e’elods arvived. ned iNo Gaore wore opened te revenue inoreared—the surplus became immenso— feartol ‘Ominous to all those tm powor and authority, | be site like bie ary abd teacher in eoiphur below tho publie, the :oeno was amusing; the veople denoribed nd Ke uso excited the vorncity and avarice of all the ‘evolution both In politios and commerce is | The disorder increase x gliab, and use DO mincing words THE PANIC IN PENNSYLVANIA, Toned up pell mell io ihe paying telinr’s couner, and \n- took jobbers in New York and Philadelphia, The stock p ery day and at every point. Dis | We treet ie Meee so the [nssvenoe, to the nimi te , atiolly awaited thelr t ‘Aa th of th : 4 reer, which will lear up from ils foundation | organization \« breaking out all over te country. In the a » piletty [From the ihiladeipois Press, Sept. 26 | iy aw ety turne. 19 great majoriiy e with the United States Bank enjoyed all an Vi , 7 .. the frogality, to ‘he purity of anciont times Wo must Pants redvemed. their rmalier blls, iheso frightened cote ad: ‘of thie ns, and thetr 4 and the roots of Martin Van Buren's aiminitratin. Uniow | Sooihern Stace stop inws are talked of, inthe West tne 4, ‘and bid by toholl. We must study SUSPENSION OF SFRCIE PAYMENT BY TRE BANKS OF holders were soon relieved of ‘weir pacor cad eae foars, - he calls Congress icgether inswntly his fate is sealed All | officers of justice aro 4, | quit the devi PHILADELPIA. ee ete Anat igh mercy ohaceed the mercer | ‘Be 0ld questions of the day are gone forever—broken .o | York, those wb” appeal to the laws for she liquitation of | She morale of our pilgrim ‘ethers. We must throw Salen | we gre informed, upon the withority of a gouileman, | Shd they wont aon thelr way rejolciog. All this was a0 then took pleco, which merely ohanged the current | sicms Abolition is folly—the great stap'e of the south | debts, are beginning to bs denounced by the Wall sirect | ®2\ #pecuiaiion over soar: Present revulsion if & | nresicent of one of the city borks, that he wan de,mated ab Stra bed tote tebe a nail doc inlos Wehto oe nak Of speculation, but cid pot prevent ite growth. Severs! ators in Wall strees were by that process thro n on backs; bat the general mania, set on foot by the failing—dieaster and confarion everywhere. The firet | papers as if hey had perpetrated heinous offences. It ie | Jost and mortied dispensation of Divire Providence upon | 4 ru1) meeting of the presid vm of this revolution will next week go forth from | even reormmended to the weroantile community to refuse | OUF Kenere! wickedness and folly. Wo Jorervo all we kot, | Aiba held f : of ail the benks of Phi'e- | 4, ery liule epecio we obedien se to the laws, and to cheat the government out of | ten mos moro. The Almighty wub a iinger of A claims. on, to inform the public ea ong 2 euhiying tele conquering and to conqeer. A ratical revolu prev agreed to recommend © Geties Sete Bask and tho goverament, con)-temty and ¢ throes of partorition. Not only will the Tam- | the duties impowed By the acts of Con At otbor ur doom, tp the Aurora Boros \s, gorogs the | their respective boarde this morning ® tomporary suspen ee a as oe ee Severally, stil! went on, and now specu!s ors came into the omeat pariy be defeated, but tt ts doadifal if | points « general ruspension of eprcie pay men! jel ber- men of specie fi ymonte and neo tas or All the banks declined to day to casi depositors’ checks, ) Our everiasti ond, eoke wer } the Candi(aves of three wards out of seven. | ated upon, the iesue of post notes by the banks, and a | We have neglecied our smiling felis, our ME | wll be held tui . but they all * aed the chooks were var fortile'valon, our laxw abd hil aides, for vanity gambling, vice and (mmorality. then used in par aoe featiee oteer banks, The Mechanioe’ B ‘In 1834 the current increased, The new squares ap ace it, wo bear {t, we feol it, and we do not a. Deeply as we reg et that danke have onnolnded fpocie and there wan little or no town wore bolli—great profits made in Inte near towa— | Yoow pus we rejvice ath. I scramble through all ravke of society Bpeculations began also in jhe South—cotion caltare in » Y . Sed. Ils ts mndnamy nts frner pogrom an? | gigi mer eee mne, nied end tn reais | Be me wit et reveoton and dorgaiaion mally | EOAUTE aden gare wi sressroramrenses glow” at remove dare te mo | Ane dor titan te Continued increasing np to 1836 tn July, when {t had reasb litteal fanatio'sm, the mere strength of umbere | tn the mereantile world which have already | "peecy woolse) 8 again, Lt ig with pharge to ourrelves, our felloe men ‘and our great city ed tte height. In the course of events prices of ince the world began it has done so, aud as long as the have precipitated many hundred famiios | vf Drow earn our dally bread ot, revolution, insar. ‘State. Tho first of these duti fe to thing sere ‘world insta °0 also. " parative poverty. | 1ecilon, or piilage, will only ‘lestro7 the few elemenia of |) tout no harm comes to our great (From the New York Herald, April 8, 1837 } ri le famiiire aro siri "ped forever of sheir plamage i a tad fashionable speculators mot at | 2 tbe farmers, meobanice an ore: PROGRESS OF THM REVOLUTION, re—and tT ee and checks so marked by banks will De re- the Masonic Hail, ani! becauge the bublies bat burst by ‘The revolution advances. From point of be com. ne opie! mer bants who have bravely siommed f ag | eight, they seemed ready to break in a thon pay ment of debts cus thie inetita jon.’” yass—from the South from the West, from the Fast, tae Tomeles, herdly tarowh aot ee fon lg be which — 80! get, enum: i of North America, tse fvadesmen’s ead tho symploma of we great obaagein poitice and ts commerce, | devcloes honey moos, have prospect opened to the: tm tho bariness of lifo, and im the barinoss of govern: | of a long, eheerlese ard forlorn life. Never, perhaps, did ment, are borne to us by every wall, and on every wind. | such a radical revolation in society take piace 1p any coun- tacos at Van Buren—at Van Buren—a g: Mechan, Kk all ite notes protie cf banks, bat who always bear the burden of & | wiinin ine den-imoation of $10 pad Beginning in the large citlen, in whiob are the of | try sate now going on in this fair, rich and smiling Ian, general bankroptsy, demand onr utmost ollcliade Rash Gs, Dut failureant Aissatsr arenow cor oaly remedy, | OOF various local systems, the excttomen' and gaaié, Brad. | Some cf the privaie historiee growing out of he French freaserés will bart them mos). The banks aro still tr Wsleoatat vally and by stars, spread to the Interior Mal remote 1792 may furnish parallel instanos to the conditien to tnfict tx )ary upon the commonity, and while towne and viiages kn covatry places I of pride, elegance, wealth, beauty an! gran. many of those who have enjoyed t10 favors of those \uel ‘This is a singular country, a repadiic, deor to the lowest depths of ir. Nowhere else. Ife burning thunder )olt from that aky tutions will escape the blow, yet it will eavily upon by the popular will, lu yet provents ® state of soc ond Many fen ilies and persons of distinction, whose wealth rn the ‘midst of a all, would be eotbing those who bave been toiling ia thetr ham#o avocations, Row WILL You save ni? . content with the scanty rewards of booest indue'ry. | ot we deserve for our folly and wickedoee, | C5 hear this lending fact in our minds in the course of our Soo ts py TL sotion upen the present emergency. «1 on Our commercial syvtem. gone forever. cies of ancient Greece or more modern Italy. Athens, | Others preparing to rpend the next summer in Parie or Sparta, Rome, Florence, Venice, Gereva, were more or | Florence, uncler the smiling sky of Franoo, or in the Je note holders who bet fy mrured leon coracies In one'pertod of their pride, but ruined | Kelous groves of Italy, have to a>ardon their fashionable We are giad to know that several of the leading banks pleesani|y askod the tlier “how they wou! sod biladed with military spirit and miliary ambition. | enterprises, ‘od will’dooe be fered to wander to tue omen Fe ee erthe “Geta | have revolved to fake Immediate stops preparatory Wo re- Those who id gold got it, while others ate They were single cities, actuated by single Tais | rica of the West in search of more subsirtence, The jsf Aner gt qeaiang, ‘and we trast it may eer bo | Stmption. When wo re‘icot that all tho great intorosts of received small silver, (he worn. © Fer WO #00 | reat republic of the Went is « collection of such democra- | jonable milliners in Broadway ave on the verge of despair. +~ J Ay? Tee tal wo abten pean varoeeh nea gricalre are in s'condition of prosperity, we caanot bat ratification. Tele poilte ead ascommo- By the express ‘ve acoounta from | Sl@8, Rroured up togethor, and acting as one body, under | We learn tha‘ all the orders for the summer have oon FO ee ee a eee ee none coRBE | ope that the present gloom will pass off’ in a compars- | daiing course put the poorer clage of note holders io an New Orleans Charice the intioonce of x new apéciee of palioal, commersiai,and | counterman:t«, oF, ea one of the most fathionahe of them pA — bed ng to loaghieg tively short time; and when wo romombor tho stringent ‘ten to the fariabie, | S0cial princioles, We ferm a great complex machine, | calle it, ‘the isdiee what have given me orders for tho | poll Inston es = Lame) By hovers = 4 iawe pgaine\ soepensicn, we may realize that |t ls the trae mm LIVED. but rather 4 ated and sot in motion by the power of the prees and | werry Paris fashions, bave protested the most on | instee Poe elit te | " iv Yin Of every bark to take steps to resume sposte pay The course parted by the majority of tho banks had money affair power of steam. Nothing, , bus the same | them.” Broadway is now almost devtitate of gay equi. | IRE ® moral. plovus, aoe quiet fi of indalging 10 | sents before the law hat had time to operate, the elect of allay ing tho excitement among the excita ‘le fs rising—flour thing ia | *Pty intelligence and ecience which creates the social | pages, and a person on foot can cross that strost without | *! jousness and tsnmeraliiy. Meanw bile, friends, be of good cheer. Do not give way Ne who were #0 clamorous early in the day. Baring falling of much a country can preserve it from revola- | endangering hie limbe. (From the New York Heral!, Mey 6, 1897.) to ince nriderate action. Boar and fovbear. This is no time forencon crowds of Idlers stood gazing a6 the outside o! ‘The Virg! their bank | '0m-an4 bloodebed. In all ancient or modern democracies, There nover was such # gonert! sweep of the specula- TRUB CAUSES OF THE REVOLUTION--THR REMEDY. for violent impelecs. a“ : eapital to ‘come | the lee way of iho social systems was corrected by a roro. | tore—-of the pareenus, of the nobility. of the bau monde — The Guurier and Enquirer reads « lecture to the lovo NOTES OF SMALL DEWOMTNATIONS from‘ lation of blood sod of plunder, Here « new stato of Of al hove erases of fauhicnable society, who bare been foro meeting that wee bell in the Park on Wedaseday, ‘We learn that ihe Presidente of several of the banks of (From the 837 society exists, with new principles of action, new im- | figuring atall the waterirg places for the Inst five or six | and talks seriously te thom om their ‘infiammatory this city bave ex; & determination to do all in their ‘The ban a pulses, and Dew powers of recovery. ears. The rout is overwhelming, If it were confined | cards,’ “their love of notoriety,” “their dangerous doo- | power to bring te | regamption of specie pay: ory ‘notes by she ‘We bare now reached! ons of those arises when the that clare of society, there would be something to re- | trines,’’ {their lntererted and leaders,” ond. | ments at an early Cay. ‘¢ hove they may succeed. Bat a: Sates ‘thie be ¢ | Spirit of Business and tho Spirit of og ot engaged in | joice at and be glad ; but anfortamately the Innocent | ing 8 long bill of ind’ Inw the terms “dea. | whaever may be their gevera! policy we carncatly incist ‘Wowid |i not on! per cont a contict. Dearing the leet ten or years, while | and the guilty are javolved alike in the goaeral wreok of | ojnte,” “ruinous,” “bae men,” &o, ram through { to | that immediate measures be taken to reieem in epocie month? Ai thi but of a; bod; Seu carntd duel mi the bigh creoit system. We bardly haves throb of pity | the all thetr notes of smal! denominatione—certainty all thetr those who ou ‘ember. pation tm every art of civilixed life, for the mob of specuiaiors; but for the poor femaler, who, ‘The impudenos, the barefeoed impudence of these re- | five, and if possible, all their ten dollar bills. Franmenia n ve been by the ties of kindred, love and aifection, are involved in | marks, coming from such & source, is oe? wom onght not, under any circumstances, 1) extent to doing en acted the general calamity, we are traly sorry-—we traly re- a aptrit of prey or a epirit of contempt without a | small notes, »! that {t shold do to Dusiness on ever. & Rendered by the atrocious system of fashionable | carallel. What ls the Qourier and Enquirer? Who are ite | Before ihe run upon the Lf day te amount of ‘The embarrasaments cont of the rding schools, recéntly introduce! among as, utterly | condectors? What forms tho cliqoe of that concarn’ What | specto in their vauite wae nearly, if not quite, eqoal to their ha ‘country trcieat for all Ube household purseses of hawan fife, teelr | haye beon—what arcihelr optnione? circvlation. about 8,500,000, and ine re are mer: ‘eo four oF deatiny is embittere: with the consciousness of incapaltti. Bot a short week rinoe tame journal framed the | iatter abou $4,0(0,%0. Bat yesterday noarly 61,5000,000 x monthe a aingle ty to buffet the rigid billows of the futare Atrootove plan of beginning an inrurrection by counsellieg | of specic was drawn from them, a largo portion if which ‘word uttered depend ‘We do not pity, therefore, any epoculator, or any clase | the merchants to d! lawa ofthe land. It boidly | waa received by dsposttors, who had sb 04 upon, speculation of epecuiaiors who are destroyed by the existing revnl- | and ¢aringly came before this communtiy, and actually | the baaks. The continuatiw of a drain npon them tbe Keyra tion, bot we weep aed mourn for the poor, biushing, | aavired the public, not only to resist the execution of the | by 4 would spesdity exhanst reir resvarose U defencelers, Innocent, beanteous females, who | ia bra by myeerins Mam oes Ominous invendoes in- | the of our existing banking laws disortminates be. ive inthe eoneral crash. They have bern de the aanenin UF to Washington and bury bis pwern thar coligation 0 reseows in cotved, betrayed, bested, aod ently abered by the folly | poigrard in \be breast of the President. This same paper | the balances dve to depositors, and whilat ‘There can be no mistake in the of the times Ther of the ege—the pride of thetr fathers and brothere—the | and its cliqae mot in Masonic Hall, passed a series of in | nese el ‘many men whe regard the lato movement of We deep and overwhelming Fay ay varity of mothers, and the goneral laxity of a corrapt aad murreotiopary and ridioulo is reedtutions, ( nied a Com. | thé banks ae a measure of fe Gommerce and In politics—a radical change |n all the great wioked . These are the wicked and unprincipled | mittee to go to Washington, and continued the samegtrain | it rather benefit than (njury, ther: Desiness avenues of life lly approaching @ crisis men, in the rising tide of sproslation, with | of agitation and incipient revolution, until {t saw an ther | console the great body of note G@ronghout the country, the last two oF three contempt upon their more mocderrte, sedate, industrious | party take the field, to countersot the madness and folly of | who have amali notes of $$ or $1 j ph LN mpeculators have sows neighbors. Suoh men deserve atter prostration. They | the merchants, by similar (olly ana equal madnoms in the | their hard labors, and who can il) aiTord to have them, whi they to reap the storm. have led the world sstray--the men an! women oqual- | rabbie. ‘eves for ashert time, discredited. Let much 5 Preparations are making in this city for an eleotion that ly 99. Not content with theee tafamoue arowsls and courses, | fore, be protected, {t ous cause no very serious diffisal evidently had an cy tmvolves ® gonoral revolution throughout the Union. With the prevent terrible train of evils before ae, we | some of the clique of this journal actoally, but in‘ireotly, | to the banks to redeem thoir small rotes, and whether stand. here can be no mistake. We hear |t—we see Iwo feo! troet that al! persons in this community wil! panse and Si. & body of 10,000 of a committos | dose or not, their first dnty ie dne to thetr small pote hold. “On, 1 don't exactly know; ite a— Ah, (here & f—we can put our right finger on it, take ® leseon, Lat there be « general reform im owe social | to march to Washt and ‘he government at | ere, who never receive their favors, who canoot afford, | mutnal’ aoquaintence pamed the indie) Mra ——, oy -) UY Fong) ont such @ Fe system. Les edooation, manners, morals, and life iwelf be pT ‘and merchants bal failed im bu. | acd should not be oslied upon, to bear the bardes of thet? | how do you do? {did mot see you ss charsh on Sunday, imbeoility and weakness of Mr Van Baren's ad- anged (or the better. Inevead of building gay and lordly | sinew and ould not pay their debia. Jones. Thore who hold uctes of ‘argo denominations can | and I wanted to tell you about that pattern for Jane's yyy siready begia t be developed. it cresps cborehes, and enlarying empty and pompous clergy, let as Yet in the face of inoendiauy appeals, these atro- | better walt for the genoral rerumption, which, we hope, | collar.” along & reptile—it - afraid of , | plant religion im our hearts, modesty in ovr condact, | cious vaitions these wicked an! unprincipled at | will take piace at an cariy but we protemt against the Here the conversation took an entirely di(ferent range, . energetic correms Onmare sree ure ia) | worsh!p God In simplicity and In troth, aed ebot v9 all the | tempte at Inaurreotfon, the same clique of the Oouri and | laboring mom, tho mechanics, the tolling masses who earn | and our reporter lom the luminous dedaition of what ine the tone of Genera! ‘under the of party , the country ie | fashionable boarding schocis. They have been the hot | Fnowirer has the folly to heap oppretrium oa ite rival | thelr broad by the sweat of their brows, boing obliged to | clearing house wes, which the financial indy seemed ooofooes | reduced to 8 state of rain and degradation, beds of pestilence and corraption, These vain and empty | agita ers in the Park who, as ‘aa consistency, honor, | bear the brent of exirting dimoutties, e aro satiafied, | about to give thetr head. In this city the revolotion begine—a revolution that will | pretenders, who, if the beet man in the community wool! | prinetple, decenoy, interrily, indostry, ani, abore too, that to business men generally ihe redomp toa of small Wo heard another iady exclaim to a frient, ‘ Well, jmait of Cor | and must cure the disordors of the times. Next week an | object to their extravagant cl ee, Wonld way, ‘oh! he spect and oatoem for the laws are involved, » notee in specie would bo @ highly socepianie movement, | Mary, I hope you've had oo trouble with notes this - oe vegies. trough the baile boxes, cy, rreage hom. | surntte teva cay, MiiOny, rest sonnblage 0 8. poasibte Per sharia Fenn > carp | promere Waien OM) be ine nemomae mertemeetine | onomea th Mary, “and Ifwont right dows to — ~ | ony “ win , FOOM- | sombiage aa it is possible for imtegrity in rage w #0 pressure which # 18 necessary nonesquence of the | ‘‘Inderd I have,” said ‘and Ijwont right dowa Unto the drooping hoaria ot his followers. Thy tastio of | selves under We ridicolous named of whige, demoeraie | jude, and truccigyaiion of charger? Ialstorttne In 1800. i had Paws | Preeeat aafortunn'e ooudition of eur tonelary alsre the sere this morbing and wade Joba give ae silver, 60