FALSE _PRIDE. It has -always; itien a . matter of regret ids me at false. pride could not be made, ike theff; i 1 ,0 criminal offence._ It iithe renters - ass many crimes as any oth ' vice•f' Such I hold [it tii be,at least , ne deseri ion of it. Where it isis weak. ,eta it ia• uch to .be pitied, and general• laude te,impropriety. Row many bon ,- _Coen 'ha';e been made scoundrels by the la& pridetof a foolish wife and *revs , id family, it is a compound of ignor. .nce deception and envy, and the world, •fisil alit., - • • Elo longAis it operttles on individuals n one, it is a matter of trifling consideration. at strange as;it may appear, its influence trikes-at the very rout of a virtuous and ourishing coms9unity. Like intempep nee it iS assintliat, the shape 'of a national alamity, and merits the Severe reflection if every reformer. Thousands who haye . ine forth as armed -knights upon a cru de against manifest evils, have, in them - •Ives, been slaves to this insiduous enemy. .:'• elf love may prompt a man to do a good action, but false.pride has never; it is -in , •otripatable with its nature. In our own country its chief mischief consists in ma ing labor a degradation, and thus strikes iiii the foundatiodof our prosperous conch- . tion as a people. There neverwas an age. . orhaps where ao much scherneing was re torted to, to avoid hard work, no period could ethibit so many Jerry *Diddlers a Bove staffs and.below, or manifesting such a wild spirit of sprvilation, as the present. 'lke rich man of to-day, is the,Lazarus of .Tomorrow ! Fortunes are staked upon the (rise and full of stocks; as upon the cast of a 'die. -Cities are created by fraudulence !-- In the morning all eyes are east norm The Canter spirit of enterprize, aii4 the eve icing finds him a disgraced man wain the walls of a prison. Ingenuity itself is thunder struck at the countless methods a ooted to obtain BoR hands. Why does 1 :This disposition so exteniivcly prlt , .v..il ? I , Certzirily 'not fu r the security of happiness, for it is fruitful with poignant anxiety—not Igor health, fur it frequently enervates and 'destroys. Sir Walter Scott,* I think, says I no man ought to want in this country, who lean buy a hatchet and fell a tree: conse lquently, the remark being true, it cannot lbe from necessi.y.- False pride whispers ;`tit is not genteel to work." How bane fullyis this illustrated. Does the successful merchant make his son a tmechanic ? very seldom. D:,es the professional man make hi= son a mechanic? more seldom still. But does not the more fortunate mechanic make Isis son the guardian of cloths and calicoes? Why is this? Is the yard stidk more:honorable than the jack plane? the goose quill more dignified than the type? Look back twen ty or fifty years, and behold the liarefoot ed adventurer, and at the present time roll ingin wealth! orOpendingliii samual income of some three thousand 60 lass per annum in manufacturing ladies of his daisahters. Does he teach them the usual rudiments of housewifery? very rarely. Is . it hecaus..e the healthful exercise of domestic duties is disgraceful? 0 no! Fake prde says it would be "ungenteel fur ladies to work . " —as if it would tarnish their fair amt deli cate Jiggers, that brtng such sweet sounds -from the piano, to dust the gorgeous instru ment itself. 1 How supremely ridiculous is this illegiti mate pride! Thousands- of 'daughters; ! whose mothers have been raised in a kitch i en : and their fathers in a horse stable, would feel insulted &asked if they had ev er made a, !oleo( bread, or washed out a pocket handkerchief! ~They would more j likely prate about "good society," "mixed company,"' the dignity of their anCestors! A few years more roll round, and the thrif ;ty but imprudent parent dies - --and then comes the scramble fir some ten o'r twelve divisions of his hard earned estate. How small does a large fortune appear when : apportioned to nuuterous licirs. l'he • daughters must of-course marry gentlemen, for pride .dictates it; and the gentlemen Wrist of course.squander their patrimony. And what has the parent bequeathed to society and his country ? Children raised in idleness, without the stimulant to add one iota to the general substantial prosperity of the community. Can there be a doubt but that honest la tior is daily becoming more and more-stig matized ? And what follows ? A grog'- ) citing imitation from the cellar to the _ gar. ret? A Spirit of. extravagance, in winch i the tnost,unprineipided means are restored_ t to. Let , it proceed with the same rapt' i march that has commeneed,!atia i, will be . 1 a stigma to "earn your Weal by the . su eat of your brow," . Infect thetcountet--the i farmer--with the same polio!) that Bows i thrciu-gh,the popullttion Greeyr large cities, I and you;make . ,,the country Of Franklin a parallel tul§lontestnna'el • . .1 ~ With us. labor to every.:thing r .: ft' is More ptecibus Menthe Minereof Al-esker-- 41cus vigils. ble• than citless wealth. 7 - :It itpotorily.the founda tion„ tug the main ilingharthb confederacy. Unite it wi!li quest '- .:tefan nad=ii'fbritris'a tower . of strength' on t 'whibli our Iteittea may rest forever. The I priestess tnetals'oftbe earth may exalt a l nation to the highest attitude of transient 1 glory; bit like phenomena thahailluminate i the heavens, - they dazzle bpt 4 moment, '4 in thi Case with Spain, S* into dark • ness and gloom. Not so • the labor of i • man. its glory is' centre*. earth;, 1 and we behold il, -iaohn istrkle of' internal 1 improvement= Alte p success. of irention— i eh of m .the perfection eanical eltill a • and 'the ~.„• inculcab l on ,of those mara t principlits which givci;durit4litr.,%; iiiirlit -stitutipis and. raise mankind tnitheir own nature existence. Indaktry. is the grand lever won which this nation must de for its continued growth,"a4d in. "dolencadoes not more to retard its Useful ness Aim Elise pride does to bring it - into disreptite—just as the turning a 6ingli3 r valve aces powerless the mightimit en gine. ' Bri4sh . feeling for Anieticane.—A S . great eeting of the citizens ef Bristol, the Ala or in the chair,, was held; June 7th, to express their acknowledgements of the hospitalities shown by. New York and het citizens, and Government towards the Grtat Western. The utmost enthu siasm prevailed, and the following -elo quent passage, full -of noble fire and feel ing; may furnish to out readers some idea of the lose affiliation into which, by the potent liarm of steam, we are now 'being drawuOrith our fathtle land, So should it be. 1 The extract we annex is from a speechl of Robert Bright, Esq.: "And' how could I invite discussion where every mind is, strung to titep and unusutt feeling, it would be little fitting to introdtj k ce any discordant topic into a meetirix which seems to be assembled under More hallowed and more spirt•stir. ring iniluences than ordinary. That a vast 'hemisphere, hitherto separated from us 'by ,a long and perilous navigation, at which commerce hesitated and curiosity started back, should be brought to our' very s i liore, presses on the mind as one of those mighty changes in the relations of the litiman race, in which man is but the feeble )nsirument, whilst he is himselfurg ed onward to his , higher and ulterior desti nies. I And pith what association to us is this change surrounded? • 'who are they whomit brings to our thresholds, but the eliddr4it's children of those whom consci ence drove from the shores and altars of ecisnmon country?—remote not separ ate, distinct but not alienated. When your Wondrous ship appeared upon their water, she seemed to bear them an invoca tion forum the tombs of their ancestors and those ,vho were distant and. those who were Uear, the aged and the young, those who vere most wrapt in active pursuits of life; end those who rested in calmness arnids( the sympathies and the affections of the land of their birth, all, all arose from their hearths, clasped to their hearts, their brothers, and girded themselves to the pilgi image. (Cheers ) I saw much of thoSe whom the Greast Western brought to us during their short visit to our neigh borlu+l. To them it seemed to come like aAream, peopled with visions of the inst. They were animated with but one feelin a feeling, that they were visiting i their nog-lost' but not forgotten land. "I go to Scotland," said one, "there I shall see t 4 tartan of my clan." "NI v mo ther,"..lsaid a , econd, "was of a Bristol family' famili." "And- I," said a third, "whilst wanedring threnwh your lovely country enteidd a beautiful churchyard, (it was Vetibery or Westbury,) and there I saw upon 4 tomb the name and heraldic bear ings of my house." Nor let it be suppo sed ti4t the chord of domestic sympathy alone is struck; the most precious freight wafter]ov r the Atlamic in the 'Great Westerns as a nosegav• formed of the choicjt reductions of American llorti colturft, and destined fo'r they' Queen of Etigland, not a tribute, but an offering, a pledge from the chivalry of apighty na tion to the germ and the glory' of their fa ther liind." ' Tlie Bouquet sent by our friend Thur burn 4 the Queen. The following truly philosophic remarks are e*tracted from Dr Brewster's life of Sir liiaac Newton. They were induced by Newton's decomposition of a ray 01 light, ; ai.d the consequent discovery and properties of colors. It may bii proper to remark that the white light ore sunbeam is coiliposed of seven different colors, viz: red, ci,kange, yellow, green, bltie, indigo and violet—all possessing different degrees of refians,ibility : k. 'lithe objects of the material world had been illuminated with white light, all the particles of which possessed, the same de gee Of tefrangibility, and A*6 - equally acted upidn by the bodies on whiih-4they fall, all nature would have shone with - a •leaderi_hue,And isif the combinations_ofex• tenni; objects, and all the features of the humaq - countenance, ivOuld'haVis exhibited net ptljer variety than that -whieli they pos sess irk a pencil sketch dr-aChinla inkAraw if ing.- ',The rainbow itself 10'4:m14)11er dwin dled. iiito a narrow arch of:white lig t, aii._. the' mentl e of a wintry twilight = Woo d have replacd the golden vesture of the iising . and setting sun. But He wholuts 4hibit -ad such ,ipitchleis skill in the ogrankation i t of Dia-feria' bodies . , and such ex q uisite taste in the*truis upon 'which they , basiiiiiteraddcd that ethereal b . utyLwhich enhaneir their more permanelit quilities, and piesents them to us inlbei evolver'' , ing . cul ors of the spectrum. 'W i lda the -.... 1- 1 foliege of vegetables, life might have filled thee* and fostered the fruit which it -veils; but the -youthful green of its spiling4weuld have , heen bleoded with the dtinglieHow of ittilitunin. Without this the diamond i • miglWhave displayed to scienct the.bsit ty a is forms, and yielde,l to he erts , tts edam ntine Nitues; but: it would have cease to shine In the chaplet iof beaut y._ intl. t spa rkle in . the diadem of,lpiin l Wi.-- I THE NIMBUS , J11)11:111ATAL. r W4* thiaOwliamanqpitntemancelmight halm - expressed' all the irjrnpatipes I ,of the hel4l},„Wthe : 1 0u9) 1 0;litht ,tif*TetwOu.ld not have risen on the cheek, notthehesttc 'flush been the timid oriels decay; - The gay coloring with_ which- the Ai. mi d ghty has decked the pale marble of na ture, is not the result of any quality inher ent in the colored body, or in the pqrticlea by which it may be tinged, but is merely a property of the light in which', they -hap pen to be placed. Newton was the first person'.. who placed this great truth in the clea rest' lig ht.' The IP6mily From the Aew York Mirror. THE THUNDER -STORM. FROM THE atilllAN or ciatirroce. Seel! the signals of his march ?—the flash Wide dreaming round?—the thunder of his voice Hear ye?—Jehovah'. thandeil—the dread peal Heu ye t that rends the concave? Lord! God supreme! Compassionate and kind! ' Praised be thy glob:toil name ! ' Praised and adored! How sweeps the whirlwind !—leader of the storm! How screams discordant! and with headlong Ware' Lashes the forest l—All is new repose. Slew sad the dark alotrds—slew. , - Again. new signals press !—enkindled, broad, See ye the lightning 7 —,hear ye, from the clouds, The thunders of the Lordl—Jehovah calls ; Jehovah !—and the smitten forest smokes, But oot oar cot— Our heavenly Father bade • Tb' o'erwhelmiog power Pass o'er our cot and spare it DOTY TO INFICILIOVIIII. The celebrated Walter Scott has somewhere observed, in his popular works, that, in an ordi nary ride in a stage-coach, he never found man so dull as not to communicate to him—lf a free conversation were opened—something, which he would have been very sorry not to haze heard.— It was a noble observation ; and the practice which it implied, no doubt, contributed much to that deep knowledge-of human nature, for which this great author is so much distinguished. But it is not as a fine sentiment., or ass} useful maxim,that 'Virgo this mutuarrespect. I say it is a duty. I will listen thaw language ofhaughty pretension. or fastidious taste, or Lover-refined doubt; I say it is a duty. I say it is a duty,. most especially binding on all Christians; yea, binding upon all who make_ iiny pretensions to a belief in the religion of Jesus Christ. And remember, too. me brethern; that it is a duty which will one day be telt, which will enforce conviction thrOugh sanctions more commanding; through a judg ment more awful, than that of the sages, or the preachers of thi&world. • There is an hour corn mg, when all worldly distinctions shall vanish away; when splendid sin, with all its pride; shall sink prostrate and cowering before the eye of the eternal Judge; when the modest merit that it 'could not look upon here, nay, when the virtuous poverty that was spurned from its gate, *half wear a crown of honour; when Dives shalt lift up his eyes, being in toinient, and Lazarus shill be borne in Abraham's bosom to the presence of the angels of God; when the great gulf which shall separate men from one another, shall separate not bet Ween out ward splendour and matinees, bur.be• tween inward, spiritual, essential purity arid pol lution,. Let the jfidgenient of that hour be our judgment now. That . which will be true there is true here—is true now. Let that severe and solemn discrimination find its way ink. this world; for it is written, ••fle that exalteth himself shall be !ambled, and' he that humbleth himself shall be esalted."—Drwil. rIJRIIOII' CIT WICAL2II This insane and insatiable passion for ae.cumn lotion, ever ready, a hen circumstances favour, to seize upim the public miad, is that 'love of money which is the root of all evil," that "covetousness which is idolatry." It sptings from an undue, on idolatrous estimate, of the value of property. Many are feeling that nothing—nothing will.do for them or for their children, but wecahlf; not a good character, not well-trained and well exerted faculties, not virtue, not the hope op heaven— nothing but wealth. It is their god and the god I or their families. Their sons are growing op.to the same worship of it, and to an equally bane ful reliance upon it for the future ; they are rushing into expenses which the divided proper ty of their father's house will not enable them to sustain; and they are preparing to be, in turn and frum necessity, slaves to the same-idol. How truly is it-written, that "they that will be rich, fall into temptation and a snare, 'and into many foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men' in destruction and perdition :" There is no need that they should be rich; but they toifl'be.rich. All the noblest fuections of life may be disarm*. ed without wealth, all its highest honours obtain. ed, all its purest pleasures enjoyed; yeti repeat it—nothing—nothing will do, but wealth. Dis appoint a man of this; and he mourns as if the 'highest end of life were defeated. Strip him of this: and this gone, all is gone. Strip him of this, and I shall point to no unheard of experi• ence, when I say—be bad rather die than live I A. HOP= OF IMMORTALITY. :slrong as the death it masters, is the hope That onwar d looks to immortality: • Let the fra me perish, so the soul survive, Pure, spiritual and loving. I believe The grave exalts, not separates, the ties That hold -or in affection to our kind. I will look down from yonder pitying sky, , Watehin and milting. thine I loved . unearth; Anxioup in until they, too, are there. I will•attead ,our guardian engel's side And temp a T jour faults with holy tears Your midnightshall be filled with solemn thought; . And When, at length death brings you to my love, Mine the first welcome heafd.in-paradise. • tars, Arm ITII TAD. - Renterobei for what' purpose you were born, and, through - the wholeof life, look at its end.— Cohaider, when thaPcohrek, in what you ; will - put icon fruit. Nig in the bobble of worldly vanity - -it will be biokco: not in wlitldly pleasures— they will be gone: not in-great conneztone—thei coon& serve you: not in wealth-.you cannot car. ry it lark you: not in rank—in the grate there „is m° alitinction: not in the reenilection of % life epept in giddy conformity to the silly fashions of a thoughtless and wicked world; but in that of a life spent soberly. righteously and godly, in this present 'world. I =3 That aIJ who are happy are equally happy, is not true.' peasant and a'philosopber nisy be e qually satisfied, but net eboally happy. Happi. nese consults in thymultiplicity of agreeible con ciousuess. A peasant has not capacity for basing equal happiness philosoPber.. This ques tion. was very happily illustrated by the Rea-Rob ert &own• "asmall drinhing glumnd a large 0 11 3' he ebtiallyll4l..hu the large one. holds more than tie small. -` - IPOTTs . mckRNRIG;-.J ,==2 d4.,(Thockh..c.r4lB..BiusitLiam. owit Wm Of ever rieseriptria, prs!itsitat this Oirgs Gs" Pnir• Coaraitteo orCerreepeedreee for the Bereigh - of Pannellto. , , • Samuel D. lAN - • •,- - George 6 1 . er Held . • ' John Efeffitr, T ' Benjamin: Bannon, James Sillymn;. Jr. Henry Sager. •Eeg. • John T 1 Warne*. Andrew IL Mire, o== Let the People Remember • , that DAVID It. PORTER voted in the Senate last, Win ter to instruct our Senators and Representatives in Cons gress to vote.in flavour ofthe odious and infamous • Nub- Treasury Bill. • LET THE PEOPLE Also remember that DA VI') It. TORTE( voted in the Senate last winter, in Ib.- vor of the Government issu. ing Shin Plasters—the 'only 1 irredeemable shin plasters that will be in circulation in this State, after the 13th of August next. , low is your time tor News. The Miners' Journal will be furnished until the election, at the low rate of TWenty-tive Cents For each subscriber—or 25 copies week ly for 85. ' Notice to all indebted to this Esta-blish nient.—W e would respectfully inform all indebted to this Establishment, that we are busily engaged in making out their bills, which we hope they will be prepared to meet promptly., We would also inform them, that we made but few collections at the commencement of the present year, of last year's arrearsgep, owing to the pressure of the times—in consequence of which we are sorry to state, that we our selves are now pressed, so that we are under the necessity of requesting all in debted to us, to call and pay their bills with as little delay as possible.. Our distant friends will please also to make their re mittances without delay. .A Collecter will wait on those residing in this Borough. Now is your time,, Boys. Another Proposition. The subscriber is now ready to. receive 500 subscribers tb the Weekly Miners' Journal until the election, in this, and the adjoining counties, on the following condi tions: If Ireph Ritner is re-elected, we will charge each sdhserther 25 cents. If David It. Porter is elected, they. shall have the paper for nothing CA.7 If the Porter awn are so sure , of electing their cat,clidate, they now have a chance of getting the Journal for nothing until the election.• B. BA NNA N. • CCr- boot forget the 'County Meeting at Orwigsburg on Tuesday next. , The Porterites hold their County Meet , ing at Orwipburg• on Monday next. Does not din . edtor of the Lehigh Re pubhcan'know that he iies,'when lie states that Porter swill have 1000 majority in Schuylkill county ? Kr- See, "Notice to Contractors" by the Chief Engineer of thelJaatus Rivera & KANAWUA COMPANY, among our ad- vertisements t&day. ' The Shin Plaster Party ; —After the 13th nfAugust; the only.Slifn Plasters in circulation in this State,• will be those ts , sued -by the General Government. _ Let our readers hear in mind, that David R. Porter. voted -in the Senate of this State last winter, in favor of the Gov ernment issuing these Shin Plasters. • 0 ::fThere is,great coniptaint in this Borough, in eoupequeace of the non-re ceipt of Packages by the Stage, since the opening of the Reading Rai! Road. The Stage Proprietors state that the charges on the rail road, on packages to Reading, are greater than what they have been in the habit of charging for:the whole die tame; and sooner than carry for nothing, they have declined carlyin' them altoge ther. We Lippe the evil wlt soon tie rem edied by some means or ot er. 13th of A.ultust. Tae 13th. of August\wilt be a memora ble day in thi3 annals of Pennsylvania. Al ready are arrangements msking in various parts of the State, to celebrate it in a be coming mariner. A tremendous meeting was held at Pittburg, immediately on the receipt of the Proclamation, which was read and received with thundering ap plause. A committee of one handfed were appointed to make the necessary arrange. meats to celebrate the dai in a becoming manner. Let it be celebrated on "a pure specie basia;land let Van ilium) and Por .tor's vile Shin Plaster ~COrrency be, con-- earned by ItONPIRES throughout th State. • ,• The Porter _men arty 4hat the Banks had agreed lb resume spkte-paymeats on the Ist of 'Aisguet, before :Governor. Rit ter issued his Proclamation requiring them to resume Cif' he ' a kumbug.,lhisy knovi it to' e false— UM %tit, ~="3 Lecei , -I.b4r; -;' l er;L4 hes most gross-deception • i irrthis• Bore gli-by,thet ',fops, upon their po litical-friends in- other. pares of this Coun ty, and also On -tieseifrom oilier parts of the Stift. For inStance: A loco from Harrisburg-visited Allis Borough last week —and offered tb bet largely on. the elec tion of David -R. Porter, (Government Inoneyi no doubt, for ;,..we question wheth er he had any of his own to spare.) Du. ring his stay : here,he made inquiries res• peeling the Mein Schuylkill County, and was assured by Porter men; that Schuylkill would give from 1000 to 1200 majority for Porter. A more glaring falsehood was never promulgated. We also learn thin the mail contractor, a few days since seated to several persons from this County', (bat Goy. Ritner would lose between 3 and. 400 -votes in the Coal region of Schuylkill Cooney. Now, the mail contractor knew the aboveurtatement was not true when he made it. The fact is that Gov. Riefler, insteed of losing in the Coil region, will gain in every district in the Coat Region; and in the Pottsville, Port Carbon, Millersville and Schuylkill Haventdistricts, he gait' between three and four hundred votes more than he re ccivedin 1835. Ca this statement or the vote our friends may with confidence rely.• o::7^,.Let every laboring man, who is now suffering foil the want iof etnployment, bear in mind, that ( JOS*PN RITNER is re.elecked, business will 'again revive— employment wilt be plenty, and we will soon return to the good old times we ~exper ienced before the "eight years reigh of terror;" but if David R. PCI te r shou Id suc ceed, the infernal war up nib° currency and industry of the people, will Imp contin ued:. Let the motto of every laboring man therefore be Itituer & Pro verity, vs. Porter, Idleness & Poverty, Bread no Bread. Irr Some of thiPorterites are actively engaged in etuleavoring to humbug the people again, byttreating the impression that the PrOclaimitiori of the Governor, re quiring the Banks td resume, has caused all ttra bard times. Let the ,Bankir re sume when they will, a temporary depres sion must . take place for a few weeks.— But we say, pressure or no pressure, the sooner they now resume the better for the country—And so- says every body but a few of leaders of the Van Buren and 'Porter party. 'bet the Banks resume7-dis• charge the ”experimepters" at Washing ton—and-our word fur it, confidence will be revived, and the prosperity of the bout!. try will noon be restored to its former footing. Mines! Ccmfe seion. 7 —A Van -tinren man in Philadelphia, remarked to a mer. chant in this Borough a few days since, when on a visit, to the city, "The people are about taking the Governnieut out 01 our hands. Well, let them hav it—fur be - hanged if they can do wo se than we have done !" • Gambling. We learn that there is a regularly established Gambling House in this Borough. Hsi), it ought to be Wo ken up forthwith. • The Globe is; abusing Grey. Ititner fbr commanding . t lie Banks to resume Specie Payments. This proves conclusively that the whole party ale opposed to the resufnipg Specie Payment9 l • (jam "The high. ground which JOSEPH Rtpefit now occupies, has cast Van Bu reu,and his Government quite in•the shade. His name is scarcely ever mentioned ex. 'cept in derision, while the people in all parts of the United States, are turning theie eyesio JOSEPH RATNER, the honest and ‘itlightened;alef magistrate of Penn sylvania,,` and 'proClaim ' him as 'the DE LIVERER *of the country from - lie reign of Shin Plaiterii tyranny and oppression. . . , CO - The Reading Van Buren and• Po rter Shin Plasters are in bad odour in this neighborhood. ' They are generally re fused by the businVes community—and we haie heard that 93 bills have been. sold 3 t l) for`s2. Why on't the eelybiated "Com mittee of Safet ," of the Borough ofßead log see to this , atter 7 -or was it the ob ject of the ICommittee," in preventing the redemption, to depreciate the vitlue of the Notes one half and thent,h?y, them in, in accordance with the true loco foco princi ple! of the day ..i - 214. perhaps the "Coni mittee's sympathi was so . strong for the General Government, that they are deter mined that -their issues shat not be the i ii only irreileema le shin plasters ' in circu lation iti this S at!, 01er the 13th of Au gust next. Rest i imptioi, bay.--Public Meetings have already bCini called in various parts t l , of the State s on Vie 19Th of August, the day * fixed Ivo . by, Governor Rimer- 'ter, the reaumption,of specie paymcnts. 9 ' , . The :114;4R hop ROMAN, the Whig candidate fur overnor of Itouisiana, is 697,* - oiti of aboni- , 12,000 I voth e a polled,:- Mr. Ittind . 's -celebrated Speech on the corruptions of ther General Government, has been tmnslted, and publishedin Ger man in Missoutfi. - - The same speech has also been translated., and- pablished . in French 'in NE* x. , . Orleini.',', 4 -Iyhrlii:iat- a German edititaiott o : in -Pennaylvanitatt - • • Cray, was cheered by; the pe o , ple in the most enthusiastic manne r, nt nearly every town hearrivesi as, on hi, way home. Tim President of the Unite, mates, ix. compaaied by tido of his ' so'pas ti me e:V to thirginia Strings.. 1 4 The Steamer the Roux, W arrived at Nevvirtirk, it brings up to the sth °fluty. The • fain a detaited aconnt of the of Queen MOne and AmeliOan stocks are in nited Stateti Bank stock • tbs. ' Bard Rvb.—Gov. Riti Lion has made the . Govern ington wince. It has MN ror in their ranks, that thl i i teinpting to deceive tie troy its effects, 'has resor and contemptible trick o impeifeet copy of it. In t which appears in the Lilo important sentence is left 4 TIIE ONLY PAPER IS LATION AND NOT CONV SPBCIE AT THEPLACE, WILL BE TB( )SE OF - 1 GOVERNMENT." •. Further comment is on " • C . OM* [MICA- I I • Why is, Puttsville like Ans... Because it is ,; posed of Mihers or. sup. [Minors i—s . - FOR THE,IfINER'I3 J Mk. - EuvriArit--Sem weeks: since, there was "Emporium * " a paragrap "Evening Star," New the arrival of the two fir England, and the two Pottsville; the cireumstan; able, because the latter the names of the 'former 'and Sirius. is I took i Major Noah was uninfor rival of the Adventurer in conseq6ence of the Ca 'an opportuait to. )r 1 'bless h freedom of the ity in a g the editor of t Emporia informed of that fact. ,I impression that my friehd would set the Major to rig his own - time and way to feet, of course; but inste friend ufthe4ournal copi tide into his columns, of the simple circumstanc chi was not •exactly true i This being the .ease, an reason to believe"that wb attached to the surcessf taking coal frtim the min( and landing it satiety . at Ni out re-shipping, is all t likely .to receive, in con parties Concerned , st a mlin ned rights. I would the me with sufficient room i per to speak for myself in matter; and to hewn' M the boat Adventurer of P ly delivered 57 tons of Co wharves, North river, Nei and returned with eightet chandize, in defiance. of contrary winds, want of pi experience on the part• servant and his crew. These - facts would • go Messrs . . Stockton & Stev. honored with the'sum of thereabouts, for toll, &c. o ed from this place. Wh of the' Adventurer had any considerations s reSpecting lion line fromlPottsville t, more than I Can jay. B that as yet I•have receiv to that effeci; though I ; hope that the:parties wil admit a few iepreSeetativ Curer to join their, fleets e season closes; or 'at least season has witnesSed the d Gret4 Westein and Siriu to remind Major ilioah, 4 necessary for me to have first trip; seeing, (as 1 sai am not likely to receive a to judg,ifrom preseneappe I cannot "bless his Stars' of a subscriber, if he d matter; for tho ell saki. sundry other luminaries h in my elpenditures; hesi. planets have taken u. within my .own domicil, some share or my attentio. receive it o z not. Yours:Respectfully Late captain of the Among the del#gaten convention at. 114risliurg named Joseptii-MiCorniio prehentrain't.t*iiiiid of tars T± 1 .9.!...,0ff,e,T1-P , ,the having: Trevinusly .murile . an offiqei4ziwiliki 'perform attempting:ti .arkeat - Mc a;ria,n).#l,,nfienpe A Berbecu l e dinner will lumbia i S. a; on petard". come home lUit Mr. Senat a> on! tritn.an orquirtanity constituents. The, otbe Co . ngiess frofn SOuth:Ca t ted to attend4and !tldresi II CM U R II 1 1 iii . .. i l it li al i c e ll b at as n. ctonation 4 ,Plelity, i t nd. U. 1 ''te 'at ,t 4.5 I . . rileri itio c i ana . Irnerit la Wash. ,!ek oWO ter. i le ed °P ia .- t e :!i: I t t s -te h h e 'n i d n ' i nte g nd : a i rt I i n : d r lamalign . • following ut: UE . CIRCU- R I LE INTO- H R 'SKIED, HEIN . TIONAL i i u tettssOry. ' ED.! 1. a Opicrge r - ' e on ,. 'mil by Mihers tIII.WPO 1 4 ty i ro lor three 'm*lo' in the erfdtied ta the odd ? pncerning S*era from : st iqats from 'e b t i i , op remark . s horfored tvith Gr'raf Western for gritntoci that ecl.alto the er n p4ir last fall, tart . t hating I s Sys ' " for the ; Id ho ; and that 1 witt also an. wa ,nder the I oiJournal rts-l-wing him ariv into er d fithis, 'my e h same at.. i ith l uti l thinning :, tliattisaid ail!. alllit bearings. • Inivt 'g Oleo , ; t lilt! credit is l i eakim vit of es ai Pottsv i lle, em illirk, yytth • betiefit L i am 1 .i. , i ecitieT e of; the I . onith irreisei.• It to oblige yo rlinext pa re mild to This l jo Ipah that ' ttsril r, actual , I cri ne of the ••tor, last fall, I :n On' of 'flier ,. ink l .ssion of i t, an viatittf yOu Inuribile • to allow, that, net I, Co.,#ae ift tto tollure - 1 ato el clCar. I the i r his rip r weigh in Oink hett (wepchte , Nel l wi k., is t t ii 1 know, , d tfOevidence m po without ye! i t ooseilt to 'a of t ts Adieu : e the ishipPing befoul ,another I - pollute of !the s . y iosh idso t at it re highly he #e it of the i Nilo' )t!let '1 . y och benefit,' ! ran ge ; though ',lk amount t le•inoe,ice tpia nt eon t h at ve aliateirat, es - Upki of , d t ei -lab* a i f iv a, .claim , wte et they . . / 'C'• : tvOloicter. ( 4 .4 .:Vt A 4 ; j. 114 . rco fo co was pan t iot l'o• h o se np.; l en liii tired 401- iid id 'Oorinick led pi Mills, leg i duty! in lorini Is• col' a 1 ! . ; TY ! ET-et, t is 'at a, 6- el-. i e `..> e j'cO.;_end i eies: -:ing Ibis • ethbOrs ! of i s teie illv'' ' le. neli 13r P f ai