I=Nt= T er ms of pubs tiaitions. Two DOLLARS per annum; payably semi-annual in advance. If not paid within !the fir. ' 150 will be charged. 7- Papers deliverd by the Post Rideir will be charg ed 25 cents extra. . , Advertisements not exceeifiing twelve lines will be charged $.l for three insertnalur—and 50 cents for one inseruo. Larger ones in prdportion, All sdvertismenis will be inserted until ordered out unless the time for which they are 4 to be continued is specified, and will be charged-accordingly. Yearly advertisers will bei i charged $l2 th e per annum including subscription to the stper—with privilege of keeping one advertisement not exceeding 2 squares standing during the year, and !lie insertion of a smaller one in each paper for three successive times All letters addressed to the editor must be post paid otherwise no attention.will be paid to them. All notices for meetings, he 4 and other notices which haye heretofore been inserted gratis. will be charged 25.centseach,excent Manages; and Deaths. Painpiaets. Checks, cards. thas.iy Lug and Hand.bins of 'ivory desrrepthin, neatly printed al this 4, n 1 the lowest rash ar,crf • —7- PRO . SI9.:6';TC6 TILE MINERS''.JOI:IINAL TIIIS Journal was materlall enlar.zed and otherwise unproved at the eummeneen!ent oI ihe year, and will rank with any pt .er in the state, out of Philadelphia lts pager will be devoted to a • General Chroni . le of the IC•.,11 Improve:a , nt, in the NtahulActory of Iron The pr o .Tre,- of the Arts' an I s •o•nee,; A Sun.n.iry of 1:;urop• ail ItattlL4ence; 'lle Current New,. of Lltk D.ay. sod in stiditlo i, etch nu•n's.•l will he furnished, unless p,-ess of local mill' .honl I exclude it, with ußh:l\ \l 'l'.ll.G' I' ,ere!)a. rn 11k:n.4 n i '; .1 :n 1•1;•,{, , nllny rillllllCaliOnh .se ,nj:o,c1•1,1(1,1 ,21-.•••• i • 1 :' Ie II ktl talc/UM. ro 1111,ti,,11 In I I • 1:•,4 I •.1' I ,n v.:II an th , , gen..ral !I.; •,• IS In, ,cf v :and .i11111Sr•hli•nl, and :10 ..I.•is shul be SO tra-I it %vurilij the imtrun.s.n. ,f all classes of Ow comtwinily, ;0 — wuricEß I:\ l, ItGEur.x . r. _f)3 In tli k : first we kln.i. thtNl triers' J.etr• 031 Will a,,en I "er:.•.l r • limn to ee h pt:e. t ll' h i,..1 11.1;0,11 OW 1.11',2f, 1 •l• Mk of I ° ll.llllel 1111. Inn .1 . 1 1 , 41 811')".•(J1.1 1. f Wlll. •1l 1 1P: 1 1 1 , 1 n pros ire i 11P1 adkitteeell ot.t. het. elll be char:. ~,t 1 32, ati7; /nll tru.k rt..trueot"et 1.l lo•s rhte Tlt i e Cott 1te71.111 I,ill to 1 WI,: ••••1 ilt.l(/ ‘l . ll/11 ,1 141 .11 . 1 t w i 1 f , '11.• .1:1 , 1 tv .t N SEM P11IL.101:1 , 1'11: I) PO ITSI OPPoSITIO -7-4 1 4:.04 LINE OF DAILY UOACIIES, Read inze vrl .Vorr i intil 11111, ROADS havinz ce , l , d to t 1 cats , .. p.l.,•ltations or Ite• collieueiry rt,pectiellv (11111 , .1111Ce (9 the p u l j h e th.rl th e " rimming a 1).111,Y [ANEW' C0.1C111;:i Briween Philadelphia a d rationale, For the BCCOlllinorint ion ohire public. The Conches arc entirely new, b.,th at Troy, large and roomy, and superior to any now sunning in Pennsylvania. Experienced and accommodating drivers ure en gaged, and every attentioii„ paid to the comfort and c invenience 01 travellers on - the route, by the Proprie tors and their Agents. .17 Na acing will he phiniiied on any consider° non wiatece•—r.or will the rates of fare be changed otlizr Lines shuold think proper to reduce their. rates, or even run for nothing—r? betng the whole an d s o le aim of the. Proprietors to aerommoder le the p Odle it a reasonable nate (..1 Ve tin re',ire confidently look to the punhe to Su•ta in th, m in the undertaking. The Line will leave their °lke, io thr old Po-i Odic,. at Pottsville every ria-irnirltr at 7 n'elock, A. NI and Leave Sander.ons I at di o'clock, evrry inornmg, and at 'l. o'e PC k.every afternoon. By the arteriluoir Line, Passengers arrive at Reading the VI , IIC licit, and leave Reading next morning at 1U o' Hock, arid arrive in Potts Ville at 3i °cluck, I'. M., . at the following RATE-: FAR!. From P.,tisville to Reailin4. From Redolog to Pnilad'ai ti•.. I Do. Do. No. 2 cars, PiltArille to Port Clinton D,. to Hamburg lUn From Philadelphia to Pott4yille, No. 1 Carr, 5 nil Do. Du. D Ni. 2 Car , . 450 3 t ymnittu:em are eovicea to carry na.sengrr q to and from the depot in l'hiladc:phia and acrp., th e Bridge at Nor ri4town, fret of additional eharg, s,ut tlie above rates (Li fare. F,,r seats, it) Pottsv!lle, Bl•piy a t Orr t)111,, , , i n t!IL o!d Poa Office. In Phdadelphia, nt Ss*, tel, North 4th St., .11ounl Vernon H. 1 ,1 . ,•. Congress Hall, 3d St., Ilitteri States 11,J1,1, and lionse,Che4oot In keadtng, at hrineyrs lint, I. tP All Baggage at the tli , k of the owners. Tne Proprietors woul , l iherviv tome ror the iiifor mation of the public, that thry l.nm h as n .. tiori whatever with ext,iio 7 tr nor will It ha , any CollneCti , m—hut tai! Or rocritb. PUTT, SHOE:NIA:, lINNIIY R ( Proprietors I:2—if )larch 23, PENNSYLIAMA HI in the Borough of POTTS% I: • L P . : J. IL Ut aLIirOUT. ; - NM ..S;( oi the . travel)diti, public that he has 111 ti'd 11, Cl/{11111 , K11..!IA estalt- Itslnnent hit It (•%ldv altonnoll to Ont otntort bad cent( rhenc of his thiliiins. The einiticaity of as the Maier,' Blink and the iftferoto Cria la ui~n,v recommend, it to the num or ttstile-s, whdel I's ohensove parlors and ,ted sler.e.og apart monk:, cL,4. peelhar adratitael fur the suniwortray-t.(l -(r the invalid. ; 'f Ir.( 1 t:itrtai tat .•1 (•a .• .• t•e I Itin ;Is, and he f,rdrr (a lit , • I•, • t ; o. •ry• I•i i i Or. (I; carty of viand and Itronr, mitre (•1 1 4 :14 • r 'ryas will it ali lain eon t.ete t(to pleasiire tit.d . attend its or The salubrity of the Boriiin rh of Potts% To. aad the many sources of amuserneult. both natal-al and artificial. wh , ch its vicinity affords—sender it a dcairxtile 11,,n of resort, and the proprietor pl d'/n. tits con t tied exert lona to in ike a sojourn theietn,ei ndosive both to anenfu:'t nod gratification. Pa 'March 30.11839 13-Iy EXCHANOE HOTEL, I'OTTSLV'ILLE. . ,"" • gird Want Joknson (..71 HAS taken lhi cuminoiiintl9 establish nient recently oe 'fined by Joseph. Weaver, the " National Mt( I," corner of (!entre and callny.lllll street,, and 1144 materially im d ro, 2. it, arrangement lnr the arr.iiiiiiirririatiiro The tot,nati.,n H im central, being ronlig un,le tn . the Post ebbee and - Tow:it Half, and in the bekineqs part of-the trot riu ; and three Daily Liner. of Stages arrive and depa•l from the Exchange "to and from Reading, Northumberland, Dansidle and Cattawisaa. PRIVA l'E FAMILIE, who desire spending the summer months in the Coil Region will be furnished whh•pai lours and chit - crib/a calculated to please the fancy and Tender cornfo table the most fastidious guests; and TR AVELLORS will always find those ace , mtnodations which ire most desired, and the strict attention of servants. 11 were superfluous tot say, Ciat-iiisTABLI: and 8 " wi ll always be furdished with the choicest viand s arid liquors ; arid With a wish and exertions In gratify his guests he antic.putes the patronage at the Poet villc, ape: 13, IC3il Walla Exchange at . New. York on Loudon, 9} to 10 per cent. premium. 77 , c Cha 'net ..ZhnAultanrous Illeetings."—Bir mlnzharn —Thu simultaneous meeting, as Cher te p.rter calls it, agreeably to the neyyloineni clature, which terms all ni , etings simultaneous which do tint take place. on the same der, came utf yesterday. It W.+9 a miserable failure. -• The numbers did nut d, if the y e stall, d, tmee ut the meeting when 11. ssrs. Brown, Powell, and :.ionald.uni were chosen ( tor r, porter :1,-12114 , e‘ ern] readOtiti fur the I.,,t).eVilieht I . 4lllliti 10 tF. 1:11,. tau . . doubtless, was our, and the chief. The ureic( red Punch's alert hes to I)'Conti..r's. 1l r. liCuutior told the people that the iiia2i-Ir.,''µ 1/111allit h , stur meant 1,1 p o t do t the Kersal Alwr inec•lng; and that, Li they did, he would send an andiatodotor with the ti. dm !a, and-loaf, it one drop o! blood was spill, they Birmingham men) must march through the th, it wives and_ on their arm., and t bur wives and ding era y, about caps; anal, Ihitit,a done an, they urine r tire to a field. chow tkeir c ,ps. and there watt for anoth-r am to tell them to put their raps on, we sup pa.". Reilly Mr. O'ronnor's audience must have I, e • a i-it,towed with a most rdi(rlng patience, when tin v could stand fur au Muir ni the chill of yester• rimy, to ~ i ris all harangue. We h, h e y, tai .1 in. des,gn 10, rt oim d by the magistrates of Lind -1, I" ul putto.g down the incrting there ; th 1 t-i nl.l lie shed or ; that no ambassador ; that the v 'yea and daughters of :1a tn. r. o n , ffirt iol 11..11,1 iv 11, ad vesterd.iy, will :!. m ; and - C,,P lii. . whoO.r antwuneenunt t:II ,•, ri a. Itrit Lither arinmincrment nt Nr iVieor,r--that iii re were 011 C hurler d and Keisal lteeeer:llarerheater.—Kerqeel flour meeting st.„s t.,) harc Ileeri.uitctided by 500,0UU, and uhicti a , lad to the most astounding results. We :Pen various ae , ounts or the meeting. and the to n, eqti,.le itt tit. 111101 , 0 1 1" la that or the ,ibrn eq e eeeter Courier, t% holt eoonates the numbers pres elsi"al 11105 , 15,0 ,1 0 It, L 11,000." The Mors in Stallof dshire. —A batch of rioters ere exarllllll,l Loeb., 1":,, It 'I a r oo t, Capt. Alainw, nj, am: .ther nuat wrates ; the rca .It of which was Dial ~I~C v, ere can , iitn d or trial, eight It ,cralcd up -4,n r, ccPlllll/.,111Ct. , to keep 111CoptfaCtt, and three di., C ,, :/I Vlderif, aglinst the lal.ter number not be- II,: MAIO kW 1{ t•tr011:: to criminate then'. Beitton.—The rscutful Igh of May, wh'ch was dri ailed Cie old woilen in the iitighbonrhood, d IT wit nout any tumult or gathering of any d •••iriptiuti. Pleasant Farts for the Chartists:— There are at the preseot time in the northern distrtct full twelve thousand troops, ready to be called out at a mo ment'a notice, on any emergency or outbreak. In addition to this large and formidable available force, arms and ammunition requisite for military opera. bons on a very large scale, are in readiness, in dif ferent towns, to be brought out, should any active ineaturesof repression be deemed necessary. SINGULAR FACTS Is NATURAL lIISToRY —On the estate ot l Thomas paitshorne, Esq, of Silkmore liouse.tnear Stafford, tour lambs which had been be rcaved ot their dams have recently been Adopted by an Alderne cow, which was intended to let go dry, and such is the care and affection with which she anti-hes over her new charge, that if one of them IA missing, she manifests the greatest uneasiness until It is found again. • There is now within one hundred yards of the farmhouse of Mr. James Inksip, of Caldecot, near Italdock, a partridge nest, in which a fowl deposits Mr eggs with the partridge. The following combination of names and profes sions may be found in this town and neighhourtniod: —A. Just, iiiilor,—Tons, bona and shoemaker,—A. Sinai t, stra w.bonnet manufact urer.—Tink ler, clock• in ker,—A. Hest, Tailor,—A. Conmion, ale and poT tr r Ready, dress maker,—Large, hosier. —'['tree Mercury. .5t2 nil 3 nil 2 lii The Martinis Carncarde has given directions to In.+ agent, Mr. Robert D'Archy, to enribank a por. wro 0. the lake, and make a spacious Chit green at I.'multrea, for the accoinrnodation of thepublm The Arebh:khopric of Tll/1171 nnw extinct, and the diocese N; ill he milted to litllala and Aeltrunrv, reventiqh of which have been transitrred to the Ecele , i3atieal romint,e.tieN. The new Prelate ,il he In•hop of Tuam. !idler* and Aefronry. The arch ein5e,:,1 , ..1 jntisdicuon nfTuam will be trans- IL eft d to At in agli. 11- 1 y . ' , _ , C : J IiBIEN will teach pat te , pierce the bpwele of the Earth and bring out from the Caverns of the Mountnini, Metals which will give strength - 0 our Banda and Ambient all Nature to our use and plcature.-Delaetitistait VOL. V. ENGLIND to v,ir i it r tp. fiilUi %vtather a' ii aln lR nti m. n at Peep Green on Tuesday IRELiNII. A Curt;o:•erv.—A quantity of hotter; about fen pounds aright, was found iii Bog, near ~ti, county Donegal, 1:1•1 week, fly a:labourer of Nit-. Edward Johnson's, ut D;une•nellan; It lay in the lot% est cut uT a bog, in a solid miss; sod al thouub it must have lain ut that wtuatuin for n great twiny years, pertly.' centuries, it Was in a Slate of pru,ervati.,n. It I. of it pure white colour, soon what re,•einb:ing tallow, and, whtn reduced to a fluid state, nee WV to have the appearance and rates 01' butter of a super tar qua f. A ' , Mail port lOU of at has been ?eft at our office, where it may On by the • curiou•=.--f Derry Soitinel ;—A sliOn uttstal,e. The sub Linea dtescrlbed is wolf soown tinder thu name of line tallow, and has been frtqueiilly finnid ui the bogs In Eriglatid and Scot• land. Hoax —Some way having reported, that a mer maid was to be t.ent at the Norio wall, Dublin, on Wednesday morning, a orowd of persods atoembled un thy qoay. Afk r enduring a qmart shower of snow, they had to hoar hearty cheers trout the bye t•taoders . on the approach of the merina4- 7 a hand some, mood att•rned strainer from Ilriltol=to take tip the preotion of the Jupiter betweetOahliti and I:la—,ta•—the later having been dispatelitd with troop, ail' evenmg prev ious to Liverpool, where idie i- to he r, ft , te.! with new hoi'ers. &e. D. ,t •h -ens 4.t liens arri , 4 , •Sam e tide wiv , an additional source ttL ounv womnn trns examined the othrr day, wi tt WaS u , k, l,v one or th ' C,111;1 4 PCI lors if Rho c..mc loi rem tiro rilara o 74 r of a •triodcal woman 'N,o, Sir," tali -1 do. 11. o; ilia which lips Into: the row or flit', has been the making of you— I oican impudence." SCOTL ROYAL VItAT TO SCOTLAND. --It is ani.oulteeh in a Wind-cr paper of Saturday last, that tt was gener ally under-t'". I among tho-e attached to the Colin circle, t, be the Queen's intention to Oay a visit to in the course of the ensiiing auto. n. .1 t rrreiVe , . confirmation fiat! what took place at q meeting of tile Town Coudcil at Edin burgh 144 week, where it .was stated that inquiries had been 'nitric it, in the event of a rbvel visit to this part of her Majesty's lominions, the Palace of linty rood eahld afford the requisite aeCommodation. SEVERITY OF THE SEA.DN.—LocIi ttannoch, 111 Atholl, has tbis week been Completely'froenl over, tor the third time this winter; a circumstance ne ver before remembered to have happentql in April. STORM •AT ST. ANDRE:Ord.—The hiih tide, corn. blued with the strong cast wind, Feta era St. An drew's-hay sod toast t an object of 'great interest during Saturday and Sunday week. On Saturday, in particular, the sea broke over the pier in sheets of water, rising to a very great height 4 and alight. fr on the south side of the pier and irt the harbour with great force, and: occasioning considerable damage. The pier, but tar the vigilance" of our sav MEI AND P Weekly by Bettjankin Batman, Pottsville, Schuylkill fOunty, pennsylvaniO. magistrates, would have - sustained very serious in jury: as it is, it is much rent and loo4ened about the light house, and will require considerable repairs. .The scene all along the face of the rocks. taken in connection with the pier, eras not only sublime, b it terrific—the wares approaching the rocks with lin mense weight and size; and then, in their recoil from the cliffs, meeting and contending with each other, and spouting up into ridge. and pillars of sparkling spray, A Cliartiat peareible loc.ih ty was disturbed a few data ago by the of a person suppostid to he a lAanidloess.'hartist: town was quite in an uproar. The parish clerk and clerk to the migistrates were amongst the cart - test to on the qui rive, but alas, both these functionaries were doomed to disappointment, as the indisidual turned out upon. examination to be no Chartist at all, but a highly respectable - individual, and the wor thy magistrate immediately ordered his discharge. A Chartibt Caughl.—ln a certain Weal) bor ough, nut very mmy mires from \Wrexham, a gen tleman anxious that the march of Chartism should there, at least, be nipped in the sexy bud, pounced the other day up.,n t two unfortunate, ragged, half starved looking f.;l whose very l ,ohs condemn- ed theta at once in hi; C, es as betug most vi:latouns, l'hartsts, and fo, this it.h they were popped into dur ance vile. Next day the constituted authorities as sembled in due order to sift the Chat tu:in out, and On_ rlitle:nan, as in duty bound, undertook to dispLy Lislll.4.'lluity in I xtracung th, it delinquencns how their own lips, and rendeung their politics to MA gt.tenal eyes as palpable as their, persons. Sever,d pie-Awns basing been addressed to one of the cap tis es as to his route and destination, without coin ing sery . near the point, this, subtle question was at last propounded, , •Pray', sir, where were you born'." At New lurk, " was the reply. The captor's c now kindled with delight; nuv, hi.d he caught and convicted the miscreant out of his own mouth, and exposed the falsehood of his got up tale and lie, im mediately in eestacy net:time!. o 1 hen, how the d-1, sir, came you to speak English l All pres ent were flahhergisted. Pwithcli.—The May F at this place was held nn Moinky last. In the hiring department, men's wages, for the next six Months, were on the average front to £2 higher than for some time past. Cattle of all descriptions sere sold for higher prices; and horses, in good condition, were readily sold like- DER Tricks of the Chartials.—On Tuesday se'nnight a man named William Watkins, who was in the employment of Mr. Powell, as a woodcutter, was brought before the magistrates, at Newport, on a charge of inducing a soldier to desert from his regi meut. It appeared that the prisoner, at an early hour on Monday morning, met a private of the 29th regiment (a detachment of which is now stationed in that town,) named John McDonnald, who ap peared to be affected by drink. He spoke to the sol dier, and induced hitn to accompany him to the house of a man named Young, situated near the Six Bells, on Stow Hill. Yonug's wife made breakfast fur them, and while they were there Watkins en deavoured to prevail on the soldier to desert, as an inducement he then gave him two half-crowns and a shpling, and promised to bring him clothes to the eveciing, in order that he might make his cselipe, and also promised to give him 15s. per week at work in the woods, after he had deserted. While drunk Mcllotinald agreed to do all this, but getting solver after breakfast, he refused to fulfill his promise, whereupon a quarrel ensued between him and the prisoner, and they both left the house of Young, where the transaction occurred, and went in differ ent directions. The circumstances conking to the ears of the officers. information was given to the po lice, who soon succeeded in apprehending Watkins and bringing him before the magistrates, when the above facts having been proved by oath, the pasoher was convicted in a penalty of L 291 or, in default, to be committed for three months. Mr. Watkins, not being ready with the bail, was sent off to ruminate upon his folly in the House of Correction at I'sk. [;elected (ruin various British papers to June 10) The Chem.'s baying now dispersed ,themselves over the country. and the simultaneous meetings throughout England being about ended, very little appears in the newspapers during the last two weeks with regard to Chartist agitation. Dr. Taylor and Harney have been present at some meetings Imi Cum berland, and their speeches are described as being violent; but what meetings have been held in our vicinity have been of a moderate description. The ladies of Sunderland had a grand display last week, and one Miss and lialf.a dozen Misses moved and seconded resolutions ; and among the gentlemen who urged them to pi-severe in changing their con dition, was one beating the very appropriate name of Batchelor. he is what Isis name implies, we should not wonder but hay persuasive eloquence may be attended with effect. To-olorrow evening the females of Newcastle give a tea party, at which sev eral members of the Convention are to be present.— Tyne Mercury, Mr. Ilarney.preached a sermon in the New Lee lute Room iu this town; and Mr. Lowery OLIO in the evening. Mr. Lowery's discourse was unobjec tionnble as a political lecture. He certainly firmly adhered to his own political views, but he argued the questions lie brought forward very teineerately and tairly.—ibid. Chartist Demonsaration at lianchealer.-- This much talked•of meeting was held at Kersal Moor, Man cliesier, arid a mote complete failure was, perhaps, never witnessed even artiong , t the Chartists. As to numters, no period of the rocitio z die they exceed five thousand. Feargus O'Connor, in the course of his address, said he had good a,,thority fur asse:ung that die Flan tveriari clan. in London were at worst to know how they could dispose of our young Q seen, ar.d 'to substitute a bloody Curoht rland in her place; Vol if !hat fellow wire upon the throne, that circum stance *mild make hint (Mr. O'Connor) put on a red coat at once ; but at the same time he did not see .why a bloc coat might not cover as sound a heart, and as true- courage a• 41 red coat. He should say, if they did Ihar, he should have nn , he.tiation" in advi-ing the people to revolt —that it would be their duty —against the factions, and in favour of our con stitutional monarchy. Tho principal resulutico a. duple& was the following :—”That in accordance with the recommendation of Lord John Russell, we, the inhabitants of South Lancenshire, in plebe meeting assembled, to the number of five hundred thousand, gond men anditrue, all of us interested in the protection of life and property, do hereby te stiJot our chairman to apply, in our behalf to the Home Secretary for five hundred thousand stand of arms, commissaries, ammunition, kr-. suitable to the emergency anticipated - by the noble Lord. We further assert, that II the law allows a search for the arms of the poor, the law also justifies a search for the arms of the r i ch. And, therefore, should our au_ plicatiun for arms be refilled, or our houses searehee for arms against our catisitnt, we shall conclude It is the government's intention to arm the rich against ~~= ~ ~ - .. may' , , ~~ all SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 20. 1339. WALES. FILE CHARTISI'S. ~ ? . ,....\.0,....-• ...,.:;:' --., .....i r., RAL 'he poor'--a comstf of policy which we shall comid er a violation of.the bill or rights, and treat as a de. claration of war against the indtistrious-elarses." Chartist Bombast_-11 was stated I v Feargus o'. Connor at Birmingham, that the numbers attending Per p Green ini•e7iiig amounted to hates rnißion ! His rival in ag•ttaiiiin,o'Brien, just estimated the crowd at row hithdred thotriand, or a hundred thou sand less thart . l.islriend Fears:N. We nerd scarce ly Sat', first h.,th thee, a'e nients are nionsliqus versions of trot ; tie Is! i-or ,sitmote is even' act nal r more than he et6ule male adult iii,puiathin of the Weid. Rich 1; One of lb, l' . • .'l.t. 11311 r. d 11,1111 il3 . ,t 01 =lOllll.l rha r. DI I . 11 he xi, ti. , • iii j I , t .“,te I 111 clown, anti, with IlledlCa I tele, ri-plorid In i hat state tifa Ilving being n h 1.71. In• had vt rt Iv tvrnmwed. let.Oi t heard thnt Las [wen Sihi, et 1., ve..p‘tonal aherrultnnn td the Journal Tvin ‘a.,- are d', have latterly tieen t wade to sci hrc to the linose nf Mr. ex.Aldertnnh Hadley. "Inls ts. we .uppose a very email 'Mervin!. al brin,.:;,g N1...n0r measures into uperotion.—liir !Hingham Ai:v..rtiser. Muryport.—Mr. Harney, the Charti.t delegate. and a few , Imv I.lliws, from Coekerinnuth, i.o.t week held a meeting at Alarypori, when the fnrther gen tiermin I. in ihe u•nt.tl hi teal cum non s, and endeavoted to ',Hum the minds ,if the worLiog c:aa-es at 'Mary hit wtthnut eIF c', an I ha d come as he priiini-ed,oni Inc 11^nd.tt Inlimt Iliere Were. I li•e , e roi•,iiri.d in covet L n who would lone matched him oft. and given Min .tia at: opie•rtunit r ariying at ut pliyaital lOrce tutu exi'culiin. Toe Charity!, have kid •ag l inyt n number of re-ey-ciable fitivoliw. a l 1,011 training. 'qr. C01,1,,rt, ~ t Fcargur O'Connor, apptar, d to I the roYy- cotton. It a flin'tired fri,rn C m , efidei,ce Ihal the prlvoners, tlYr n, number, had been walking togeth_ er, and on tetr road home, one nt theni who been m thy tunny raid, ' 11 el/ szendetrtan, I a,nelad9'. Inn see you w alk rn soldu•rl.ke.•' 'l•hey kmw lug he had been in the artily szln, "Tell us Low to attl, 'room),•' which lie did ; and on I heir h."n e he In qu , only m , d military phra:yy Or.e tin r prix nneag %as neynt!erl, and the reiontod, r were OVer to LIII•V‘t r el.rge at the Mt.nSloripi. rh, rp Live been ('ha•tisl tocting. in QvvPre wirtrr,, but they have Ite.:1) ore< rly aoJ %irthit, at the t•aitie tune, they hare bet n, ahliosit without excr i ir ion, tillia:ler than ti••• in the Fame s. This is the character of the strilultaticous rutetings BO lur us they have proceed. ed. The Secretary of the Salford Radical Association applied to the Earl of Derby, the lord lieutenant of the county palatine of Lancaster, for a supply of arms for 2,200 men, for the protection of life and property, according to the plan of Lord John Rus sell. His lordship, in imply, said he had not the arms to send, and it he had, he knew nothing of the person making the application, and was not aware of the existence of such an association. lie, how ever, promised to lay the application before the Sec retary of State for the Home Diepartment. The Savings' Banks and the Chartists.—The run On the Savings' Banks would seem to have been much over rated, and to have little exceeded what might have been husked for, in consequonce of the partial depression of some branches of industry.— The total sum sold out by the Commissioners is on. Iv .1120,039—while the total deposits amount to 123,000,000 '.! As to the Chartists, they may bel low and threaten, but they arc not the class who have money in the batik. It is a remarkable and instructive fact, that in no considerable town have these noisy demagogues been able to make airy iin ' , tension On the labouring inhabitants. Mr. O'Connell has sent to the Birmsnzbam Jour nal an address to the Chartists ot Birminglisin re munstratang a ith them on account of the errors in• to which they have fallen, and suggi sting that “a• the period seems to have crowe alp n the raitonal arid sober part of the Operatives ontztil to se'', sale from the men of violence and n new Sr-or:a tom should lie tormed, and a fresh council nnnuna led, and that this association should come forward as the fricods of peeve, law nod order, and as tlii hafting, rs of peace, of union and of sucee.s. He proposes as the association lloinwhold sill (rage, iiieluding all h, ads al tainilies a Nether pone of eritire houses or Olrk 101 l LIU ; all joorner. teen It, trades ;and tat teachers of literal rue , r p c , race. 2nd. The 3d. Trie, will part. tin. n • 4th. Tire ab,.;iiiiin of the pro.), rte Tribne 5t h. El: ctorul distric is, C. i.e.. ri% li• I ~ 1. 1 1,0111111;1'ion. With FespeCt 'I., noon Oi • %. •o'l • atiOn 6u is indifferent. 1 Ince may mill it ••I'mori Society or Clrh, or by the more Icnattiened name of 'Precursor oh Rt.:lir in A•sociiit mu." '1 lon, rods tills sirai.gr lyt 11;111; y # EULOGY OF ROBERT BURNS. At the celebration—in Lonistiiile, hentuticv—of the birthday of Scotland's favorite poet, Mr. Prentice, of the Louisville Journal, addressed the company in the following strain of impassionate and thriltirig eloquence. It is an out pouring of the heart, wor thy of being placed by the side of the most brilltam oratOrical passages. Britain and America assembled to pay Lhr ir 'wart felt tribute of admiration to diet - Memory of Robert Burns, the unrivaled minstrel of Scutlutind, whose fame gathers freshness from the lapse of years, arid, like the ivy, flourishes greenly over the lone prostra tion of the lovely and the beautiful. You all know the history of Robert Burns. The. world knows it by heart. The 'cottish boy, born in poverty and obscurity, won bra way through toils, privations and sufferings, ti one of the loftiest and brightest places in the history of literature. Ile / avas the child of misfortune : and mankind still weep over the sor rows of that genius., and w ill weep over them forever. He was unfitted for the rough of a world like this.—The ly re of his soul should have been fanned but by the air of Eden, and have given Out his inwic in a heavt my clime ; and who can wonder that its timed& were jarred and almost bro ken, when visited by - the tierce winds and IVA is light nips, and the blasting hurricanes of life. Like the rainbow, his lone ,prung up amidst clouds of gloom: but like the rainbow it was a reflection of the sun, and its arc, though resting upon the earth, was lost in heaven. The genius of Burns was Universal ; in' whatever he attempted, his success was perfect. His talent was all-powerful, whetlitr he 'aimed at the heart of the lo.tr, or to call forth the loud or the qUiet mirth of-the votary festivity, to kindle the high and holy fervor of devotion, to pour his great enthu siasm for liberty into the soul of the pstriot, or to nerve ate arm and send the lava-tide of aengence along the veins of the warrior. If you paes. through Scotland, you feel his nighty influence every where, like a universal presence. He has made the wild and romantic country emphatiatlly his own. His step is upon her mountains, her braes and her glens image is reflected from her blue lochs and her gushing streams—and his name is breathed by her winds, echoed by her thunders, and chanted by her Wave sons and 'beautiful qlaughters. " Remarkable. Escape.-90 the passage of the Ship Alexander, from New Orleans to New York., a young lad about fourteen years, from a naturally _, r A"~~ EILTISER. frolicksome and mischievous disposition, became so troublesome iu his pranks, that it was 'idneatened by the Captain if they Were continued, that he would confine him in a water cask. Our youngster took no heed however, aid at his next offence was put in the, cask. which was headed up, leasing it large bung hole fur the admission of air. thrit: night the ship encountered a violent stortu and in a sudden lur.:11, the cask containing the hoe, lolled over nit., the sea. The circumstance was not noticed by those mt board. Fortunately the cask struck bung up, and floated about thirty h o urs when it was thrown upon t..c Beach at Calm Jt. illas. Here the boy made de-peiate tr,it, w extr cate h.msclffrom his prison without AIit:COSA, and in despair gave up m Some cows however strolling on the Bench. were attracted to the cask, and in walking around it. oti , the number, it being fly time. switched her titil in to the bung hole, v.hich the lad grasped with a des perate resolution. The c.c.. , bellowed and set off for life and after running some two hiindri d with the cask, struck it against a log on the Itach, and knocked it as we say, into a cock'd hat. The buy thus providentially released, was discovered by some fisherman on the Point, and taken ni A p.. 1 icula, where a sinall collection being made Mr on. he was enabled to proceed North by the way of Co- Jo,pla =ME A \ ILtl, g Cat 111 follow log; from a Lte nuna`..),•r et the K,lt,LerYuckt r, to ymgs de,cription of a vill..ce church : A s the Dominic generally preached 1 , 3 t 1.4 li‘ , ui, a bucket of Water was prod,:, utly 111.14.1,11A1 a .I . lli li the door, in summer, Will a till I. slue 11, fur the solace Lot those who might he a thir,,t, either tile heat of the weather or the drought of the tier in.n. • • • • • round tl.e pulpit, and L.li.nd the cominunit.ii ta ble, sat the t li;eis of the church, reverend, gray-;,t ad ed, hatlierii visaged wen, o how 1 rednrd,..l wnh &toe, as so many apostles. 'I he 2, were rat in their san..nty , Lt pt a vigilant e • ve upon niy giggling coin pan:ons and in) sell, and a rehuking fiu b t r ut any boti.h device to?these the tedionsue,s of coin pulsory di•v.,tion. \ atu, hoo ever, were all th..ir el b.rt, at ‘1211.1.11Ce. :.,.r..1 ) had the prealiei held I,oth for half an hour, in one of his interminable Si nn.-as, than it seen. das tt the thrust ay influence of Sleepy.l.lollow bn athcd intu the place : out by one the chngregation sank into slumber : the sanc tified elders leaned back 'in their pews,' spreading their handkerchiefs o‘er their faces, as if to ke. p utl the flies; while the locusts in the neighboring trees would spin out their sultry summer notes ? swing with the Sleep provoking tones of the &mine." Novtt PLAN Fon DIiPERSING s Moa.—Our readers will recolleci that it was statctl•in the pub lished accounts of the recent riots in this town, that Mr. Whitney had dispersed a mob by playing a fire engine on them. We learn tram the Rev. R. L. Venable'ir Domestic Scenes to Russia, that this plan is regulaiiy employed for dipersing a drunken mob. A number of fire engines" were," he says, sta tioned round the booth, to be useful not only in the event of fire, but as assistants to police In • keeping order, sine, in a case of a mob of drunken and dig oral-fly people assembling at night, an engine play ing into the midst of them, speedily disperses the crowd. " We trust, after the recent proof of the of a deluge of water in'ilispersing a mob, as well as this statement of Russian practice, fire-en , - trines will form a regular part of the police appara tus for qUelling riots. Better moisten the skin than shout the. carcasses of rioters.—Lirerpool Albion. The !tine and Uak.— The following beautiful allegory is from the interesting Igic lieseart bee ul Henry' Scheo!craft, Esq.: A %ilia was growing beside a thrifty oak, awl had just reached that height at which it requires sup port. "Oak," said the ivy vine, • bend your trunk Si , that you inay be a support to me." "My .iupport, • replied the oak, "is naturally yours, and lon may rely 041 my strength to bear )ou.up, but I am too large an] too solid to bend." Put your arms around me. my pretty tine, and I will manfully support and cheri,h ;gam if you have an ambition to climb, even as high its the clouds. N% hale I thus hold you up. you will 'ornament my rough trunk with your pretty green knives and shining scarlet berries. They w,h be as fr lidos to my head,' and I shall stand in the forest likk a glorious warrgir, with all his plumes We we 4 made by the Maker of Life to grow togeth er, that tv our union the weak should be made stro and the 4trong render aid to the is oak. " " But 1 wish to grow independentV," said the vine, " vihy cannot you twine around me, and let me growl . up straight, and not be a mere dependent np n yoh " - Nature, " answered the oak, " did not so 4sign it. It is impossible that you should grow to any height alone, and if you try it, the winds and rain, if not your own weight, will bring you to the ground. Neither is it proper for you to' turn' yc+ arms hither and von, among .the trues, The - treeti will begin to say, it is not my vice.—it is a strangdr—get thee gone, 1 w ill note cherish thee By this time thou wilt be so entangled among the ilitkrent :branches, that -thau canst not get bukk to the oak and nobody w nil then admire thee or pity thee:' Ah aw, " "said the eine, "h't me escape from such a dbstiny ;" and sith this, she twined herself arout d the 0.,k, and they both grew and flourished hapinly together. I had I.aken refuge in a tiarvest lick] belonging to any good; neighbor, Fiume; Creaswell. A beautiful child lay!: on the ground at some little distance, whirst a youngigirl, resting from the labor of reaping, Wll3 t‘listing . a rustic wreath—enamelled corn flowers, brilliant 'poppies. snow white lily-bells; and light_ fragile hare-bells, mingled with tufts of the, richest wheat-e4ra— around its hat. Therel was something in Coe t'nder youthfulness of these wo innocent creatures ;in the pretty, though somewhtt fantastic, occupation of the gii I, the fresh wild flolsens, the ripe and swelling eoru, that bar monizet% with the season and the hour, and conjured up merrioriea 0f... Dis, end Pmserpine,' and of all that is gorgeous and graceful in old mythology ; of the lovely Lavine of our own poet; and of the sub ject of that finest pastoral in the. World, the far love lier.,Buth. But these fanciful association soon van ished taifore the real sympathy eicited by the actors of the s4ene, both of whom were known . to me, and both obj eta of a sincere and lively interest. The joung girl, Dota Creswell, was the orphan niece ore of the wealthiest yeoman in our part of the wor ; the child of his only brother,—and having lost both her parents whilst still an infant ; had been reared 4 herividower uncle.as fondle and rarefully NO. 29. The Rustic. Wreat h. ~1 as i ni own :au ,- I ,W . tow: Ife said. that ho tovea _ - her ' quite as welli - per haps he 'loved her Warr; for although it wiiti.. - olkii4 - #4 . fo r a' father no! to hii i proud of the &A inittdaOtelentli t Who at sighte hail a 'tnatirsitMnggi, and a 'man's stature,. Wi;ii,.* bet singer, the best cricketer, and the beat 4 1 4 : 1 1- the country, yet the fair T.:lorte s ivho nearly ten Team younger, was at once his hatiLinsid, houSekeepei, his' plaything, and his cprirpanion, was evidentli She: very apple of his eye. ' Our good father 'stunted her , itecoroplishments.sui men of hie class are wont to boast of a high-bred horse or a favorite greyhound.. She could' make a shirt-and a pudding, derv, stock::, ingt, rear Voultry, keep accounts, and read • the newii paper ; eras as famous for goose , y- Wine as MM... Pritarose, and could compound a yllahub with say 7r daiSy-women in the county. T ere was not such a handy little creature any where; su thoughtful aid trinity about the house, and yet, out of doors, as gay as a lark, and as wild as the. wind ; nobody was like his Mira. So said, and so thought Farniet Cress.: well; and before . Dora was ten sears old, he had resolved that , in due time she should marry his.son Walter; and had informed both parties of hi's inter: non. . . INE New, Farmer Cresswers intentions were well known to be as unchangeitble as the lava of the Mede , and Persians. lie was a fair specimen of an English enatniin ; a tall, squarelbuilt, muscular mum, . stoui and actor, with a resold° counteuence, u keen L.. eye, and an intelltgmft his temper nag bois t,ratis and irascible, genemus and kind to those 1A horn he Lived, but quick to take•offence, and slow to pardon; expecting and ex acting in.plicit obctlienco *ust . all about him. ith Uora's • goad Vas,: the su eel and yielding.nature of the gentle and sub-' missive little 101 was; undoubtedly, the 'chief cause of hex ainiOc's partiality. Above all, ho wag ohstin; ate is the sr ry highest degree, had never beeninOwn to yield a print orchange a resolution; andtlie fault was mho more iiivtterate, because he called:U. firm: itess,:and aecminted it. a virtue. For , the rest, he . 06.1.4 3 person of excellent princple, perfect integrity, clear.ilieaded, prudent, and sagacious;, fond of agn cultural experiments, and 'pursuing them cautiously tiuceessfuNv ;- egood farmer and a good man.. Has son Wt alter, who was, in persoT, a hand .o;ne; likeness of his father, resembled hi, also, in inany punts of character; was equally/ dlystinate; and far more thry, hot and bold. He lolled this pret ty cousin much as he - would have loved a latrorita and mi7ht, very possibly, if let alone, have he: come att.tel.,d to her as her, lathei w but' to he dictated to, !e t Liined diAvn to a distant engage west; to Bold himself bound a mere child,—tbe ye r) idea was absurd ; and restraining with &faul ty. an abrupt denial, he walked down into the Vil lage, preditipoi , eil, out of sheer contradiction, to fall in love will the first young woman who should .conie in-Ids way ; and he did fall in love:according- Iv. Mtry Hay, the object of his ill-fated pass:inn, was the daughter of the rt speetable tress ofthe endow ed -cdool at the other side of the parish. She was delicat,, interesting creature, with a slight droopitig figure, and a fair, downcast face, like rt snowdrop, forming such a cuutrust with her gay and gallant wooer, us Love, in his vagaries, is often pleased to bring together. The courtship was secret and tedi ous, and prob n;t4.l from months to years; for Mary shrank from the painful contest which she kneir that an avowal of their attachment would occasion. At length her mother died; Mid deprived o( a home and maintainance, she- reluctantly consented to d private marnage. An immediate discovery ensued; and was followed by all the evi6‘, and more than all; that her worst fears had- anticipated. Her husband was turned from the house of his father ; and,in Tale • than three months, hiii'desith; i by an inflamatory fe ver, left her a desolate and pencylesss widow ; un owned and una ss isted by .the stern parent,' on whose unrelenting temper neither the death of his son, nor the birth of his grandien, seemed to make the alightz• est Impression. Bui for the general sympathy ex cited by the deplorable situation and blanieless de pertinent of the vridowa bride, she and het infant - must have taken refuge in the workhouse. The whole neighborhood was zealous' to relieve and to serve them hut their most liberal benefectress„ their most de . voted friend, was poor Dora. Cmisid; ering her uncle's partiality to herself as the primary cause of all this_ misery, she telt like a guilty crew= tore"; and casting off, her native timidity and habit= ual submission, she had repeatedly-braved his 'anger, 'ay the most earnest supplications col...mercy and for pardcin ; and when this proved unavailing', she tri ed to mitigate. their distress by all the asssistance thriller small means could admit—Every shilling of her poekt t money she expended on her.slear cous ins; worked for them, begged for them, and trans ferred to them every present that was made to her- Alt. front the silk frock to a penny tartlet. Every thing that was her own site gave, bat nothing of her uncle's.; fur thou, It sorely tempting to transfer some the plenty around her to those whose claim secu ed so juar, um! whose need was so :urgent, Dora felt that she roust prote herself trustworthy. - Suet was the posture of arruim at thO time of my encounter with Dora and httle Walter iu the hat- vest field : the rest will be beat told in tite course of our dialogue:— And so madam, I cannot bear to see my 'dear cousin Mary.so sick and so melancholy and the dear, dear child, that aling-might. be proud of only look nt him !" exclaimed Dorah, interrupting herself, as the beautiful child, sitting on the ground, in ail the placid dignity of infancy, looked up at - me.: and smiled to my face.. Orly look at. him !" con tinued she, and think of that dear boy and his dear mother, living on dimity, and they my uncle'alaw ful heirs, whilst I, that have no right whatsoeverom claim, none at all—l that compared to, them, em but a far-off kins-woman, the mere creatures of hishoein ty should revel in comfort in plenty, und.theY wing I cannot bear it, and I will not. And. then , the wrong that he is doing himself; he, that is real- . ly so good and kind, to be called a hard-hearted ty rant by the whole country side. And he is unhap py himself, to; I know he is. So tired as becomes. home, he will walk about his room half the .. nigit and often nt meal times, he will drop hiskaitix and fork, and sigh so heavily ! He may rum me out of d'oors, as he threatened; or what is *arse, c ll me 'ungrateful or undutiful, but he shall see his boy." o lie never has seen him, then ! and theta, why you are tricking him out so prettily?" o Yes, ma'am. Mind what f told yen, 'Vetter; and hold up your hat, md say what I bid you." Gan-papa's fowerl4 . l" Stammered the, pretty boy in his swect childish eoico,ithe first words that I.had ever heard him speak. ; Grand-papu's flowers said' his .Ilealowt, pre- ceptress Gan-pa'pa's fowera! " echoed the boy. •• Shall you take the child to the hottse, Dotal" asked 1. No, ma'am. I look for my uncle here every minute ; and this is the hest-place to ask a favor u.. for the very sight 'of the grrat crop puts film m good humour, not so much on account of the profits, but - becettee the land never bore half so mach before, and, it ill owing to his management in dressing .and &Wing. I came reaping here to-day on purpose to . ple#s'e him; for though-he says he doge not ; wish me o.wcii-lt in the 641114 . ! knotir he likes it; ; and. here he shall see little 'Welter. you think ho ran 4esist him, ma'am P. , ntinitted Dore: leaning over her infant cousin, with thetrace and fondness i:O of young Madonna; odo you think he can resist hint, poor child 60 helpCeee, so harmless, his own blodd too, and like his father 1 No 'Heart could he hard enough to hold milt: and 4 alp swaths his will not. Only," pursued Dora. relaspit. g girlish time nnd:sttitudv , as c r oll. roar en:faille' lid --.