'be Family Circle. From the Are York Muror 111T*3110 . 111131....-1/ CHACX e, arlactrr, IWdare but two —the others sleep ' through deatit'acatroubled night/ . .t . We are hut two--oh let us keep The. /ink that binds Lis, bright: • . Pilinirflimps to heart-.—the sacred fbilvd l f rlict•aterms us, is the same "Irlutt-go4d old man—his honest blood "Alike We fondly claim. . in one mother's arms were locked—. Long be her love repaid ; the same cradle wewere -Round the-saute hearthwe played. atahrielyriltspiwtainere aU the.Menai l 'Each little joy and aro; .. Met asapbeod. keep alive the Lame, so long ago.. tWestre blitsine--he that the bond' ?go holdms till we +die ; • Ramadar to shoulder let us stand, TIU aidaby side we lie. •. - • ACQULSITIVSNMS Or TRZ riGzi 11 ws world preserve our liberties, let uir not be sitar eager for wealth. We shuold mica for en lharateratile independence, but should baa are of a •-thiirat for riches which saerifiees tali else to its ;gratification. Money, it is true, is a peat aid di fliii.frosperity :and :power ora country; ',but re. sassimbe'r, also, that it has corrupting and lentiva lOW influences, What ' reduced nations of the swidecs time from their glory, to oviitiness and .4laviaryi Do we stand firmer? IA lour eniirse .stare brilliant than theirs 1 if eo, sp It viii not - always be with us, if •ve told uproar isety heart s 'to the attainment of wealth mid great poetessioos. -Strititge!itionerging, as recently as we have, fro... 110Whertywnil obscurity, that we ahnutd tike such Arapid strides towards luxury and ettsirainaeil 'Wealth, it is true, has Our, -our einils, eon -struested our railroads, and built up her thriving, •warta. Brit these are not all a main:in:a glory.— The requirements of the inc &Moat and the num' -anamperine to the physic-ahead +fib/eve are neg 400i the? cannot -but be when We are so de wined tolgOlden dreams, we do worse than cocci - ~.issitain erniur—we sin: And •1 would ask, iftlre Pares rents of our moral apd inte:hictual great slates are equal to those which dhoolai eur wealth and pawed Are uur morals any i better than • they srerafifly.yeara ago? Are they; as good '— Depesttlipon it, there is ton much gtasplng after -riabes--too much avarice among oa.; I fear that We nei4zt n too much the sutistaiviali to attend to .airy es and visionary El Darhdos! It is a fifty that acquisitiveness is a preslomEilant prnprn sity (lithe age. Ft contracts our so4isl - ..arautp.our-literary energies and thrtatens to pot ' • SOD the -streams of our prosperity: Let us act -taw these startling truths; let us he bp and doing: surely, my friend, it is betnir to !case like =the frugal Spartan, even with. trno;coin, than to :peewit bite the miserable and intaptinaus Chattiest. sanaid the haoquet and the repel :—Caeptii. . _ satuntess enzsrriat. to Lis t aTs , . - w limn }wt have given such valliti4ous en- 1 Ikea -preservative °roar r medt ,,,,, 1 ',,,,,„,,,,,, d , cou rage client: for I have knowle e id . di .theof-ovir Lord.Jesua Christ- halts pure i t vers fine gall-luta that you must needs have - If.= illiPoly the election Grow roontrY- f to attend upon you, doubtless, to afford you cumulh_aaactiaattiellietka,rs3fithdiairelXinupneetofontrit,:ect,t.Chtht for crush. c 7 u 2 s l i t. 7 i the like grat:fication. Nay, to such a pitch si ..__ __agefneeeShoright, not fir the increase of intol , of shatuelesaneiw hare you arrived, that it inrauvrObiletry and-finatitiam ; hot tar th e p lc ,i be known to more than one, you have a W ullion of these and of other evils I commend It, 1 man with ybu in private the whOle night -that its mild and benevolent spirit:may pervade; ir„,„ug---- }ott. e ham o 1 and then do you - .-self If h" in „Abe hearts of the people; that its wisdom may ct. ' (in the street in the early rnorniqg. And' 'ilea oar atatenien, our legislators, arid all to sh am -aro, "basted the destinie s of oureematry; that 1 this has 'been done? too, when you have 1 -its loveliness and its power may be known in all 'sworn you loved tee alone! Ido believe lbstenent eau vast territory: that the fountains . 1 that there existeth not in this world so de I i pri ea* may be puri fi ed by it, and all oar as ceitful E nespon a creature; one of so fuJs te a heart, time d Or its precepts; that. surround. i -ad • th e atmosphere of moral pun „.. ~,inch lit toad of so profligate a nature—ode so dm -Is a to impart, OUA land may shine. forth to tit ~ roughly itrt to toil sense of i ' °Tha a r and of avatiaaa, beautiful and fadeless. :rue affection. ‘Vby, the viretcheviest ''Whila thee:stria bears a plant, in the sea rolLs in 1 woman that heath upon her Lion iniquity, -warm," 6e no other than what she seeittst, and scelieth not to pass for any thing better: 1 but thou bast added bvpncrisy to am, and wouhl hiile the cli--piisition of a , s'autor. WA i der the character of a vestal ' 'T4ke heed,' exciattned the: mercer's daughter, wbo, as she had feeeno had be c.inve raceeding'v pale---:s boa-tin heaved mighti(y-i—her brilliant eye shot quick and uneasy glances, and altogether, her appearance was that of one rrial i rvell.eisiv disturbed. 'Take heed, Francini, I can Iterhest realms of earth are ibPse a here thK gospeptis not. How they glaciated ia ho r.ject On basseple b, mad in the history of the French two. prist., Whey -eooteenned its _ a rota ar it P. total: ea +Liberty. and Amway came. la stwin, and dark. topie. , end blood, It Came Ycs, It was 4.Larele ant ipbeyed the call for they had contemned an 4 "tbrasit by the cery dignity eif Lai:wet). W tut this awl of hrstory.bemre oar us aeotd Abe reek apse which they split Got4ed Dr the lieu of heavenly trutn 'and .19eying the tactidei ofetterrimg wisdom,. we wilt hope foe the .~ltarareatiat of 011ir freedom. t:mi arab a•ltls oear _ep is the boar of peril; la Hon be eat star . . mad maitaisi4riss the boar of prosperit 'l iii. 4104 L.WW. itril iftilit maintain the supremacy of the laws. 'Wisps:ft abe guardians of our property, our )1 rem, .1411C-11j04141 tigtooonr best and dearest prontegrw— Itesireatier one harrier of regarsant to be levetled. mnisifor a icemen', we open a floodgate. through miring:lb sway rush dedraction lacentrep ne.s sod m=liniheittehy is ewe of the worst eivernies to and u ie only be justice and rtghteoUs so* tightly shamed, that we cae-beep down the Ifeta 1 frhisisaftraiwg Is called for. Sweats of fear sl4„er did -ham agitated this lead Auxin these few .. pest Ailed rust amid lawless Race base .ihrwegit oat street% oar dwellings sad sop ' *se e s. with sioleace sail Wirth flame :ZIP& Mkt. the law into ooze own hands. In that which is not our right; we assume a .carer}: which only the people can dehgate: sod we nomilest pabbe robbery by the aaVarsmirtum Searle. by by yielding to our owe . plawsder of other, gimeg away to mobocracy and the exwe gof Abe moment—we: are stakiming oar 41111141 IIIIMPOIr•mad exposing ourselves to the de -Aril et therbaldlyame, or she ma ity dorwagwerse —thisto win shall - rise ap from oar Eery midst aamilibild 41.6 At first, tp telly they will lead us 111 1111 adafelly they will iimuoutte concerning -smgeeesiewhoes sent anti:plated costotas;" little by tthee m; . limy mill meet oar ayes from oar glorious emmi we are taixii:4l--grir it ap to . netship-,ciaised to the - Ist.9 a. a leader— ! The. win the deceptionsdeceptions nsash fait - malignast features, of a °ingot*. or, from wader the matmsed garb of libery, 'lmam, head of 4 Cry will crash the last li et oar %WWI) E its gra;sp! Ciii as re mama that hatudem—:yoor noblest rights • . tharesa rillii4o 4 -- sa il l amend and the taus of yam country .,-.-4, amarramoor.. . Aspieitairisearation is generally the reenett . rif lireirdemper and etantned views. Pewee wit! Leh lleram rd he paderity, who tamer look -.4.laoiiis aseemais.. • _ , As: lloolt lifirsasihrepssa,=-Diiijoar padeliow. as woo al IMMO oat tithe Foil into ask! water, arid it asa astodbwas to the bite is witsatoe la ace siSsor areisroge ►a?e: Oa *biome prick pre:souse the: they amoshis wales far the UAW Aim • psi awl arAst bd, the !ca of fet i mii;zii i ! aosist ai p %noncom kratarbat. ttbe bat 4a y„) Ma at say that bia her( -spacal before 4 0 NB it an, vary aagety reauetted, .111,01 m I ansa yois I oarebrat hal bat a haft aa ash 4l l Abe. then esesthrat mach Olt ' LOVE - AND -PRIDE. 1 From "'Shakspeare and .his Friends,' is nevi 'work recently published.in London. i 'What aiteth • you?' she . inquired with much tenderness. 'Sick at heart! si k at hearecluicklz answered Master Francis: isick of the villainous deceits that:! have been played upon me. Like enotach in- i deed to took not so well as I was. I went 1 in the extreme comfort of thinking Myself' beloved by one lirnaziried to-be ed of a goodly store of all honorable v rtuee: —1 return but to find that I have been the dupe' of the • very wickedest canto[ that ever .disgraced God's earth." What mean you by thier asked the mercer ' s da hter, seemingly in great astonishment - . hat .mean mean 1r exclaimed the youth, itidiguamtly. 'Gast done no ill thing? hest given Me no provocation - to-quarrel since I haw/ been away, by the infamousness of thybehavi. our?' None!' replied she with e&ceding earnestness; q have done no Olt 'rag; I 1 . have.done.nothing that should .gi e you provocation to quarrel. 'Ha! and indeed!' cried her . companion, now still . pidre in censed against her; 'dust tell the alai and come straight from the kisses of my Lord Cobham?' At hearing this, the !colour Mounted into her cheek a little, of which he took speedy rint:.ee and continukb.-4 see nature will take no part in so monstrous a he.' But I 'Atli confess that I was near ly-as nigh unto you as I may kit the present, and heard all, the-shame!' ss it'll -I,' pudency nr 3 oUr proceeding.. I truth, •)on have made of your lips a eom on, up ou which every ass may tied past re. Go to! you are a wanton!' And so sai,ling, he turned away from her. 'I pray yoa, Fran cis, speak not in this way,' said I/eanra, in a very serious manner; and with a face somewhat troubled. 'That ini . ,, Lord Cob ham has caressed inc. I ak-klioe ledge; but that I gave 6111 any such return,* most u.ii ri.e.:. alai 0.. au4lit wurse than ,l at done by me at any time, know.l not hinW •I)osl think I can believe any such tinarr: from you!' asked-NI aster .F rancis suddenly.— •Di - ist think I know not more of sock con duct!---...2ven if 'twere not enoughl to coa demn you by, as the stealing under the public gateway with one so notedi and go ing into hidden corners. to be 'caressed by him. I tell you he be not the only one— nor Rolph ;Goshawk, whtim }sou idid un otushingly assure me ) on cared net for. to .. . beer much from you, but this—this I can-4 not bear.' ''Tis teas than you; / have tie- I served,' reit - lied Le. 'And nor I base I done with 4 . ou. There!' be cried, as ap proaching her clo. , ely he daahed at her feet the chain of gold she had othi's uncle. ttttit 'There lies one of the gills with which you have souzlit to bribe me in*" a tokra lieu of }our infamous doings. Lind here! he added .as he followed it with a purse that seemed tolerably well filled. 'Here is that which will pay for the Coan..l hare been to foil in other thii.es. e. as:oired it bath .beco honestly come *; and riot tike your costly presents and generous st, ;plying of-my wants —the liberal wages ' of a mote liberal iniquity.' To this she I answered riot 'ease by a slizht gasping a. . ilea. breath; bur her brow became darker, !and the expression of her eyes! unnatural. i .1 now take my leave of you,' 'added Mas. I VI? Fr - Inlets' , in a voice sorriewfhat trefoil i lona. ii rare-notif ewer I seii son again. I You have -misjudged me hugely if 'tin:night I was of such a nature as to 'Aer ate for . a. single moment the - :nfatny you bare been about. Your judgment and your oifts have been equally, ,enlaced: V y heart is not one of so' mi#p a sort as Ito be satisfied with the effectuate of a jilt; nor is my - disposition so base i as So suffer itself thhe bribed by a' .----t. •Villaie ' sereaniedirsatuta, as she turiclusiy dutch- ; ed hinr by: the throat with butt herharids before the offeasave word had been spoken. • paid think I can be Mildde4lll.4 la this rile way, and bear it tarnetti?. If thou basrst twenty lives they woufd scan:el* atametnetikenough for so atrilcnnts . an in sub. Thee bast traduced rut ,T ; bou huu spoken of me the borribleat iabinesthe i l falsest,---vilest—wickitidest tie rs that ever misused women lath- ' firtec. Ito ' endure. Asst think to .; hve. 4.W,t hope, for. aretrey Ibathare shove s If Thou L bast None& are into •it ' . stradifto My *orris -nerdy tabard . Ury brain reeks ::I‘t thy life shell be tlie..forfeit.— Thy life, villain --thy - life' i ' '' T' : MINERS 4 4OII)EtICAL. . • Master Francis watt so seined by sur prise that he seemed not to have had time to make any struggle, -or she had grasped him with such exceeding violence that lie bad only the power to move up his arms a little aml then let them fall; And his (ace grew Attack' with an extreme suddenness, sothat when shell:wit away her handsfrom about his neck,' his bead fel! hack, and-he was falling to the ground like one that is taken with a . sudden death, when Joanna sprung forward and caught bim in her arms. 'Why, I have 'not killed thee, sure!' ex claimed. she, apparently in a wonderful consternation. 'Nay, it cannot be itieetV I meant it not. 'Titres, iretlthe madness of the moment. Ohl whs . ) a wretch have I been if 1 hr.ve done thee any-hurt. Francis!—dear, dear Francist• —I will.forgive all the vile things thou bast said of me, if thou wilt not look at me so horribly, Move but a breathe--or let me feel but the beating of thy heart. No—all be as still as a stone. Oh God! be is dead he is dead, and I have killed So saying, she , clasped him close to her breast with many- piteous sobs, and with the saddest, wildest Ith,k eye ever beheld. Again, she felt his heart; but there was no bcatiag; she looked to his lips, but they were slightly open, and breathed not at all; and eagerly watched all his limbs, as if to observe. the slightest movement, but the-quietness of death seem ed to be upon them. The eye lids were not quite- eluserl, and -a little of the eyes save the white part was to be Feet!. which made them appear to look very ghastly and un natural; and the delicacy of his complexion was scarce discernable for the iliscularrui2 of the skin, which marvelously increased Ins.ileathltke appearance. ‘A lack! what a sight i$ this! What a villanous thin? have I done!" she contintiad, as she kept k i , surg and pressia,g, of him to her bosom with A very heart broken counte. femme. I that have loved thee better than all the world beside, and would freely have given my own life to have saved thine! I, know net -what could have posae:md me to las hands on thee. Oh! 't was a moist her rid wickedness'. ,Franci-!—thou who bath ever been to me the gentlt, fond es t and best of creatures, and that I have loved inure as a chil 1 of my own than ought else. Oh! speak but a word, or my heart will break! Indeed, and on shy life, and heats, and soul, and all things that be most sacred in -this world; thou bast been most shamefully deceived in what thou didst say of me I have done no Alack! Mack! he heeds me not !" The Poor and the Rich— Dentar„ognes Aristocracy —the itterchants— the Globe. Ertract from the SpecCh of the Hon. John C. Clarke. Member of Congress, of New Fork, to his Constituents. Mr. C. was circled a Van Buren man, but roted against the Sub Treasury Bill. We hear much of the party slang of the narnincracs of wealth and the dem ,cracy of hurnhers." This a unmeaning ; goose:— .t it calculated to ev.ite reeling en's, jealousy and hstred among class es who should live together in harmony. atic: n - 11,.. interests are mutual. In thillree and harpy cocntry we have no inles inherited by birth—no estates I handed down by cntatl, through a long course of succession—no lass of porno i:entture, by which property in large mass es descends from father to son in perpetiii tc. Here the road to wraith is open to alt. Enterprise, industry and rattly sill con duct Its possessor t i the gaol of has ambi tion, pecuniary indcpentle'r.ce. an Coturie and condoion is the result of unequal capacity arid application. Every ' one can procure a competence, if not wealth, Jibe wills it. Industry, perseser. ance rod kr-nonny sill insure it. An ar istociocy ofecalth! where is it tote found! The poor man of to day is the rich man of nest year, and the rich mart of last year is the poor man of to day. Most of -the wealthy men of this country have become so tirtheir own industry. /sagacity and e conomy. They started in the world pen nqs, with no capital lot ready Lau& and honest hearts, the original elements of the credit systetn. Fes. very Icor, men are wealthy by tribermaree, • The naillon wire, is gathered to his father's, and his e state is scattered agorae:it het relatroos.— 1 Property here tends to ihsteitattun. Th e intereirs of society are Atonal; the de pendence of the rich and the poor is mutu al. Who fads the mouth of labor! the' rich man. Who. ministers to the reeczat tim`of the rich! the laborer, who by his in dustry. in his turn, becomes the rich man and the employer of laborers. The demo. gogue who arifey attempts to array the pour against the rich and the rich against the poor, is a friend in neit her, When he appeals to the worst passions of thit„posr. and tauntingly asks, it they wail be ~hew ers of wood and drawers watee. — does he consider that they could, not fill even these bumble stations unless employed by the owners of capital. and that in the ale mace of such employments they must Starve, or beg , or steal. This. however, is the loco Coco doctrtne and policy of abe tunes- -By such inc ead:ary appeals, the poor become chscootetated artth their wadi. Ilion, and coots the property of the rich. In moments of phrenzied &At:mutual they 1(44e/et in Rohe, ina p i :Milder. pillage and Aram: The erskra, who WA shut fonder to the e &sailed 'Aitgs of, itie **Tam atid..ristkwaid excite them to dee& of tiwiesaneas, is a pelt, i *Mob motif to be. desecrated itfan the bumble and misguided instruments of his base design. • No. The aristocracy of this country exists only in the brain of the demagogue. But to re turn to the "official organ," the Globe, which has no small amount of sin in this respect,. for which be must answer. I cite the following extracts from my letter . - to 869 w his disposition to arouse party feel ing against the merchants, who for intelli gence, enterprise, honor, honesty and pa triotism (nay challengers - comparison with any body merlin Christendom. - I refer to the attstsks of thi'Globe upon the mer chants-of the country; ;denouncing them as. a body, as being "devoid of patnotistn,-and regardless of tbehtinor of the nation;" as "destroyers of credit' by forcing the banks to stop, by refusing to meet their engage ments, and by withdrawing their deposites, (Globe, May 23;) as "colleagues with Bid die to surrender the funds of the Govern ment within their. grasp to carry out a for eign policy, "Globe June 23;) "as pur chasers of specie at 12 per cent., for paper never to be redeemed to pay their foreign debts;'tias men whose "besetting sin has. ever been a readiness to sacrifice the peat' interests and general welfare of the. ceun try and the people at largii, to their tin. Mediate views of personal profits." The exertions' of the merchants 'to pay, their debts abroad in specie was 'charged upon I them as criminal.. Without stopping to in quire into the morality of the doctrine, that it was wrong to pay our foreign debts h 1 specie, when nothing else would be re ceived4n payment, it is worthy of remark,. las shot ing the palpable inconsistency' of the Globe, that, no sooner had the banks' suspended, the effect of s hick was to re 'tam the specie in their vaults and prevent its exportation, than the floodgates of its , otiose were opened upon them for doing an, act, effecting the object which the Globe ' nad eo near its hi art. These attacks upon hour credit system arid upon the merchants,' were ' continued with um-emitted severity, lentil a few weeks before the session of Con• I geese. The reason of their eessaticm is to be found in the fact, that he was a candi date fur printer to the house, end he.l thought it prudent to reein more just andi discreet. No man who is a republican at heart will indulge in denunciation of a t whole class of citizens, and thereby arouse a spirit of hitternessagainst them. The arerettants,-as a body, are high minded, pa -1 triotic, sad useful men. They hold an important station in the business world.— Whey are the agents and factors of the far mer and manufacturer, without whose aid the products of their industry and skill' would find no purchasers; and they are, in fact, the collectors of the revenue of the country. The three great branches of out natural industry—agriculture, commerce and manufactures—are iatirnately - connec t. led with each other- Destroy any one of them, and you paralyze the others. We learn that there are demagogues even in this place, who are endeavoring to excite-this feeling among the emplos ed against the employers. SUCh persnnS, whoever they are, must beknetres at heart and, scoundrels in feeling—area who would itoS the honest laborer of his lust dad thee ezult orer his Miter y. They are walking fiends, whom the pair man ought to shun as he would a pestilence. CALHOUN vs. CALHOUN. In such an no-ue, when the qu e stion Bank or no Bank," it is , difficult to *ho gams the cause.. -In one of his speech es denng the lad session of Congress, M i. Calhoun stye: have always belonged`To the greet State Rights patty, which patty has ever been opposed, on constitotional grounds, to the, incorporation of a National Bank." In his speech on the removal of the de ponies in 1834. Mr. Calhoun declares : •1 might say with - truth •that Me Rank awes ansurikto me art* mop Mier Wi n Word in the asanatrip and 1 mina even add that, had it •ot been for tyr. . eforts is wormo arcm-iurve sumionairrsnia." Put that and that together; and then, without any alltions to the livid cons6'-t -ency, let tbeveader determine for himself whether is is bank or no bank with the Is-tinniest No tither." Economy. —Eco6amy is generally des pied as a low vutue, teadmg to make peo ple ungenerous and selfish. This is t-ue of avarice, but not so of economy. The man who is economical, is laying up the permanent power of being generous and inieful. He who thoughtlessly gives away ten dollars, when he owes a hundred more than be tan pay, deserves no praise! he obeys a sudden tozpue more like instinct than reason; it would be real Charity tp cl.eck this feelintr, because the goal _be does troy be doubtful, while the iitioryf be, does his family and crecitors is certiiiu True eeonsirny is .a careful treasure in the service of benevolence, and when they are united, respectability, ? roepe r ny y _ an d peace, will fiAltivr. Edecation is the West —els enseirmat- 1 ti there are tiro abocmool nine hood4l red scholars enrolled the Common,' Siboots. Fslly fi ve !Anthem made "midi koala are employed at an annual expense of sixteen thouand dollars- Fund for. tenches hereafter to tee twenty-three thou nod dollars. • • We boa teemed emend exuabera of a I? Wks, Alley tau 47 estatoitie4 mo d , *chafed the •Tevapar's Melanie' It is be laded ee; therappard eche whireinriaraGarer ear Ritzier. "ad ireetahot "eidisn=with 1010 4 7-' ir imew help aline* for the card cram- • r:ririi - wrimu SATURDAY MORNING A UG. 11,11338. Pamphlets, Ma:U. Canis, Bills of Lading, and ficrallefis of-sterydetcripttaa. neatirprnsted at ass Office at the louseet cask price s. Committee of Correspondence for the Borough of Portrirdle. • Samuel D. Leib. George Heisler, Erg. John Heffner. Beesarnin Batman. Jame* &Hyman. Jr. Henry Stager. Erq. • ' John T. Werner. Andrew IL White, Samuel. Haitt. Let The People Remember that DAVID R. PORTER "%rated in the Senate last Win ter to instruct - our Senators and Representatives in Con wress4o vote in favour of,the odious and infamous Sub- Treasury Bill. LET THE PEOPLE Also remember that DA VID. B. - 11-ORTER voted in the senate last winter, in fa vor of the Government issu 7 l ing Shin 'Plasters—the only irredeemable shin plaster*: that will, be in circulation in this State, after the 13th or August next., -1 4 tow is your time tbr NCIAPS. The Minere Journal will be furnished until the election, at the low rate of Twenty-five Cents For each subscriber—or 25 copies week for 85. • Nom is your time, Boys. Another Proposition. The subscriber is now ready to receive 500 subscribers to .the Weekly Miners' Journal until ate election, in this, arid' the adjoining counties, on the following condi tions:. If JOseph Ritzier is re-elected, we will charge each subscriber 25 cents. If David R. Porter is elected, they shall have the paper for nothing. (r.:r If the Porter men are so sure of electing their cardidate, they now have a chance of getting the 'Journal for nothing until-the eleehtion. B. B.ANNAN. Beau:op:4os of Specie Payments. kooday" next is The day appointed by the Governor's Proclamation for the resump. tine of Specie payments by the Banks of this Commonwealth. We are bight. pleased to see that the measures pursued by the Banks are in accordance with the wishes of the people, • expressed through the Proclamation of the Governor. The. Banks will resume on the day in question, and we trust will be sustained in the mea. mire of resumption, by the co-operation of the Peciple.' The Banks are admitted to be in 4 sound, healthy .tondition. The utmost confidence is reposed in their abil- I sty to meet all demand, by men of informa tion and intelligence.' Their conduct has been highly praiseworthy: They have richly merited this confidence. Their course has been prudent and upright! They have nothing to apprehend, heranse the people hare] nothing to apprehend from there. We !believe the People are fully determined to sustain the Banks -in the measure of Resumption. This can berac .complisbeil only by countenancing no pan ics, no illiberal runs. A certain quantity of specie wilt be required for purpcKnes of change. This the Banks will furnish.— Beyond this, their paper is preferable to retie. " Porter Slarsders.—The friends of tta aid IL Pone/ deziounce all the charges brought ageinat this gentlemen as slan ekes. Now, we admit, that if the bar ges brooggragaimit him are duelers, they ought to he diereditixl, teed 'the slander ers p unished. We have looked in Web-' *ter a Dietionary . for the meaning of the word slander., and find that it is 4firsel-to be 4 false tale or report, inalicimuly mt. tered,-and tending to injure the reputation of another." It will be „decreed that fill:dies:id is an essential ingredient orsiaa der. Therefore, without f.4lsebood there can be no slander. Now if the charges a- I bore referred to are -tree, ' they •cannot be slanders, even though they may -be mali ciously uttered, and teivitto injure the rep- I citation of Valid R. Porter. The evi- ' dente of* truth tithe material iwits of the charges is, it must be admitted, - , eery strawy. -The - first capital ebarr, iI7MIOI- al taller aid . fibertirie warm!, seems to be established beyond convosersy. , The, specifications of Ibis chargé .have been clearly Jeßett.:4 The Vietitiis are still living= 'thrown like a leathsotee• rag away—diet ethess.mcnimmisits of parental disgrace! I, The second charge, fraudulent insolveneyi,iit everyday acettroutating clew I evidence. 1 The --40.5"-already •published are startlitig, they throw a deep shick. of sasPielgekti4 sl, - Porten indeed the% . a.elt :id, as witichimicef, as the nature . of the ease' will perhii pa-adroit of, h ecao, these things are alwayi done in - secret. The sorts` now ' for acknowledged detit% the' inyste '' disappenaoce of the As o treditora mai the office of-the Prwthocio ceummi tary; the "inweent to Stoeeteaker, end r e ..ai i ci. r to Porter; these are orate which are facia, 00 4 slatiders:l 'tat if their talew,eurcngl air. fLoorsar are shodera,- why -14 tkier rk....t.-_-' • i - , - aid- -•'.'. !.•.• . L ..,,,, toyj ;bet premed *tot the.• • , • , • - or.iiigrialni aiighbe c T k a Hai. 41,gdocitJ I. thetbititabeit afary4C'erde they come Rom home? - .Is it Ossitde that these things'can be fabricsl at, home, and the fabrications escape e ection and exposure? We say itis not possible. But the best way of testin fhe truth of these charges, would be forlarommittee of upright and conscientiotis* _p;desirous of arriving at the truth, to'p ' 'dho Bun- Itingdon .Coutity,to investiga e .. owl Oar ges. ,Why l is it that the Po 1 niesl,-who Tpi fecal() disbelieve there, ha e otiong a ..go appointed Committees frcive ach COllll - for this purpose. The answer tatustbe, because they prefer darktlea4t, light - Errors —in the letter fro reeneburg, published in Wednesday's far it is sta ted, that "the majority for Ritner in West moreland county in. 18.5: 31 i3l votes." It ought te hate• beenlo i i. Several ot he r er r ors • escapedjthe site tion of the person aho read the prohfoduring our absence. . , G *-- Several hundred dolma of specie has already hien deposited in the Miner's' Bank,. by Miners, who snit. that since Gov. Ritner hes required the tanks to re stunt., and speete is again coin ng out, t,hey prefer depositing .t in the Bary to. watch iirg it in their houses. , Theatrital. —Mr. R. f*ry and com pany, have fitted og,the Long P r otma, a t O'. Connok's Hole', in this Bo'ro'llgh,, for. the purpose of giving theatrical fa frt a taa ten tg for the amusement u( the c 'glens of this 'Region. The first perfiiritiance - took place last evening, and 041 ie continuedetery evening fur d short srO Phi/ode/11/tin 'lnd PottstAl ! Rail. Road. —We understand that 20 innl4 of this Rail ! Road leading ;w 'l in eading o Port Grin. ton, will shortly be put itni er contract, which will Comprise the la rest section. This section we understa it . ItriN cost a. bout i,1,000,000, and caniti be coinplet. r ed under two . years. The,. ining link from Port Clinton to Pottfri, le, will proh ably be put under contracti iii the course of next year, as we undertta t ed the Board of Managers are cleterinit;e4 l , to complete. the road to Pottsville as 9y as possible. , More Help.-- We littimi received the fit.t number-of the People'S .Advocate, pub lished at Lewisburg,' Uniodl county, Pa. by Jonas Krkhner. It is nut in appear anee, well conducted; and, , , supports OW Joe for re-election. " . I : t i ti*: 'Anthracite Iron Purtirrtrrs.--The fur. trace now erecting in this P4ough by Mr. fund Patterson.and othetS, is progressing rapidly. -We hope to -- 1 the furnace completed and in operaiioh before long, The result the experimiihiean hardly be deemed doubtful. Wit littok upon sue ,. SC Mesa' re eentl. arist Mill - been in operatioi. -- c - - ~.. ,Jily etrualrithe expectations cif i ' - proprietors. Tile - engine is of 20.- ho power, from the Steam Engine Mannftuellory of Mms/s; tinywocodok Snyder, wh. ' tiairies are snrpas..4eri, by. none in Ibe t te, The Milt in question terns eerie ~ inperior, frcer. ff We base no doubt that t til enterprise of the Vroprieiors will be te , 413 i rewardFd. The !,,,h,i must prove a. i !....t eorivenieum, tattle inhabitants of Nit , ', . , and I t s rieinity. The schema: .-. resulting . from. it', will also be felt throu l ~ tnu.e region. wherein large quantiti :- , ' fleair are nee. manrily consumed by ark liner/serous and increasing population. Ittr : Mir interest policy toene [tie tnanulae. tures. The adjacent e , rjr, l will supply the grainy and (*Fawn raillnotiould furnish the flour*eeeeeme. r ilpboine indirs , try is fostered, capital ' ' ' iti'' ted, and the ineaes4sotoportip ai ahrtiereu.s pop ulation trtuhiptieo. • e i t iodo Rolling Ilifir at Saki fair on the LinkSdaritkilL-7-Iliz unand ill; t I Ilessrs.S. Bartolet# • • o [ of flerlotCcuf ty, we . about to estabils a Rollidg null t su at Stsoutoalt Forge in l i t! county. We butatto doubt that the e ricoent sill be folly ruccettsful, hecauSe iar e quantities of ;tolled iron are alreadyi reed in our i %%nun.. We colderstand hat Th e iron for I .,rail ,roodt, ;lon wed i ' this region, is [ chiefly of that dacrifilirfi. • Nould not thisinunerriate neighbor [ ~. prove a goad location for a rolling will i Dan - Id K. Porter in, is maid, is an frishun is en clesiatin; re be RI Gera LOVA try is gale give nest. 1100 Mot Philadelphia , - 1 ! and at O. thee 13th inst. 1 1 theiiiri 4 i 3 : o ; l 4 and less denotoi satir ,tai redeemed in iilser. - bate been made with 'intlikeztr epaitattoo, ibel.llS, Rank, ta wan dmicettift :toes igloiapio the Sbia-Pfisleta, bY the citY of 1`' _ rib* . ''its:', rest Weitelty , in New Yfilk 1 0a $ 2 0 11 41,-* figeuE ibe - 11- 01 0 6 44 1 1-k* 1:40r 0000-i _ which , will . October 1 000 to Cotri t tny. o. redeetik t All of a &Ear, as. acre