: ~' 1 II . ~r '~~~k t d Sk~Y W}~~ cztoirsy, ; I ,*ho Vounty.:V-.4 aa lco ut i ii, wUI ' out d. . • _ t iszawratic frit= Plow 044 :11V14.1V IV; 0.41. 7,Auttsl. dLSON, Shakespeerei . fiat -'IIENIW IL ON. 1 . ; do; M. LOW. Y. . 1 _ wit. Pi iiLAND,I. GEONEWCOMBIe, • ' WM. 811011, GIBSON. . L uaborg tifi! TEMPERANCE , RECORD. THE salsas' /OiiTHHAE. ' __ , . • • TEI4PERANCt. - i r ' 1 HT I W LEEED HASEEU The gr a t moral reformation now -taking place: over. - the hole world, betokens a new era io its . 1 future history, end affords immense material for Netlection 4nd study. It plainly intimates that we are spfiroa,phi g some great crisis of universal - pros .perit) and on recedentcd Virtue. A glance at the i probable ti. aof this. reaction of virtue, in iitir count y, rosy not, perhaps, be uninteresting to the reader. Ain m g these CauCES, T.DUCATioX holds a conspicuous . sitiqu.' Universal Education has cre ated a new ecessity, and not only excited the de sire of faith r _knowledge, but exalted -it even to craving; Fro hat mental food is becoming as indis- , parable to t 0 mind. as the daily sustenance to ther e body. Tbia• ecessity has been ' promptly , nobly, and ardently ;le . by . the must virtuous end enlightened . Of our co nttiymen fur national literature has be come, at once ,pure end refined,— , and our public men have,gained imperishable honor by their .pittri rtic and unbounded devotion to the cause of Tem pirance; ros . . , years since, and the young men of our . eir evenings and nights to a series of • nil follies; but bow changed are they t they then were ! Instead of frequent low iesort, and rioting about the streets i isgraceful split, we find them repairing • .ective literary institutee—learning the science, and applying its principles to V calling which demands their industry ; ing to their respective dwellings busy and oilman nicat ive and inquiring,--enriching I with their new ' foUnd stores, rind re importing the highest gratitication—the of mind. . Some few cities spent dissipations • now, to ing piseeS o in idle end to their res. ruthmentrin 'pie' particulr irid_all retun itioughtlUl, their famili calving' rind -gratification In a polib A be fraught V gout and I has never Y knowledge all subjects, utmost limi The important change in' the condition -of 'we lt:lan—wry ght more, perhaps , by her own peculiar , povirers,!.h n by man's sense of justice—dering the present eeltury, has greatly assisted the cause of the Temperate . They have become more elevated and l e alistinguitth I—the chains that bound their intellect and degia ed them, have been cait aside and Dam pened and rfoot. She is rapidly finding her -• sphere' and truc Ic 'el—which is, in fact, equality with man— at lea* as egards intellect. The many moral wri ters anion' the American -women, have raised, the minds of ur countrywomen to ,an excellence un known, in past ages, to the females of any clime ; and it is t them that a full meeal of praise must be given., Let us calk at the influence which woman \ !. exerts in the do 'ethic circle. It is impossible to conceive a moredriadful situation than that of on interesting another 'a d her children depending for their sub sistence on a man, who, by his Opravity and wicked conduct, neglects to fulfil' the sacred offices of a Husband and o lather, and ab.intioris the being whom he has solemnly vowed to protect and cherish, to the cold, headless commiseration of an unfeeling -world. No language can express the mental anguish a vir tuous worniii must suffer, at 'seeing her husband the degaleihiabjeet of intemperance. And Jet it is often in tie I power of a wife —n• mother—to prevent, . - Dila Ova Path, the husband and son who may err from thd Path. of virtue. She • has been gifted with I , a persuasive charm in her voice and actions, whit , if properly and judiciously ixercisedi will prod ce greater effects than the mere reclaiming of an erring friend;,L-she may' by constant assiduity arid tender ness, di i his mind to whatever object or course she ple ' , and produce a total and lasting reform- Mien— I conclusion, we . cannot but revert to „the devotion of bnixale talent of our land to time great: cane at Temperance and Morality. It has been actively and unsparingly exerted, and the rewards t hat the fair writers may claim, is the consciousqnss of havinbeen gifted with no talent, which py have mi s applied , slid-of possessing, in its tulles( ex , Kilt, Wilits SMILES or TUE -intbasT !'".. ' ' cal and social view, this ctange must ith the moat important results. It is a .itherto untried, experiment. The world l et seen a tuition all mind and energy, •nd enterprise, capabl6 of investigating anti ileteimityd to pal ingt;iry to tts CO:3 1 ,1 (7: IC T El).} .ji r.. you devote part of your valu able ' 4 a".-- 'is , able sheet to the sacred and holy cause of Temper ance, I will trespass a little on it, as I think kt a debt due to Ready all the honest hard.wiirkingmen on the rai4oad,soo'w being graded Intwten . Reading and Pottsville. You will find many who smile -at the idealof a Tesiperance Society that allows to each i s of its ro'mbers a certain quantity of liquor, but such forget;.e common maxim, .! Rome - was not built in a day.,!' They know little of human ~nature—of the toil sad hardship's men on' public works endure, land mucltl ' of the facility of obtaining, and the many iii temptati nathat preseut themselves of tasting, the poison°, draught. It is a great, a; n'oble, and he tom stacOfice in thetr4 to renounce! and abjure all those allurements so generously as they have dune, and to put up with about onc-third of their usual &Rowan* when they could get the; other two-thirds gratis.. To have advanced so far is honorable to them, a nd atrords sufficient reason to hope for the &party .sind total extirpation of intempefince. Al though I am not an' advocate of such societies as permit the we of ardent spirits, yet the good that has ' -' a froM this, bars effaced from my mind idess which I find' on experience to have been very erro nicia:', I firmly believe it is the more feasible plan, at least, among them, to attain succestfully the pri mary ohlect Of total abstinence. They are now re. 'dessainiktheir character, and vindicating , themselves from the foul; charge of intoxication. They have o'lh hecl i On the monster, and crushed out its snr bee-l i on me in 0.,...,.„, ...._ _ life's bl,od . They are now merry and cheerful with l out theicsciting glass—far 'their mirth is the off epriitg.4lvirtticancl7eobriety.. Pituwithstandiiig the hurry i(!til hil•4 o 61, 1 1 % 1141 e woiks, "they do not (ergot t h e i r i Oraigeldi ; the attention which ,the y pay to their.seliiii ius duties, is truly astonibhing,—where they w re entirely neglected hcretefure, they are now thew concern 7 —where torpidity and indifference ,Prev,a • . they have now . vanished, and diligence and ea estneia: have - Appeared , j Where the bottle i and s were the:deities to whom honor was, pair, 'shay a e now abandoned, end their-eight- and ap- Posran detest.eij! Where the 'hearth of donivinic , J. effect* n .ezhibited naught but4enea of atria, miss-, 1 7. • 41• orde r, now happiness, peace, and harmo ny d ell,forir has become the asylum of-paint:l tiud l ose , Where children wept tears of bitterness} they now is . ed those of joy --they 4to dreaded their fa dues cturn, now look with .anxiety for his arrival, _ ihey- lise 1/ed tiiimett in feat, now bound with SI 1. , 7 Idreciton: to hii arms, 'Vow, rill their esrahign are eitherolly-tdei . e4 i tipil.,.i7w*,: , .. , . :, _ in the purchase lint # l o l4 l 9•4 *: comfoiciirtiogir,heal4i.lierOun s n in4 : plofliiiitem tirsletiard thettrler thitit'vii** . eser that body sod Mt denim/Eng mousier,_ intemperance. ' I These am some dike scenes which delighted the -heart of one, who grieved over the loss of so many lid destroyed by Intemperance—whoyeamed with, the most ardent desire for this mighty reformation— which took its rise on the other side of the Atlantic,. and was espoused with a proper enthusiasm by _ the 'friends of morality on this side of the waters. It tit • truly creditable to the contractors, who have taken up the cause, and support it in the manner they-do; many of them employ none but such as belong to, the , Temperance • Society,.and by this means they genre their own safety, prevent many accidents , which would otheraise occur, and elevate the cha-• rector of their men. They told me it, was incredible , the change that had taken place; they did not be.' liege the men could be brought to do what they ba , ie done. •• They now see peace established among them—party-business forsaken, mobs abolished—end es_tery drunkard that appeart. despised. May it long continue so. 'May the cause prosper in whatever itiiipe or form it appears, provided_:it guarantees that greatest of domestic blessings, ana which adds moat to domestic happiness, rational temperance. - ' A Terrcreasan. ~..._~, x f i ~ -t' I= WE e - • , - POTTSVILIAE. Saturday Morning, hug• 15. RExstrraNcea tiv MAIL. "A postutaliter maren elose money in a letter to the publisher of a newspaper, to pay toe subscription of a third person, and frank the letter, if written by himself."—Amos Kendall. Some of our subscribers may not be aware that they may rave the postage on subscription money, by re questing the postmaster where they reside to frank their letters containing such money, he being able to satisfy himselfbefure a letter is sealed, that it contains nothing but what refers to the subscription. [Am. Farmer. D Ass current bill, free of postage, in advance, will' pay for three year's subscription to the Miners' Jourrial Read Governor .Kinney's Letter , Ty.. The Iron Trade, No. 1." hos been received and will appear next week. POPULATION OF POTTSVILLE Through the politeness of Maj. Downing, we are authorised to give the following as the result of the census just completed in this Borough: • Males , 2126 Females 2148 Total population 4274 The above includes 43 colored males and 36 col ored females. • The population in 1830 was 2424—and in 1835 the population was 3117—showing en increase in the last ten years of 1850 —and in the last five years 1157. Mount Carbon is not included in the 'above Tire population of Norwegian township is 3940, A Flood.—W e. had a very heavy fall of rain on Thursday evening last, which completely flooded the lower part of the borough. The water rushed from the mountains in taffetas, and some of the streets presented an almost unbroken sheet of water, causing considerable damage to several families by the filling up of basement stories, &c. The cul vert under Market street is entirely too small to vent the water and immediate measures ought to be ta ken- b) these interested to have it enlarged. Mr. Bear, the celebrated Buckeye Black smith," addressed a tremendous meeting of thePeo pie at Beading, on Saturday last. The locus appear to be exceedingly troubled about his remarks-41nd the democratic Press heaps a whole column of abuse on the speaker and those who listened to his elo quent address. Would it not be bc U Mr. Press, to refute his arguments, if you can, and not abuse the man. lit Blaxt Apparatus.—Mr. Lyman's improve. ment (or heating the hot blast at his Furnace, .was tried list Saturday, and succeeded beyond the expec tations of even the inventor. Competent judges pro nounce it the most complete and economical appara -1 tus for heating blast in this or_ any other country. The Furnace will be blown in probably next Week. Another Anthracite Furnace.—Mr. John NO, of the West Branch 'Valley has converted big charcoal furnace hit° un Anthracite Furnace. She was bl',wn in exclusively with Anthracite Coal about two weeks ago under, his own superintendence, and continties to make excellent -iron, yielding from 10 to 12 tons per week: The furnace is of the smallest clasi, and the yield, with the use of Anthracite, is grea t er by two ar three tons per week than with the Use uk chtlicoal. This makes the aevcnl/i Anthracite Fu nice in blast in this country. c - Our friend Mr. Grund, of the Penn'a Ge . ! .3n, must excuse us for not complying withhis reqiiest in publishing the article marked. We can assure him that any Abuse or aspersions on his character, from that quarter, will not injure him in the estimation of his Getman friends, and the people of Schuylkill county generally. The little incident Mr. G. allii/les to, and ethers of a similar character, several of our citizens have been acquainted with for 80034 time past, and places that individual in rather an 'unen viable light before this community. • T•p Gatherings.—h is impossible to keep pace with the acres of peoPlo" assembling in various parts of the United States, A mere notice of them all would fill our street. The whole West appears to have resolved themselves into one grand Harri son Committee of Vigilance. • The aindilion of Me Manufwititig dosses and our population, getzerally.—lt is estimated by the Connecticut Courant that upwards of seventy facto ries have ceased operations in New England, and that at least one-fourth the population of the Enited States are now out of employment. The 0 State Fetale," an ably conducted week paper at Hartford, Connecticut, has hauled down 'the Van Buren flag, and raised the broad banner of Harrison and Reform. The editor says he ie a de mocrat, and therefore cannot support the ultra fed eral measures of Mr. Van 13nren's administration a ny longer. Efnig , retnla.arge bodies of emigrants continue to pour i nto the ports of Pailadelphia, Nevi York and Boston; from Europe, principally bound ;for the West. ginigration * is greatly on the increase this year. Shameful Confession.—Bron". Van Buren, a nephew of the Preaident, confesies4hat be got up the'effigy of Gen. Harrison.itt Kindirhook, Mid thus attempted to disgrace a soldier whathed fought his country's battles from the age of. 19, and a' man honored and trusted by Waishington, Jefferson and Madison.—/Voah. ..tt 4 • - The Miirsisdippi papers are filled with nolices of log obit' Taming -arid barbecue.. Mil '-' .7 - .. '-‘• -. - ---------- . .-----:'- 1 -- ------ ' -----. -... -"' i . '.... __ , , Illial l na raub softir.e,.!aiste*S o lo 4ll l ; - -A : . I reri a g e `ila-4«-,. aeliice* PosikritltS do NV* 0 1 0 1 PlaPP.!; ;',l * *Oirsir ' iultikrkittlkilialriker $ itai# ol o 64 *** v e taid - Vitt 11 *0 11wr .14sitattlatli Si*" 0 8 0 1 . tie* '.4 11 ‘) iiile er:Olia.21;i8f0011101" jhrsitheit iltlit*l l4l344t9lllllllth 49 4r ^ entire Electoral VetiiiO ii*elarrVcBt *Male' he - sitiel'llientrifee.ierfti"l4 o . l' ... : 7 .• , eideldr`end withal% lit least off thel hh 6llol/14 ' ', lholhiee-0 1 8 , OW . of, that W.ll/4 iceietec deY , not havesaa a majority; Theyiiiiii - altattrie 64- and Atatv much *Mild bi- sale illi ems, per hews:dlY• ' ' ' ' ' ..,- • - &dna* it to tiocaly-)lvialtntil Pertel-!eha hew , much Would he ravel. 81'ints per 4 Redice it to tweke lento per day—snd how much 'hill he We t 3 culhiler deYZ I - via a reduction of- wages therefore beneftt the working' man, if Oven the prices of other articles should come *lowa in proportion 7 , , The price of Brea& stuffs does not depend upon the reduction of wages under the flutorressury sys tem.. It depends altogether upon abundar.Vcrops, and foreign demand. If the price of labor should go doratito 25 cents per day, and the crops should fail, and tho.price of flour go up 'to 7 or $8 per barrel, baseman, day's wages would it take to by a barrel of flour 1 The prices of Tea, Coffee, Medicines. &c. &c. which the weikingmen of this country now enjoy, and which are derived from foreign, countries, would not be reduced in price by the operations of the Sub Treasury in this country, consequently the workingmen would be debarred the use of these necessaries, or luxuries of, hfe, if you may so call them, under the system of low wages as recom mended by Van Buren senators. If 4 poor man is in debt now, and you reduce the currency of the country to the hard money system, who is henefttfedl the rich man to whom he owes the debt, or the poor man who hes to pay itl In paying debits, a dollar under the hard money sys tem ie only worth a dollar to the. poor man—but under the same system it is worth at least four dol lars to the rich man who receives it., If Farmer A. owes farmer B. $5OO on hie farm,— with wheat at $1 per bushel, 500 bushels of wheat will Pay Farmer B.—but if the Bub Treasury syw tem reduces kite price of wheat to , 25 cents per bushel, farmer A. will be compelled to pays. ,farmer B. 2000 bushels of wheat to discharge the debt. Faarier A's. land will produce no more wheat to the acre !under the Sub Treasury hard money system, than it did when wheat was $1 per bushel. • b!iimit7 llll B l * 111 04 1, - 11104 flarniscp V. BOOM ite4T6ol2. V.l3llten. N. limp. • 18006 scal Con. . . 800 :4500 B. !Ain& . 250 1800 Virginia Louisiana Total - 20,020 9,800 1009: Van Buren raajority in n 1838, 20.030; llarriatut in 1840, 1,800.. • "- ,These States gave forty.eeven Electoral Votes in 1838—all for Van Buren. They now stand area for Van Buren. forty for Hartland 0 :7 Patriotism of the Ladiek—The 41int of Easton presented the Buckeye Blacksmith with a Silver Pitcher, as a memorial of their approbanon of his untinng zeal.in the cot se Aid* oppressed eeiln try. Poor Chapman Can't Crow.—The Indiana pa pers state that the very identical Chapman, editor of the Wabash Loco paper, whom Pattison ordered to crow," has been indicted for pajury. cooped up; , his comb cut, and his Ors off."—he can't crow any more," Cincinnati has nearly doubled in population'ilur lug the last ten years. In 1830 What! 24,000 in habitants, and now has 45,000. • The; Banison Convention at Northampton, Pa. numbered 3000 men, Mai. Naylor and Mr. Baer were among the spnakere. Newburyport responds to the patriotic [proPosal of the Boston ladies for a fair for the completion of the Bunker Hill Monument. Humorous.—The German American, published at N. Orleans, in commenting upon the fresnit of the election in the Third District of Louisiana, says; Winn couldn't wss without Moor; friends; and Moore wos more friends than Winn could w rr Something New.-4 celebrated singer ha been giving Harrison concerts" at Albany. A paper in New Orleans styles Arnow Kendall, Van Buren's .• Extra" tier. Federalism of 1794, AND Federalism of. 1840. The Modern Sedilion Law.—We subjoin quota tions in parallel columns, from the rules and articles of war to whichrbe Executive proposes to subject 200,000 militiamen, and from the o alien and sedition law" of the elder Adams, so that' the reader may see at a glance how much more tyrannical is Mr. Van Buren 's scheme than the sedition law of an cient federalism : Extract from the arti- Extract from the Sedi des of war which are. lion Law approved to govern the militia by President John 'when trained tinder Adams, Jaly 141 h, President Van Bu- 1794. rev's new plass/or or- « See. 2. And be it ganization them. further enacted, That Art. 5. Any officer or- if any person shah write, soldier who shall use print, utter, or publish, contemptuous or diets- or shall cause or procure pectin! words against to he written, printed, ut the President of the tered, or published, or United States, against the shall knowingly and wil- Vice President thereof, lingly assist or ,aid in against the Congress of writing, printing, utter the U. States, or against ing, of publishing any the Chief Magistrate of false, scandalous and ma any of the United -States licious writing or writ. in which they may be ings against the Govern quartered; if a commis- ment of the U. States, or sioned officer, shall be either House of the Con. cashiered, or otherwise gress of the U. States, or punished, as a Court the President of the U. Martial shall direct ; if States, with the intent to a non-commissioned of- defame the said Govern. ficer, or !Midler, he shall meat; or either Souse of suffer suet' punishment the said Congress, Pre ss shall be inflicted on sident, or bring them him by the sentence of a into contempt or disre- C coin Martial. pute, or to excite against Art. 6. Any officer them the hatred of the or soldier who shall he- good people of , the Uni have himself with con- ted States, or. to -stir up leapt or dsrespect sedition within the Uid wards his commandr9g led States, or to excite officer, shall be punished any unlawful combina according to the nature tions therein, fin oppo. of his offence, by the sing or resisting any law judgment of a court mar- of the United States, or pal. any act of the President Of the U. States done in pursuance of any such few, or of the powers in himf„vested by the Con- Stitution of the United States, or to resist, op. pose, or defeat any such law or act, or to aid, en courage, or abet any hos ! Idle designs of any to. reign nation against the United States, their peo ple, or Government, then such person, being there of convicted baton) any court of the U. States having jusiidiction there of, shall be punished by fine not exceeding $2OOO and by imprisonment nut exceeding two. years." "Art. 7. Any officer or soldier who shall begin, cttcite, cause, or jJin in any mutiny or sedition, in any troop or company in the service of the U. States, or in any party, post, detachment, or guard, shall suffer death, or such other punish ment as by a court-mar tial shall be inflicted. Art. 8. Any officer, noncommissioned offi cer or soldier, who, being present at any ,mutiny or sedition, does not use hie utmost endeavor to. suppress the same, or co-Ling to the knowledge ;Sf any intended mutiny, does not, without delay, give information thereof to his commanding offi cer, shall be punished by the sentence of a court martial with death, or otherwise, accorditg to the nature of the offence. Art. 9. Any officer or soldier who skall strike his superior officer, or' draw or lift s up any wea pon or offer any violence against biro, being in the execution of his office, on any pretence whatever, or shall disobey any Law fa 1 command of his su perior officer, shall cur ry' paren, or such pun ishment es shall, accord ing to the nature of his offence, bsinflicted upon him by tho sentence of a court martial." The Sedition Law of the Federal Administration of John Adams, sinks into illSignifiqineri when com pared with this modem GAG LAW of Martin Van Buren's Administration. "‘AZ - ME 7000 2000 270 2000 IMM i a ~ ,,: , „,,, : , ,‘.,, , y. . .,.,..,;: , .,,,.,..,,,.,, , .,,,..",: , ,,,-,,,,,,,,,-,_ 0::T The Buckeye Blacksmith, having been slan- dered in the most shameful manner by the loco presti,—accused of stealing horses, running away with! other people's money, &c. &c.—we deem it proper to publish the following certificates in re gard to his character, given by hal neighbors, among whom he resided for a number of years: South Bloomfield, June 26th,"1840 We, the undersigned ctizens of South Bloom field', Pickeway county, Ohio, learn with regret that our fellow citizen, John W. Baer, has been slander ed it the vilest manner by the press and otherwise, at the East; and having been requested to state what we know concerning him,—do certify to all whom it may concern, that he has lived amongst us, and: we have been well acquainted with hun for more than three years, and that he is just what he professes to be, JOHN W. BAER, a poor but honest industrious blacksmith, that has a respectable family which Jhe has supported by laboring at his trade, and that alone, that he has never been known by any other name than John W. Baer, hat he is not a defaulter, and is not guilty o bumpy or any other crime or. act that will pre vent his returning to this neighbourhood whenev er be pleases, as pretended by those who slander and abuse him, and that we are credibly inform ed ;that Mr. Baer sustained the same character in other counties where he resided before he settled with us. • Nothing but a desire to have justice done to every honest and worthy American citi zen has prompted us to make the above declare tioh. Nathan Denny, A: 8. Williams, 1. B. Bill, Wm. Morgan, A. Dennis, Anthony Shaft; !eerie Holmes, Joseph Bnochs, J. , G. Thompson, M. D. I am acquainted with the most of the signers of the foregoing, and know them to be among the most respectable of the citizens of. the township in wtOch they reside, and to the extent of my knowledge, fully corroborate their statements. 11xsesexen Star—ln conformity to your request, I;hare obtained the necessary information on the Object of our friend John W. Beer, and in pre senting you with the above communication, I would only add, that you can put the utmost con fidence in the statements there made, for the cha racter and veracity of the gentlemen who have affixed their signatures to the above statements,is the strongest guarantee I could give you for its correctness, having personal acquaintance with every individual, as also with John W. Baer, the Blacksmith, of whom I know nothing, but that he is an honest, sober, and industrious man. this was signed by a methodist preacher. Mr. Moore, of the firm of 'Neill, Moore & Co., extensive stage proprietors, states also that Mr. Baer has shod some of their horses for the' ast ten years, and ho knows him to be an honest man to the best of his knowledge. • Mr. Ridgway, the member of Congress from the district it Ohio, m which Mr. Baer resides, states ,that Le is acquainted with all the signers to the above certificates, and that they aro among the most respectable citizei.s of Ohio, Decency.—Gen. Hameon was burnt in effigy by this Van Buren Convention in Maine. They also burnt Jas. Madison in the war. These are the chaps that then let the British occupy half their territtiry, and no doubt are some of the same who ate so fierce now for eating up the same British troops on the Arostook.—Noah. Baer, the Buckeye blacksmith, proves as ugly a customer foi the loam, as some of those that Crock 'ett had to grapple with in the cane brakes. FOREIGN NEWS the Great Western arrived at New York on iBunriay lad, and brings news twenty-one days Witt. !from Europe. The news by this arrival is of very little importance to the general reader. In the case of Oxford, the youth .%;!ho made the 'attempt upon tile Queen's life, the jury have return- ed a verdict of insanity, and he will probably' be confined in a mad house the remainder of his life. Letters from Rome, which come down to the 7th ofJuly, state that the health of the Pope, which bad been in a dangerous state for a consider:lbl.; period, had; though still suffering, been' sufficiently improved to enable him to be removed to Castle Gandalo. The Jews of Damascus are still the victims of oppression. It. is stated that Lucien Bonaparte, Prince, of.Ca nirmAied at Viterbe , in Italy. on the 29th June. He was 66 years of age, and is said to have died Of the .same complaint, to which Napoleon fell a'vic. tim—cancer of the stomach.' Thomas Dibdin,-who is now in his 70th' year, is said to be lingering in the most . griping penury in London. , Hugh O'Hara, F. W. Kellogg, J. Dennix, Jacob Gessler, A. C. Styles, John Adel, A. Newman, John Cochran, B. F. Gaud, M. D Circleville, June 29, 1840 W.B. NIALL Er COMING IN A BLAZE or mown! Never, in the annals of elections, have the Loco FoCo Federal destructive, suitilned such &Waterloo defeat; as I 1 the 'recent &lectilitis in Kentucky and The tltiults in these states are brilliant beyond parallel. ' The 'Louisville Journal expresses the, opinion that there will not be fifteen loco feces in the , next legislature. The illumination in Louis viae, the procession, and the whole scene on the night . of the sth, is described as having been one of the most electric things of the kind ever remember ed in the West. The Journal says : g• It is no wonder that the working men of New Albany and Louisville met and congratulated each other on their deliverance from tyranny. It was nq wonder thatthousands of freemen assembled at dui Log Cabin on Wednesday evening to seal anew theh devotion to our glorious Constitution, so long trampled upon by the rulers at Washington. It IS no wonder that seeing the bright star of Freedom glitter in the horizon, and knowing that• its beams would soon illume the whole country, they proclaim their joy to each other and to the world. It was well for them to rejoice—their joy was not for them selves as for their country. It was well for them to send forth their shouts like a conquering army,' for their shouts were not those of narrow selfishness, but of a broad, liberal, and expanded patriotism. It was well that they should express their high emo tions by blazing bonfires, streaming flags, and roar ing cannon, for they exulted,.not at any triumph of faction, but at the certainty of deliverance of the Republic from a fearful tyranny, that for the lett twelve years his pressed upon it with a weight like that of death." A letter to the editor of the National Intelligencdr, states that Letcher and Thomson, the Whig candi dates for Governor and Lieut. Governor, will have a majority of SIXTEEN THOUSAND. VOTES at least. We have also further news from I N . D IA NA It is fully ,confirmatory of. what has already been furnished, and is calculated to strengthen the im. pression that Judge Biggers's majority will range from 13,000 to 15,000. A letter from Indianapolis says :+- Our Legislature will be changed from twenty against us last year, to at least two-thirds for us this year. We.feel that the triumph is complete and overwhelming. KENTUCKY Most of the returns in the folluwing list, include only the votes on the first and second days. In others they sic complete. Letcher (W.) French (V. B 1495 622 605 527 1091 592 654 379 741 240 558 581 386 381 460 269 479 192 607 200 490 372 592 - 615 589 94 641 145 694 781 226 met Mason, Nicholas, Fayette, Bourbon, Madison, Bath, Franklin, Jessamine, Woodford, Parke, Montgamery, Harrison; Gerrard, Lincoln, Mercer, Boon, Kenton, Scutt, Grant, Bracken, Campbell, Gallatin & Carrol, Oldham, Shelby, Harden, \, Jefferson City of Louisville, Marion, Henry, Spencer, Lewis Greenup. Fleming, Nelson. We are enabled, from the returns received this morning, to add sixteen counties to our list of yes. erday, and to correct other returns. These swell the majority to over 10,000: Counties. Bigger's m, Howard's in. Majorities in;1836• Whig. V. 8.. Harr. V. B. 'l7O 79 1625 , 1300 142 158 i, 337 ' 220 368 418 514 399 332 62 100 88 303 366 805 592 83 75 Dearborn, Wayne, Union, Fayette, Rush, Randolph, Delaware, Franklin, Marion, Henry, Floyd, Clark, Scott, Jefferson, Jennige, Ripley, Switzerland, Decatur, Bartholomew & Brown, Shelby, Harrison, Hendricks, Hancock, Johnson, Montgomery, Hamilton, • Morgan, Monroe, Madison, Grant, Putnam, Vigo, ' Crawford, 181 592 315 346 170 487 303 466 65 200 250 125 Knox, Martin,* Drviesn.• Orange, Lawrence, Washington, Pike, Parke, Sullivan, Clay, Owen, Tippecanoe, Class, Clintan, 8000, 11,553 2,466 Whig maj . In 1836, Wore Whig gain of 2,111 G 'These counties not complete. Harrison's majority in Indiana in 1836, eras 8,720, and the majority now' will be from 12 to 15,000. His majority in 1836, in Kemucky,lrms only 3;520. It is now power& of 15,000. Where are all the slanders of Oeii. Harrison moil 10,089 7,978 250 154 50 280 mai 404 337 250 mai 89 494 189 , 42d , 679 797 303 maj 2088 290 50 35 275 256 971 800 968 9255 17.115 INDIANA EM 27 493 333 260 111 437 159 14 291 441 73 270 314 288 123 250 120 108 373, 676 30 296 IN3 300 135 254 8 294' 660 134 80 275 200 141 203 227 2416 9748 1770 1770 FED t=iiM=HLMMN t,.. - : ,, 1PP...i4: , nt - ' \ , !.:!!'..;;'4 ,Z7r:•.„, t ; fOr_tik . o„ . :: 1 NORTH , CA R O L A.t.. , z. prom state, as far so , :tussid 401i3; ass hll7ll Si* 4 45 e r eSe l la0 * 4114 one teener;equal to pi q uift WOWS onjoint,ballot, u compared "with.that -00;1m year, when' he bad a tnajotity of - twolwl on joint ballot. The Richmond Whit says at Mineheadvrill also be elected governor of North Carolina b,7 , from 5 to 10,000 majority, and with Whig ,Govemor, a Whig Legislaturett es l at e l y" wing majority in August, no rational 4nanaut doubt -tbat Gen. Harrisou *ill receive her electoral vote in November. All whig accounts from the State wok of the event as certain. Virginia and North Cam• line, who have so long acted shoulder to shoulder, will not be separated in Noveinbe .. t —Both wiU vote for Gen., Harrison by-handsome jorities." Alabama Corsi A letter to the National Late(lige( following cheering language: L , (8 Since my sojourn here the electt( for members of the Legislature has so far as heard from, most gloriitusly cause. A friend hat just hand en about eighteen counties, comp 'ski Lewis's district, and a part of cis Crabb'a. The result is a clear chat i o sentatives And Senators, equal t 0 bars or votes on joint ballot. thsi em part oil the State does any t ing have a marity of the next Legisla 1 rg county heard from, the whigs time popular voter, and in many la ly. j a It would , perhaps, be calm] atin say that Alabama will vote for fe but, really die . ' prese4 indica character is would lead one to is no doubt of it. Certitin it is Lewis's &lurid will show a ma two thousand sgainstium, as election." better and B MORE THAN. TWELVE JORITY. We have just been shown polls, which states that in 60 gees majority is over 12,000 Goad news fro We hake also a letter from that as fat as heard from, the. decidedliin favour -pi the NV POSTSCR THE BUCKEYE BLACKSAHTi BURG AND POtTSO We ate happy to announde to Mr. Baet, the celebrated Buckeye address the people of Schuylkill c burg on Wednesday next. the l9thi P. M., and Pottsville on Thur at 2 P. M. Farmers, Mechanics, and Worki kill turn out, and hear this powe ' your rights, and the sacred cause ho has so nobly espoused. co , . Mr. Bear will arrive in Pat day evening. The ! Sub -Treasury act ar/c1 its fects which will result to the labor country from this "second decla dente,"—as some of the friend_ have Been pleased to denpann , clearly ,and conclusively set forth American of Monday. We ask calm and dispassionate considers terest of the subject so well merits The object of the Suh-'rea l edly, is to bring the country is called. " the constitutional ci is, hard money. Now this country—which raises mor Burnes, and depends upon forei the sale of the surplus. If the which we deal were also hal tries,iwe might Itrade upon a inasmuch as England, for inst customer for cotton arid tribal sionally for breadstuff's, wisely of the benefits of a mixed cur and paper—she, will buy our low prices induced by hard.rr us her manufactures at the her own currency. But it will riot buy upon these;ternas; home manufacture for supplie/ ever is impracticable, ;for if we cannot sell-and p- oducir said before, more than ,ve conl plus must perish on our hai changed for the produCts of o _ . A first effect then of the hard. is tolreduce the value of our bens t of foreigners, I withoui cost a the imports necessar consumption. Again, if our impoOs fall ( too must fall off—and then t the Government must be p direct taxation: Thetsecond the hard money scheme is to sary a resort to direct taxal port of the GoVernment. A tural and inevituble conse prices, wages must fall, and getsi from 75 cents to $1 a duced-to one half of that sum, plied, he can, for that; dimini' lion, buy as much aslfor his fora. So far as ,that !refers t or that of which the :value our, own currency, it may , wilt not he true 'of 'article_l abroad. His bread and be! will get at. bard-money prii and sugar 'and coffee—a ri their for his wife—or, a bett, self—he must pay far at t I countries from whenae they which prices' are little air lively, by our currency. quence then, of the hard , the reduction of the wages a correemondin: reduction 145 •1.91 445 98 articles to which heretofore our happy country has been But low prices discourage farmer who gets 0n1y,50 cei wilt cultivate less land—wil that is waste—but contentil living near the wind and bor as possible, will wait fi But meanwhile, the farm. la" and as ho can only live by hands, if there is no demand it cruel mockery to toll 'L__- Elal g. • • ' I ,cer holds the I n in Alabams forth;: ' ig returns from most of ]t r. I Dellet and of 13 Repre in of 26 mem if the North er nay we shell s ure.. In every gained in the too lorgeki to 'turd Harrison; liana of such a sukma that them ' that'Oe Hon.' D. H. l 'orityr of from one to ntlieated by the itrto 11 - 01ter. THriUSAND MA- letter from Indian°. coduties, Judge Big. • otes. , I llinois. linois. ~ I. 1 im , p uo, which states elec ions have gone igs: iiffiliii our readers that Blacksmith, will i unty at Orwigs inst. at 2 o'clock l ay the 20th inst. gmen of Schuyl ul champion of of liberty which !villa on Wednes. estills.—The ef ng classes of the lion of Indepen of the measure to it,—are thus 1n the New York `or the article the [on which the in -ury bill, avow back to what rrepcy"—that i s a producing r. than it con 'gn markets for 'countries with "money CALM equality, but nee, our chief co, and occa• avails herself ency of metal roducts at the oney, and sell high prices of ay be said, we and : rely upon .. This, how e do not buy, g, as we have I:ume, that sur ds, or be ex her countries. • money scheme , xpoi ts for the reducing the to our home if, the revenue e expenses of ovided for by effect, then, of tender neces on for the sup !. am, as the rt /. , uence of low he laborer who . ay, will'he re But, it is re shed compensi h igh e r ') p ro s d y n be homeee s regulated by , e true—but it imported from if and pork he Oes—but his tea bband 'now and • r coat for him• e prices of the tire brought, and Icted, compara- A third conse oney scheme is •f labor, without the p ! c ab u r r accustomed. t e h r o s i en 'enterprise. The its for his wheat, ill reclaim none • himself with ring as little la r better times. 'borer must Jive, he work of his for that work, it im he can boy I II
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