VOL. 12. . • PIUNTEP AND PURL SHED, • • . . .BY BENJAMIN Ili 'NNA.N.' wain Ezat . Two Dat.t.tits per annum„ pa , ble semi-annual in advanoe, if not paid Within year, $2 50. will be charged . ..A.d.v,e(tisercients not exceeding t eke lines wildhe . :tharged $1 for three insertions—a d 50-centafor one insertion: Larger . ories in prepor inn. • All advertisements will be• ins rted until ordere out„nnlesethe timefor whi th they are to be continue is specified And will be charged aordingly. 4 d Yearly dvertisers will be cht $l2 per annum;' including übstiription to the paper with the privilege rp,, of Italia 'oMeadvertisement not elcceeding 2 squares standing uring the year, and the iiisertion of a small- Every reader will be impresi cal beauty of the following stag written by J. N. Mailton, thel umoro Monument. Such petit I nkvE NO FATHE I saw a wide and well apr Aud children young and Eonie one by ono—the side And take their station's ti) All neatly dad and beautit And with familiar tread ;1 They - gathered rwfnd with • -Orr meats and snow whit ; 'Beside the board the father •I A smite his features vvortl As on the little group ho gal And told their portions o': Said one Why standest h See there's , a vacant seat I Amid the children—and en Far than and thee to eat' 'Alas :or !' the child rep In tones of deep despair, •No right have I amid your I have no father there.' O hour of fate, when from With notes of deepest dr y The tar resounding trump Shall summon forth the What countless hosts shall 1 1 , The heavenly threshold And gazing on the blest, el I -has% no father:there. A From the knickeitocker THE FADING TREE BY MRS. BIGOU4NEY, Old tree !;—old tree !• 're only one Round which the poe - i's mesh I twine, When faintly wakes thel autumnal sun, Or wearied sleeps thil day's decline. I see the front-king hereland there • Doth mark some lea is for his own, And point ipith.icy fin' r where He soon itrill,,rear a rant throne.• Too aoon ! too soon ! in Cold mockery of thy And proudly climb thy To hang his flauntin • While thou, all - tretublit • .Shall stand with sear, . ' Like baaoer.atal£, PO la Bre rutitleal victory t I too, old friend, when I Shall pensive to my 1 Or like the lonely Droi, The blsghling of the But when young sprin Shall wake the bird, Fain would I niid the t • 'And hang my alende ENGL -. Exchange at New 9? to 10 per cent. pre aamburgh.—The bodies of the Steamer ForfarNite cast on shore, four have b Accident.—Several persdns were recently kil• Jed by the falling.in of The able end of the Wes leyau Chapel in Leeds Stleet, Liverpool. The sebrors were workmen en aged in pulling down building. Railleakßiot.—The En lisp and Irish labor era on the Lancaster and resion railroad, have been in a state of collision The Irish laborers worked at /ewer wages, -a. the others assembled and beat them off the gro d. Some were corm tx.dlecl to 'Win] the river to .ave Their lives. • 'Working man's uniser. , ' y.—We learn from le Manchester .Courier, hat a large meeting /has been held in that tow for the purpose of es tablishing an institution w icb was to be distin guished.by the appellatio of "The Parthenon, or Working Mint's Unive . ...ty." The object of this institution was "to au .ply the working man with that kind of keow e which,• while it - would elevate him in intell. t and circumstances, should at the same time in he him amore valua ble member of society." ter several speeches had been made in. favour . such an institution, the harmony oftherneetin l .' was disturbed by the entrance of a party of ;.dical agitators, who had just returned from at nding a "demonstra tion" at Maccisfield. e foremost of these Alas. shoemaker named II nt, who declared that thelieople did not want ki.wledge, "butmore equal disrributickt of prop , ty, and that s o' long ' as they received such low -ages, and were,kept et work so king, they con • neither find money nor tithe to spend in such an institution all was proptised." A scene of co fusion took place, in reonsequeice of Mr. Bret- rton interfereing to • - atop the % speaker ; but tt Universal Suffrage men were too powerful to, be silenced, and ulti. metals , ' tineceridesi in ejec. ng 'Mr. Brothorton tram the hbair and in carr resolutions favor able to their own views. IREL Mr:Niebolsori, of 'Kill° ° - . • WILL TZACII TOO TO . PIIESCIL Tall SOWELL°, THY tTIIAND SLIP • . a poor fund 'in St. James Oriel], , ba hig put a bar to payment.of £37 balance cha i t z money, that be had been - made a bankrupt, -. , thatch wardens and ves.ry this week resolve upon send ing out as a deputation to him all the perish poor. Who are to be conveyed to Stillorgatil tin brewers cam! k Tile Earl of Guaford has at lengd- and never was the return' of any intividual, ip any .rank of life, greeted with mar; hearty de. rnonstrations of joy and. delight than*ereexhib• ited on Wednesday 641 on his Lords4ip's appear-. (ince once more among his . Ilion& Ind tenants in Ater kith ' . • - Bonaparte's Costly Costume.— Mto bits been i t. -...".. M h b., the disCussiim of late as to the cost Hie dresses BO recently ' displayed on the dbron bon ,of our Lady Queen Victoria, of Engl a nd, and of the Emperor of Germany; this month a 'Milan ; but these were surpassed by the ordinar , appearance the EMperor Napoleon on stet odeasions, "when . attired in the full-dress uniforui of a French general, as the following estimate, !drawn from official sources, will testify :— r - - Velvet embroidered snit, full.dreis l. - uniformll* '0 0 Half-boots, gold embroidery t 6 0 0 Military hat, Opest beaver I, 1 10 0 Diamond button, weight 277 carets„Vor hat 2V,000 0 0 Sabre, the blade of best Damascus manufacture, 10 . 0 0 ted with the poeti tzas: They were redttor of the Bal ite touchei the soul. THERE. Sabre hilt; a crocodile, solid gold, slight twenty: seven ounces 108 0 0 Di -end - -lied th,e. 0- Ji of the oarnond, cab crocodile d board, air Diamonds, set as eyes in the crocodile . • • r t first, re. Epaulets, formed atlas finest • brilliants 0,000 0 0 • . ...« ~ Total coat, x3p7,741 Jo 0 , Thos. on analysthg the above, 4 will ::sppear «the cloathtng, hat, and boots, inclutling.the gold embrmaery, was only 4.133 10s; leittring, on the score of ornament,. the enormotta surplus of ..C397,608. Foy to feast ; bread. The Marquis of Clat.ricarde haallaailed for St. Petersburg. where as representatiqh 'of the Brit ish-Government, his attention will tie fully occu pied by the aspect of affairs in thei.East, and.by the intrigues which aro manifestlygin operation. Our GovOrnment is evidently aliva to this state of things, and by some' ehangeqrecently an nounced in Friday's' Gazette, considerably strengthened the embassy at the Qihrta to which 'these remarks principally apply. The year 3599 of the Jewish e commenced on the 411, Oct ., which was cele brated by the Jews as their new year's day. Vie festival con. tinued for four days, and the twlllth day after observed .with great solemnity IT • the day ut atonement. re my dear ? group, the skies, 'ad, fwoe ead : land without IMMI The miller of Libberton milli! Lanarhshire, who has Dean much annoyed lateo, by water rate making holes in the sides at h •• milldam and i water.lead, thought of trying to tdh them with c i w 1 a common mole-trap baatedivith a • orm, and set ` in the water; but in place df a ratite was agrees bly surprised in the morning to 6,, d that he had , caught a large trout. He set it tin, and with F the same effect : and has - contin . d his expert i men% for a considerable time, bi 4 he had never got a rat, and never missed a trout except on one. i occasion when he got a good Pvt. ;tad duck with! ' her head in the fatal neon. t i Another whale capture took lace at Scapa Flay the other day. Twenty si 4were caught., From two to three hundred of 9mse monsters were chased from Flutla to Holm- from thence td Strsainess, and again to Scal ia, them wtre driven on shore and Sutured. Thd here a part oi• i l• remainder got out to sea and escaped. The purl suit and struggle were grand beytind description, and many of the whalei must habeen mortally f ere wounded. Some of them 'ale ex ted to be yet taken, During the affray a bo V was stove id, but her crew fottunatelY were siVed. , - i rimson bright, I .llause, he'll flout„ topmost height, l• signal out ; tg atihy late; M and naked bark, 11 and straight, mark: • hou art gone, esement go, =EO ii letort with matin clear, he stream, the tree, ain appear, wreath on thee. At an Ordination: recently heir' by the Bishop of' Hereford, a young,Quaker nettled Nevins watt admitted to Holy Orders, all a lt whose familY have of late professed themselve converts to th*: tenets of' the Established Chupith, which they publicly embraced.{ r ' I will take this opportunity oleommonicating an anecdote relating to the vi billing . -depart r ment at Portsmouth, which I safety visited. Inh credible as it might appear, it lel , fact, that corn was bought, ground, cleansed,liied, rolled, cut into shape, stamped with the nue is mark, bakco, taken out, carried to the storesr .d. In how a lone time did they suppose? in thin ' tthree minute i '(Cheers.) Dr. Johnson once , i,•"Wonder ut the effect of ignorance ;" I now ' *k you whethile it does not show how capable 1t . 1.h agriculturti and machinery is of improvemen ': May you noi, by artificial manure, be able to l i drow your coil quicker ?—[Spiech of the Rev. irk. Litchfield a the Banbury Agricultural Dinti4. :; IND: ork, on London ftbe su6rs on board Sc beginning to be en already discover , ! IVALESi. ,I; 1 j The New Pier at Aberysiwyt is progressi ' i t steadily ;itisto he about 300 kids in len , commencing at the New tlrid : over the Yst:- wyth, and carried on in a strai ' lit line into tbit sea, on the South side of the har or. About the fourth „M t n of the whole has beeh,Completedsin A pril lait, and at the same ratiii ',the whole Pi will be finished in the course offezt year. - ! Sir John Walsh Bart, M. PI ;bas subscribed .ClOOO towards • rebuilding th 'old Church tit Llanvihangel. , i .. Novel and Ingenious Media inn.—An acc rate. model of th at stupendous lasterpiece of alt. chitecture, the suspeniion Menai bridge, hs. just peen completed by a Scott.* itiiifice , of tU, name oft &Million who for seve years past hip been in the employ of M'flo ' {and Grundy 'f 4 Manchester, and of Johnston,'oiear Paisley ll Sailland, inachiniats, &c. It aok.ars that %Ind their instsuctions, MI/Lilian witsf sent to an . mterid the, construction and crettion of a idea - engine. "frit the purpose of sailing timber, properly of Messrs. Richard Bayles and So ', merchants, Bangor 'Ferry ; antildiar during t completion of this undertabing,tbeing deligb with the structure, order, and, grajestic ap - once of the Stately Menai, hir.OPMilliart co • menced the Construction of its ukchiel in wood Other niatcritils.. ~ 1 't ' 1 On a post martein ezawrinatiuti of the- body . f Elizabeth Standtieg, esbumediat-Stockport, .. suspicion or having been murdetid by her lath. , for the purpose of obtaining: y 'froln the, •Ilenefri Societies, sufficient or - wives foOnrl-.. ut Have killed a dozen persons. T 4e fatti of Sta ,: ND. ani. late tpoteurer or i' , arrived— eouth of the 11 ,1100 0 0 egent, in t 11,500 0 0 SCOTLAND. : ~"- . 5 ,4 $ •-_ 01-::. rt nye l tg i f ..4 i tti !F . . . 1 , v. , - - . .. . •• '...,,, , u1 , , .r 4 . ,.. -s.! o ~.*_, ' i , a, , ' - i , I , 'a , i , ? - 741::rz •• , i'l 1 / 4 '''' ; . ' 4 ''''•.' - ': ' ''' . `' .4 •' 7l .*:- . •° •. 1 '•- - -- • .. AN P4l i , ~ SMILE- GE IfEllitA tilkillr 4 1 1 *:, . ~,, , , ... =.- AM. '47.1+f,.4.1 4 -*-. - 7.11, :, - , --rZ9 + '+'+:. ;I - 4 L7.7.:. , k...%, -z,..zi v,.--,•• 7 4-- 3 :- 9L -• .. ... ~.--f• 4. _ . . _ - , i - . . . .OUTPAOM THE C4Vc.ll,Nti OP TaX,.I7OtONTAITOD.atzTOI Aralaik a' v tiadons.straaNin . Tovtra ILL A N D smAnsar SLL XATUI!C TO OUR USE AND " PL.ftIitSURIC.III....IOO.S9/ OTZ'SV I LLE, 14 DE. ri' g". having • .ptire ailed • ttr-eettie;' 0:114 the' de„, missed a nurture (Which he calledj leptreacleil i ali ‘ d refused to call 'in medical assistenm_btAiug Ouse& he was fu4-eontmitted-far trial, on the cbtarge of inurderutrbiatlanghler. aid the math. eij was held to bail ti fait-to appear i wheo called aloe. .POPULAR ERRORS. That, a contract made on Sunday . is not bind- That those wholairelitudest or most Unceasing itt;their prufessionjof regard. for •the-People„ are e People's truest ! friends, That genuine courage is shown by , vaporing bravado i! That it is consistent with the character of a iOntleman, to smoke in.* stage coach. That green or unseasoned wood, is as good for rhasking fires,'aii dry or seasoned wood. That, in order tb exclude a child from a share in his father'. cantle, the father , . wilt must give bim something, howsoever small; orwentiou him *la any manner. 1 , That hot.breadi or any breatl.his than twenty four hours old, is wholesome. , . tvl That excessive Ifainiliarity is not dangerous to iendship. When I hear two men; whose intim, y does not date from childhood, calling each other groin,' and 'Nat,' I look for a speedy, nod perhaps s i violent death to their friendship. The friendship 1i not only shoWn, but strengibenee, by mutual . , teapect. . . . That a lawyer, In succeed in hke 'peofeeaion is 'bliged to utter falsehoods. ' • That those who are constantly talking of the .ishonesty of other people, are themselves honest. • That the citation or many books, or the use o earned works, is a sign of learning. 1, That persons who clamor for practice as better than theory, and are celebrated by themselves° find their friends as practical men, are always •More trustworthy than those . whom they deride as 'theorists.' The former have usually - no guide but their own (often narrow) experience ; the Ist_ 'ter sometimes have the light gathered by a thou 'sand clear and active minds, during area of dill. ,gent and enlarged observation. A properly con. :etructed.theory is the methodizrd, the digested !result, of what has been seen and done by hued. l erds of 'practical men. Thut a first lore is necessarily purer, or stron. :ger. thati a second, or third, or fourth love. That keeping the door open in cold weather, is conducive to' health. That other people have not many, or as great 'cause of unhappiness as ourselves. That any simpleton will do for a legislator. That a man, whom his neighbours would not trust with a hundred-troller' of their own money, is fit to be trusted with a most important public Interest • That edaccition consists only in being sent to school ; ur in book learning: That political consistency is shown by adhering constantly to the same men, through till their changes if eonduct and opinion. That it is inconcisteney to think with one party on some points, and with an opposite patty on holler points. POTTSVILLE. SATURDAY MORNING DEC. 15, 11198 Dictionary of the Me:wage. For he satisfaction of our readers, who are perplexed at the obscurity of ma ny of Mr. Van Buren's meanings M annual message, we have selected the fol lowing a* worthy of explanation. " The strength of our fraternal and domestic ties. "—By this undoubtedly he referred to the bonds by which "the par ty " are bound to the loafers, bullies, and mobocrats of the Philidelphta county lo coincos. • Other bounties ?Ore exclusirely our own."—The interference of Mr. Van Bu ren and Co. in the State Elections, and the bounty money, offered for perjury and fraud by the division of the Office Hold er's Betting Fund. " The tn/baited operettion Oriel' the Constitution has given the people." —The mob at Harrisburg, and the unlimited op erations of Post office hirelingS, in bul lying and attempting to control the free counsels of a heretofore free legislative body. '• The anti•republican tendencies of associated wealth. "—Whether Mr. Van Buren here refers to the association known as the Office holder's Betting Fund, or to the acquired wealth of his runaway sub treasurers, we are at a !onto determine. " It was reserved for the American Un ion to test the advantages of a Govern ment entirely dependent on the continual exercise of a popular By this is meant the advantages which have resulted from the popular will having expressed itself against the Sub-Treasury, at the recent elections, and as still being impudently pressed ,before_ them in the • present message. Has not the private Secretary madea mistakeintranseribing; should - it not read -a " Government de. petulant on continual obedience to the pop; ulir will?" The" Exercise "-which -the President here gives it, reminds us of . it: friend of ours, who being daily pressed by anothes• to walk sOmeidozen miles before breakfast for. several Weeks," at last Was 'tired out, arid refused to budge. "Whit" says,the peripatetic "-not Walk ; what-bh. jection can you have. to a, der glidel morn• ines walk, -and such exercise too rt--• That's • the rub " was the reply, ." morning's walk I like, well enough, but this,exercise I object Loa 1"- 4 -• " The right of Su Page . .."—An old privi lege'of the peciple4foritierly• -recognized by all as voluntary,.bnPnow exproded,atnr less under the:dictation of goveratnentiofi ficers-. • ..f.'ipoubtfa Ittestion . i of climatic 044 ka ve been *weedy set tled inutivalom bearanre. " BM The Wiest betitnifill-part ..fthe'message, bearing - at;' it °demi s 9 'appositely • on the Mormon - .war, the Judge 'Lynch system, i and the indian diaturbaneee ! Mutual for bearance here, means fistir cuffs, and the .sentence is as pretty a specimen of Syn. I chysis, as Pausacias himsplf could desire. " Strict ferbearaswe on the part' of the ,Government from exercisirg.any doubtful ler disputed pcnoeri ; andia cautious ab stinence from all interference with con cerns which property belo , and are best left to Stale .regulations. ' Oh ye Gods and little fi hes! only listen to this bombast. The overnment has not exercised any doubtful ewers ! They tlillonot tear the revenue f om its custodi ens, and scatter it among their rnyrrnid— ons ! They did not.seek jto repel the de cision of • the Circuit CouOt of the District of Columbia i.a. tint-case .ef Stock lon and Stokes against the Post Master General! They abstain from all interference with. state regulations! Where has been the election fur the last six' months, that their officers, ther money, anc their influence has-not controlled' as far as they could ? Witness Maine, New Jersey, and Penn sylvania, witness Reil, the Custom House officer of New York, and'MeNlahen, the Post Office Bully of, Phiurdelphia at Har risburg ! Bah ! • . . . " An exposition of the fiscal affairs *of the Government; and oftheir condition for the last year, will be made to you by the Secretary of the Treasury." This means, hl r. Woodbury will contin ue his report of public defaulters, and 'run away subtreasurers, and lay before the people all - the beauties of an independent Sub-'Preasu•v. " When the Government can accomplish a financial operation better with the aid of the hanks than without, it should be at liberty to seek that aid as it would be the services of aprivate banker, or other cap italists or agents, giving the preference to those who wilt serve. it on the beat terms.'" . • . Which being interprted tueuneth, that read th i e i t returns tro ir :t o t w he sa said r returns, e w t h o e ll n . w it the Government having. • tried pet banks LT g entlemen had been duly - elected 'Senatort and state banks, strong boxes and weak viz: - • boxes, treasures with leer s ; and treasuries Frederick Fraley, from the Ist Distribt. without heads, have made up their •tninds . James Hanna. do ;41 • do . that the good old fashioned way which John Strohm, • do 6th do F. Coplan, do 18th do - suited' our fathers before us, is good enough John H. Ewing, do 11th do for our father's sons. That having ex- I John Killinger, do 7th do • peril:nettled till there' is alarge dticit in the Samuel Hayes. •do 2 2d do - treasury, - and the Gove ment bankrupt , Thomas S. Bent do .3d do being actually in debt t every -state their t and that William Wagner bad been elected from th rb lff i th P .D ell i z s: p oportiou of the Postpo ed installment of d l e ee t o d n . d . r D b i o s m tr a ic ii t ' vv in ilh p a l m ac s e A l e x. f o r f o , n the surplus revenue, they will most gra- trice, in p'lace.of Cornelius Darragh resigned, and clonal' , endeavor •witb th. assistance of the that the returns from the Eighth Senatorial Dia banks to retrieve their b oken fortunes.— trirt were so imperfect and irregular, as to render The revived gamester w 11fly to his friends t. it impossible, without an investigation of the fur succor and assistan e. The lacteal facts `tune,sret forth by them, to admit any of them ,at dugs of -the Treasury ar drained dry, and th a t At this siege of the proceedings, Mr. Pearson, now the public officer must find (tome a Senatorn frffin Mercer, moved that the ,return other pap to feed on, a 0 the ' people have from tlie Eighth Senatorial District be pesupened, for the present, whier Mr. Frailey,' a Senator chosen to wean them. ',- front Schuylki.l comity, moved to amend by stri- A lia l ving thus endeavn ed to ex Plain. and plirdniin its - correct light some of the Ptes- tiug that Thomas S. Bell, of Chester, be new ident's periphrastic cam ingy, we Will now admuted arid sworn as a member of the Senate. do a " bit of cyphering," and explain the. ' ti ' king out all after, the word Res..llved, and inser. the Speaker decided that the amendment was not in order ;,that Mr. Bell was undoubtedly emitted to a teat on the return which had been regularly arithmetical ataternents in re!itiou to the State of t•he Treasury 'D part nint. - coMnionicaled by the Secretary cif the Common. He states that the ba ance, available on wealth ; that a Senator did not acquire a right to the first of January, will be 17)2,765,342, a seat by motion, but by the election (lithe people; and the receipts from ' i t lie sale of public and t p h e e a r c e m tn r z o f me t t h w a n t - w eteetion e re a gu r la e r d ly tm l ma A d i e e ; lands and the customs 1i,;2.0,615,598, and Charles Brown, of the " county of e Philaileinhia, adds that : . - then went or the Clerk's table and tendered a " These usual sourc,s of revenue have j P aper, which he stated to be a certified copy of been increased by an i _tie of the 'Treasu- the return 'of the election fin Semites in the See ry nods ;of which, 1,-s than eigh.t mil cu d at i D u r ch t rt a ct,, im pe bu i t. was : aiid in n for ot n bo ied il b le y t Ei le re t ce S iv pLek a e a r lions of dollars, inc' , ing interest and the return of the said election was then in po - s=" principal, will be mast nding at the end session of the Senate, transmitted officially by the of the year, and by the sale of one of the Secretary - of the Commonwealth. Mr. Carpenter, o Senator from the county of Westmoreland, then bonds of the Think of 1 e United States ' offered a. resolution, That the Secretary of the for 413,V.54,8714" Commonwealth be directed to furnish to the Sen . Now if to these we .11d the whole a- ate all papers ;n his office addressed to the Senate, mount of treasury note-, $ 17,129,531 the and moved that the Senate - proceed to the second resources of the year ~ ill 5tand.542,765,- reading and consideration thereof; and; on 'that 4 42. This whole a ...mit of treasury I. resolution, Mr. Pearsoti.,end Mr. Carpenter ask notes is wisely suppre- ed; but we can are ed the yeas and nays. Mr Rogers-a Sepater.front rive at no other conch sion, but the cor- I Bucks-county, then rose and commenced addres sing the Senate, but was informed by the i Speaker rcct one, if we take the President's data ; 'for from the 6t2,765,3 2, which the mes- thata tion t w li e a e w e a e s t a d t : ba h a t t ee t i b m l e e t n h o e t c in row er t de in t, t a t t t i ll s °. sage acknowledgesacknowledges to be the yearly cur- crying out, "Go on and Bear him, Hear." Mr. rent expenses of the G..ernment, if we de- Rogers then appealed-from the decision of the duct the amount of th :-,. Treasury ewes, Chair, and hie appeal having been stated by the e r at'anderes folios th ie e Se n a te ;ei We of the balance can be. not i ing else titan the Clerk, heentertained ierkt the gk g t. rh g e actual revenue „of tb i U. S. ; for the constitution - of that body—That at the time of the Treasury stnn-plasters being redeemable.- adoption of llie present Constitution of the Corn- • ,can hardly be dignifi- . with the name of monwealth, the Senate had teen regularly organ - reve ue, and as thn act it receipts donot e - qua - e actual-expenz•-:, we must have - a • h • nation debt. . Now . 1 r. - Van Buren may titized, and had continued always to be an Organized body., bound by certain written laws births goy deerniimb: deliberate s l i r [ct l i c o h ri IT u th id e hmi -only y t i!e tha a t i th ier e e tleri by - fo th r e . take his eight million ifehin-plasters, or bade any debate on the motion then pending, and our actual ballance o seventeen million, that 'until the newly returned members .ti•ere duly available qualified OS . Senators, they' were not entitled to tald, deduct the 1,2,'65,3•12, f ers:t tie o e r e v f ote on any other question thani the balance on the l at.. in. x., and he will have a Speaker. Mr. Rogers then- .with either six. or fifteen ~. Miens to be put drew his appeal. and the question beingl taken by down as national debt, If this is not plain _yeas and days, the Senate refused to , consider the Reso r l e tos i offered by 'Mr. Carpenter, there 'figuring, we have corgi lien our old friend Dilworth, or the ?real' ea:works by an*. . r bein futiou M i r t l l. l l ta' e n on fw -a. th depa a Senli ttme te nt7it i r ' clr a ti ll a y . preitisil edition. . . Lion -to lay lover fisimiliday.. :, We have thus and :livered to 'give• an On motion s the _4nate: peociieded bi . einci a ' Exposition to this me.,:, ge, -- and should rac. Speaker; mid the names of the Senakirs tied the returned 'Members, with the exception of the casion require ' we tail again -revert to it. several. claimants-rfrour :the Sib 'Nettie, being - called by._ihri Olexk, it appeared that Charles B. Penrose had received la votes, Samuel L. Car penter 9; ind tlfe - Clerk then announced that Charles 84Peritose- was duly-elected Speakerof the Semite; whereupon Mr. PtarPle took the Chair, &Waller making his acknowledgements to the Senate, was duly sworn as Speaker, by ;, Mr. Carpenter. The S t ealer then called thej 'Alter Fantiy Wi ght's ifetk her clothes were 'to attempt to reach the etree ited,by all steam at, the e velment. If the SMte pa Ifflineera utimentionirttni, un th in kables. —Lon itteille .. . . . IgER EMBER 16; 1838. rurtkieli• - Ationa Harrisburg. In our lastJouroal, we give- the first news connected with the disgraceful riots. at Harrisburg. Since that time- the Whig Senators have published an address in vindication of the course they have pig sued, which we lay before our readers, in the full confidence that, they will appreciate as it deserves;the,full and manly exposi tion of those Whom we feel proud ofbaving elected as representativrs of the Whig party, anti who in time of peril and coin motion, adhere Steadily to those rights. of which neither force nor intimidation can peprive them. ' • Pe nnsylvii nia Trlegropis.—Extra. 6, 1838. . TO THE PEOPLE OF THE COMMON: -WEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA. Fau.ow CITIZENS; The undersigned Senators of the Common. wealth of Pennsylvania. duly elected, returned, and qualified according to . the Constitution and. Laws, and composing a majority! of that body', Teel called upOn,.'hy , the novel and dangerous circumstances•which have attended the meeting. of the Legishiture, Jo lay before the people of the State a brief account of the .occurrence at the Seat of Government, on the 4th day.of December, 1836, in order that they' may clearly understand ; the position In which their' representatives are now placdd by an illegal and insurrectionary assemblage of persona' at present in the borough of Harrisburg. On the fourth day of December, 1838, being the day fixed by the Constitution for the meeting of the General assembly, the Sen ale, and a number of gentlemen elected to fill the places of Senators whose terms' of service had expired, anG others chosen to supply vacancies which had nenured by Beath and resignation,. met at the Hall of the Sedate, and there appear-. ing to be a quorum of the Senators the duly qualified present, the Speaker of the Senate called to larder, and reported, that during the recess of the ,senate he had issued writs of election to supply the places of the following Senators, viz: Alex. M. Peitz, lute of the Second Senatorial District, and deceased; Cornelius Darragh of the nineteenth District ; and David R. Porter of the eighth District„ . resigned ; and then the Secrets , ry of the Commonwealth being introduced, pre sented to the Senate the-returns of the said elec tion. On motion of Mr, Fullerton, it was ordered that the Clerk, of the Senate do 'now open and last lecture in New a by the mob in her Let•tbeni be men. anti° of the State Go. a fur the mending of why not for FannO, Journal. • t i ~'. Ott: • ' I ...,,: ' t . `4...:.;; ft... g ME IMO newly returned members to the ClerkYilalaki;' take4beir .thri and a ffi rinatinns allininneskw ( tif • the mite according to thiCoriitittiti#rr'r sr ' ' At tide time M r Rogers of Beekii:ecitintyi*ollt ape stated that ho was deairous, at offerin . a paper, which he lilialtef his: bifld s pbewieg t he returns of the electioire'nfEretialbses iii the•Cautity, of:Philadelphia, antrthatlie fie !Wired tr wils,now the proper timelliprtisho The Speaker intimated repeatedly to Mr. Rope' that each a discussion, and - presectiiiio* . eikittiot • 'in order, and that any other evide nce-dish return sent in. by the Secretary oribtigiaiiinna , wealth cotild not be contreverted idenee, and would be enquired tiOri,'under-the acts of Aseetritily •fortrylitgeon. 'tested eleittions. Mr. Begets, hoWeirer,'Peritist ed'iri making hit remarks, in stanies were highly disorderly„tending;aithotigh we believp unintentionally, b. excite ties feelings , of a large assemblage of persons, who r thionged,_ the-galleries and lobbies, who indicated , by ap s -...., t (dilute their approbation of his course. ()rile; having been in some degree restored, Mr:rid 'erten, a Senator froth Franklin' cOunty. moved that. The swearing of the members§otti the din* ty Philadelphte, be postponed forte preseittfidid and within motion a desultory andlexeiting. ds. bate ; took place, in which Mr. Bell,* member returned from the third District, sad Caplan, - a member from the 18th District; neither; of thetiv having at that time been sworn, attempted to participate, and 'with great difficulty - 'Tett ler* ed by the Speaker. - • • ' The question, on the Mellen of Mr. Fuller on, then being taken by the yeas and mill; was,dts cided in the negative, and again the newly ro. turned members were called' to the Clerk's tilde and 'severally quali fi ed according to the Crow tu. Lion: At this time Mr. Broadhead and.. Mr. Lougacre. were announced by the :Sergeatit ; Aida. as a emerettteii from the Howie of Retirti- sentatives, and on being introduced, stated that the/louse of Representativisi had been organkrel, and; were now ready. to proceed to husiditest o they then i °tiled, and the Sergeaftt it Armirian nounecd Messrs. Henry S. Spackm4tind Tl;l3Mr• as S. Sinn!), of die Ilnuse of RerireselitattrenoFbat were introduced, and stated that the•HouSe of Representatives had been organized by theielec.- lion of Thomas S. - Cunningham as Speaker, ind were new ready,to transact business,. the Wan-. oouncement being interrupted• by iiiserea from the• Gallery, and . then retired: On motion Messrs. Barclay and Pearson were , appointed a Committee to wait on the House of Repneentit.. tives, and announce that the Senate was note or garlized, and - ready to proceed • with kritaintiat. At this time, Mr. Brown; of the county of Phila delphia, not being a member of - the Senate,, rose and attempted to address . the Senate,. and 'ea being infirmed that he could not be permitted to pniceed, the mob- in the galleries and ltibliacit commenced making intimidating noises Stitit threats, crying out Bmwn ! BroWn-: hear him:- -ntionsider your resolution—swe .will hirer .01/r. rights, kc. 4c. Amidst this tumult, Mr, Rogers, a senator from Bucks county, rdse and moved that Mr. Brown be permited to addressed* the Sehate, which being seconded by Mr.• , Hwißg, s setiatin from Washington county.. who wall, prdmpted by,a fear of personal itiolence„ ter.. the Speaker, and threats of bloodshed from the mob then pressing within the bar of the Senate. walk agieed to. Mr. Brown having pledged Mahon. or. to Messrs. Miller and Fraley, senators , triMe., Philadelphia, not to use any inflignitory rtimarksi made a speech which he professed to, be.intend- ed.to subdue the excitement in the galleries, and to fluftice the mob to disperse; but the warmth of hie feelings serried him into great firipropriety , bOth of speech and manner; declaring that -war were in the midst of a Revolution, and that thoue. wits an end of constitutiocal goiernment, ones...! iinnally addressing them in a sOpplicatirig mans.' ner,invoking them to be q?aiet, and inking there ) whether they were prepared to trample then; Qin:Ahearn], and Laws under foist, and abed tbea beet blood of the Commonwealth to attain, their ends. To these questions the mob responder yin, yes; we • will•we will; and accompanied! their .assent with horrible cries of give us blood if we cannot have our rights—Mri Brown conclud4 ed, and on motion of Mr. Bell, of Chester, thi Senate agreed to meet daily at 10 , o'ciock in thei mottling, and then adjourned , the mob rusbint within the bar of the' Senate before the Speakef hod announcedthe, debision. The Senate liThrini bar was then taken possession of by the mob, an and most inflammatory speeches addresseditrthe i b several of their leaden, and that • huller t4cred aptr ment has subsequerilly;Wrlener e Senate attempted to.assemble, herMilledrwitlO rioters,lthreatentng violiiint interference with th business of the Senate until theft. demandawer; exceeded to. To such a fearful height was th emiterneut carried, that tbo Speaker tif the Sen ate and several of the members 'were compeller . ender threats of personal injury, to ;escape' by. the windows of the Capitol. , c... .. . • i • The, unlawful sod riotoustusemhlmes.,4 the, Misguided and dangerous map, have,beon ems. i'tri timucd several times, at the Statpittit• ate Court House of them:ally of Dabribin; -andibit enate is now unable, to proceed with legit+. • ate functions, sod they acct dingle" announce o the people of the state, llint%their„represeeht, Lives cannot with safety attend the Balls of legit. lation,' until the' insurrectioriaiy and riotous assemblages, by which they are now, threatened Yrith Adele, are quelled by the arm 0,,the : c . ,4„, Ititutional power of the state, ur nretemtri reasli bn and duty, shall induce theta' biiihirsiiiish ... :*, . CHARLES 11.1`4NRCME. - ; ••' Spealtei ofille:Seriate,, I. ABRAHAM MIURA ~...- : _.; . -4 ..- • JAMES PAUL.".. ;.. „ ... 4 ..-., 1, PRROERICH PIIALEt, :, WILLIAM WAGNER: ' ;:- ' 4 ' . ' :. :* l. JOHN KILLINGER '' . -'-i-' - v-i b .4.'r ,{ JOIE* STIMIIM .0",14-Ne'r -. 414:1- •SAMILLE M. BARpL4g. . .- ~. i JACO,B i t'ASSA-2f,. - 4 JOSEPH AL "STEREI7IS- ALexANDEtc . mvor -", rliwilks WILLIAMS -. '''T '` t ' 4' LOILICASB ''. • , .. '•--30, I, -1 . JOHN ff. EW IN G"..• • .. ~ 72 „1: - ~ WILLIAM PURFIANCE, ' . • . ); L • : JAVESBANAA r -. ' 4 ; JAMES ircoivichr-g , s , ' •,,t, , r. S. micHLAR.4.-R. , ..42-. JOHN J. PEARSON . _ . - i t l . . . An 11 00 8 0 4 8 11 4eW!W.b..q 8 a.ifleilt 3 cl _ yo. the Wkag . tuelPherd,Of 1 1401:101 1 0 - 10.4 4 . : as it is based_ oneimiler4ftweepte itith that o f the gestate we tiay,e. .- - ,ll4reed twee, cessary t o insert: . : • :---...-, : , 17 . 0- - ' .4—." 1••••-••- • lbs. SuPerlig • pairylOieletM .T • Sc . 8 • Dye. 8 II 1 AIM U 111 111= 11 MEM MI CMS • ' 'l. =1