The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, June 13, 1838, Image 2

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    111
rrsvILLE.
AY MORNING, JUNE 13, 1838.
%V EDNES
, Cheek*, Cords, Bills of jading,
of cam, descriphoo. ocatly printed as
lows* cash priors.
and, I •, •
this Offix at,
1101P08171104 4 7:
In prde to place our paper within the
reach of very person, during the present
Guberna rid contest, we have come to
the concl sion to receive subscribers to
the week y Journal, to be forwarded regu•
%oily un il the second Tuesday of October
'-next„ al i e low rate of FIFTY CENTS;*
or TW LV E SUBSCRIBERS for 6ve
dollars; onthly subscribers will also be
received until that period, at 124 cents
I. each pe, month, payable m advance.
Our friends, in rations parts of the
county, will please act as agents in trans
/ milting the names and cash of those who
feel.. disposed to subscribe for that pe:
j niod. • .
APVIIIENTICE.
.ctive intelligent boy, ag ed about
; years, of good moral habits, is
t this office, as an apprentice to
ling business;
I AN
I,S-or 1
, wanted I
the prini
e refer our readers to part of the
ngs of the Yuen Men's Conven.
ieh . will be found on the first page,
riper. The Address and Resole.
seen as published, will be furnish
er 'readers in an Extra to the
13(:) -
, proceed
Ilion, WI!
tif this
twos, a
ed to
Journal
*tag Capital.—The assertion, that
!thing Capital of the State has been
d nearly forty millions of dollars,
Ritner's ad•niaistratton, is, in the
Ban
he Bat
Inv reas
during I
iteat i
ke un
which• the Porter own wish it to
rstood, incorrect. The Bank of
the U ited States was in existence, and
the re hatter of that institution by .the
legislaiture of Pennsylvania merely trans
formed it into a State instead of a Na
tional institution. The Bank was formerly
a United States Institution, it is now a
State Bank. There is no more stock held
in the institution now, by citizens of this
State, than there was before it was char ,
tered by the legislature of Pennsylvania.
The chartering of the institution, there
fpre, by the legislature of Pennsylvania,
Was no increase of the banking capital of
this State by the incr rase of stock, but .
Increly Tetaining the capital iu the state,
hell in that institution.
Can* go if.—The last Bedford-Inqui
rer, contains the names of no less than
tredve persons who decline serving on the
Porter Committee of Vigilance, for that
Ciounty, and declare Weir intention of sup
porting JOSEPH itrrnsa, the people's can
didate for Governot.
1 ,..(* Read the remarks of the Editor of
the Carlisle Republican, who supported
fllr. Muhlcnberg at the last election.
The great Whig State Convention,
Which assembled at' Ctilumbus, Ohio, to
tbe number of tywards of Fire Thousand
D i &gates, nominated the present indum
bent, Gnv. VANCE, for re-election—passed
a resolution stating that they had nude.
stied confidence. in Gen. HARRISON,
4t ,:nietnitly pledging themselves- to' abide
by the decision of it National Cotiveotion—
andJequested the Senators from that sftie,
Messrs. Morris and Allen,: to resign tlieir
stiats in the Senate, because they are
representing a lar . ge majority of the people
of, that stale.
The Mohr: slates that upwards of duce
bendred and filly-eight thousand dollars
lv4. re coined at the Mint, during the 'last
'nth. •W hat has belotne of this morn?
Hit all used by the office-bidders? The
pdople very seldom see any
_thing but
Dr.
LV•ruxtc KEar.Ki declines standing
-a Candidate fur re•electiun to Cittrigresst, itr
the Dauphin and TAbasimi district. Rea.,
istia--,Can't be re elected.
Lamentable.—Messrs. previous. que,s.
tiqn Cushman, of N. H. and Petriken, of
Non. lately got at loggerheads in Con
gress, and thelormer absolutely threaten-
W I to move-, if in order, to have the Doc
tor's queer cut of.
The ,
New Hampshire legislature assem
bled at Concord last week. The Van
Barer§ majority in the House is stated to
bel fifteen.
Repeal of the Five polar Restriction.
--1111 r. Kilgore, of Ohio, offered a re
sotetion in the House of Representatives,
foil the repeal of so much of the Deposits
prohibits the receipt of the notes
of !banks which have, since July, 1836,
is..ned notes of a less denomination than
five dollars.
- The.resolution was objected to, and per
mitision to offer it refused
x Virginia Banks.—The Richmond
Enquirer of Tuesday says: " We feel our
selves authorized to state, that our flanks
are; prepared, and will resuene specie imp
meets the very moment they cansemer
tit
.tai ' that the hanks of Baltimore have
col menced, or will commence wit% them
the same day. We all know that that
cit
y e
is the great receptacle of bur paper,
andj i
it is not perfectly sfe fut. our hadjut
to sumc until the Baltimore hanks will
egr to re leive our cheeks en Philikdet
plit , New York. and Boston, insteadnf
speCte, in the redemption of our-sgotes,
1
. 4 11111 , '
Tike le)
(ate see(a ,
pujority,
bow befoo
ind teach
tinstitutio
eatructil
An insane
ed from
man, in
on Thur 4
en the he'
Sctne
anti the
Herald of
ANOTL
A you
'ney was '
corner
Moymem
named J
BS near
or three
before
McKearn ,
flea the place Ann mentioned, about
nine o'clock, in company with a sister, a
bout thirteen or fourteen years of age,
, i
when he was appro ched and accosted,- in
a friendly manner, y the black tellow, to
whom he replie.l in the same friendly-lode.
That the black man, Wikants, as -he ap
proached the deceaed, drew, or opened a
kmfe. which was observed by the sister
who immediately r quested her brother to
theleavee place; bu as he did not see the
knife, or suspect pay Irvin, said "why
should I ? I eon not afraid," or words to
that effect. She had ace -cely however,
~ i
spoke, when Willi ins came up, and in
passing her brothe gave the stab in the
lell side of the abdo en just below the Short
ribs. .
We might give t:i.! testimony before the
Coroner's jury more at length, but do net
deem it neceFs try, Tribe lamentable,affair
will 'soon undergo a legal investigation.
It seems from what we could gather,
that Williams had been struck, a few nights
before on the back, by n piece of wood,
and was under the Itielief that it WAS Mc
Kearney ti his struck Mm. This is all the
provocation known. i
~t r.
This murder ere!' d great excitement in
the immediate' neig borhood, and several
hundred persons a tolled together, and
couttstenced all attack upon a frame hou-e
occupied by blacks. The Sheriff and May
or, however repaired to the spot with the
Police, and put a stop to all riotous pro
ceeding.. •
From Me Rochester Democrat of Jame 4.
Another Steamboat Outrage!
The steamboat Telegraph fired into by a
body of armed men at Brockville.—We
fear that a crisis is approaching which Will
throw our frontier into the whirlpool of
strife, for it is impossible that outrages so
glaring as are continually being perpetra•
'ied on the lakes, lean long be tamely borne
by either nation. The destruction of the
Caroline, shine, *as sufficient to have en•-
dangered . the tranquility of the two coon
tries;, and nothing but mutual forbearance
could have sub,lus.d the fearful storm which
herimith the smoke of the Sir Ro
bert Ped ; but we know nut whether any
thing but the interposition of Divine-Pro
vidence, can keep the sword sheathed, now
that another outrage has been perpetrated
by i n discreet—if nut wilfully, uniliciuus
men.
The facts of this last act, as we gather
them from the captain of the Telegraph,
are substantially as follows:
The Telegraph left Oswego at 8 o'clock
on Saturday evening—touched at Prescot
as usual—and reached Brockville about 9.
here she landed at the lower dock—look
on board and left a number of passengers
--received the• visits and insults of an en
armed mob, who ransacked the cabins ,and
otherwise evinced a turbulent disposition—
arid was moving past the upper warf, when
she was hailed and Commanded to "come
to," The captain supposing there were
paiaengers in wailing, stopped the engine
sod dropped down to within 1 .?0 feet of the
Ock, but, apprehensive that all was not
right, be told the passengers to crime un
board in the small boat. , But this would
otis4 , the crowd, who insisted "rpm
ilihoat cowing up to the dock.
After a few words had Passed, the cap.
•tpin peremptorily refused to land, set the
engine emotion, and moved - off. l.mme
dialcly upon this, and while the boat was
within a few feet of the warf, about twenty
muskets were fired, and FOUR OF,THE
BALLS ENTERED THE LA IBS'
CABIN!-One passed within a few finches
of the chambermaid, and two str very
near the captain. •
It is said thiit the men who fired the
guns were the guard called out by the pub
lie authorities. If so, the outrage is ten
fold more aggravated, end may lead to ten.
fold more serious co sequences! sl* the
pt rpetraters are denia*d t)s , our govern
ment, they will nut, of course, be delivered
up. in thit case, owl Goverument. ran:
not, consistently 'with its dignity, give up
the wretches who destroyed the Str Ro
be,t• Peel, and thus a collision may belated°
inevitable. •
But we hope that they were not in the
service of the government, or ifthey were,
that - they, did not act in accordatict with
the-Comilland of any officer. Ind*, we
w ill not, fine moment * her* Abe .ffintight,
that it was might else thain n unauthorized
which the Colonial G/vernment will
.4tiell;* lit, its
W(4.4
tritely 14
its elarsieter
spirit ot oor
liberties; aria
nests.
AO had escap•
teed a -Watch-
phis county,
beating him
I in typp,we
Commercial
D ATRO—:
Ilt.
'els McKear
ight, near the
'pen 'streets,
black fellow
ircumstances,
em from two
meet examin
were, • that
he aide walk
' THE Rik lor.iroußNAt..
Itii*,lt.illtk i t . as' IlOWWis
melt willtthot of the ructbmtkor
Bi r-Rii 'Net' 'now board of
'tlltsl`eleiiitpli suppfte that ' object it
comm;uding her to land was to troy ber;
and attribute ber milapa from :.a cattle:
trophe milli to hee l lending at the lower
lch
wharf, where the body of mea, were nut
aisemiled. - But we believe eueli an 0 ,
pinicml to bc erroneous. t
~ ,
'The . feet, however, that she was fired
into, the - lives of those on board endangei,
ed, soden insult offered to thei American
Bag, is enough to alarm every fine for the
consequent:ea.—Something efficient thus I
be dune to prevent a repetition of the ou t
rages, or (it is folly to disguised) war will
ensue. • -I
A letter from Mpntieal dated sth June,
states that the wretches who fired into the
American Steamboat, have all been com
mitted tp prison by the ihtboriva.
The Carlisle Republican inf the 31st ult.,
a zealous Muhlenberg paper in the contest
of 1835, and; undecided in relation to the
candidates now before the peoph3 of Penn
sylvania for the office of Goveor, comes
out in the following unequiv ocal manner
against David IL Porter.
That we shall not support ',David R.
Porter we _think extremely probable. ''But
why shall we not? Because, in the first
place, he having held ogee either from
the people or by Executive apJointment,
for fifteen or twenty years; to support him
would evince, on our part, a nmst shame
less disregard of the dearocratiti dootrimr
of RcrrsTtort ili Ornea, a doc(rine foun
ded in wisdom and safe - policy, and never
sacrificed to_ mere questions of e*pediency,
by the pure fathers and founders of the
Democratic school.
In the second place, because we do not
deem him either mentally or morally qua
lified. His talents (with all the, opportu
reties he has had) are' below'mediocrity;
and his moral character is not so unques
tionable that a free and enlightened people
could make him the depcisitory of their
rights, moral, civil, political, and religious.
A man of loose moral principlsa., as we
believe David R. Porter to be, W:ho is not
gifted with a godlike intellect to counter-
balance and sway his moral infirmities,
is not fit to be the ruler of a free people.
In the third place, because, like every
other male member of his family, he is a
trimming politician, in whose integrity no
confidence can he placed; and fuither, - be
cause his whole family connexion have
been fed and pampered, for a period of
forty years and upwards, upon the "11pOils
of office"--Lin other worth, upon oney
wrung froth the hard hands of la borious
industry, in the shape of taxatibn. His
father and each of his brothers were, in
their day, the recipients of public favor;
and fed without stint upon theirlmaster's
crib.
Io the fourth place, because, ift elected,
we are led to believe he will stain the
pernicious measures of Martin Van Bu
ren's administration, by which 'the ener
gies of the country have been prostrated,
its treasures squandered upon Worthless
parasites, or expended in barbaious and
disgraceful wars tippn- unoffending Indian
tribes, who have been wronged, cheated,
and persecuted by white speculators sent
among them as Government agents.
In the fifth place, because he blithe can
&date, not of the people, but of the broken
down ex-office holders, who expdct thro'
him to come again into power, and support
themselves in a course of profligacy and
licentiousness at the public expenee.
Finally, we shall not support him, be.
cause we have no confidence in the man,
or in the party by whom 'he is abstained;
knowing, of our own . experience ; that all
their professions of democracy and love of
the people are hyperitical, and all their
designs low, sinister and selfish.
But who shall we support? We do not
like to keep our friend of the VolUnteer in
the dirk on this subject, but we *mot let
him no further into the secret now, than
to say, that when, in our estunat,ien, the
proper time shall have arrived, w/ will do
whai our conscience tells us IS right, and
strike fearlessly and zealously for what
we believe to be the best interests of the
state, and the prosperity and happiness of
the people. ,
The Springfield Mess. Gazette, quotes
the following from a Van Buren paper pub
lished in that State. It will be seen that
the invitation is a very pressing one:
Z!Let the grocer, the tavern ,keeper, the
rstaildrinker come into the ranks of Oen°.
cracy. LET ALL THE OUTCAST
OF SOCIETY came to our help. --
THEY BELONG TO US. They bale,
a common cause with us. Like us. they
abhor the crushing pewetof human d -
potism, the withering blight ofpkarnaaieut
insolence. Let
,them come. They shall
receive our sympathies I
The River of Intemperance.—An Eng
lish paper caldulates that the quantity of
liquor, alias poison, drunk in England and
Ireland every year, would be sufficient to
forrn-s river 60 feet wide,3 feet deep and
8 mile * long. A more. llightful caltsula.
(ion would be one , strewing the miseries
that are occasioned by inteniperbece; the
number of men whom the wares nf tbirr
mode& Styx bear into prisons, madhouses
and this grates — of children who perish of
hunger while their parents wallOw in
dmnkeness, aad of wives who mini their
nights in anguish, lamenting the inkimper
ance o(their husbandd.
[Fros Mr. Dewjr's Adress before the Machiai-
Us" is the great school of
mareirirteet. •It is iot mouth to asy, that the
industrious ail always the moat vinare', classes.
fleadt libelee observed that human industry is
plaiied in peculiar circumstances specially fitted
aid designed to elicitiand try the airtime el hu
man beings. • The animal,billowing his instincts
Ands a certain, facility in his path. Human in.
dustry, on the contrary, is always a conflict with
The animal organs are - precisely
fitted to their respective tasks, and are already
sufficient - lb all the . purposes of animal industry.
But min has to adjust his powers to an infinite
varietal of exertioser ; ten thousand delicate man-.
'utations and feats of dexterity are required of
him; his eye is to be trained to precision, and his
mind to taste ; new instruments, too are eon
steady to be invented to overcome the eifficalties
in his way. This, then, is the theatre of energy
and patience; yes, and I add ri f 2 inocel - wisdom
and sell-restraint. The anim I may gorge him
self. add can then lie down d Bleep off hie
surkift ; and he takes no harm from the midnight
dew, ar the open chill canopy that is spread over
him. But man cannot endure such indulgenee
or exposure. If be gives himself up to sensual
excess, his powers at once begin to fail him.—
His eyes loses its clearness, his finger its nicety
of Wash ; and he becomes a lame, deficient
and dishonored workman.
Nor is this all. How many natural ties are
there between even the humblest scene of lobo:Mr,
and the noblest affections of humanity ! In this
view the employment of mere muscular strength
is ennobled. There is a central point in every
man's life, around which all his toils and cares
revolve. It is that spot which is cpnieerated by
names of wife, and children, and ,home. A se:
cret, an almost imperceptible influence from that,
spot, which is like other on earth, steals into
the breed of the virtuous laboring man, and
tersegthens every weary atop of his toil.. Every
blow that is struck in the workshorkand the
finds in echo in that holy shrine of his affections.
If he who fights to protect his home, iises to the
point of heroic virtue; no less may he who labors,
his life long, to provide for that home.—
Peace be within those domestic walls, and pros.
parity beneath those humble roofs But should
it aver be otherwise ;.should the time ever came
when the invader's step approatbes to touch those
sacred jthresholds, Isee in the labourers that are
taken for them too ; I see in every honest work
man around me, a hero.
So material do I deem this point—the true
nobility of labor, 1 mean—that 1 would dwell
upon it a moment longer, and in a larger view.—
Why,then, in the_ great Peale of things is labor
ordained for us T Easily, had it so pleased the
great Ordainer, might it have been dispensed
with. The world itself might have been a mighty
machinery for the production of all that man
wants. The motion . of the globe upon its axis
might have been the power, to move that world
of machinery. Tea thousand wheels within
vrlteett might have been at work ; ten thousand
•processes, more curious and complicated than
man can devise, might have been going forward
without man's aid ; houses might have risen like
an exhaltation, •
with the sound
Of dulcet symphonies and voices sweet,
Built like a temple ;
gorgeous furniture might have been placed in
them, and sett conches and luxurious banquets
spread, by hands Sinner ; and man, clothed with
fabrics of nature's weaving, richer . than imperial
purple, might have been sent to disport himself in
these Elysian palaces. "Fair scene ! "
I imag
ins you are as , “fortunate for us, had it been
the scene ordained for human life :" But where
thcn r tell me, bad been batman energy, perseVere
anee, patience, virtue,. heroism ? Cut off with
one 010 v fr o m the world; and mankind had sunk
to a crowd, nay. &r beneath a crowd of Aramaic
voluptuaries. No, it had been fortunate.—Better
that the earth "c given to a man is a dark mass,
whereon to labour. -Better that rude and unsight
ly materials be provided in the ore bed and The
forest, for him to fashipn into splendor and beau
ty: Better. I my, notbccause of that splendour
entibmady, but because the act creating them is
better then the things themselves ; because exer
tion is nobler than enjoyment; because the labor
er is greater and more worthy of honor than the
idler. I call upon those whom I address, to.tand
up for the nobility of labor.—lt is heaven's great
ordinance for human improvement. Let not
that great ordinance be broken down. What do
I say It is broken down ; and it has ileen
broken'down for ages. Let it then be- built up
again ; here, it any where, on these shores of a
new world, of a new civi lization. But how it
may be asked, is it brokeh down ? Do not men
toil, it may be said. They do indeed toil, hot
they too generally do it because they must. Sub.
m it t o it as, in some sort, a degrading necessity ;
and they desire nothing so.much on earth, as to
escape from it. They fulfil the treat law of la.
hour in the letter,-bat break it in the spirit; ram
it with the muscle, but break it in the mind.
To some field of labor, mental or manual, every
idler should fasten, as a chosen and coveted
theatre of improvement.—But yim he is not im
pelled to do, under the teachings of our imper
fect civilization. On the contrary, he sits down s
folds his hands, and blesses himself in idleness:
This way of thinking is the heritage of the ab
sorb and unjust modal system ; under which
serfs labored, and gentlemen spent their lives in
fighting and feasting. It is time that this
opprobrium of toil were done away. Ashamed
to toil, art thou ? Ashamed of the dingy work
shop and dusty - labor-field; of thy soiled and
I weather-stained- garmenti, on which mother na
tare has embroidered, midst son and rain, midst
fire and steam, her own 'heraldic honors ?
shamed of these tokens& tttles and envionsof the
flaunting robes of imbecile idleness and vanity?
It is a treason to nature ; it is impiety to heaven;
it is breaking heaven's great ordinance. Toil, I
repeat—Toil either of the ' brain, of the heart, or
of the hadd, is the only true manhood, is theonly
true nobility. .
Statistical. The population of Minis.
-sippi by the Omens of 1830, Was 10,443
whites, and' 65,650 slaves; anal the cen•
slit taken in pursuance of an act of the
Legislatiire, approved January 19th, 1837,
it wis 144,351 whites, avid 164,393" slaves
—showing an increase in seven years of
neatly 74,000 whites, and 100,000 glares ;
the cotton crop was returned at 317,782
hales, and the acres under cultivation'at
1,048,6.30. The number of acres in the
state is nearly thirty millions.
Wei roils the euntnweray winch his so
ka4ragitatecl the Preabyterien Church is th be
motioned in the civil tribunals of the country.
'Mellow *bad, so called, elected six trustees of
the Theological Seminary, and miaowed six of the
Board. The 'board, borrower, refused to admit
the newroembers to a seal, and the old mom am
tiro* loser. A onstemporary. says—"llerenpoo
issues the rlt of qee werreeta, by which the
whole legal question will be decided, - comierning
the rights of the respective parties to the mune.
property, 44. albs General Assembly.— MGM.
AWL Gas.
When insePit*!l4. tii tW
,pieesnt worthy Ex
ecutive OfTennievania, first brought before
the people for their ielfrages,he dirt not occupy
any office of bow or phial. He bad, however.
previous to his first ineninatitin for Governor ,
_
b., chosen by the citiaensof Ike county in which
b then resided, a member of the State Legisla.
hire, the several successive sessions. Immedi
ately alter his fi rst nomination, a committee was
appointed by the Convention to inform him of
the fact, and to ascertain whether or not he would
accept ofeuehra nomination. The committee
pursuanm of their appointment, repaired to his
residence. Acd where did they find him?--OUT
IN. THE HARVEST FIELD WITH HIS
COAT OFF, BUSILY ENGAGED WITH H IS
HANDS GATHERING THE CROPS, THE
Fituns OF HIS OWN LABOR. Such is the
tact, and we, advert' to it to show that be is not
Mr never was an office seeker, but an honest
farmer, who could mike a "Oshtemo without
officer, and WHO HAS DONE IT. He la what
may be properly called t "practical farmer."—
Contrast him with David. R. Porter, and behold
the difference.--Staterset
'The Harrisburg Reporter. - e Iran Buren paper.
tanner a shin plaster party alluding probably
to the recent paasage of the ten million Treasury
Vractinta.—A special election was held in King
George county on the 7th, fOr a member of the
House of Delegates--the member elect, at the
general election in April, having Milperesig ne d
right to a seat, owing to some informality in the
retorter, tending to-throw some equitable, if not
legal, doubt upon the matter. At the recent tri
al,-the same parties, Tnyloe and Hooe, were a
gain candidates; and 'we learn from Fredericka.
burg that Col. Tayloe, the Whig candidate, has
been elected by a majority of three votes. The
segregate vote in the county is thus stated:=
Tayloe 145; Hooe 142. Cleve enough. This ,e
-lection is emblematic of the etre:tea of parties
in the Virginia Legislature; as it is•believed that
the election of the Whig candidate in King
George, by three votes, will secure to the Whigs
proper a majority of one or two in the two hon.
ses on joint ballot.
Torres. , --The tolls aecruing from our public
improvements, for the presemt season, already ea.
coed HALF A MILLION- of dollars. The ca
nals have scarcely yet been three months in op.
oration.'
QT Et-President Jackson wrote to Mr. Blair
of the Globe in July, - -"I hope no Treasury notes
will be issued." This hope has been murdered
twenty millions of times.
Curses like Chickens—they always come home
to roost.—One of his constituents has called' our
attention to the remarkable declaration of Mr.
Senator Bocnsems, made the other day nil the
floor of Congress.. It was in the course of a ' - dc.
bate that grow out of Mr. CLAY'S saggestlopp in
regard to a Nationol Bank; when our ex minister
to Russia—of the 527,000 out6t and contingen
cies; a ft er declaring his uncompromising hostility
to a National Bank in_ every -possible shape
wound* op with the words: 'if THIS CURE; must
be inflicted on tliis country, I sin for having it
located in Philadelphia !" Now what sort 01 a
curse must that be, which a Senator is so solidi.
west° plant among his. own constituents? Mr.
e
BUCHANAN insists upon fastening this curse o n F
the metropolis of his own State What be r
comment can we have than this on the vas a
mount of rant an d rigmarole that has been wast
ed in denouncing a National Bank?-111 Ye.oier.
El" Both the Journal and Intelligencer of this
city have asserted, on several occasions, that not
a single Van Buren man participated in the cer•
emonies at the opening of Pennsylvania Hall,—
In looking over the Philadelphia Ledger, issued
On the day the Hall was opened, we find the name
'of the Hon. THOMAS MORRIS; cr Van Boren
member of the United States Senate from Ohio, re
porded amongst the gentlemen who delivered ad
dresses on that occasion. Abolition is not con.
fined to any party. It has its friends and its op
ponenta in all parties. In the Eastern States it
is notorious that the Abolitiocista are, almost 'to
a man, in favor of Van Buren. We reecive but
two abolition jcurnals at this office, tine from
Massachusetts and the other from Vermont, and
both are violent and zealonq advocates of Martin
Van Bonn. It is also said thit the present edi
tor of the Abolition journal printed in Philadel
phia, was lately the editor of a -Van Buren jour.
sal in Massachusetts.— Lai/caster Exam,
The inmates of a ihantee near the
mg minea, (Mauch Chunk) have been arrestua
fur beating to death a woman named Gayle.
Her husband it among the number.
gfects of the New .fipecie Cheater.—Stocks in
New York•tamb!ed down two or three per cent,
on Monday. Ought not Congress to settle this
business definitely and permanently?
• Real Denuteraey.—Mr. ,John Van Buren. eon
ortbe President, has gone to • England to witness
the Coronation of her Majesty, Queen Victoria!
We hope for the best, but we greatly fear the
effect of this intelligence upon the sensitise ,
nerves of certain members of the "Democratic
Pasty."—Raleigh Regisler.
Unusual Event and Interesting Cete
mania —5l/8. Manhei 11, presented her
husband in this city, ten days ago, with
three sons at a birth! Parent and chil
dren are all doing well. This event was
duly, celebrated, on Sunday last, (on the
Bth day,' according to the Hebrew Ritual,)
by the circumcision and framing of the
three little Strangers, Laic, Daniel, and
Jacob. (See the 17th chap. of Genesis.)
Upon which occasion, Dr. Cohen, in a
very impressive address, pronounced 'the
event to be without precedent among the
people of his nation. The whole ceremo
ny was unique to strangers, and interest
ing to all the witnesses. As' the rite was
performed with each infant; a neat silver
medal, with the name_inscribed, and hung
with a differently colored riband, was
thrown around the neck of each, to distin
guish bite 'from his brethren. A plentiful
entertainment, and imam fine sacred music
closed the ceremony. Some of the fair
sei, in the spirit of mother Eve, might tie
tempted to inquire into .the ages and tem
perament of the parents of this extraordi
nary trio—btit is do not feel ourselves at
liberty to uosiit s uch mysteries to
,profane
eyes. '
Upon one point, ire hope tbat we are' all
agreed--that the means of the parents may
increase and multiply' with the number
of Their offspring.:—Rich- Eng.
MARRIED.
Oa Thaneley evening inalOig the Rei. Mr.
flerpel, Major Emmet) Mini.v*matit, at Scholl.
kilt Haven. to Mien Eusesern. Raltlf, &tighter
of George !babe, Esq. of OrwhOnng.
itsmtvs' or..Tng-
'' Prams Us.
WHEAT FLOU R, the load w. I
dit
_417 -41111. , . . , ..
WHEAT 1 30 p*W Lod .
RYE • MINI 2 *t. is d nd.
, BUCE, , HEAT H OU R 30 per tie,
• RYE, bytherload 80 nests te ,
F .
sale
CHOP
- . •1
RYE HMI CM* per •
- OATS 40 cents-ready isle.
POTATOES-43 cent. per bujibel ' -
. 0:11RN-%•10 cents per bushel an .
' CLOVER SEE i6O per .
TIMOTHY SEED-112 00 per lw'
FLAXSEED-31 12 per bushel is r'
viskili
MUSKET-742 nasal per plias.
BITITER-14..cents pound •-• 41
EGGS-42, cents per • .
LARD-10cents per •
TA LLOIV=2 cents pound.
HAMS . 12 cents per pOurd.
CORN CHOP 80 o-eato per busk
RACON•&-111 cents per pound.
4
BEESWAX-,18 coda per pews&
FEATHERS--62ce*per-posad.
COMMON WOO . cents per
MACKEREL, by the bbl. No 1.31 i
SALT - 4 6E4 per bht; 87 P im - • '
PIASTER, is worth fr 00 per to
HAY loft per ten.
47
•
f . Sg4 'age.
r l.
RE-IVitsertbers baying ; taken
one owCallowhill flitted, oppoal
Taverrt., and joining the one paten
callowhill-St. WWI; and one On F.
joining the one occupied by A. J.
foot of Willow St. Rail ißoad; are 1
ceive Coal; Lumber s &o. on whatifike, and on
commission, all articles landed st Fairmount,
can be transported by rail road to th4pelaware
Apply tp.the subscribers on
,the meninges, or at
28 South Wharves, Dtware.
• BUN ING,CLASN & CO.
4.5-11
Jane 13 1
Fmniii4UM
wArbuuir BIBLES, Ifriu/111
- 81 ; just receAd and lilt sale by
just 13 1 ,;>
CLARKS
in 4 sots. neap
oil , and for oado by
jone.l3
D ICK'S" CELL
supply of Dii
calved and for sail
June 13
Leaden Pi)
BANNAN
u•en Pipe, wl
superiovijuslity,
and - Wintcr Hyar. o
a 1
matariale, of which his will sell chew.
juae 13 I ;i 45
Candles! Candled 7!
THETSupseriber has MI hand • IS' lie supply
Jr , . of 'Minces Eandlesralso, dippedliutd Mould
for family usd,which ha ayiU sell oheaose than ever
by the Box or found. The Candles ltre warm' is.
ed to bo -of a superior quality. " t •
• I
JOSEPH - DORFLIIIII2,
opposite B. the' Netiu a l Hote.
PottaTille, Juue 13,183 4.,5-3• l
NOTICE.
Samuel Hughes, Admr. In the Cir
of Samuel Hughey doe: ff. 6.. r the
vs. triet of Pa.'
Petit, Adair. de bonis Circuit, Ve
non of James Wilson, to April 8,
dec'd.
ALL persons having claims upon
Court, being the proceed* aside
abet, under a Venditioni Exposing of
mg real viz. .
Three tiacta of unimproved 'Jan..
Pinegrove township, late in Berha, no
kill county, lila
I—Surveyed on a warrant i then
Seigle, dated April 3d, 1794; tai
ores, 59 perches and allowance.j
9 War rant in name of Peten Lice.
3d, 1794, containing 465 act* 65
allowance.
3—Warrant in,naine of Main Li
pril 3d, 1794, containing 461 acres
and allowance. '
One other tract of unimproved land,
in Berke, now in Schuylkill collety ,
name of Conrad Lcngal, dated! April
containing 440 acres. 31 garchek and
Three other tracts of unimprrered L
ing each other in East Hanover towns,
Dauphin, now ih Lebanon „entity,. vi• 1,
I—Surveyed on a warrant in the niTof Pe •
ter Hammer, Jr. 'fated June 184, 179 , nontain
tipv
ing 407 acres, 132 perches and now
2—Warrant in the name of illia Stewart,
Jr. dated June Ipth. 1794, con ining 416 acres,
113 perches and allowance. i
3-Warrant in the game of Wills! Stewart,
dated June 18tb, 1794, containing 437 acres, 70
perches and allowance. • ,
Seized' as the property of James Warn, de
-ceased, are hereby notifiedthal the sufweriber, to
whom it has been referred to asipertaii Whether
there are any, and if any, !what Ilens ti Wtros the
ro
pperty sold under the above writ, an to report
a distribution of the money in coed, ea attend
it his office in the State Hcruse,"in the c ity of Phi
ladelphii, on Saturday, the 14th day of luPe Ink.
at 10 o'clock in the awning, for that purpose. ,
FRANCIS HOPKINSON, -
Clerk circuit Court.
Philadelphia, June 241838- 44-2 , ~.
• - - Catholic Books
PVOUS GUIDE, .
Key to Paradise, .
True Piety,
• Catholic Piety, . . _.,••
Dona) Bible, •
Puor Man's Catechism and :.
Small Catechism,
Just received and col. sale.by i ~B. HANNAN .
Dec 23
CHURCHILL'S MAIN, AL; and ireagiaas in
Fasts, joi s t received and for itigi bt
• . I ' NANNAN/
april 4
Swahnlii Plaaaes.
DOZEN Sarainespanaeaa, -
ed fixab heat the. p a lnetop.
Seventy-Five Thailand les iar this.valeintile
medicine weiniadd last•ydar, and the clematis
increasing. For satiety- the 4zen, or sionklastke.
Price $2 per bottle;;or three ibottlee Alt 8414 y
B. DANNANe '
Bote4rot for *MOVE County.,
Also Sirahn'iVertnifuge..
Old 'Grape-Jaffee Port Wile, *O. , 4. , e;''
VERY superiocold *rap, jinWs Port Maa s
d do • doff 1 coniOany* do
ri du bind' - .:410. do
i t
Very sipirint do Eat Intilkliadeins, •
ri wood'
and bottles . Very sopenar 1 idd IX - • and
Duff Gordon 4 Co.-Sberrttrinsi.firei Madeira,
Sicily Madeira. L. P. Tana/464 old Lisbon,
dry and sweet Malaga :14. Ise. , sob by
a it 28
• MILLER' ILDAGG '
3 2
[m .
_,
II
CO
13, 4 •
onb on Fn
Lin demand
Ndy
a.
demand
demand.
.1"
Itep 13 taws
ildemand
'
ad
abliJ 2.111
i L
la wharves—
ta J. Iktaalre
known as
at dam,
14ton fi Co,
'tatted to re-
Id -17 each,
iiirs AN
Court U.
' tern Thit•
n) the third
flcli Expend
Na 4.
lei &Me in
by the Mar
.follow-
.Mtuate in
schnyb
me of John
ink 433'a-
'riled April
rdhes sod
e, (dated A.
MI perches
liiitiatc late
{warrant in
3d, 1794,
lapowance•
till adjoin
lip, late in