POTTSVILI.E. :11A1101iDAY.510/VIING SEt!"l. 1. 45, 18,98 44:1Firsizadets; /was, Cards, iirtals of Lading, • • of Oar y deocripiro, neatly prtated at $ or - ittrietatibesi ask rri«s. 'the People Remember • • 11 that ---- DATO R. PORTER thiSsate last Win to ins ue our Senators Rep • tatives[in Con -* to vote in favosir orthe s and infamous Sub sUry ~ 1 ~ 1 1-4 " 'bet the People iremem that if David IL Porter leeted Governor, mind the Treasury Bill should , the Government war a , st the Banks wilt be con vied, anirthey will again I mpelled to suspend Spe- Payments—and the coun will again be flooded with ;in Plasters. The Mineral JoOlai, be furniseed _weekly3o dubs and 're until the election, at t* fuiluwing oth rat 000.coliies for _ 5 5 Do 2 Do able in advance Rafter, Democray, 4- Geld avd silver. • General County Alpeting. to pursuance of the. recommendation of the sung Men's Meeting, held in the Borough Of Potsville, .on Saturday evening t ri o lot of Sept. en- ber, a General County Meeting of all the D-mocratic Republicans of Selo!) lkill county, fri ndly to the re-election of our qtesent worthy .let Majestiate JOSEPH RiIINER, whose Pr. tantation required the Banke n ho resume ape ci. payments, and consequently blinished all the . ~.. in Plasters from the State etc?: the 29,000,- Gt t irredeemable Shin Plasters sues by Van B rev's Administration, and opposed to the elec ti. n of the Shin Plaster Locufocot;'Soh-Treasury c* didate, David R Porter, are reques:ed to meet atitheAnuse of Henry Stager, in the Borough of P ' ttsville, on Saturday aftemoon,i . the 29th inst. .at: 2 o'clock P. M., to consult together, and a. pt such- measures as may be deemed necessary fok the coming tiontest. irr The meeting will be addrefited by Waimea C.I. Ltvistarmrs and Dr. Crowns lii. Emmy, and advent] others by invitation.,andithe committee able - respectfully invite the Candidates of the Sub Treasury Ticket to come foiward and pro claim.thetr pews an the leading measures of the day, tin tinc occasion. i By order of the Standing Cominittee. WILLIAM KOCK, - CHARLES DENGLER, esq. • . DANIEL HMI,. LEONARD SHOLL, . - . • JOSEPH FEIITIG. --o • Rittfrr,, Dewitt-racy, Silver and Gold. i D emocratic Meeting.. ut Democratic Republidans of Wayne 'Township, who are in tavdr of the re-elec. tion•of Joseph Ritner and 11 -sound currency of lilyet and gold ar.d. good bank notes,' and a in't the profligate Aministriition of Martin an Buren and Porter's Shinplasters and the ir• deemalide Treasury Notes,(Codinental Money.) re iespectfully invited tO attend:a meeting, to be eld on Saturday the 15th insti.,, at 2 o'clock P. 1. it the house Jacob Luckenbill, in the town ibf Freidenabur gfor the ' purpcne of promoting Ole, Election of our present woqhy farmer Gov. ernes' and the Democratic count!, ticket, and for itoch other objr,cts which may tend to uphold the rise If the People. The Dernherata of the 'ad ' oining Townships are politely requested io at. a rid.. Several speeches will be ;made in the En glish and German languages. r i • MAN YI'ARM ERS. I • Wayne Township Sept. I, 1 SR. 1 Ritncr, Gold & Sitrer, , and no Sub Treasury; MEETING of the frienijs of Goy. Ritner, L."- and opposed to the . Loco .Eoco Shin plaster leandidate. David R•• Perter, will be held at the house of Jacob Rapp. in Union ' i town'ship, on Sat lurday the 22d hut, at 2 o'oloek, P. M. Turn but Democrat's, and support yo r cause. • • Sept 8 • 70— • • Porter a' Democracy. , . EETING of the friends] of Van Buren & lzw"Porter, but opposed to the tSchnylkill Haven nomination for county officers, held on the Ist.l instant, will Lake place at the house of SotoMo; Shaffer. East Sehoylkill fjaveri, on Saturday th 115th instant, atl2 o'clock P . M . _ ' - 31411/Y VOTERS. I September -8, 1838. An Ancient Fable Or Mod ern Tit' nen. Read Instruction froth the Past. •It is Oly. in the records of the past, i the imperishable annals 4 dime nation. Wiluise eiistence con be tr ac#d only in theb is tonic page, that we can fiml those precep sod examples which Omuta mirror to sue' eeerling ages the tru e philosophy of goy eminent: In these he workings of tb il kiisinan kart under &bent systems o social polity, the ben of curtain passio .. and the"varieties - of optijar will ere eel. 1 uf to us , as chronic) s tojregslate qur fu' lure - course r and war us liorn the commi. i sem- of these acts w ichAexpertence; . h , 1 1 shock to be unwise nd dangerous. In rivet: 'age, and , ridtr every form . 1 gown:point, the- op ler portions of spel l gy sre but toil, apt to, •ia4; the guidanie .: • their cw4itical. welfare to ,kfew without in surely rOlecting on the ilierivileges site they .itrrender, or the daler nett* imp!' it a reliance on the integri Tof our.natur - . , . E . - fiance has.tob clearly oi n 4shik, - th. t When such is the cise, the 'rulefli' pe ceptibly embody themselves into an St istficracy 3 in progress of time to support these pretensions, they resort to finesse, du p lit - ity and. even force, and in every in st ce where three distinct classes of Boni et are formed, a combination of two will' be sure . to effect the interest of the other. T is was einehatically the case in our par ty idistinctiens at the clog of the revolu tion. l'be Tories, the violent Whigs, and the moderate Whigs, formed their compo nent parts. From 1784, to 'B7 these con dated, until by a union of the first andthird, tke second was placed in a minority,and as- I su eel to themselves the name of demo crt t„ w‘hich party never regained a per in neat ascendency till the election of Tliomas Jeferaon in 1800. We have mentioned these facts' solely foil the sake of example, and will now pro- cetd to a statement of parties at present, nn, confining them to the mere political fin- s of demarkation, but to those' of a • •re social kind. • Since the existence of .0 country as a nation, it has become a o • munity.uf hold enterprise and median ci✓l skill. "The abolishment of the laws primogeniture and entail has made • ev -ry one the architect of his own fortune, and we may now class our community un der the three heads of the tory rulers or th anstocracy of office holders, the gen erril men of business or the employers, litid those who - Bre in the incipient stages advancement or the employed. As the ts. ies of 'B7 strove to amalgamate them. se yes with the third TUirty, sai now are il• . $lO 00 ' 5 00 . 1 2 50 12 . . h.se who bold the reins of goVernment, ,t w i , lying to create dissension by exciting h employ* against their employers, and t insidious and deceitful promises fr endly protection to associate themselves th the operative portion of community.— ith a view to this end, the general gov ernment press, and the state _press, which advocates its supporters>are unceasing in their denunciations of the employers, and endeavor to shift -upon them the odium re. silting from the failure of their policalex p • rimejits. We have heretofore at length s own the sophistry of their arguments, b t-will now lay before our readers that an- c _ c ent fable, which has been the admiration o acres, and which has always been consid. eed model of didactic excellence. The facts which led to its delivery are some. What parallel to ' present _ times :—The commons ot Rome, pressed by the exac tions of the patrician - rulers—and over. *helmed with debt, seceded from the city, left their trades and employments, and re. tired to the Sacred Mount, determining ta hold no intercourse with it, until their requests should be acceded to. - The ar• ringance of tSe Senate and Consuls, and the depression of business during the ten 4, twelve years succeeding the expulsion of i Tarquin ius, had produced these open hot% Wiles. • Arts and persuations were equally useless until Menius Agrippa, himself orig. tially of their order, procured access to them and related the following, which o pened,the way to negotiation, and conse. quent reconciliation. Let every laboring Man before he allows himselt to believe that the interest of the employer and the `employed are not identified,-.read, mark, I learn, and inwardly digest the FABLE OF •ITIE BODY AND ITS NI =MIS "At a time when the menibersof the hu linen body did not, as at present, all unite in one plan, but each had its own scheme land *nage, The other"parts were annoy. red at seeing that the fruits or all their labOr, toil, and industry were serviceable 4nly to Ithe purposes of the stomach, and 11110 they ;did nothing but work for its gratAcation. Upon this they resolved together,' tlAt the hand should not carry food to the mouth, nor the mouth receive it, nor the teeth chew it, until by hunger they had reduced the stomach to an equality with them— the consequence was the whole body was reduced to the last stake of decay. They found that the office of the stomach was not one of indolence, or ease—that it only received the nourishment which they gave, to return it_again r to themselves, by supplying every part of the body with that vital nutriment, on which depended their life and vigor." The moral is easily drawn, and is as ap plicable now, after a lapse of twenty four centuries, as it was to the discontented Rotating. Get your smoked glasses ready for next Tuesday, to witness the great Annular Eclipse, the last which the present gener ation can witness., The obscuration will take place between 3 and 6 o'clock on the 18th, and will be annular over a apace of 420 miles wide, from Fairfield, Conn. to Raleigh, North Carolina; the ring will continue about 67 minutes—the sun will be partially blotted from the sky, and a ring of surpassing beauty takes its place. The• next total eclipse of the sun will not take place till 1869. 'This will commence about' 7 minutes past 3—the ring , be form ed 27 minutes past 4—be 12 minutes crossing the disc, and end at 40 ‘. minutes past B—total time about 31 hours. I Porter Liberality in Betting.—The Porte rites,. kind, souls! ere offertog to bet on the general result of the cOUnty State ticket. They whb boaatrof a ma jonty of frout-10 to 120.016 this County 'are trilling to bet that they will have a ma jority of one. That's - right my Itichrour , Porter,Aorne out to be nothing but jmall beer aftii•all, The Great. Eclipse. , THE , MINLRS''JOV AFL. I. ME Bpaera Mechanics land La. , towers, gavelyO for wli ni O will o` retest . In less than four weeks, the elec tion will be at hand—the election which is to, deeidethe fate and pros ferity of the Coal Region for the: ensuing season. Many of yok have not yet decided for whom to vete— either .front carelessness, want of promptness, or . the fear of ;being wrong. Look -with us therefore at the results which will be attendant en the two issues. In the first I plane then, if David R. Porter shouldlie elected; he is known to be 'the . advo cate of Mr. Van Buren and h 4 mea sures-, of course then the odious sub, treasury' scheme, a scheme that is Ito take the control of public Money !from the custody of the • people, and give it to office holders—this will be revived and insisted on.— The consequence of this win be, a continuation of those rash experi ments which have brought our bu siness' almost to n stand, at' 'least have rendered it discourageing and ruinous. No facilities for carry- ing on our operations can be obtain- - ed, and the inevitable result' must be, our operators will be left with out capital to continue basiness the ensuing winter; money cannot be obtained, and the miner, the me chanic, and the labourer, must be thrown out of emptCy. This is as sure as to morrow's sunrise—Bat on the other hand if JOSEPH RIT NER, is re-elected, public confi dence will be revived—the facili ties on which the colliers must rely to carry on their winter operations, will be obtained, and a cheek will be given to experiments and sub treasury schemes. Pause then fellow citizens, before you vote, for it is •f vital impor-• tanee to yourselves—rest assured that if you produce a wrong 'result, you are injuring yourselves.—Those who claim to be your friends,_ and wish ,you to vote for Porter, will desert you. when their wishes are accomplished—when ruin is brought on your families, and they are fat tening on it, they will not bring you work to support them; they will not clothe your suffering wives; they will not pia bread in to the mouths of your starving children. Glorious. news FROM OUR DELEGATES TO THE PITTS EURO CONVENTION. cttr ! The r g -election of Joseph Ritnerren dered certain. .1;:() , . Oa Wednesday evening last we had the pleatiore of hearing from those,of our del egates who have returned, the triumphant result of our Convention The thousands of Whigs who assemble to join in the support of Joseph Ritner, and their spirit ed) proceedings stroc dismay and terror into the Porter rank nd file; the of fi ce holders looked bilious, and the expectants agueish. Never in or country have Four thousand of o fellow citizens met together, as delegates before—never were such perfect harmony, unanimity and con- I cord *xhibited. From the estimates made, the election of Joseph Ritner is certain. He cannot have less than 8000 majority, and will probably have double that num ber? An address to the people of the State 'was reported, which will be laid be fore our readers as soon as received. The delegation saw the original transfer of Da vid R. Porter's, property, in his own hand writing, and dated only three&four days before he applied 'for the Benefit of the Insolvent laws. Samuel Sturgeon was on the ground—add delivered a plain unvar nished tale in such a manner as to carry conviction to all. The documents were acknowledged by all of both parties to be genuine—and looked upon as the evidence of his infamy under. his own hand—his I confusion. Milner Township Meetings. The friends of Ritner will hold a town ship meeting this afternoon, at. Friedens burg- Democrats turn out. A meeting will also be held at the house of Jacob Rapp, in Union Township, on Saturday next. Germans Attend. In Pittsburg, we Icarn that ell the Nat •oralized Germans are in favor of Joseph Riefler. Germans of Schuylkill, will you, suffer them to be more true to the interests of their country than you are. We think not—rally then around the banner of the German Fa?mer Governor, and teach the rulersof your nation, that"Duteh Hogs" as the Porter met% call you, cannot go. the whole hog any longer for Van Buren Sub treasury or Shin-plasters. Crowing Soo —W hen 'John Wil liamson Esq.; first came out in vindication of . David R. Porter, there wire a general l fluttering of wings and crooring throughout. the loco chicken-coop, but he has since as. that the statements made against him by the Stonebrakers and others, hays convinced him that lie was imposed ,om--; Re now believes Porter guilty of all the charges against hiM, and will}vote for Jo. v$ „Ritual., because he now knows Da vid Potter defrauded his cOilitora Tit*Ctrat Tiaittle.: The Viaggea peak. ~.--Wer - have . pienidied to substantiate by -fitureteite assertions Wintry:lip the" Coal Trade, and show by ealcidation .that our wishes ate tit - the "general good, and not tocreateoany panic. UP -to the present time last year q7;000 tons had been ship ped from the.,-fo ur principaßregions, the Schuylkill, Lehi gh, -Speiser .filetcdow, and Lackawanna, and now . but 4150,000 tons ; have been sent to motet, making sp far a deficit of 124,1100. From 150 to 175,000 tons were on hand at the commencement of the season, a major part of "islich was theOrtrbite Agh, generally -used for manu facturing purposes,,the demand for which had been superceded by die effects of the government experiments. The-consump tion last year, as near as can be ascertain ed, was from 725 to 750,000; there h4ving been upwards of 8.50,090 tons sent-to mar ket, and there remained over at Kingston{ Jersey City, and other places, about 50,- 000 tons white ash Coal, making the whole yearly supply 900,000 tons. Of this' quan tity, John White, Esq. who Visited the dif ferent markets early this Sprie.g, estimated about 400,000 remaining on band' the Ist of April. It is a well known fact that more Coal was sold in the month of April for im mediate consumption than during any of the winter months, aril as there was very little shipped to market during that•rnonth, we are inclined to estimate the quantity on hand at from 150 to 175,000 tuna out of the 900,000 in market. At the time we penned,oor article alludel to by the Ledger, there was nearly an entire; cessation of the coal business owing to the want of purchasers. If this state of things bad continued any length of titne,.there must certainly have been a Ann supply— and as it is, every/ exertion cannot prevent the quantity_sent down this season from falling short of the last from 150 to 175,- 000 tons. We believe the market will be barely supplied, if the demand continues brisk for the. remainder of the navigable season, and there-should be an immediate supplY of water in the canal, which is at present almost useless from the continued drought, and consequently the shipments from this region have nearly been sus perided; The Collier deprecates high prices for I Coal; all he asks is a fair living profit,' Which prevents auctuation.in prices, from which they can derive no possible benefit, ' but an absolute injury, as creating a want of confidence. This year, however, sw ing to peculiar causes, they have not re ceived even this living profit; a large pen non of the Coal has been sold at less than cost, and eve think we are safe in saying that at least one-half that has been sent to market, has not more than paid cixpenses. At all eve is it is evident that Witte price of coal ishigh in our cities, the first holders here derive no advantage from the! advance, all the benefit must accrue .to the dealers and retailers where such advance has ta ken place. Last year we were accused of tryil to depress.the price of Coal—this year ore. flung a panic to enhance its value. We are equally guiltless of both charges. , We wish to see a fair value teceived fur our staple,*arid the lower it can be aNirded the better for the interests of the region, as well as the consumers. Our cq of scar city was not without Toumlstioo—human efforts can barely prevent it, and it is our wish to have a full supply to prevent the increase of price which a deficit must oc casion. Last winter was comparatively mild; much less Coal was used tan antici pated—hardly any for manufact ring put.- 1 3 poses, and for domestic uses th ruinous state of the times compelled the most rigid economy; at all events, had business con tined uninterrupted, there would not have been too much Coal. When there is a short supply, no matter from what cause, the collier is Idamed first, and the cry is immediately to take off the duty on foreign coal. It is - therefore our duty; when we think the supply will be short, to warn them of the fact; if there is an Overstock,' the coal region receives no benefit from it; the consumer has all the advantage of a glutted market. 1 Review the subject calmly—look at the relative situation and interest orthe collier and the consumer, and it must Oe evident we can have no motive for misrepresenta. . lion. Certain. it is we have no wish to mislead : we chronicle our exports fairly, and strive to give all general i formation ,on the subjects of our region he cures ' pendent of the Ledger is ignore tof the na ture, of the Coal Business, iind t e author'. ty on which he predicates ii . charges, knows less. A price current o Coal, here is impassible: there' s a wide d fference in .y the worth of Coal even from the same vein, ea they run unequal, and the . q u ality Of the, different veins varies as much as the dill ferent kinds of *ood. The flutuatiOns in the price of freight too cannot guarded against; this season it has var . d from 90 to 135 centa. All these Gies ake it evi dent that Philadelphia is the l ace Where e the first useful price currenrea be estab lished--the price of export fro there can not materially fl uctuate, and th re its4iiar Let value must - first be estimat d. • O The sale of the - estat- Grim, advertised, in our last I. on the 4th of October, Will /Woodsy the Bth of that month The Curry Comb. is the new peperin there,.is plenty of, work for it ing to,iferi]seTc. • Illiner*.itiad. • Vote, for the friend of In Brent, JOSEPH RITNE of private Interest again one who if re elected will ty of work, plenty of Boat= if yoW late for David R. will continue ruiruirkous Year; bet if - Joseph Rit oar capals will be full of co brisk, and money, will a: • "Coblers and "TT wan Vote for the Democra ,, c Farmer, pot the. Federal locofoco" I 1 ce hotderi vote for one who never cheat •d a workman Of his just dues. i who never livas.a fraudulent insolvent; a nd do not support one- who would not pay i hard laboring man his honest sines, bat compel I him to sacrifice his all, while he himself was rolling in wealth and luxuty. - I . . Teasnsttirsl'. Vote for Joseph Rinser,. who has brought honor on your calling, nd who was use fully tending his own ho ses, while David R. Porter was tunning is nags in races, and his creditors in di culties. Germ= s . Vote for your German Governor; who shouldered his musket as a private volun teer during the war, and not for David R. Porter, who . was a no.fighting Genet.- , al, and would not turn out when our coun try was in danger. . I .., Farmeroof Srbuislkill, If you vote for Joseph itner, you do not support one who has liv d upon the public for years; who tale pohticiati by trade— but he is of yourselves, lone who will look to your interests and thin of the country. Vote for him if youl would sow your seed in a fruitful gardeil, where the tares of dishonesty cannot check their growth; for one who is known s an honest man, E li and one who feels•prid in being called a Farmer Governor. 1 . Office-Holders and Office-. Minters. . • Vote for David R. Poiler ! if you do no your Chief Miigician +ill draw your col tars tighter, and turobr out of your ken ars Map of Wiironstp.—A Lithograph Map of the Wisconsin Land District, by Stephen Taylor, late cif this•borough, has been pdblished. It ii compiled from ac tual surveys and official documents, and will be found of great iI3Q in ascertaining the location of sectionl, as each are num bered, and the different ranges earl and west of the'fourth Meridian delineated. It has evidently been pcepared with much i care, and will proved valuable adjunct to the settler and the lanc . holders. For sale at this Office. . 1 Withdrawing Bet 4 —Several of the Porter party have recntly made applica tion to Gov. Killer's 'rupporters to with. IL dra w. their bets,. whit requests have -been granted. • We trust al our friends will see the necessity of being I ral in this respect; many who cannot afford to lose, have been so shamefully deceived by their leaders as regards Porter's character and prospects,. that they have ventured large sums on -a result which Avery day! allows to be more 7 utterly hopeless. Coming Round.—Oince• the return cti . our Pittsburg Delegates, a gentleman of our Borough who hat heretofore been an adherent 'of David R.;Porter, has resolved to 'support our Farrier Candidate. He says he would not throw away his vote for ten dollars, and kil thinks to give it to the Jail candidate mould be the "worst kind" of throwing it away. So it will be with thousiinds, who.litving the iinpossibil. ity of Porter's etectioh will give their votes to swell tie popular; majority of Joann' Rrritat, the peoplgs friend, the poor man's ' introdut Stonebreaker's statement is false. Cer taro it is, it corroborites as far , as it goes the testimony of Eldar Owens, which they acknowledge to tin korrect, and the re• ceipt in David R. POter's own hand wri ting, of part of the . amount of a bond, as aigned byihim to J. iStonebraker, and by - him to Geo. Davis, it more than circum-, istantial etidence in favor of his veracity'. It won'rdo gentleiten—every step you . take you get fartherhn the mud, and there you mist stick vita the election, and thed perhaps yell,help you out. The Coal illfredt is not for Porter.--Aktlin late Reading Niter Coa vention out bousteti 70 delegates; (the Ritner Convention counted 1.30,) we do not ben die name of any one particular ly interested iticair coal operations; There are three 1111;41 wbo n'ay in the course of the senuniandlip half a dyima boat loads each; but 130,4eAular deale'r. hiud yet the delegation carried a lump of coal as an emblem--wittil as much propriety as Paul ding's ludicrous etymology of Black Rock, Whit*h earl so called from the nutp bei or wifitepebbten found there. . va n Otalemin!sin, and D*-- Union,--40reSlent_Sub-Tivasu6lrinil'a= ten and - C albiim paper,ligq . uMeaioll4;.' boldly-deilarea that thel.tinirmitisfaiied to acansikolist object tor addcicit vials qua lhe -- sooner It' is du so ivedihk ' of" George taktiOlace be hOjAtoo I ' *me lor I - I Wingl print - b r "nl°l V 1 1 . . tattt . What e Sub- asuryt The tree is knOwn by its limits, and:th Sub-treasury must be -known y its effect:/ It is emphatically en to make our 'government, and • its tifficteholdersi stock fobbing broken, to fatten on the wants of the people, Femme specie- f" their favorites only, and_ givn loge to tho body .of the people. For dimple; it ii within the recollection of-elli l ho.w , bent* -lug it was lately to obtain - ecie for 'the payment of postage. Our *master set , ir mended speeie for ' all • let ere from the -- people; and while he was riving flotilla* v ie - but:hard Money es the & L agent of thO 'grivermnent, he d , übtkss • paid to the butcher and baker, shiapl eters for hill dues. We-learn he was "the only Post master in - our CoUnty who! did not afford , -some facility to the peoplef:-he gave as - the reason that the - law itopelatively de- . • mandetthini to 'receive notleg but specie,, and .yet, • notwithstandiegh a duty was so .; exPlicit,lte did fake Bank b Its . from some, • . ~ ll chereng 'five per cent premium for the operation of converting them into specie. This is the regular, sub treasury mode.-- the Postmaster is paid in specie; the mail contractor is paid in specie; but the people must pay specie or be charged with a los4 of five per cent.. The little floating spe- , cie of the region wee -soon 6 the hands of government ruh-treasure4—they could make their own market of It by selling it again at 8 or 10 per cent prernium to the people, for . they must have it. The same Wheel turned remind continually, and thus every time a postage was !paid in specie,; , the officeholders were mak'ng a handsome profit out of their Ritual asters. This, ' fellow citizens, is the Van uren sub -trea sury plan-one which Gov. RITKE : II crush -led by compelling the , Beks to resume irl specie payments. It is th revival of this 'sub treasury, to which the dlection of David R. Porter is to be _made the stepping stone ,i 0 is the legalization of this that the Van Buren and Porker parties ere striving for with every energy, add should it be carried, the Banks in sell', defence mest again stop specie paymertm, and the same ,scene of distress,panic tied misery, from which we are but now rev icing , wilt again be presented. I -. In our kkrge cities, the , o peration is still more ruinous—the merdhant must pay his heavy governrnent brie in specie, while that government isissuing treasury shin plasters to all ut their office- holders. " They get all the s ie and the garde game - above 'stated is pl yed on a larger scale. The merchant m se buyi, up specie from 'the harpies of they government at a pre. mium, and they Gan . selll again and again till the end of the chapter?—or until -corn tierce and credit 'both dre sacrificed to Van Burenfsm and a Subitreasurv. Fellow-citizensll this seheme is one in which the Government have boldly and .unblushingly resolved to !'sink or swim;" it is this you are Tiled upon to crush, by voting for Joseph Ritner.; lie is the man who has and will standtween you and i t the arbitrary tyranny of corrupt Execu tive. Adhere to him, an Van B urinism, Porterism, the Sub-treesuri and Lodofoco ism, must sink—the weight of popular o-, pinion—your votes in the ballot box will hang like millstones around theit necks, and, they must drown amid the tide of gen eral execration, and the tears of those whii have been ruined by theii. medsures. • • 'lrly er uvve • the guardian nionopolies— bririg you plen age., and good I ' inter, business it Wig' been this • .t . on're-electinly coerce, freights in be plenty. (:fr• 'lle Ritner proceision in Pittsburg was upwards - o ' two mil • : long. Cowan) , of the Porter rac4 nags 6 d bottoasenough for such a two :talc heat Who are the Fr iends . Workmen ?—fn the third congressional if trict, Mr. Naylor, the Whig Candidate, is, imaelf a working man, and the 'firarsuppor er of their right's, who so ably defendedithe from the moil.. sioas of the southern Vad''Burenites. Mr. -Ingersol, the -choice, of11(040k:is a man opposed to- their inter ta, an.old school federalist, .a .wealthy ar stoerat, and one whb has asserted that h would have been a tort' had he lived,in t e' revolution, and could never consider at appellation a roproach! ing to senior ""TRUTH, IS MIGHT —A NI) MUST • • -PREVAI ." (tt- The Locos betatme jealous of the popularity of the Pecr4e's Advocero, an - excellent - Ritner Penny ipaper. in PhileAl phia, and• bought up seeral debts agaNist .;it, and seized the ESt blishment fo the purpose of stopping it—but the higs came forward prornpjly, advance the money, and.the Farm 'a Flag still waves proudly at its. mast heap. • ' • , ' - The People's May.—The Oiled States revenue cutteron• the hares of the• eastern states are industriously. em ployed idling the ssrapor c r3 t hji le i r , e k e „ tioneering. by dlstribut rtg , :papers, pamph, tete, &c. !mild the . dteinistratiou seek to degrade four navy) hat leiel, where their aspersions have"; :mid) , placed it, and can the JAI - 4ft be ware of their mis -1 ( lions 1, : W. llopempt. tiliiii o4l"ll* Arigatre at tiop . ,cwjed a temp of Emblem: - Right—for 14,elhiptiop,,liker the c . ' ';:Alt the'Peci i iicg! editgr.claesjcallp, obr sitiOn..genexa y ? as their semi Oti nos "Via. and means we . *inlay is nothing." • II he Sehillkilliconet . Reading Citieren - tone coat ail their th;eir, efrorti sifter at, will befolind in non tb oPP°' el:ctions who• hog Abair What . % •