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The Correspondent Of The Albany Patriot Writes From New ...

The Correspondent Of The Albany Patriot Writes From New ... image
Parent Issue
Day
17
Month
July
Year
1843
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

gj5 The Correspondent of the Albany Patriot writes from New York, June 30: The business of the city is gradually imnroving- every thinc seems to be settling down on a firmer basis than heretofore. Monev was never 60 plenty, and ony runount can be obtained upon good security. Six viillion e ollart of the U S . loan has just been laken by John Ward & Co. of this citv, at lOli Per cent# an so ty tuem aoam within two days at 104 j! thus realizing in the specuJation over $200,000. Proper and legitímate business, and a system of permanency,z.xe only wanted now, to make rnoney plenty, and to spread'abroad thrift and prosperity. The formar the sagacity and industry of the countr y at the norlh wil! soon find out, while the latter can never be realized wlule elavery lasls and controls the national legielation, as it now doep.' ftj A correspondent of the Tribune gives the following account of the slave whom Mr. Tyler took with him to Boston: H is known that Mr. Tyler haa with him a slave, not his own, but hired of anotlier man, to wait upon him during his absence from Washington. I am tolda colored man of this city has held a conversation with this filave, with a view to induce him to remain l,ere. and thus secure his liberty. He declined to do this, on the ground that his moster has already promised to emancípate him and eatablish him in business when he becon.es of ace, and that lie had a mother at the South whom he did not wish to leave. He stated that his master was also his father, and tha hc had confidence in him that he would fulnl the promise to make him froe, otherwisc he would certainly never go back to slavery.Some of the Whig papers nrc taking President Tyler to tasU for visiting the theatres in New York and Boston, and visiting Mount Auburn on a Sabbath afternoon. How much better example would Mr. Clay set? 'The chivalry' are not very particular about such Puritanical notions.Receipts from the Central Railroad for the mouihof June 1843: From passengers, $0,999 4 i Forfreight, 8,647 82- $14,647 29 Amount recoived, corrcspondiiig month, 1842 10,964 38 CTf Ovving to the sickncss of our compositors, our usual amount of reading maller lias fallen short a litlle for two weeks. We liope to bring il up gain next weck.

Article

Subjects
Old News
Signal of Liberty