voL. `PRINTED ' 1111rBENJ UNIX' ' • • - 0 Teats DOIAJIII4 arta Farr goy-able meroi-anittotlly i • d hi the year. $1 will be Arg',.. ,ottive the paper free or =Ls am $3 ier annuls If not ,alt will be added to the prte4 o • .WgEILL ' ' • Two DOLLIMIII per annum. Payable sempannuall le advaemi. If not paid within] the year.tt BO will be charged Advertisements not exceedi:itwelve lines wiltbe elmnied 01 for three insertion .--and and 50 cents for one amnia& Larger mops in oropWrtion. All advertisemenia will be. • nserted until ordere -out. onlessthe time for whi 1h they are to beiebotinue is eftilled ,and will bat changed accordingly. Yearly ac +admire will be charged 012 per annum: maladies subscription to the paper—With the privilege orkeieping eneadvertisement not exceeding 2 squires man ling during the year. and tinsertion of a retail er one in each papr r for threes ccessive timet. rs All letter addressed to the ed tor most be post paid. hF otherwise no attention will be paid to them. -All notices for meetings. &c. and other entices which have 'hereof° been inserted gratis, will be harged.2s cents each except Marriages and Death*. ' ELECTION . ; WE HAVE A CAPTAIN GOOD AND TRUE Air —"Attu) Lana Eras." I • 1- When Wisdom mildew thei ship of State, ...And Justice holds the helm; No drlving stormof frotviiin¢ fate - Can e'er the birk o'erst:hetriV* Ckannt: We Nivel captain and true; The people'. ma , 1 trow: • He's steered them safe all tempests thin.; They call him Ciptoia Ju! No sounding . name, his trte, we own; No iitled tinsel there; Yet kings inightlanvy onitheir'finone, A name so good and far. He The School House decks the wayside hill; Tba Boatman's merry horn, Alattg the gay Canal, is sill • Hverd noon, and night and morn. • Then here's the e s p. And up the rugged mountain's side, And o'er the miring Behold the Locomotive g de, • And vreelthlglide in ito train. Then here's . 4a. • . And he who Virtue makPi his guide: And Mind directs his ray, A Captain fit the free tolguide, Stall we forsake him?! Nay! Then here's 4c. We'll cone from every 1111 and dale; From mountain, vane , plain; And when we met Octutier's gale, Give him the twilit again Then here's &c..{ —Wilkeskarre Advocate. I PLOUGHBOY . . From the New Y rk American: ' I • -- ~„ . TtlE WI,. IT LIZOT. 0. W. PATIII2I, U. 5. MINT. . ' Oh! shun the bowl!—ibe di-sughtheware, :Whose stride but ITIOCkii, the lips of man; When foaming high withwaters rare— ' i hs Ohl never (Oben the go t then. With friend. we love, um sweet to sip The necuit'd juice at el of day. Ise Yet trust 'e nut the syren hp That wins to cheat, an tures to slay. Oh! shun the bowl, and thou shall know A deeper spell than swiins in wine; Thu' bright us hours of • meet glow. Their trimsnr. clouds brtrfly shine. d i IA few short days in ma. eas past, And thou wilt rink nhnown to years; • Within:l t a hope bevondli e bi;o4, Or I I . Which moans above grave of tears. Oh! leave the bowl—if ti art wise To shun the path of g illy fame: The burning road where afigutrh lies, And perjured honor w4epa for shame. • In aher years iionle chke ing ray From virtue's smile wit I o'er thee spread, And thou wilt Wills the better way . Thy erring steps were teeth to tread. • Oh! shun the bowl—as th'ii wnuld'st leave The poisoned spot whe e reptiles tread, , 1.:.„, wtdow'd hearts for t ee should grieve— For tete, untimely Wear be slx . d. Yea! Seise missy be thelfearful toe . To prove, 'ere time huh dimtu'd thy brow, A etre—nod yet tee tette n tas not Of them woo weep - tf Mogen vow. Bast thou a bride whose every sigh 'Deep trembles with the joy it gives? Bast thou a child whose meek mild eye Lives ir. the Legat tufa/ter (Wes? - Then, shun the bowl—toe draught be mare, Whose smile but mocids thb-tikis of inch; When foaming high with waters rare • —Oh! fwVet 10,1 Ph theohlet then. To Areamericz,— fhe only way. lof a young MILO to prepare tudaselli tar usefulness, as to de , tote himself to study dMing his leisure hours. Fait, be anduitetuus in you• business; never m.o. ' plain that yotiereohligr iar. to work,—eo to it with alacrity and cheerful's. and it will be a 'tabu which will make yinaireispected .snd . belovid by your meter or employe' . make it your business to see and-promote his nterest.—by taking Care etas. you will learn toi take cake of your own. ut ie Young men cif the p nt day are too fund of getting rid of work; the seek for easy and lazy employMent, an kg id! tym out to be boor miserable vagabonds. Tee mast avoid all wish. as to live without labor:labor is a Maiming rather than a curse; it teak - ;:en healthy, and procures them food, clothing, an; every other necessary thing, and frees them f •us temptatiOn to be dl.. honest. . . . . bit . Ainfm, &Tzars or R A —A pram/ lad,. Me minnit great personil and mental accomplish- Anent, and also rich In is wfirld'a . gooda, _rem witted alt Farrin on, N. Y, only fifieeft day. of seerfri4o. Mg impalkd to the fatal deed by diamarefinyt th t her husband was • Daaweavo.—/ Fester dorrilaer. . Segniseig eni g ma -Tina wee 4 e prone Opect th morel!' . mentenoe. He die i wiAl and family nod lc 6. The *melt ty 'folk Chet Joetice Saw. MI ' the aseteoce. c ir i as 4 meat in th e "Dill" .411 Fr• ea remade OD - aen eal ' ly.reaso wed to iliaon...: 4 , • . , _ 77 - 7, . • • WILL Mca:Tou r itaolvinkiltiowWl*.TalutiAllOn) isuroxortitosiminia(vzuts'iWairikiitithrri as; ,1 1 TO, opfitOnir#lll SPEECH OF EDW A.RD if MORRIS, in the Anti- Vinediures -tY 4 t O W 4 16 ;f 1 • Qutvention, ate Reading, :Tine stk, . 1 18;8., . Mr. President, ,and of the Mnientioui4iitn*ttittif tke - *Okold of maohoodo4, , k, ..iiiittiif;FOginiril,wfib my cotentporarienAhe rot% *tie of thiebody, e deep interest iktiteropecet ß iphi* this. Convention is isseinbled. We, sir, who .4 4 ,*x.dx. 52 Csw*i per seem. e. If not paid with to all thole who re- To mail nnhaerihen in the year,tiOcents are just entering - lupo.i active , life, cannot be indifferent to political contests, which involve so much of high principle, and have such an important influence, fot good or ill, upon the fortunes of, the common. wealth and ourselves, Is that which is av prosching in October bent. '!While a per annal interest, to secure fool -our .pirm of life a,gavernment which stalll be promotive of social security and happiness, urges us to mingle, in political warfare, we riV, im pelled-by the ditty we owe to our Autintry, and the institutions which have shielded the liberties of our ancestors, to range out. selvei with the 'W hig party of thetioion. and to join in the groat battle which is ap preaching, for the vitafication of a violated constitution and An o,ipressed people. if any apology, then, is needed for our early p irticipation in political contests, it is to be found in the greZprinciP;es, which are now at issue, and the deep stake wb have as individuals in their decision. We are gathered together in this , ancient town, ° like the Oreeke at the Olympic games. We have come up from all parts of a widely extended commonwealth, like them, to strengthen our devotion to a com mon countiy, Al an interchange of senti ments, by personal converse, and by mu tual vows of fidelity to our institutions. We meet with the same object- the de fence of our liberties-wand we coqperste with the unity of feeling and sympathy that belongs to men engtged in a solemn and important undertaking. .13light shades of political difference are obliterated, and all personal and party feelings are merged in the zeal that possesses us in behalf of tour - country. This is nO time to divile and quat tel upon ,points of,inincir interest. • A perilous and tremendinis crisis has arri ved. The existence or the constitution is periled, anarchy and social confusion threa ten to enguiph all order and libesty. All men are called upon by the regard they have for the well Vegulated freedom we enjOy, and their apprehensions of the aw ful consequences that must ensue upon its destruct )))))) , to confe4eraie in this hour of need, and to join in a .holy crusade to re ' cover the constitution *ton the iiifidel hands which are now,desecrating itseacred character. He epho can be indifferent a such a crisis; is a coward, end he who fal tars between party dr personal .preju 'ices and his duty to the. country, is a traitor, and dims not deserve - M live under our free form of government. When I . bank abroad . over our state, I am surprised at the 'extent of her natural resources and power. fetins)lvania stret ches _over an extent of territory, large enough fm. half a dozen Italian kingdoms, and almost as capacious as the island of Great Britain lidelt. We are placed in the gap between the northern and southern sections of the Dania, and are the great avenue of transit between these important divisions. Within our borders, beyond the mountains, rise the sources of the' nvtir which opens a ebonite' cf eirminimication for us to the most distant „regions of the civilized and unsettled west. The Dela ware, which sweeps its broad current by the city to which I livei expands into au arm of "the ae.i, and,gives us a wide portal to the Atlantic, over which our produc tions are carried to s.II the kingdoms of the old world. OM. sod yields bounteously to, the husbandman, while mines of inexhaus tible_ minetiul wealth ate boned every where beneath the curt ice ? Towering mountains, whim _summits are bathed no an, ationspiiere of cloud, are oluthed, from base to pe.ik, with.Firests of the Moot use ful timber, vbile their sides are pierced with shafts of coal winch run into the very heart of the mountain. Beautiful sireains of water, course the• state io every. direc tion, opening chaonels, Of conveyance in alinost every quarter, . while the canal winds its way iu Solemn stillness, among the moat remote 'solitude*, 'giving life and animation to inert labor. _ When I "reflect, that in addition to these' natural advantage's, Our population it made up of - the descendaote of the most industri ous and nioral 'Batton' of Europe, I think _that wecan claim for. Pennsylvania the pos. session ofalliheelementa that tend to make up -a powerful! and' if iurishing common= wealth. The , destinies of such a state ought to he entrusted to long tried and-ex perienced hands, avid not toMen who, like our opimOnte lf tqa to t x-mearkamLeardid _i n 1 . thCii: viewsto i fie, 140,4*aten.. to any doing of diunit.iii.thmv . . pill' y, of wiattomrin their ossemu lithiliniiiiatiOnf , 4. he Imam* and splen dor of thavOlikitti4' ° ~ ',on' entjitioniet_o . their keen te,;pooolkitf liiii com. ,menwlislth h aws . , alletideityllielielec.tion of a. fAciverni q l,. - -lit ' Outober;-ala , irestitm which will have a; moat s important !. bearing inn woe Ihrsretort. _ of n reople in the So A, to he Kr. Kneeland's Court o l ittended by his Umber female friends ad. at he direction of Wild, the Clerk, reed is !sixty I days' imprison. I. '.lilr._llEmeeliod Made soe, I:- was immediate. maictipt. MNIIIIIMIIminm.- . - . - - ' . 1 ' •i. 't-4'1,..","