' T .1• 10, * ii aft basiensii, without , making shy nista chamber. - IStot still liittliter sw) now that Wed' for hiss, Fut sit her lose ieturuet) in its intengai. - . •lie shall nut .die! safa Ore rebaltitply ; .1 will rave law.' - • That afternoon George to , * atits brought iiut• for newtotl . in thsrrebel camp . Lutlyette was bit tent, when Annette, breaking through the guards, th`reti r tiersetf at his feet, - and implored his jutercesintinfor her lover's - Isfe. He recognised his hostess, mid hastened with her to Waihington. Wbai he.asild to his chief we know not; but we do know George Lee was pardoned, and the next _a u was lott,eheclin Lafayette's hody guard. In the elibiequent battles of the Revolutionary km sleihe distinguished himself by :his valor and de votion to the Anierican cause, and at the close of the WM was: marrierttaAntietie c eshose patriotism ..reatarthid lip the fulfilment of those hopes of kive which she had so nobly sacrificed_ in behalf o i!. " • .7, IL. Mien, Wier and Free-Trade, The,editoX of the CI Herald exposes the folly and hypocrisy he Federal advocates of Fies Wide most amusmitt, In ono of his expo. alder)* of Free trade, r". 0: feteoistn, he illustrates the subject by the baking congressional anec dote ; • •u We witnessed en amusing incident .a few years Sinca'ti United States. Senate, bearing 'upon this subject. John M. N des, who was at the some time isiSenetor from Connecticut, arms in his place still declared himself " friend of the poor; that he went for the great mass—that the common maple Were his chosen constituents, and finally concluded by offering a resolution, for the sole . -benefit of his poor constituency, as he said, call : mg fora reduction of Me , duly ou cod. Well, the, speech !was the speech of a demagogue—he wished to be called the poor man's representative —the friend of the masses—the fearless champion of demciertMyand this speech w'rii4ublished by Me parly;eit the time, as proof of their exclusive • devotion to i the 'commie people. •• After Mr': l Senator Niles hid proudly - rented him , self, one. Daniel Webster, a Senator at that time from MassaZhusetts, leisurely arose, and drew from his drawer e printed document; and, without ma king the Most, distant allusion to Mr. Seriator Niles' speech, stated that he would call the often don of, the Senete, a moment to said document. IL w as the proceedings of a meeting ' of the credtt qrs the Duke of York, then recently held in tondonf° The noble Duke was the brother of King UcorlslY., and after "pending a/prodigal life, he diein debt to every one who misted him, and insolvent to an astonishing amount. it Seem . ed also that the noble Duke died seized of large tracts of cot 1 lands in New Brunswig, which had been easignid to Trustees for the benefit of his • creditors. Now Meke noble cseditors of a noble Duke had met to decide whether these coal lends shOuld be sold at once, and the proceeds divided among the creditors,-or Still longer hold—whereupon it was solemnly declared that the government policy of the United Sates was. variable. fluctuating, andunelnbk-rthat their Tariff was of uncertain cuniinuirneri and of frequent modih'cation—and . that the deity on coal. would prubaby sorra be greatly .reduced, if not entirely abolished-rand then the late noble Duke's coal mines, monopelife the American coal market, end in a few year's command their own price far coat. - • Therefore it was unanimously resolved by the said , meeting of creditors , that the extensive coal mines of the late noble Duke of York should ba withheld (rim sale, fur the perpose and Intent of soon monotiolising the American coal trade as a foresaid. Mr. Webster having gravely concluded the rea ding of saidlprociedings, as gravely addressed these words to the Choi, Mr. President, it would seem froth ihe proceedings and rtsoluttons which I have rea d , that the Senator- from Connecticut instead of tieing the representative of any class or gradrof Ainerican citizens, upon this floor, and upon this question, is in truth and in fact the rep. • rtsentative of the traitors if the late noble Desks • eif York . 1 "1' The application -war withering, and the rebuke of the demagogue overpowering. There was an iirepreesible burst of approbation from the Sena tots and gallery. end poor Doctor Niles' anxiety about 'the duty on coal was forever hushed in sleep-- .; Thie,same John M. Niles has been re-elected United fitsies Senator froth Connecticut, by the I,ocofoerre.l trod help the country, when such -men'are selected to make laws for the ED. M.,./.l] tssorruz,—Varr BurtEN •Nn Jonssov.— . The Jeffinion correspondent of the St. Louis Re publican wiites under dare of the 20th: _g.There ;was a aye! Democratte caucus last bight, which undertook to nominate Martin Viin Buren for President, and Richard M. Johnson fir-- Vice President. Johnson was the strongest man of the two,t but the intrigue .of the Van Buren leaders preVailed. This will n3t be submitted to •by the friends of Johnson in Missouri. A prop*- , shion was Made to take steps to submit it to the people, hut ,the Vanites knew. well that on issue before the people, between Dick end Martin, the ;wily intriguer of New York, would be double dia. tanced by the old Hero, and therefore they went en with th.6ir legislative nomination. Many of ,the Member's:refund to have anything to dolivith the Picreeedings. • .R4tittosa.—lo referenee to the Railroad Iron tneaufastored Above this -city, the Neer York American remarks I - ILAILTLOAD leos.—The first Rail , load Iron made in this country was made by the GCit Western Iron Company. Penn - Sylvania, on thei Allegb;my. River, about 50 miles above Pitts bores. -The Company lag )t op by New Wit and Boatonicapital.—About 100 ' , tons of Railroad Icon from these works.lately arrived at Pittsburgh, on its way t for the Railroad at Madison, Indiana. We ire glsa toles a commencement in the mann rectum bertt of this important article,, for which tinhorn' offdollars have been sent abroad to par. chase it , icr ober counteisaP Tats. Lair C...an:—The New York Tribune of late d a t f ip a y e: o The Last Card' of Van Bo- Titoism is en effort to induce Geo. Jacarson to at teod,and preside over the proposed Loco•Poco National Convention. which is to nominate Mr.' V: Eh fattiest President, and whistle down Messrs. Calhoun, Cant—Johnson, Buchanan. Ate: This We good thought; bat the advanced ego and es trona') debility of Gen. J.. will. probably defeat its evocation.: The:old General would hardly Jive .tbrougb the fatigue and excitement of carrying oat this especially rf the Convention should be held io cs near the winter..' Ittertation va. lamest-en—Few people' lit aware hole much more insanity "novelle among bachajorit'iand unmarried ladies, than among the merited of bath sexes. From the ezantinitien of . very ninny report', out of . every, See of sit the lunatieisent to Atinerican Hoepitals, three sre 'Married, 'end only two are married,-and that el ,. moet all cif them me over twenty-one years old 'On the other is pretty certain, that in ell the ecipoitinity Over twenty-one years of age. there are Morn than three times as many in as out of wedlo'ck..! if this be `the case. theriihe unmarried :are more than . four times as liable to become in , sus u "win} *Ss, • - , ' .":=?.. 71 • 9 7W - 1 4 7 114 W , :'' ' POTTSVILLE. SATURDAY AIORSING. JAN. 7, 1842. Job Printing °ince. The subscriber has procured the necessary type, presses &c.. sod has attached a complete JobPrinv. 1 ing ce to his Establisement. where all kinds of C . Pamphlets, Handbills, Checks,Billa of Lading. Am., ill be printed at the very lowest rates. aid at the mem notice.' Being detertnined to accommo date the public at the very lowest rates.' at hone; he re dully solicits the patronage of the public. Pr filing in different colors executed at a short,notice ,= 1 ' Card Press. • kfard,Presi has been added to the establishment. whio will enable= to execute Cattle, of almost ev ery oe:actilaion, at very low Pates. i I 1 • B. BANNAN. P l\ c • Important. Let l A - ery citizen hear in mind,that it is not Onlyhis Interest, but his duty, to purchase every thing that he can at home.. By punsuing such a course, he.encour ages the Mechanitad industry of his own neighbor lxiod.on which the prolperity of every town and city mainly depends—and besides, every dollar paid out at home forms a circulating medium, Of which every citizen derives more 'or less benefit, in the course of trade. Every dollarpaid for foreign manufactures pur chased abroad, is entiretylost to the region, goes to enrich those who do not contribute one cent to our domestic institutions,and oppresseioni own citizens. Insurance. The subscriber. Agent for oneof the best !riser ince offices in Philadelphia, is prepared to make in surances on all descriptions of property inch as Houses, Mills. Stables, Goods, Furniture. Ste., etc, at the very lowest rates. B. BANNAN. V? 6: Pallier, Esq.. No. 101, South Third Sues:, Philadelphia, is authorised to act u Agent to receive subscriptions and _ advertisements for this. paper. c r Wanted, at this office, an active boy, about fifteen years of nge, who can corns welt racers'. mended, as . to capacity and qualifications, as - an apprentice to Mei printing business. None other need apply. Tea Coka TRADE.—Next week we shalifur nish our readers with the annual statistics of the Anthracite Coal Trade of the United States. In order to dispose of the Governor's Message this Week, we havOheen compelled to crowd out several articles intended from this paper. az ? We drew some -"sketches of ehaiseter". two weeks ago. They most have been tree to th'e life, is they were all immediately filled and re. presented. Tea Somen'i MuTersz.--The Court of Inqui ry is progressing in its investigation, and have examined Mr. Wales, who disclosed the mutiny, Lieut Gansevoott, and Acting-Master on board the Somers, M. I C. -Perry, all of whom corrobo rate the statement madd by Capt. McKenzie.. All the witnesses so far. testify positively and uncondi tionally as to their belief that the vessel could not here been brought home in safety, with that crew, without the execution of the ring-leaders. The great length of the proceedings prevents our pub. lishing them in fell, or even giving a satisfactory abstract. Canopus—rex Bsraauer L*w.—Petitions continue to pour into Congress against the repeal of this Bill. Indisposition prevented Mr. Mar shall from making his contemplated speech in fa vor of the repeal on Tuesday last, which caused great disappointment to the crowd in the galler ies who had flocked to hear him. Senator Benton, who is now soluricrus in op position to this law, submitted a similar Bill to Congress a few years ago, which was in Isub stance similar to'the law now in existence, and advocated its passage. r f We have received•several 'communications in relation to an explosion," which ,has spread its !. filth " throughout this region—Gat must de cline publishing them, for reasons which will be satisfactory to the author.. We never reply to slang and billingsgate. It always recoils on the authors with a• en-fold force. And in pursuing this course, we are fully sustained by the follow ing quotation from Scripture: " Answer not a fool according to his folly, lest thou also be like unto him." . A member of the Athenian Institute proposes the following question for debate: Is it consistent with the character of a pro prietor of a Newspaper, who is a Philanthropist, to take from a Newsboy all the proceeds of his annual NeW f Year's Address, or not?" As there is a member of this Association in terested in the decision of this question, 'her& certainly can be no objections to its discussion before the Institute. SELECT Linit•ar Or REI.IOIOOISLITERATVUIC., --We refer our readers to the Prospectus of the above mentioned work, in another column. As it will unquestionably have a large circulation, we have made arrangements with the publisher to furnish the work to subscribers in this region at the publisher's price, 15 cents per number, free of postage. wCocK-it-iDoorit'-doo!"—One of the kan Philanthropists crows loudly in the Locofoco pa per of Saturday last—but it won't do—he can't go to Harrisburg at the expense of the working men of Schuylkill county. That game is block ed. Some of them are pretty old birds and can't be caught with chaff a second time. Taa RAINSOV/, oa Ooti Factor' Sem lifoisTnxr 'Ms SIN is a beatitiftil Mag azine, issued in Neiv York, at 12i cents per num ber, devoted to the interesta of Odd Fellowship. Persons wishing to e•ftive this work, will please leave their names at this off!ce, where a copy can be examined. Amara:. Masa yrs ca.—Persona who ire 13t1": believers in Animal Magnetism,AartOKtiii: doubts removed by atteridinglili:lfailiktbat,*:; at the Town Hell, on Monday evening nest. -A . number of converts were made on Tuesday even ing last. , COLD WiLIIILIL.-011 Wednesday morning Inst. st 7 o'clock. the Thermometer stood at 3 degrees below zero.: The 'sleighing wee never better in, this region. and the people seem deter mined to enjoy it while it lasts, Governer Porter • recommends a Tax on Coal end Iron in his Message. Of course the Porter Clique will calla meeting, and •pw resolutions in favor of the - meritorious service* he has revs . dered the State. • TT It is said that there is a Printer up town whose loconaotive powers are so great,. that his friends intend laying a wager that he 'can beat anything in creation atronning. The impression continues to gain ground that Judge Parsons, now Secretary of the Common• wealth, will be'sppointett to the Judgeship vacs ted by Judge Barton on the first init. P. G.4hics. M. D. has been aptminted Physician to the Schuylkill County Alms House. in place Of Dr. 8. R. Medlar. . HINRS CLAT.••••A the Fix:option of this diitinguisbed Sjalssawin .at P/Or.Othii4, will be found ow Ow lkstv pose. : .. THE- El Mr. thubing li e recent speech, isi which: be fan— bliishinglY held up ill the offices — in the gift'of the President at public suction. to _the' bighesibidder on the ffer of "Congress, bas caosel quite _it ab lation ihrotighatit the country. swan was the effect of the:degrading proposition. that.it met with an immediate and sevenrreb#lGam the nest portion bf both parties. , this inexpeeted testilt has called forth a pallia tive speech from Mr. Wise, which is thus alluded to by the correspondent of the It If, Courier and Enquirer The remarks made by Mr. Coshing the nth er day; when the Bankrupt Bill was under con. sideratiori, were so. Very adieu"; that Mr. Wise thought it necessary to disclaim, for that gen. demon,the intent to say what every body on. derstood him to have said, and to uige that Whit he bad *Old ehould-betaken with all that allowance which is due to an unpremeditated speech. As to what ha did say, there is Cu daf. ference of opinion among all those whose bold. ness it was to attend particularly to his remarks; and, as to the plea of a want of consideration, it is not so understood at the White Honse.., I happen to know that the eon and private Seers. tary of the President. this day declared that "Mr. Cushing never speaks unless he is prepared, that he shiny' gives the subject a thorough cumin. ation. and always maintains the true ground." Besides, Mr. Everett charged him on the floor , of the fiance with' having made a set speech, and with having spoken by authority; to which Mr. Cushingttade no reply, nor did he express dis sent by look or gesture. SCHUYLKILL NIXICIATIOS CONPAIII.-•••The following persons were on the 2d inst., elected of of this company, for the ensuing year: President—SOLOMON W. RGBERTI3. MANAGItra. Manual Eyre, Thomas Firth. Lindsey Nicholson, John Serge:lntl • John Bohlen,Edmund Wilcox, Mordecai Dewis, Richard Rindolph. William S. Vara, William•Ashbridge, Jacob G. Moms, John C. Cresson. CLAIMIUS.HARPER, • &eq. and Truer, Mr. Roberts, the new President. wee formerly Engineer on the Little Schuylkill and Susquehan na Rail Road, and is a gentleman well qualified for the station be has been selected to fill. Nsw liltoaks.—Mtany's Musson von 'Aar e-ART, 1843. —The first number of the new vol- ume of this work, has been received. Subscri. hers wishing to continue their subscriptions to this interesting Juvenile work, will please leave their names at this office. ABEDIZGO, the MoneyLendet, by Mrs. Gore, price 32i cents, just received and for sale. Also Handy. Andy, complete, price 50 cents. Jack Hinton, do do A fresh supply of the Pictorial Brothel Jon athan, just received and for sale at this office,-price 12} cents. The LAST or Tan BARONS, by Bulwer, is expected daily. LEGISLATIVE.—On Tuesday last, Col. H. B. Wright was elecied Speaker of the House of Rep• resentativea by the fallowing vote: Wright. Foremen, Scattering, , 2 Mr. J. D. Andrews baa. been elected Clerk of the House of Representatives, and A. M. Hams,. Sergeant et Arcos.and Mr, Steadman, Doorkeeper. Mr. Crispin ores elected Speaker of the Senate, by the following cote 17 Heber, 2Ut sotto of Stems. (Original and Selected.) The'report that one of John C. Spencer's sons was in Sing Sing Prison, is unfounded. • Major Noah has retired from the N. Y. Union, the Tyler paper_ in that city. Publishing Tyler papers, without a party to support them, is rather an up-hill business. ,The Supreme Court of the United States, has decided that the Bankrupt Law aupercedea -the State Insolvent Laws. • • A bankrupt in Vermont lately gave among his effects as the product of his labor, nineamall chil dren. He thought hie creditors entitled to all his acquisitions since he became involved. Professor Walter R. Johnson, delivered a lec ture in the Representatives Hall at Washington, on Thursday evening !sit, on the subject of Coal. A series of experimenta upon Coal which has been instituted by the Government, have been confided to the direction: of Col. Johnson. Tits Maas Rouses Cass.—Justice Merritt. of New York, states in a letter to the Courier; that he does not yet despair of tracing out this mysterious afTair; though impediments of all kinds are thrown in his way. lie does not say whence these impedimenta proceed. In democratic' Virginia no man can vote ntt,g' lees he is a freeholder ore honsskeeper And in democratic'• South Cantina, a representative to the General Court must own a freehold of five hundred acres and ten negroes ! McLean, charged as Oneraf the parties concern. ed in the murder of - Major - Floyd, perpetrated some time since near St. Louts, has been tried at that city, and found guilty of minder in the first degree. Amos Byrd, charged with the murder of his fa ther. John. Byrd, was (gonad guilty, at Jackson, Missouri, a few days since. The prisoner -is a boy only fifteen years of age. The re•election.of Senator Begby took place by the Alabama Legislature on the 19th No politician is considered any thing now•a days who has not tried both sides. Like a buck. wheat cake, he must be turned once before he is fit for ase. Gen. Gaines has published a letter, in which he declines being a candidate for the Presidency. COLUMBIA AND ,PIL 4 - s„Thetote k . i4 1 : 4 70i -- When - you see a men who cams it rains, frets when a fog occur; and smiles only when the sun shines, be sure that anch a one cap never beer op with fortitude against the attacks of misfortune, nor stand laid:equanimity the marvellous changes of oitr daily life • The New York Tribune says : "It is now the common talk in Wall strut, that , the defalca tion of Mr.. NichoU of :'the New York Life and Trust; Company, alnW.dy discovered, is nearly $lOO,OOO. How inao, if any, the estates for which' he Was mutt°. thaws suffered, ills impos sible yet to know." . B. R. 'lPorter, a prumimmt Dorrite, has come out under his' own signature in the Providence Chronicle, denouncing the renewed efforts of his old suffrage associates to renew the strife for the Dar constitution; and (lectures it will prove fee ble, and of no aiail ; that, the' great body of the party will pursue the Comes of law and order. Counterfeit $lO biltl an the Brooklyn, (N: Y.) Bank are in circulation. They ere well executed, and appear to have WO altered from bill of , some of the broken banks in this city. The spurious bills signed P. C. 11. Brotberton, Ceshier ;J. Q. Adams, President: letter A, payable to J. D. Morton, dated Oct. 1,J836. . The olikeMof the, bank are Abas. Halsey; Cashier; and W./. Cot` sets, PoOling ) and , the genuine bilk - an Os* NWIM GOV. PORTERISMESSAGE. To the'Siii and-House'of itepeentalibio ,of .00 Conszsonweida Ffixolr Cretzatia::--Baving, in toy foimer messages, entered-very frilly into the financial. condition and other general iotereatiof the date, 'I deem: it iinnecesiary to repeat the . yiewi - then. submitted to' the Legielattdc, but armiliect tete? to them, and say, that they; remain in all respects substantially the same as heretofore expressed. I shall proceed at once to call your attention to those matters of public policy, Which seem - to re quire, in the greatest degree, the attention .of the Legislature. - In common with evirE State in the Union, and with all parts of the commercial world, the citizens oflPennsylvania are new un dergoing the circled Of pecuniary embarrists. ment. Business of all kinds is crippled and par alyzed; private and public enterprise - has been. arrested ;, the timid - alarmed, and even the bold est staggered at impending evils. --But at is some, consolation for ris to reflect, that these difficulties are the bitter fruits, so far as Pennsylvania is con cerned, of rash and impolitic legislation of p eln• gle year, and that tione of the responsibilityi rests upon_us. For, upwards of ,ten years Pennsylvania had been gradually improving her condition, and en joying all the advantage!! that can arise kom substantial currency, and the entire confidence of all parts of the world. At an unfortunate period, the banking capital, which had been, during this flourishing season, about twenty millions of dol len, was increased to near sixty ; and, as one of the most fatal consequences, many unwise and impolitic public improvements undertaken—cor porations created for purposes far beyond their means to accomplish—individuals contracted res ponsibilities and entered into speculations, which 'they were totally unable to bring to s successful close; and finally, to render the catastrophe more destructive, the explosion of en enormous bank bubble has crashed all 'these enterprises, public and private, and left in every quarter of the State some monument of blasted and public folly. It will require a little time to' recover from the pan ic, and to estimate, with precision, the extent of the mischief. It will probably be found far less than has been generally supposed. The vigor and industry of the community, sustained as they are by our immense Aslant resources, will soon overcome this temporary repulse, and go on as if it had never happened. Some will unfortunate ly be ruined, but the great masa of the communi ty will in the end be little affected. That por tion of the community engaged in agricultural pursuits is comparatively free from debt and em barrassment, and possessed of all the benefits that arise from favorable seasons and plentiful har vests. I can myself see no just ground for that despon. dency which seems to pervade, so generally, the minds of the people. The injury to our credit abroad, although productive of much temporary inconvenience, will ultimately be serviceable to the community. - It will teach us to rely on ourselves, to turn our attention to the development of our own resources, and to obtain that, by our own labor, Which we have hitherto bought upon-thist. Whatever may be the fears of that portion of oqr community, who are always predicting ruin, and bemoaning the effects of causes which they do not understand, time wilt -soon. soon prove; that the resources of Pennsylvania, her ability to meet all her engagements, and the respect of ,her citizens for the plighted faith of the State,, have not been in the slightest degree shaken, by any of the mis fortunes under which we are now suffering. In nearly all instances, these fears Will be found to have had their origin in the croaking. of unpin cipled demagogues, who are willing to undervalue her means, and the integrity of her citizens, if they can thereby promote their own selfish ends. U there be any;of our citizens, who honestly be lieve, that Pennsylvania will prove unable to per. form sll her engagements, they will be found to be neither very deep reasoner', nor very accurate ly acquainted with the abundance and nature of her. resources. If there be any of her citizens, who think that she will prove faithless and un willing to discharge her obligations,we may vile ly -say, they know little of her true character, and meet with no encoureginnent, \ or favor, from any considerable portion of the community. To do what she agrees to do, and to pay what she pro mises to pay, are two of her distinguishing charac teristics ; and he who would induce her to forfeit either of them, will find, that he gars neither the confidence; nor respect, of her citizens by the at. tempt. She may be temporarily obliged to post pone the discharge of her engagements until a more convenient season ; but to deny the obligation it self, or to refuse to comply with it, would be a reproach upon her integrity, which no pultlie man dare advisi or sanction. However great her public debt may seem to be, li,taz of a few cents par ton upon her coal and iron which are scattered in every hill and valley throughout her border*, will , as some future day not only pay the interest on her public debt, but the principal also, probably within the lifetime of many of those, who are now upon the stage of public action. This tax would be paid in a great measure by the consumers of these products in other States, and would be scarcely felt by hor own citizens.—Cut off as this country novel's, and must continue to be, from the European supply of coal and iron, on which ikhas hitherto chiefly depended, the day is not fir distant, when Penn. sy 'Tanis will supply more than three-fourths of the other States of this Union' with coal, end a majo rity of them with iron. This is a position from which-no legislation end no human power can remove her. Her geographical position, and the favorable relative locations of her coal and iron de posits, put Pennsylvania beyond•_the reach of ill rivalry from any quarter,,She seems to have been destined by nature, to he the great work-shop of the American Union : and if her citizens and her legislature are true to' themselves, and will avoid Aid meats of other sections 'brain beteg, the development adt not the language of sanguine hope, or blind coo , fidence, but of clear-sighted, practical experience, of the truth of which every unprejudiced man must be convinced, who will catfully investigate the facts relating to her condition. . At the close of the lesl war, the pecuniary em barrassment and distress, pervading our country, were far greater •than they are now. We had just emerged from a protracted, - expannve l 'end harrow, ing war. The national - debt was nearly one hun dred and thirty millions-of defiers; business of all kind/ was brokenup ; cenfideneis wacentirely de. moped; all classes of, community were in debt; our banks broken and worthles s; public feeling weakened end shaken to a degree infinite. !y beyond what is now known ; and, worse than all thie, rankling political animosities against the -then 'administration of the general government had created, or raised up, a 'powerful, unscrupulous, and iicilent party, under - !he plansible name of the ape= party," which threw in the way of the ad ! ministration every 'possible obstacle, in the trium phant-prosecution of,det war, or the correction of the evils which it'inevitahlY entailed ntale the country. ,Itut, notwithWanding all these formW , sble discohregimenW, the good sense, the enter .prise and.'the patriotism of the people, secon ded lbeee the n entrusted witlillie idministretion ollhe "peopks ineadel . thaw Owen e ntru s t e d with lb! 1 administration' of the paea* , ',who performed their duty with floiwn - firmness - mad ; integrity. Taxes, were seeornmeeded,- - ,leiriedi mot, paidoo the credit sal 'honor of tiMgovernmont.—= 'confidence wu restored, busineneVerunied its ic eustomed,Cbsanels, end enact the most ffinrisbing seasons iii the: history at our. country mreceided., Thit enormous debt, in the prosesor of time, etw tirely extinguished. Vhoie who recomineed‘d the necessary measures to the attamme)vii this, great. end have been rewarded! with pvi,'t-Mextd gratitude. The honest end fearleddischerge of duty,- will beittended whit the, seineresults now. Our history Its never yet Jimmied a single in. stance, in which a publierMan„who stood by the honor of his country ineniergencies, was in ' not fully sustained- his efforts by his_ fellow. citizens:,:Be ,ma y be - traduced imd villided, bat a manly end — faithful' - discharge of duty outlives the efforts of his traduSers. The proudest menu. merit that a: public man can desire to leave his children, is one incrribed—he knew his ditty— he dared perform it—he never flinched from his post. The whole amount, of the present funded debt of the state, exclusive of the deposite of the sur plus revenue, is $37,937,788 24. Here follows a statement of the periods when the State Debt becolms due—how expended—the value of property belonging to the State, which is set down at $ 37,686,647 16, cost priceh. The funded debt does not'include the , smount due to domestic creditors. The whole ,mount of Canals and Rail Roads completed by the State, amount 0793 miles in extent, and 1401 miles are under contract, and nearly completed.- The Governor states that the interest on the public debt. Was not. paid in August laat—and cer tificates, bearing 6 pet cent. interest were issued to the holders of tke loan. payable in one year, an accordance with the Act of Assembly. He recommends the continuance of the pres ent taxes, and calls the attention of the legislature to the present defective mode of assessing them. No bids were received for the pi/rebate of the public improvements alike State. li opposed to a sale, under the impression that they would tap into the hands of foreign capitalists. With respect to the revenue from the public works, the Governor says : ig The revenues open our public works have not diminished in any proportion to the extent of the embarrassments which have been thrown in the way of trade. It hill be seen by referring to the repoit of the Canal Commissioners, which will shortly be laid before you; 'that notwithstanding tie scarcity and depreciation of money, the im paired condition of credit, end the enormous rates of exchanges, the receipts from tolls for the fiscal year, ending the 30th of November, 1842; amount to $920,499 42 The expenditures, for all purposes, for the nine months commencing on the let March and ending 30th Norember, 1842; amount to Leaving an excess of receipts for the 2 '"year, over the expenses of nine months of 530,452 72 notwithstanding the decrease in toile has been $169,396 61 The receipts and expenditures on the main lines have been as follows: Toils received in All expenses and 1842. liabilities for 9 months.. Columbia Railroad, $357,461 50 $132,499 45 Eastern & Juniata 195,780 16 45,072 12 Divisions, Allegheny Pottage Railroad, . 124;:—:%540 06,528 63 Western Division 85,449 42 26,080 00 $762,949 42 $300,080 20 Leaving en excess of tolls over expenditures of $462,769 28, on'the above usually deuomins ted Tax MAIN LINE from Philadelphia to Pitts burg. On the DeIMMO Division and other branches of the Canal., the excess . of tolls over expenditures, during the same period, has been $67,683 44. It is worthy too of remark that the expenses for repairs alone for the nine Months have been only $164, 526 30. This exhibit cannot fail to inspire us with in creased confidence in the ultimate value end use fulness of our public works, strengthened as it is by the fact, that there has been a falltrupotT in the canal tolls of New York, for the fiscal year ending 30th November, of $284,361 89. The Governor then speaks of the delapidated condition of the works and the heavy amount re quired to put them in navigable' condition when be came into power—the amount of the debt due for ordinary repairs, unprovided for, &c., which amounted in the aggregate to $2,367,566, which has be:en banging like an incubus on the whole system, and which has contributed much to em barrass its operation for the last few years. Thew. renewals have been made, and the expenses for repairs will be light for several yearis to come. The bridges which cross the State Canals, and which have been heretofore kept in repair at the expense of the State, the Governor suggests, ought hereafter be kept id repair at the expense of individuals and counties, for whets use they were constructed. The Governor also alludes to combinations a mong a few private companies to monopolize all the advantages from the carrying trade on the public works at their own prices, and hopes tter the recent conviction at Pittsburg will remedy the evils•complaiued of. He refers the Legislature to the Quid Com missioners Report for other grievances Complain ed of, which the Legislature ought to reciedy. Nothing:bps been done with regard to the in corporationf private Companies, to take end fin ish4tiose portion, of the public works tbst remain in an unfinished state.. Claims by Domestic Creditors to the amount of 1;710,„R have been entered on the books "natal, end only an instalment of imountincto $ 209,- the laborers villa end who, the toessti overlooked He toeommends the withdrawal' Notes from circulation, and suggests the sale of the Bank, Bridge and other !toils ixtonging to the State, and- the proceeds applied .totthe can celling of these notes. The attention of the Legislature is called to the condition of the Sink of Pennsylvania. ind asks for a law to place the State and the,Stockholders on an equal footing. . • , - He recommends the paiuge of the Apportion ment Law with strict regard to the rights and in latests of all sections of the State: He oho recommends a clang's, in the mode of drawing Jurors—by -using. one wheel only. and suggests the propriety of diewhig theM in open Court, in the presence of the Comaiimioners, the Sheriff; and one or More \ ot z tbs - ludges of the COurt. • The menage, takes-sirong ground io favor of the Common Behooli of the-State. With raga /to- the law abolishiag impriscut meat for ths he 'states that It IS vary defeeties, ask aluint renderedliagary by : _the obsconty of i-provision. qf any kw of the kind, be • , • . - deemed necessaiiiik sboold be one very different from 'the presentAlaf." lifniwcomyindeidefining:thri jurikiction of the Criminal court of Philaderphis; and •on the sub ject of the larity . Of the laws with regard to aim- - ins* says r • - • A:The tendency of public epinionfor s number of years past, has gradually been to weaken and relax the execution of the:criminal laws. This morbid feeling has even reached jurors, and other fanctioneriei engaged' in the administration of criminal justice so that it is hot an unusual spec. tack tu.see courts and juries convict and sentence on_the clearest_ testimony a criminal on one day, arid recommend his pardon to the executive the next. These appeals, thus sustained, address them selves with great force to the magistrate entrusted with the power - of - pardoning " offenders, and it is apt to be disguised, thit unless some check be put-upon it, it will, in'the end, lead, to great in- - justice end abuse. These remarks are made, Oat so much with a view to invite immediate legisk- Alen on the subject, as to . influence and temper' the action of the legislature on subjects connected with the criminal jurisprudence of the State." He recommends the repeal of all supplements to Loan and Insurance Companies, which gives them privileges inconsistent with the original in tention of the acts of incorporation. The Chancery tamers granted to several of the Courts in this State cannot be carried into op. eration, owing to defects in the taw. He there fore) recommends the appointment of Masters in Chancery and Auditore i and their functions de fined. The State Treasurer has received her sit'sre of the proceeds of the Sales of the Public Lands, a mounting to $ 60,313 27. The Governor recommend. an:appropriation to prepare and palish the information derived from the Geological, Survey of the State, fur the use of the people. ' The Message then winds. up by recommending retrenchment in the public expenditures—a strict attention to the public business—magnanimity and justice to political opponents-!-a short Pet sion—and very properly remarks that oto what• ever"department of the Government we belong, we should remember, that our efforts to reform abuses, and to retrench 4penditnres, will avail but little, if we do not practice'ourselves the pnnci. plc: we lay down for the guidance of others." With twit or three exceptions. the Message is patriotic in its tone—but unfortunately for the people, the practice heretofore has always been 'contrary to the precepts laid down. When General Harrison was nomity.ted by the Harrisburg Conventi,.n, bets were freely of fered that he would not carry four States in the Union. These wagers were predicated on the disastrous reverses which the Whip had met with every where. Nevertheless, in eleven months. sixteen States were revolutionized. The locos loit.their money, Chapman's comb .was clipped, and the people elected Harrison almost by emelt*. motion. This , was the consequence •of Whig exertion. What happened in 1840, will happen again in 1844. The Whip are now about as badly off as they were in 1839. That is, they have lost State after State through sheer default, as the returns abundantly demonstrate. When the great issue of the Ptesidential question come, to be fairly presented before the people, the Whigs will awaken from their lethargy, and show their numerical strength. Their ants cannot fail to achieve a victory as signal as that of'4o. We are not a whit discouraged_ by recent rebuffs, be cause they plainly shore that we ,have been de feated by went of energy and sztivity. • The Whig party will Eight when they have a paramount oh. ject to accomplish, end not before. The locos poll their full strength invariably. Hence we conclude, that at the Presidential election the let. ter - will do very little better than they have done this year, while the Whigs will poll their reserve of some 200,000 or 300,000 voters..l-N. 0. Bee. 300,046 70 WENDY Cray. The iv- 7t. Union,• Judge Noah's Tyler paper, in an article on political song singing, holds rho following language, in reference to the greet statesman of the West— ..He is a statesman-of forty years sianding, constantly before the eyes of the American people, of great and Commanding talents--one who hen filled various civil offices with eminent ability,— the man who is considered the father of the Ame. rican system—the greet defender of the Indepen dence of the South American republics—the able advocate and supporter of t}fs country during the war, and the Successful negotiator of Peace. If such a man as Henry co cannot be elected Pre. sidenrof the United Static, by virtue of his servi ces end talents, it is aisin eft to sing him into office--it is dearadritg to his ch3rarter, and humi liating to the feeling of his honest friends." The "Pacteccs' Cons-rurcrTioa."—Son , e very curious developiments hove been the result, in Rhode island, . of careful inquiries into the actual composition of the vote by which the so called "people's constitution" was alledged to have been adopted in December, 1841,--that constitution on. der which Mr. Dorr claims to be the rightful Governor. At Newport. for instance, if has been discovered that of the 1202 votes returned as for the constitution, 231 were given : by unnaturlized foreigners, 52 by United States soldiers, 5 by mi. nors and 20 by persons who either were not re sidents or were absent from Newport at the time of their alledged voting. Eleven persons, more. over, are found to have - voted twice, and it is as. eertained that several men are on the list as hay. trig voted, who now declare that, they did not vote at all. And all this in one town only.—N. Y. Com. A STIIONG Pourr. 7 —The following (tom the evidence of Mr. Wales. is, perhaps, the strongest point that has yet appeared, to sustain the course' / of Commander Mackenzie: Q. From what you observed of the fdelings the crew during the progress of the mutiny up td the execution, did you believe then, or do yowl now, that the brig could have been brought sof4 to land, if the execution of the leaders had not taken place? A. No, sir, end I expressed this opinion at the Mr. Gansevoort. 1832, thes dent who iriakes ids r-- , •ft is ru mored that the propriet, disin; tereattatioeireal, have salted. in Tressnry. notes drawing 8 per . .4, iptettst.,` bating perhaps what of that amount have tiansferied to the TO cent. stork •of MiF son& z Larsn PionTsrus.—Dates from 'Go!Seaton have teen received at New•Orleins to Dec. 18th, but they contain nothing of interest, The pro. needing* of Congress are of Me interest';, a fac tious but unsuamsful attempt has been nude to break up its session, by members absenting them. septa. The latest intelligence represented Col. Howard as about to march with 700 total for the Rto'Grands, The ,President's Malaise] wu re. ceived with - very general disapproval; The Tyler paper. we believe,. withontla sip& exception, take ground spinet Comniender Mc- Kenzie: _' t , as.--According to a statement Messrs. Blair & Rives of the lid fir .public printing since 33. I%e correspon. . . -.. •': ' ,: ',- '', -. ( comma iCerip. ) .. , - Aniale of Quildlibet t . . . . . . DT SOLODON SECOND Tuomitis,,SCOOOLCIAVUUtoke This Work, published some time , ago, has not, . wet think, attracted as mucle attention as its met.. its desert's. In order to place these more direct: ly before the public, I prophse publishing some extracts from it,oecasionalty, without designing or. wishing however, frag their fulness to intrench on the copy-right of thepublishers. • The Annals open thus— - ••' It was at the close of the year 1833—0 r rather - I should say, at ,the opening of the . following spring, that our borough of Quodlibet tooklhat sudden leap to greatness, which hatoflate carried it to be so Much! talked about: Our folkeire ie.; . customed to 'set this (town to the removal of, the Deposites. Indeed, until that famous event. Quad. tibet was, as one might say in common parlance; a place not worth talking aboutitrdightliardly : be remarked pit the maps. But sine that date. verily like Jeshurun it has waxed fat. It has thus' come to pass that « the Removal " is it great epoch in our annals—our Hcjirab—the. A. U. 0. 'of all Quodlibitatians. Michael Gitint, a long time ego—that- is to say full twenty years—had a Tan yard on ;Rumble: bottom creek, occupying the very ground which!, is now covered by the canal basin. 'Urea as far back-es that day, he had laid up out of the earn= ings of his trade, a snug sumo . nionej! ktrhicis Geed to purchase the feral where he now lives at` the foot of the Hog-bark. Quoillitret, or that ? which is now Quodtlbet, Wall Weir as.noChing. Michael's dwelling house and tan-yard,'--Abet : Drawn's blacksmith shop, Christy Metlurdy's mill, and my school house made up the sum In; tal of the settlement. It is now ten years, ors hard on it, since the Commissioners came this way and put the cap sheaf on Michael's worldly fortune by ruining his ,Tan-yarrand breaking up his business, whereof the dainsges was so taken to heart by the jury; that in their rage, iigiinat in ternal improvements theibrought in a verdict which doubled Mr. Grant's estate in ready money besides leaving him two acres of town , lots bor dering on the basip, which they say are worth more to-day than the whole Tan yard with appurtenances ever was worth in its best time. This-verdict wrought a strange appetite in our county amongst the land holders to be ruined in the same way ; and I truly believe it was a 'chief cause of the unpopularity of internal improve 'clients in this neighborhood, that the Commisson ers were only able to destroy the farms on the low lands, which fact it was said, brought down the price of the upland:on. the whole line of the , canal, besides creating a great deal of ill humor amongst all who were out of the way of being • damaged in the same way as Mr. Grant. With rho money which this verdict brought him, Mr. Grant improved a part °this WS - acres. which he was persuaded to cut np into town lots , by building the brick tavern and the store which` stands next door to it. These wero the first build-. iege of any note in tiuodlibet, and are generally supposed to hive given 'rise , to the incorporation. of. the borough by the Legislature. Jesse Ferret t 4. stook a lease of the tavern as Ilion as it was fin ished, and set up the sign of the Hero —meaning . thereby General Jackson. The store was rented!. by Frederick Barndollar for his son Jacob, who . was just then going to m irry Ferrett's daughter Susan, and open in the Iron and Flour Forwards. ing and Commission line in comphny with An 4 thony Hardbottle, his own brother-in-111W. . This was the state of thinis in Quodlibet five years before the o Remover," from which period up•to the date of the Remvakeyhough Barndol— tar and liardbottle did a toleishle, business, lend Permit had a fair ran there were net above a dozen new teninie . but a bright destiny was in reserve ilAiuodlibet. Sketches of the history of the patriotic. Copper Plate Bank of Quodlibet. * • 92 4, P I think it was in the very month of thri Itemov..„ al of the Deposita!' that Theodore Fogg tiriltecup " at Tumbledown on the other side of the Hegbark, and came over to Quodlibet to Practise law, And it was looked upon as a very notable thing, thiSP in the course of the following winter Ricntleas Handy should have alsoguitted Tumbledown and brought his sign as tottery agent to Quodlibet, and set pp that business in our borough. • There. was a wonderful intimacy struck up between him. and Fog, and a good many visits were made by - Nicodemus during the fall before' he came to set-. ale. Our people marvelled at this matter and were not a little puzzlsd to make out the meaning• of it, knowing that Nicodemus' Handy was a. shrewd man and not likely, without some good' reason for it, to strike up a friendship with a per.;-f son so little given to business as Theodore Yogg • —who being-considered high flown in speech, and ratherlutid of living about Ferrett'a bar room, it was thought strange that Nicodemusi wlio is plain spoken and cf temperance principles skould • have taken up with him. It was not long after Mr. Handy had seated himself in Quodlibet, and placed his sign at the door of a :weathetboardell; office,len by twelite, and within- a stone throW of Foggs, before the public_ were favored with an ••• insight into the cause of this intimacy between - these two friends. • This was disclosed in,a plan for establishing the patriotic Copper Plate Bank of Quodlibet, the particulars whereof were made known at-a meet ing held in the dining room of the Hero' one evening in March, when Theodore Fogg made's flowery speech on the subject to ten pergens, countity, Fefrett and Him Porter, the barkeeper. The capital of the Bank was proposed to be half a million, and the stock one hundred dollars a share, of which-one dollar was to be paid (i) and 1 , the remainder to be sr cured by prumixtry ,note* payable on &mond, if convenient. ! . . This excellent scheme found many supporters,. and accordingly when the time came for action, • the whole amount was subscribed by' Handy, Fogg, and ten of their particular friends, who hatli. • en - eye to being directors and officers of the Bank. -.. —to whom might also be added about thirty boat- - men, who, together with the boys of my Acatle- - my lent their names to Mr. Handy. • Through the liberality of Fogg, the necessary ;?• cash was 'supplied out of three hundred dollars, the remains Of a canal fund in his hands belong- ing to a family of Orphans in the neighborhood:: of Tumbledown, who had not yet had occasion to- - know from their attorney, the said Theodiare him- • self, of their success in a cause relating to this ' fund, which bad been gamed some months before. As Nicodemus manliked the 'subscriptiort; which , -,- indiedthe did with wonderful skill, these three , bundtl TAU went.a- , great way in making up .* ',1*.418 pst a considerably more. han a ,ma- ' ton stock :Ibis being adjusted, he under; took's t to- the Legislature, where through the I disinterestetlisiertiMis of sumo staunch democuti:." is friends'he procured a most oneleePtiortablei - ", . cnartir for the Bank; full of ill sorts Of provisionk "` conditions, and Clauses necessary to enable it to '. ficcommodate the public with as much paper mon-- ., ey ea the said public could desire.' • In consideration of these great services, Mr. Handy elected himself ... Cashier, and at the same time had- well nigh fallen into' a quarrel-with -. 'Pegg, who had' set his heart 'on being President • —which; in view of the fact, that that. gentle. , • man's habits wireamiretvbat irregular alter tfrelie o'clock in • the :day, NicOdemns would, by no. Means consent to. This diasentlon however was. seemingly heekid IT bringing in is Ilrefilderittet.n