THE WEATHER. • LAT 07 TNT LAST aApea Dedicatee Ito tie Ladies. I really vow:—l almost swear! . (Botthat won't do for ladiev.) Botaeteittly I do declare-, The weather now too bid is. Now do but think. for two whole weeks; (Mv conscience what an age,) The elements seem tmmspireitto wreak On ni. poor girli their rap. Since Tuesday week, (onluelty day.) It's nothing done but rain: •Soppnae it has,. what then , " you say, . - MYhy should the girls complain?" "Because we ladies love to roam,- How well, you've no conception— And now two weeks I've staid at home, 'With but one day's.eaAption. I started out the ether day, (I hate to think upon . To co a shopping and display My new and handsome bonnet: tierore I 'went, I searched the sky To find a cloud, in vain; An hour slier. coming home, Was fairly drenched in rain I And thus it is the weather goes, Alternate shine and shower: - And when 'tis clearest, no one knows But 'twill rain within an hour. Thus when at morn, you wake, and 6n4 The sky is clear and bright, You always may be certain That 'twill rain before 'tis night! From the Columbus Journal: 0 YES! I TAKE THE PAPERS., fr OEOIIO6 C. WALLIS. Oh pis, I take the papers— .] heir trifling pAt is never missed, Although I've stood for forty years Upbn the printer's list. To lk not of warrior's—Faust released Earth from the terrors of her kings,— le twirled hie Stick and darkness erased, • And- morning streamed alone the East, On Freedom's burnished wings. Oh yes, ,I take the papers, And sons and daughters—tall afid small Fur they have been, through thick and thin. The pastime of us all. - ' 'Twas nobly said that should a star, Be stricken from the d of Night, A printing press—it stationed there— Would fill the vacuum to a hair, And shed a Meader light. That man who take. no paper., • . . Or taking., pay not when they're read, Would sell hid corn to buy a “horn," And live on borrowed bread. The printer opes the wide domains Of Science—scatters Education Al! o'er the hind, like'April lams: And yet his labors and him pains Are half his compensation. Printiriz Office, May.. 1838. THE MOUNTAIN OF TIIE.LOVERO.• We forget in what book it was, many years ago, that we read the story of a lov er who was to win his mistress by ca?ry• ing her to the top of a mountain, and how he dui win her, and how they ended their days on the same spot. We Clink the scene was in Switzerland; but the mountain, though high enough to tax his stout heart to the uttermost, must have been among the lowest-. Let us fan cy it a goad lofty bill in the summer time. was at any rate so high, that the father of the proud noble, thought it'im. possible rar a young man so burdened to scale it. For this reason alone, in scorn, he bade him do it, and his daughter Should be his. The•peasantry assembled in the valle; to witness so extraordinary a sight. The measured the mountain with their ; eyes; they communed with one another, and shook .their heads; but all adnfired the young man; and some of his fellows, look• mg at their mistresses, thought they : could. do as much. The father wis on horse ' back, apart and sullen, repenting that he had subjected his daughter even to the show of such a hazard; Wt he thoUght it would teach his inferiors a lesson. The young man, (t tie son of a small land proprietor, who had . ne pretensions to wealth, though none to nobility;), stood, respectful looking lant confident, rejoicing in his heart that he should wjn his mistress, thoiigh at the cost of a noble pain,' which he could ; hardly think i,f as a punt consi• dering who it was he Was to early. If he tiled for it, he should at least have had her in Ins arms, and have looked her 'in the face. To clasp her person in that Manner was -a pleasure winch he conteMplated with such transport, us' is known only to real lovers; for none others know .how 're spect heightens the joy of dispensing with formality, and how the dispensintatith the formality enviable* and Makes grateful the respect. The lady stood by the side of her father, pale, desirous, and dreadicg. Shethought 1 ber lover would succeed, but onlyibecause she thought him in every respect the no= blest of his sex, and that nothing 'yas too much fur his ,strer46 and valor. , Great fears came over he , nevertheless. She knew not what might happen in the chan cesl common to all. She felt the bi terness , of being•herself the burden to him rid the task; and dared neither to look ca l her , fa thec nor the mountain. She fixed er eyes now on the crowd (which never tbn ess she saw mit) and now on her baud nd her ' fingers' ends, which she doubled) up to- wards her with a pretty pretence; the only deception she had ever Used. Once or twice a daughter or a mother slipped out of the crowd, and coming up, to her, not. withstanding their fear of the lord baron, kissed that hand which she,knewhot what ? tb do with. . The father said, " Now; sit! pat an end , to this mummery;" and the lover, .turning pale for the first time took.up i the lady. ' The spectators rejoice to see the man - ner in which he moves off; slow iiii4 secure = and as of encouraging his mistral: - - They mount the hill; they proceed wellfhe halti an instant . before .be gets midway,, sod seems refusing something; then ascends at 1 a quicker rate; and now being at the Mid i way point, shifts the lady from one side to • the other. The spectators gave a great shout. The baron with an air of indifference bites the tip of his gauntlet, and then casts oil them an eye of rebuke. At theiithout the lover Femmes his way. Plow but not feeble in his step, yet it gets slower. He stops I again, and they think they see the lady kiss him on the forehead. The women begin .to tremble, but the men say he will be victorious. He resumes again; he is half Way between the middle and the top; he rushes, he stops, be staggers; but be does tot fall. Another shout from the 'Men, and he re comes once • more; two thirds pf the re maining part of the way are conquered. They are certain the lady 'kisses him on the forehead and on the eyes. The women burst into tears, and the stoutest men look pale. He ascends slower than ever, but seeming to be more Imre. He halts, but it is only to plant his foot to go on again; and thus lie picks his way, planting his foot at every step, and then gaining ground with an effort. The lady lifts up her arms, as if to lighten him. See—he is almost at the top; he stops, hestruggles, he moves sideways, taking very little steps, and bringing one foot every time close to the other. Now—he is all but on the top; he halts again; he is fixed; he staggers. A groan goes through the multitude. Suddenly, be turns full front towards the top; it is luckily almost a level, he staggers, but it is forward!—Ye-! every limb in the multi tude Makes a movement as if tt, would as sist him !, See! at last, he is on the top; and down he falls fiat with his An enormous shout ! He has won! he has won! Now We has a right to caress his mistress, and she is caressing him, for neithp \ r of them gets up. If he has laird it is with joy,- and it is in her arms. The baron put spurs to his horse, the crowd' following him. Half way, he is obliged to dismount; they ascend the rest ~f the hill together, the crowd silent and happy, the baron ready to burst with shame and irtipatience. They reach the top. The lovers are face to face on 'the ground, the lady clasping hi - n with both arms, his lying on each side. "Traitor!" exclaimed the baron, " thou hest practised this feat before on purpose to de:ceive me. 'Arise!" "You cannot expect it., sir," said a wor thy man, who was rich enough to speak his mind; "Sampson himself might take his rest after such a deed." " Part them!' said the baron. Several persons Went up, not to part them, but to congratulate and keep them together. These people look close; they kneel down; they bend an ear; they bury their facei upon them. "God forbid they should ever be parted more," said a vene , table man; " they can never be." He turned hi-1 old face, streaming with tears, and looked up at the baron:—" Sir, they i are dead!" 'Y §^. 4 - t , z- 4 !A . "How roam is the pride of ancestry ! We are all descended from one parent. and that parent, was a working gardener." The boast of such‘an ancestry would have been very tolerable, if it were not susceptible of proof that the working gar dener was only a tenant, and neglected his duty so much that a writ of ejectment was served upon him.—U. S. Gas. - Fatal B.idal Thur.—The Chiflambe Advertiser relates a most heart rending occurrence which happened to a mother and her only daughter, while on a bridal excursion in the country ad. jacent to ihd Allegheny mountains. l'heyoung. er, of the two ladies had been married two days previous to the accident, and she with her hus band and moilieceet off in a wagon for a week's jaunt; all the party being very hind of angling, they determined to pass a day or two on the bank ofa very romantic stream famed for its excellent trout. While the gentleman had gone into an adjoining wood to search for bait, the elder of the two ladies fell into the stream, and in hpr filial anxiety to rescue her mother, the wife of two days, unfurtunately got beyond her depth, and both were swept down by the current. The unhappy husband pat returned to the water as they both sank for the last time. Amarmo A rosraorur —Shades of the depart• ed heroine, o f the drama . could you but speak from your tombs, what would you say t Auswer. Let us out. t A northern paper, discussing the subject of pdlygamy. nays•.—"Sbtnmon •him.elf had three hundred wives and sir hundred pareepiess!"..— Bost. Her. • The Picayune saym—"The practice of carry. ing deadly weapons isenntinnally prefacing the moat bloody' and repulsive amines." If finch be 'he effect of Only carrying the articles, what aw_ foil consequences most result from using them!" ,Roston.—lt is said on good authority, that Lieut. Wilkes hu resigned, or will resign, the command of the Exploring Squadron. Who next? A Righteous Verdict.—A Mr. Sharkey: a Justice of the peace in Yazoo Circuit.. hat recovered fifteen thousand dollars against certain individuals who undertook to play the part of J udge Lynch with him i year or two ago A GEztux.—Bulwer, in hit play, "The Lady of Lyons," gives the following defini ticin of a num: ,"A man who can 3 tlo every thing in life except any thing drat% useful." There are 12,714,963 acres of Public Lynda remaining meld. in Illigoiir, f Aind 01,000 tininarned women wantedWiciose wives. „- _ I ” . _ BELSHAZZAR. It is • day of revelry. MI king I , Is feasting with Ida-nobles; arrogant -I . In an Unbounded power, and madly lashed With the swift circling of the wine. /1, thought Of profiusatime flashes on his brain ; a, And he commands to bring the capon,' geld. found id the temple at Jerusalem,' To crone the board of revel. They i I ril high And pledge Been them. Courtier an courtesan -Defile the vessels dabs living God. , At that same boor. • hand came for th omit The well, and wrote. Belshanar's countenance Gleamed with a ghastly paleness. and his-eye Glered like a death-fire; & his joints were touched With dissolving weakness, and his kitten • Smote one against the other. Darkly, there ' The unknown letters stood; nor could the sea. Wise in Chaldean lore. nor cunning priest, With all his sacred learning, not thesge. Who knew the many myetertes of the stars. Divine their hidden meaning. Wher a man. In -spirit holy, epodes@ in him life, i . A son of the captivity of Judah, ,1. Stood calmly to interpret them. Be Oaks I Boldly their awful import, menacing! • Doom to the enripire--"Mine, Meng, TekeL" The ;tars of midnight glimmer fitaffulkj Over the fated city, chained in sleep And buried in excess. The lofty towers 'Are left without defence. The twole ved gates Swing heavily upon their yielding b ages, And filet of warrieinr . s , with a sullen amp. March dim' the empty streets. The solemn hoar Of death and desolation is-at hand ! This night. Belabanar falls ! His told remelts Cumber the earth, denied the holy rite lif burial with his father,. Beatincwinds ' Shall bleach his bonen,and strew his virbiteu'd dust Over the ocean and the sterile plain; res SENTENCESFOR THOSE WHO THINK. nalnalMier Of acuratodi How mach of injury has been doef to the cause of tram religion, by the softer. andgloomy also elation, which have been connected with it by bigots and enthusiasts! How often do we see children brought up to discover 'nothing but what is harsh and repulsive in a filth. which is essentially the source of a divine end constant cheerfulness. Is-it not natural that, ender such circumstances, they ahoirld Imbibe -0 d is taste for what, rightly understood, would be Itheirjey and their refuge ? Instead of teaching ; us - to regard our Creator as that , benignant .and gracious be. ing, which visional and tevealed religion assures o- that he is, how many would set ui the phantom of their own, diseased, or frightened fancy. and have us bow down to it as to tee only true God ! Oh, human frailty and human ioconsistegey ! that, professing to hate idolatry, art subject, un. consciously, to a more degrading 'idolatry than that which prostrates itself before images of wood and stone ! Let no men argue ageinst religion from its shames i for truly has it been said, that "religion and priests have the same comet:ion with each oilier, as justice and • attorneys." LITZ TOO SHORT, TZT 'WAIVED. Pliny makes a striking compute ion in regard to the shortness of life. I never recall it without being powerfully impressed by itOruth. *Con sider," be says, "the time speed inialeep, and you -.ill find that a man actually lire* only half his space. The other half passes in a state resem bling death. You do not take intO the amount the years of infancy, which are destitute el rea son, nor the many diseases and the many carer of old age, those penalties of longevity.. The senses vow doll, the limbs are reel'ed, the sight. the hearing, the power of walkicg, the teeth also. die before us ; and yet all this tints is reckoned' in -the periedrot a life." But, short as lift is at .the best, thoi6 who complain of its brevity let it slide by them without wishing-to kiss and make the most of its golden mo:nente. How much time do we waste in decision, in Vain regrets, de. loaive hope. and ungrounded fen! What a vast-portion of our precious existence is waded in mere seeitheg—"waiting for sclinething ~ that seems necessary for our happ i Tess. and the want of which prevents us fro enjoying the present hour." xxsaersg, a 1101 AL MT. , The faculties with which our Creator has en, dowed us, buth physical and in leans!, are no dependent upon exercise for the T proper decd. opement, that action and ir.dost y must le re girded as among the primary diee of acetount, able man. An old dramatist say , that "The ehiefest action of a man of great spirit. Is never to be out of action. We should ttlnk, The soul was bever.put into the body Which bps so many rare and curious picots Of mathematical motion, to stand still. Virtue is ever sowing of her seedi— In the trenches for toe soldiery in the wakeful Itudy For the scholar—of all of which; k ‘ • Arise and spring op honour." I N. .• "In all our conceptions," air an ingenious writer, "exertion is connected vdith emcee and renown." A triumph. witheofi an enemi com bated, and a victory won; a rise, whohe no (E) course is marked out and no mpetitor litany with as in the race, are notion which 6D not find a ready admission into our minds. Stich is Oar constitution, that, according to our impala .where there is' no exertion. :r honour nek reward.; Pro. intellectual licellenee 0 our Ind our interest. To 19 ins ide, is diegranefol. Wecume Ade in body find in mind, but . improvement in'both and these seeds grow, according to the cultreation they receive from exercise.Tte body yews in stature and in strength, and t mind geedually espied'''. But exercise is requisite to the:devel. °pewee% both of our corporealod mentaleapac. itierows; bat without, exercises i is hunre. In the course of years. indeed, the hudr t i oi gitiliXeeble and inactive; and the mind, w ly undi lined remains in a week and infant ; ii state. That ex ercise which is requisite in order to bodily health and - vigor...and to the evolution of our intellectu al and moral powers, is not only the chief means of her improvement. bat also tie main soiree of our happiness. Without exelreise of body and mind, there can be no happiniim. . • tatrioaratire artiii iron. • Barry Cornwall puts into thip mouth of Julian the Apostate, the &Voicing beautiful 'ligament in favor of the immortality of b e soul :--: cannot think that the email soul of man, With ita accumulated mildew+, too, Must perish—why, the word, he utters liras. And is the spirit which ga birth to thoughts Beneath its own creation." Sovare--Baing or Tnit Ro ding no to a country loda— ting rind take me to New Y Rustic—(Can't ten yo•"d Dandy 7 isomewhat woo neat odoundrel! priy wbo • Radio--Wasn't brought duos down a raft. Kan this. i Baltimore gi . ronintittsil suicide is that city, in the early of but wssk. Cause,Anak adds maid and to mum. ' ?i t rf .. .0 6 :,V1;r4tr).4 , ' • - 40110 1 11g 4 NAL. A Deestatic Y 45 1 4 14 a=paiafutiied appalliar eharaekerowas - re: candy perpetrated the'lieaterit part of Alabama. The particulars, ae recorded' in the Lakeville Express, areedmewhat to, the Mowing teat t " A young Wier great personal *Mao dons, • the daughter of a farmer in j their neighborheod, had formed an acquaietance with a yoUth of wild , and dissolute habits, and her parents, inconsequence, forbade him the house, and exerted themselves to sever the connection by providing " Miss Julia Maria" with. a steady, middle aged husband. The 'quire having performed the ceremony, "the happy couple" set off for their home on the borders of the great prairie, andefor six months the lady ap peared perfectly reconciled toiler lot, dad exerted herself to love, honour, and obey her liege lord. One morning, as the ter mer was returning home with his tide and dogs, he met his former rival, who accoun ted for his sudden appearance by saying that he had just returned from New Or leans, where he bad made a rare specula tion.in Texan lands, and that it was his intention to emigrate to this new country, sawnn as. he had 'completed some family arrangements. The unsuspicious husband invited his friend to pass a day or two with him, saying, that .although he should be obliged to go to Lakeville the next day, he other could amuse himself until his re- turn by shouting the prairie hens, or fenc ing in a patch of corn, which ever he pleased. The other consented, and re turned to the house with the hospitable &inter. The next day, the young man renewed. his intimacy with ins • former sweetheart, and finally succeeded in ex acting a promise- that she would, the next morning, run away with him. The bus. band, in the meantime, had gone on a tour to the prairie, in search of game, and was not expected to return for several days. He had his misgivings, however, and re turning home late at night, he was a hor rified witness of tie own dishonor. With out attempting to disturb •the guilty pair, he fired his house in three different places, .the flames creeping through the upper stories, and encircling the roof of his once happy home. The wretched woman and her paramour were aroused from their dreams by the flames, and rushed to the window to save themselves by leaping out; but below - stood the infuriated husband with' -his rifle, and the moment the case ment was opened he fired with unerring aim, and they both fell amid the burning ruins. Foul Murder.—We learn from the 'Darien, Geo. Telegraph, that on the 7th inst. while Mr. Joseph S. Page was at the Not Office in that town, receiving his let zero, he -remarked to the Postmaster,.' that as he expected money by the mail, he hoped the Postmaster would not permit any thieves to be abotit the place. Charles L. Barrit, who was present, took this expres sion to himself, and retorted upon Mr. Page by calling him a thief and a rascal.' Mr. Page immediately laid . hold orßarrit, by whom be was mortally stabbed with a spring back knife. Barrit is. about 23 years of age, and a native of Poughkeepsie, where his connections reside, Robbery.—The Bank of the Metropolis. Washington, was broken into on Saturday night, by forcing one of the punnets of the bank door out with a crow-bar. The rob bers failed in their attempt to force open the vault of the Bank, but carried off a cask of jewels belonging to a lady, which had been left on special deliros-ite. The .convention of Indiana banks has resolved to open a correspondence with the banks of Ohio. and Kentucky in refer• ence to an early resumption of specie pay ments. Pretty Seen.—Rev. Mr. Holmes; of New Bedford, related the following anec dote at tho late Anniversary of the Ameri can Seamen's Friend Society, in this cll. "Two sailors once met—the one looked downcast and forlorn; the other accosted him, •shipmate, what's the matter re , ' Ahr said the forlorn man, am sick and desti• tote—l have no money tosupply my wants.' The othor put his hand in his pocked, and poured out his money,• without weight or measure. A merchant looking on, Said, 'Shipmate, now you ought not to do so . , you ought at least to take a note for your mo ney.' 'I am no merchant,' said the sailor, '1 never take notes for my charity.' The - Richmond Whig thus generally sums up the haste exhibited at Washington, to make the Treasury note Bill a law. The President signed the bill , authorizing the liming of Treasury notes, in very short order. He is, as all good Democrats .ase, very much opposed to any kind of money, except gold and silver—but nevertheless, he could not withhold his signature froth a bill to emir ten millions ofirredeemable pa. PS;r• The oldest .Town► in the United States. —lt is paid St. Auguidine, in Florida.,ls by more than kitty years the oldest town in the United States it was founded Ahree cen turies ego by the Spaniards.—tiouses in it • ii.—Dandy--(ri. lazy. yoo sir ! will k are yet standing, which are said to have been.buitt flirty years before Virginia was colonized. 22E13 d)—Yoa ,Impetti ...gbtrepoo op I p at ell, thank ye: The loyal inhabitants of Windsor. Q. C.. oppcisne.tei Detroit, have burned MK. Van Buren in effigy, as an offset to the 'burn ing in effigy of Captain Maryatt at De. trait. NM! E=E!!MI El CI ~• .ah POT'l' V'ittE,~' 'SATURDAY MORNING JUNE 2, 1838. it Plump Mao. Ckooko ddl S Bala of /Abet, tomi tiotonolts of nery: • . nottly smutted at dap Office Wks poem cook • . Mee Ong of Delegateo. -Delegates to the 4th of June Convention are requested to meet at . Stager's, l this Evening. (Saturday) at 8 o'clock. P.ll. Punctual attendance is requested. a PROPOSITIOXI! In order• to place our paper vrithiii the reach of every person, during the present Gubernatorial contest, we haire come to the conclusion to receive subacribers to the weekly Journftl, to be'forwarded regu laity, until the wound Tuesday of October next, as the low rate of FIFTY CENTS; or TWELVE SUBSCRIBERS for five dollars, payable in advance. o:7' Our friends, in various parts of the county, wilt please act as agents in trans mitting the names and cash of those who feel disposed - to `subscribe for that pe riod. Coal Trasle.—W e 'regret to say, that the coal busibess continues to beika very depressed state. The: demand forlcoal is at present very limited, and how Ichig this will continue so, it is not easy to foresee. The principal immediatecluses which has, prbduced this state of things, is the gene ral-depression in all other kinds of business throughout the country. There is such u connexion among the various branches of commercial operations, that there is a reniprocal action and re-action always in progress, an.l hence when one branch is injuriously affected, all the other branches participate to a greater or less extent in the injury. It follows, therefore, thee we cannot expect' the coal trade to floOri'nh when almost every other species of busi ness languishes. The quantity of anthra cite coal sent to niarkee, up to the pesent time, this season, from the several regions in this state, amounts to about 67,000 tons. The quantity up to the same period last year, amounted to 132,534 tons:— shewing a difference of 65,000 tons. The actual falling off in shipments this year, therefore, is this difference—which would have been still greater, but for the panic which prevailed for several weeks last year, in Consequence of :he suspension of specie payments by. the banks, a course to which they were driven by the acts of the general government. Had there been no interruption in the general business of the country, nearly all the coal sent down last year would have been consumed; the over stock, or surplus on hand, would have been but small, the demand would now have been brisk, and miners, boatmen, mechanics and labourers, connected with the trade, would have bad plenty of em ployment and good wages. if a state of general prosperity should again revive in our country,-the prosperity of the coal trade will revive with it an&to the acme extent. The .prospect of this - revival ap pears to be brightening rapidly, but under the most propitious concurrence o f politi cal or .other events, which can be imagi ned or predicted with probability, a consi derable period will be required to set things completely to rights again. The demand for coat depends upon the cog gumption of the article; and this consump tion takes place chiefly in manufacturing and domestic uses., The stock on hand, of course, influences the demand, but the amount of that stock is regulated by the amount of consumption. From our know. . ledge of the stock on hand, the probable amount of shipments and the ratio of con sumption, shobld the business continue in its present depressed state much longer, we draw the inference that the supply this sea son will prove short. • While the contest was at its height re specting the Ofterman Coal Company, amongst other rumors afloat there was one , which appeared in our paper, charging Messrs. Stockton dc Stevens; of New Jer sey, with being parties interested in the (Merman Coal Company Bill. This state ment, we believe, was incorrect; these gentlemen, we have long since understood, having no interest direct or indirect there in or connexion therewith. Since this period, they have, through their agents, commenced mining operations in our re gion on an extensive scale. Their princi pal object, we Isar • o n a direct communication with th city o New York, through the Delaware and Raritan Canal, For this purpose, they are causing to be comaructed about sixty canal,boats, which are •to be raised above' the o r dinary height and coverejl. These, when 'they arrive with their cargoes at Philadel phia, will be towed, round by steam. boats to the Delaware! and -Raritan Canal, and thus pass•on to the city of New York. They also, we learn, intend to consume a very considerable amount of coal in steam boats' , probably' more than • they will mina for some years .to come. This en. terprise of theirs is one of greatmagnitude, and. destined to be, folloivd by_ very tm portant risotto. Capt. Baird's Company, of National Light bifacitry, paraded on Wednesday" af ternoon last in Summer Uniform, and with: their new Cape, , handsome plumes, and white pantaloons, prettented a very neat ap pearance and- also acquitted thernielves very creditably in heir several street evo lutions and manual exerciees. • • ligliE _ Our acknowledgments ate Hp. E. B. Huble7; sad the Hon ing, fur pubrie donuenents. ;TOW* !lima The .couttudssiineri ilie T have pttrchased the teesehr o buildings, •witich were destroy i last winter, with the .lot on w stand,. in Centre Street,in this with f;view to the erection o Hall. , We regret that the Cell did not select a *cite which • w Riven more general *stinkydon t aimslthe .Boitiugli.' We and terms r purchase sire, MS Thou lars, payablein ten yeitiv, with 1, . Yount AI en' ..Cointention. crt The Philadelphia pelegation, died, leave Philadidphia.to.dayi Caldwell d; Ovenshine's fide. be acc.oinpanied. says .tbeT / Herald, by the Washington 1 Band of Music. Several of th legations will also be attend..., an banners. We have had for uko or th ': • fine Summer Weather, which is able .transition, or change from the weather on the 25th of when a considerable quantity on the Broad Mountain. United States enate.—T seventeen •Senatorsi expire o March next. Of this number 3 Conservative. and B,Van places of the six Whigs will b. Whigs. Conservatives or WI pLy the places of the Consents the Van Burenitea, Messrs. Niles have. already been au' Whigs, anti of the remaining Burenites cannot calculate wit er expec tations , of success the the chancws being equal on AO ',ointmentby the Post rn/.—Elowitstr'A. KIUTZNEIt. master at Millersville, in the M'Pherson, who has rem. West. The PORTER inen intend h ty meeting, at the -hou - O'Connor, in this borough, evening next.' • , Exmom:m- 7 The Cove j painted 'Friday. the 16th vf, the execution of William Mil convicted of the murder a: man, at the May term of court. We understand that on Sat inst., a little girt about four - daughter of Mr. M'Fall, tel n along the bank of the Can Well i ~ and would have been drowned , d i e dt been for the timely aid rendered b e Fireman on the Locomotive Engine . Atha Beaver Meadow Rail Road, who, 'easing at the time, discovered Imi:fin/tun:. in the water, and without one momenta I -, station sprung from the engine while at 11l speed, and sucdeeded in rescuing her rum a iwatery grave. Althongh life appeared extinct . when taken out,.-yet by, proper exertions she was restored, and again mingles in the family circle of ber parents. I :Mauch Cheek Cowin:. Some persona doubt %%het tnry Woodbury will take Chief Justice of New Ha to him by Goy. Hill. • A Good Sign.—The Pittsb I Gazette sap that many of Mohlenberg's friroser prominent supporters'are now earnestly sOf asalously sup porting the re-Glendon of Goy. .itner. A NOBLE DE A Whole Town Destro elf by Fire.— The 'town of Monrovia, me Tuscaloosa, (A i la)Janta) was destroyed. y !fire about the I int4.—:every buiNding iq it_ (except a kitchen and hen hoese) including the Church, Academy; ,Back reuse, Post of-, fice and Exchange, beingkept away as with the hesoni of destruc ion. The fire is believed to have been a act of an in% cendiary, and suspiciert has !fallen on the, Cashier of the Bank, as it is believed he' had embezzled a large aim:mit - of the funds in hil charge. ' Messrs. Praia.: and ord Arrived. —These gentlemen, • the . Cpresentaiives elect of the State of Missi ippi, arrived in Washi - T , rdi end no doubt yeider. day mi seem Mrs K has ct Jacks 4 Thy bum ••neat votes WHAT IS THE Bilk Bit. g The prince of flambe' a pull mater of loco focoisin,, Thomas-H. ton. who first "get the hallineweltm." cam _ t in the follow ing style in Congress lest Th rillay : . Mr. Beaton uttered a a g and earnest ems demnation of 00110 bank' ht m Usd* resumed specie swymeatai _ Thiry had of their own and wer6 harping to creole the notes of other and :non wpecie-paying ben .JHe considered humbug a ateE'the worst and Most Of them all. Mr. B. wits not to be boo4fil try any so ,pietence of resuming s ie payments." • i re would advise tit of Pennaylva a' spiously tolponder over tits flight .f their deluged. He denounced lblq bunks that had 'resumed specie'payments. helm "dui to M had no notes out tither own. and we eauhVng r • collie the notes of newt.specio• yingAkuks." .. I 1 • el i to the C. Cush. Hall e brick by fire job they rough. • Town • oners Id have the cid land the Mend fro hurl tp lEvant, they will ►mercial pendent l e k n i! other musks • . 0 41 11 Put. a i.ztnaitler. I he state of inohth, f i3novslell ['e terms of the 4th .of re Whigs, uen. The supplied by gn will sup i ve4; Teti Of 1 tintly and ' • ceded by i ; the Van f ny strong ' he Whigs, .110 sides. _ ' aster Gene. 4b be Poet. piece of Mr. veil to the Iding a coon• i)f 'Edward an Tuesday Qr has a P iv next, for kir, who was 'lemon Hof g county rt)ay the 10th 4ran of age, bile playing e Mr. Secre the office of .+ire, offered tore, is which art, Ky. rue blue Susque• Ritner it , ber of