"E_A eM4A - c .: POTTSVIL LTi:. Stiturdiy Moriting, .Aug. 3,1344 • IMPORTANT. • • Let every citizen bear in tnind,that it Is not billy his Wrest but his duty, to purchase every thing that he tan at home.. By pursuing such a course, he Cuenura gen the mechanical Industry of lila own neig.hborhood, otterhich the prosperity. of every town and city mainly depends—arid betides, every dolin u rgaid out at borne, forma a circulating medium, of self _every citizen de titres more or less benefit, in .the course of trade. Ev ery dollar paid for foreien manufactures purchased n broad, Is entirely lost to the region, goes to enrich those *gado tot contribute one cent - to Mir domestic instita- ODD and oppreeses our own citizens. • • , TILE ROM MAN'S BILL Those who are impelled lo labor, ought fo , bear in *Lind that the Tariff is eMpliatirally the poor inai's secures to him regular, employment and good wares Which It hie capital—and just in proportion as the duties ' are reduced, so in proportion does his wages go down. Think of [llia working men, before von aid in support ing Men who will rob you of your only capital; the wa• ges oflabur. • Opinions of ;.lilailes H. Polk unthe 'fluff , "1 AM IN FAVOUR OF REDUCING THE. DU • 'TIES "TO THE RATES OF THE' COMPROMISE ',CT., "WHERE THE WHIG CONGRESS FOUND THEI.I "ON THE nottrOrJFNE, 11442." Vahaphlat Speech ht Jackson, Tenn., April ?..d, 103. "THE DIFFERENCE BETWF.EN ' TIIE , wnib "PARTY AND MYSELF IS, WHILST THEY ARE ',THE ' ADV•OCATCS OF DISTRIBUTION AND A *IriIITECTIVE TARIFF-MEASURES WHICH I - cn&NSWED RUINOUS TO THE INTERESTS of tha- } COUNTRY AND ESPECIALLY TO THE INTE nRESTs OF THE PLANTING STATES—I• HAVE "STEADILY AND AT ALL TIMES OPPOSED 'BOTIL" [Same Skeet', published likmgelf •'MY OWN 'OPINION IS, THAT WOOL SHOULD "BE DUTY FREE." [Congressional debates,Nol. 9, page474._ . , "Mr. Healy, (loCofoco) to-day, in the llonse,annionred. eteeaiing• hostility to the present TARIFF, on behdtf of ' . .Via Demoriatic party. He declared that .Alr*. 'Yolk was opposed to tt,and thatthey only wanted a Democratic Con /mess and a Democratic Presiden , elected, to repeal it.— Ppeech.ln Conessa June 4th,1814. • . CLAY'S, AND .FOLK'S VIEWS ON PRO '.I'ECTION. • • Public DitcUsidori, -, . • . , kpuhtic'. tr iscussieri, embrach the views of • 'Henry Clay , and James C. 17.14., 6n the subject ^ ofia Tariff fox! Protection, will takd place in the Orchard . , in the Borough of Pottsville, on Satur day afternoon; the . 10th of A'uenst nest, between 'Joseph.G. Clarkson, Esq., of Philadelphia, and ' Francis W -Hughes, Esq., of : Pottsville. To cpumcnce t 2 o'clock prt.c.iiiely. _ Voters of bOth attics aroi vite I t ~13.: p:•••-y , ut ‘‘,l ilk.: 0.T1,1311. • FUR Y THE CIMPAIG. •br Order to pl ire information within the reach of all, the Miners' Journal will he furnished until the Presidential ElectiOn, from the 15th of August, et the following low rates : One Copy , ,, • ! 25 Thirteen Copies, to one address, = S. 00 Twenty-two, •' do ! 5 00 co"' The money must accompany each order. will furnish papers to responsible Lo eefoco4 at the same rate, payable when Henry Clay is elected President. • - • 13 - c call the attention n ef our reade to the Above terms of our taper. The price does not Tray expenses—but we arc determined,to give the people light, let it o. cost what it may. Let Clubs be made up in every se'tlit by our friends, and the papers handed over to thoie who are in search of light on thc; great' questiOns which now agitate. the country. - , , A few copis of ,\" The Heraldof Freedicrn, and Clay, Frelinghuys:e p and Markle Straightout Champion," prihtecl at. the Great 'Meeting at Or. • cigabing, can yet be obtained at this office. Er In the coarse of -the present month, a Col lector will wait on those who are in arrears in this region. •We hope he will not call-in vain. Dis tant. subicrihers in arrears, will please transmit through, the-. Post 'Masters; Who are authorised to (rank. . „ - In" We i:efer our readers to the "proceedings in another column. They breathe; the right spirit, and nobly itend by the rights of Schuylkill. The resolution lit favor Of Schuylkill county, was only . oppereed by shout thirty or forty persons in that immense assemblage,, - The LocofoCmi held a meeting at Orwigs burg, en. Monday last; After extraordinary exer tions, they mustered together from . 1140 to 2000. 'people. Among the speakers was Mr. byewster, Of Philadelphia, who• made one 'of the most abu sive-and blackguard speeches ever,heard in this county. Even locofocoism vas disgUsted, and a large number refused,to listen to him, and left the' ground.' A german from New 'York, Mr. Lud wish, also addressed the meeting, and openly ad, socated the free trade policy against the •protec tip system. In doing so, he was cheered by the meeting—yet the Licofocos have the impudence to place on their Banners, For the present Tariff.' - Tux Brca.-r.er..B LAC KRMITIL—We feel grat-- ified in stating that JOHN W. BAEII, the Duel-. eye Blacksmith, will arrive in this place on Thurs tlay afternoon the Bth of August, by the Cars.-- We hap© his brother Blacksmiths and bur citizens will give him a hearty gieeting. It is his , intem: lion to remain in our couhty eight or ten days, during which time he will address .the people iu "e%teij , section of the county. • The placm of Meet; ing'will be promulgated in duo time. He stands . 414 to meet any of the decent leaders of the jko 4t6foco party, to discuss any of the measuresie. fore the people; - _ . Imo of the Locofoco drones, raised a Hickory Pirltritt Minerreille. on Tuesday last. Tho mi ners and 'laborers have resolved to raise fire Ash roles to their one. Such is the spirit in this re -gion: Our glorious whip aro determined to beat 'the .Locofo.cos in any thing 'they undertake—and they will beat tifem at the ballot box else., Hick' -out Poles; and such "mummeries" wont save then. Mark the result.. U? We niust throw ourselves on the ihdulgenee (Ion! malets, fors want of variety in this paper: The proceedings, and descriptions of meetings, gather with a press of advertisements, have crowd ed out nearly all our miscellaneous - news. We quo also fearful that such will frequently be, the ease until afteithe election. i , 01:):We icier 'oar readeris to the new Pfdent Virwhing .Ittrzehine, Overtisi i d is our columniby Mr. Isk A G g rr yn 3 : We have heard it very fa venntily spokerfo those who have usedit. In Rending, the proprietor has certificates of its utiti. iy from a large number of the House Keepers ia that Dorough. Ir.„Ttlffe plahliehed the first English paler, ever printed in Orvvigsburg on Tuesday last. Its title was "The Harald of Freedom "—rater-ominous - title fOi. that quarter. • • . • „117 We have received ei poetic commnt•.ication from our lata'iownsman J. M. C.” which 'will Appel, neat Week. . - . . . _ ~ . Tan Buctl-tyl.—On Tuesday evening, alter 1 ' Ova Coarousseroaai DiarniCT.---At ta the great gathering at orwigsburg, a mg eeiinwas 1-to Promise, We publish bOoiv thalaaaf that; Air . held in front of Mr. Lesig's Badhuali'H,.otel, in Ramsey knew of, and consented to; • al!! snail thisßorough. The Buckeye Blacksmitlrts there, ment made by, all the Conferees representing. dila and fifteen hundred good and true whigs W'cre there Ciongressio' nal Ilistriet in 'SePtemberiast. Th tomect him. Hand over hand he denit'Out hard wfto know Capt. Israel Reinhart w e not. dispu fisted blows at Locofoco corruption, and enforced his word, although, if necessary, he is willing whig, principles with in energy, clearness, and a Make an affidavit of the f;act. We have the Dam not-to-begot-over-Hess peculiar to _himself. The of another gentleman at our-office, who alsoliett4 .Buckeye wields a poweiful tongue, ha.convinces .14r. Ramsay state the same thing at Yriedenstanr and persuades antproselytes; therefore; he is not .in this county, which will be given to any ,persep popular with locefocos. Of course, as),-usual,_tle who desires the information. He .is aveise to meeting was disturbed by the blackguards oldie lb- having his name publistMd in the paper: cofoco party. We do not sa yby the party, because ' -,,,. • POTTW4LLE, July 27th, 1844. we believe there are honest and decent men an it— . Capt. Israel Reinharti; men who abhor such outrages, and condemn them ; as strongly as we can ; men whose ; conduct is sey state in your tiouscifier he was noniinated i manly. But the blackguards are not inhuenced by fur Congress, last year, that he only intended to the m ,tives which govern honest and decent men; rim for one term. An tigly answer will oblige they from habit and inclination, are Powerless to resist the impulses to do a dirty act. They attack private character,hold upto public view as•monsters of iniquity, those who differ with them in opinion, and, attempt to climb to preferment 'themselves, like parrots, by their beak, and their powerful ar guments arc rotten eggs; two such were discharg ed at the Buckeye, on Tuesday night. He offers a reward of 810 for the person who threw them. kaiLlzt6 Tux Con:Tatsr.--One of the oldest residents of Orwigsburg, in speaking with us yesterday of the two mce'ings, remarked, that at the Locofoco meeting on Monday,the faies were all strange. At oars, on Tuesday, they were nearly all famil iar.. You ruight recognize them as Me people of the soil—the tax-payers' of the county—substan tial fanners and hard-fisted mechanics and work 'hlg men; men whose iij egrity, intelligence and principles had peen tried and received the attesta tion of times signet—to whoie honesty and iden tity you might safely swear. ..Our meeting teas characterized by all' that- 'ex.. übcranca of enthusiasm which men feel and ex hibit When their cause is good. it was a.labor to raise a shout at theirs—and when they did, it was the poor, feeble, sickly, faint huzzar-half-smother od at its birth. It came not from the heart or the head, but was formed in the mouth, and died with the breath that give it utterance. 'ln size there, can be no comparison. On Mon day one hundred and •sixty-nine vehicles in all, containing 1,023 persons passed into Orwigsburg. On Tuesday two hundred and seventy-four ve hicles, containing two thousand one hundred and forty-five persons passed into Orwigsburg by the Pottsville road. This statement is made from ac trial count, made by a gentleman, as they passed Mr. B.Pott's farin house. If it is doubted,inquire. I of the Gate-keeper—he will tell yoti ttiat the toll was nearly treble on Tuesday. We libve not, been able to ascertain the exact number of vehi-; des and men from the other parts of the county. . - Tees RIGHT SerniT, 7 --Nothing can qiiench . the true Whig fire. On Tuesday, while lee ,pra cession was entering Orwigsburg, a man in at tempting to get up before a waggun,i - ell under the. wheel, and was run over; but with; undiminished enthusiasm he jumped up, shook off the dust, and shouted louder than before," hurrah for Clsy,7 ' , 6 hurrah foi Clay." • On the way home, a Welshman standing out side on the pole of • a waggon as it' passed Morris' Addition, turned to salute some ladies, loosing his balance he fell., The-waggon passed over hini, dislocating his shoulder and otherwise seriously injuring him. The physician who was sent for, remarked to him; "This is the effect of attending these Whig Meetings." " Sir," said the suffering man, raising himself up as well ashe might; and the words trembled.on his faltering tongue with peculiarempha,;is, locofocoism to me." What shall we rear with , such men, and such a cause, animated by such impulsive amide -% termincd zeal. A:KOTULA GAT;IERIXO OF -Tee PEOPLE:A bout five o'clock on Thursday afternoon, it was ascertained that Joseph . R. Chandler, Esq., was in town. A - Committee waited upon him with an invitation to addicss the Whigs in the beroUgh. Mr. Chandler complied with the-request.. Notice Was issued, and at 8 o'clock, the large room of the Town Mall, was crowded, pegged tight. The la dies were smiling in their own Tweet way; Mr. C. complimented their spirit, and acknowledged their influence in a style chaste and beautifitl. In ,the course of his remarks he enquired which of the two is the better tariff man, Mr. Polk or Mr.Clay;'' a locofoco in the Crowd called out Polk. Mr. C. II thankid him for the issue, and took it up; before he had disposed of it, the Loco thought it prudent to slope. Mr. C. was argumentice, eloquent, per. "spicUous,'forcible. The attention of his intelligent audicnce is his best praise; they, were enchained and delighted for more than an hour, and testified their admiration by frequent burst's of applaose. -For ourselves we can say we never liattned to a more finished and rloquent address upon a, politi cal topic. Mr. C. 1 leided illness, and desired J. C. Neville, • Esq., to precede hirti, that be might have breathing time; he did so, We all know how Mr. Neville speaks—Well Z - -Twenty-one residents of Point Township, Northumberland county, in the last Miltonian, renounce. I.OcofocOism foreier.' They tell. here. 'their, leaders that they have come to the' conclu sion to support their country , hereafter and no t party—and that any attemi t to`,Whip them back again into the traces will prove abortive. • Cd The 'last Reading 'Journal states that the Rev. Henry 4. Muhlenberg is in the daily liab' it" of playing cards and drinking whiskey hi the Hotels of that place—and dard'any of the party to deny it. Only last'week,,he and.another per son, Rtr. Wakley lath sheriff of the county; had a regular it.wr over the Card Taole; trr. Messrs. Holmes' 4- Myers, of Pinegroye, we learn, have taken the CO i lumbia Furnace, and tend carrying on the Iron Business at that place , in connection with the Coal Business. ' They are both enterprising gentlemen; and we -.sincerer hope they may prove successful in This new' ett; terprise. 4 • OPPOSITION TO TUE Mali.—Messrs Hale ac• Co.,•ha've i;xttmdell their privito mail to this'placei and will carry letter's at 61 cerits to Philadelphia, New York and Boston. The Waco of depOsit, in this plate, is at hlrAoseph F.: -Polders, next door to our office. A .writer in the Harrisburg Union recommends Doct. Holmes of Pinegrove, as the Locofoc.o can didate for Congress.. The writer says that Schrryi kill county is fairly entitled to the member 'thia . Non - Tit .Canotaxa.—The election for Govor= ncr; &c., took place in_ this state on the let inst. On Monday nest, elections take place in Indians, Illinois owl Mimi& _ Pisminosr. July 31st, 1844 Dear Sir—Yours has' been received, and in tie- . ply I can only say that*r. Ramsey stated' in my side,worn, when on , his! r Way. to Pottsville 'list that all he asked was a i single term . We had crin sidemble' conVersation Shout the election) in the court orivhicti ho strited that be claimed the nomination pn the grod:nd that he had been iton • - inated under the apporfioment bill which ;was ve toed,--but lam willing to be qualified that ho oily claimed one term. ," Yours, dm., ISRAEL REINHARTI, The prolmition for Mt... Ramsey to serve on y one term, and that Schuylkill should have Ithe next term, was made by a friend of.. Mr: 11!s i in Lebanon county,.which we hold in our poskeision" in writing, and it was Also verbally 'made to to l l . by 'Senator Kline, of Lebanon, in our .office„tvyho ex.. pressly. stated that Airr Ramsey and his friends only asked the, nomination for one .term-;-and .rat they would not give *to him on any other con' dition. Our Conferees asked the Ramkey Con ferees from Dauphin fold Lebanon to taffy tit proposition, and they would also vote for M Ramsey. They did ratify it—our Conferess vote for Mr. Ramsay,...and Schuylkill dowdy se. cured his election in the distrtct. Now.Nr. Ram'. soy, under.such circoinstances, if he wishes t l o honorably;and availl'lhp charge of treachery t his own political friends, is bound to' witli l dra , rrom.the contest. ROBBERY! ROBBERY!! The . United Statee owns 1,042,731,765 lace of Land, which, at the Government price of $1,2, per acre; amounts ie-551,303,514,706: Divide this among the State 4, and Pennsylvania's pro Po rtion will amount toi ONE HUNDRED, lAND TWENTY-ONE MILLIONS FIVE ; HUN DRED THOUSAND DOLLARS. Afteit were hesn lands acquired the blood and treasn re of the Revolution,—they were ceded to the States , fur the benefit of 'ail, ; after the debt of-the'Revelu tion was paid. Thit debt has been paid—the States now claim theii Troperty to pSy thei^ debts and relieve theni - fioca the burthenief imtation. .13ut Locofocoism, foul Loenfocoism; springs up and declareS that rob the States' of this fund, and keep it iri the National Treasury for plunder, and also to: destroy . the Protectii.e Sys tem. If it was distributed among the lstateslPenn sylvania's proportio'n would 'be about half a mil. lion dollars annually, which, after - the Public Works arc sold, would nearly pay the interest on the balance of the State debt, and relieve her al• m• it 'entirely fronl ihe present , exorbitant State Tax. The whigs demand this sum.= the prin ciple of ji s ice' arid good - faith. Locofocoism would rob -you of it for plunder—and grind the people to the very earth with taxiiton. Is not such villianny and iascality sufficient to make the • very blood shed in 4efence of our liberiie4 by our revolutionary aireli cry out, ..shayte! txr.!,l SHAME!!! on stich a Party. We published anotice last week, by resolution of the Central Claj , ; Club, that the presentation of the portrait Of Henry Clay would !take , place on Thursdaj , eveningflast, and a Committee was ap pointed to make the necessary arrangements. A majority of the Committee thought,proper to post pone the time until Monday evening next, when it will tae place. We published the notice by resolution of the Club—and no blame chin attach to us on the part of those who wire disap pointed. - Shameful treatmentof James K .Polk, by his own 'Party , The Locofoco leaders, in order to bring James IS. Polk down toe level witl, themselves, and ren der him worthy of their support, are actually en gaged in making him out a man to:oily litztvorthy of bolief. before the people. They postlively as sert that James KL. Polk • is in favor of 'raising all . ~ I , the expenses of Coverriment frogs duties. Now James IC. Polk iysitirely denies 'it. ' Ho says ho 'is opposed to distributing the tatid • (u l na among the States, (which next year wilt amount to five' millions'of (!olliirs,)—he is in fivorof retaining it in the. National Treasury, and the balance of I) ea the revenue, abo(it.three-fourtits,' is to derived from duties. Was any candidate evel ) i t ted so shamefully as James K. PQIk is by the; eadens o his own , party. , • 1 I , r TUE LOCOFOi.O LEADEttSi most of them, from pride, or soma such cause, went, on ahead to Or; wigsburg on Monday, and left the viitere to be marsloalled by Capt. Nathaniel Mills. Ibis distatisfaction. We heard some say 4hat leadere were - ash - tuned of their protesssion,l eerted them' they would desert their lelidei many of them , . Oxisnes! ramorovs ,Warat is Hastur.i.l—Orp Friday, last the L i ecofoci 'tempted to raisea Hickory Pole ' at Giricff's em near Orwigsburg—but it broke ?fib& was half up—ntis doubt it was as rottemas the par. ty. Ultras really amusing to see tha t poor_Loco' foam sneak 'pit ? , What "horrid ewer/rear/ea." Rather Sereie.—lt is stated from authority that when Silas Wright first heard of Pali'', nomina• Lion atllaltirnotT, he exclaimeabyt G- . 43, Pd sooner guasfiffh engineer on a.Missurippi Steam Boat than ionient to run with such candidate." 'NAT tiro Itsc.L.—The bigballi. our proces sion; designed We understand by lilr.iii.Strauch. is still rolling on; it will make the circuit of the county.' Looli out bocce, its influence ii powerful to convert. 'z QiThe Investigation with regard to the recent Rio in.fbiltidelphia is still progretM - ng, and ar rests are being made . . The' propc i r authorities seem detenniMsl to do their duty in probing this business to the bottom. - . a•Zaciaol Ponleoil, an lold veteran of the Fivis, aid .We4nesilay lasts is the 88d yett o his sae. • MESE i -- - . 4'..8 - E mtNER$!:'-40.v0.,:4,.. GREAT GATIIEWNG. OF TIRE PEOriE. We bave this week to chronicle the meat impos t inrand augusteseut which has - over cCmstitutea an bpoch in the'polidcat annals of our Opiiitty4: 5,000 freemen—convened, in the vivid !Utility of - strong and animating hope-to repeat cFPressi°4 'of devotion to the cause %f liberty, and pledge allow their faithfulness to tiM Constitution and to their country. It was asp Oct-We of neat gran deur. Tke onlinary occasions of festivity and re joicing, are at an infinite depth below the causes . • which convened that throng. They m e t as think ing, reasoning, intelligent freemen,n the strength and pride of freemen, to dbliberate aiid reason together,—to davise' plans of :action shall produce a result desired, demanded,' by oil who,value the interests and happiness of the whciie country, and labor to =lt forth her pow!ers to velope her resources, and build up her institutio .. s- Tbe spirit of the self-existent was with them hi their counsellings—it was not the pagelpt —the regal display that allured thenithis was a consequence,and net the cause of the vaStbut-poiar ing—they were men—the:bone`and muscle of the County=men, who were not to be inquencea iby the external and physical, .bat by truths addressed •tothe reason and judgmeit. • They, were holiest and "true men, willing to offer reverence to indi vidual virtue end talent-4o testify an appreciation of those qualitieS of heart 'end head which funiish a substantial hope, that the blessings which .tbey create and diffuse will lit; continued • and m4lti plied, and which justify . the expressed preference of the people for one man over all others in the nation. • About 10 o'clock on Tuesday morning—drawn together by the circulating syrnpathiee of their oat tures, and the dictates of 'their calm judgments,-- the people began to gather in our Horough-l—an electric chain seemed to extend through and !link together 'the heterogeneous elements that compose is our population—all classes—all conditions! and employments were there--drawn together tiy a d common interest—influenced by one hopetone in 'rentinient—in Action one. Never before in the' memory .of that venerable native, " the oldest habitant," have the streets of-Pottsville witnessed such a crowd—ova pageant so grand and iinpos ing. And when we take into view j the fuck that it was the spontaneous'and volunti4 act of the ,people, we see in it an awful warning of the They liable doom of that party whose selfishness; //cor es ruption and lust of power has driven the honest 5 from it. The procession moved et about 10 o'- clock to meet at Schuylkill Haven the delegations from the7e, Minersville,' Pinegrove,: Waydo and the adjacent districtsund nobly did the [people come--an exuberant tide of population seemed to have burst itsmountain barriers and tolled iits tor rent towards the County Scat, a hardy, ilidustri, ens and intelligeniti.euple.: -About One mile from, Crwigiburg they were met by an escort frOm that borough. The mind can hardly Work oat for it self,- by the utmost exercise of imaginativii , power, a spectacle more sublime than that array presoak ed. 'From Pottsville. Port Carbon, St. Clair, New Castle and the COal Region arourd, one Aundred and thirty-two rehicl4, by actual, counts moved in procession—and such vehicles! got up for the, occasion- 7 -drawn by from six to eleven hOrses and 'mules—for every kind of burden-beast wee put in requisition—carrying; !twenty •to , severity per sons— 'mill warrons :were never semi before . At Schuylkill Haven' the.calialcade was pined by seventy-two more - vehicles from that place, Mi nersville, Wayne and Pinegrove, of a similar des cription and similarly filled. This was from the upper end, of _the County—embracing the Coal 'Region, and,a small portion of the Agricultural district; and we take occasion here, err passant. to remark, that there is hardly a mechanic in the Borough of Pottsville, who was not of that pro cession; and we know, and therefore can assert confidently, that here and thfoughithis region gen erally, that portion oour rpopulation—the useful —the substantial—active—industrious—hard-wor king—hard-fisted, intelligent mechanic will, al most to a man, record, his ballot: :for play and Markle. From the ;lower portion of the Coun ty—the agricultural interest was fully. nobly rep resented, and when these good old sturdy, tax paying farmers had joined the !the, it extended a distance of more than four miles-';-The }front had reached Orwigsburg before the rear!' had left Schuylkill Haven. Superadded to the iiiders, all along the route, the:road was like; a eit:yithorouglr :are, crowded with' footmen. As, occasionally the sun looked out from' behind his* curtain of cloude,'providentially hung in the hCavens„to shade ue from the toe oppressive heal,', his beams glineed on the blazoned banners ;that glittered in the long array, numerous, almost-, as stars in the midnight sky. To describe the Varioui insignia s would occupy the whole of one side of!tour paper more space than we can devote to' we. could only cOunt them by . hundreds. They !Were beau expressive and appropriateall oflthem. We. can only describe a few of thesis for want of spate. jn the van of the line' was it magnificent car, carrying a Press, on which the "Herald of Free. _dorn," a paper got, tip for the dey,„wiie printed about one thousand copies were struck off on the route and at the meeting, and .distriblited to 'the people. On the front of this ;car was the full length and speaking portrait, painted ftom Nagle's likeness of the man whose name, animating gave influence and nerving effect our !efforts—the f-tho awakening of hopes and thoughts, deerer than the a t ( j ar - memory of early' tove. This waitt;tt beautiful' thing, splendidly painted and magnifientiy from . ed, presented by Capt. McCandles,* Philadel phis, to the Central Clay Chili of iPottsville— oss above thisportrait Waved - a banner hearing the I at, words "The Herald of Freedorn i '. 7 a'nd,nobly has Pac- that noble man stood forth the 'thattiPion of free. ire it dom....the friend •of his countryand now, his name shall herald freedom fronk,the ;thraldom'' of Locofoco tyranny. On the sides of this car were the inscriptions, i and The colors that float at the mast head should , be the - credentials . of our seamen.' Arouse-,..awake, shake off the deW drops that glitter on your garments, and once more march to battle and to victory.", . . And we will. Prom this car, alsoifloated a col our, bearing the guns of Pennsylvania' and a ban ner with the inscription, • ' uTho independent Press, a,foo.to', tyranny and Loeofocoism." % -4\pr Behind in the body of the 'hint, were\ Timorous c;are as welt meriting particulir deic,iiption this. Tho from Massie, Hayeroodlfitny er's Establishment, juid a very bmiittiful 'car \ en \ whidt they were busily engaged in Making steam boilers and other tnachinery,during !Om whole line 'of,march. _They carried,MlKiag otiler appropri ate banners, one hearing the hiscrkitiath . Clayr-the friend iaeLprotector of Oie Ntc,bAnie: IMM D,manhaau aBLu t m op, 41 a •is itivat • Hu inert were busy at their ' forges and manufacturing horseshoes and chains.) They risked "A Protective Tariff and high wave'. , )- - Mr. Burlee, a stone cutter, on the svity finished _a ) aillWhichl Wa.splaredopon the speaker's . standas a desk—we aave forgo.ten his motto. • From Btrolhoaberger - & Lan;r's Mill, we saw a Well grA elf car. The men in this wore vvheaten wreaths Kim their hats, and a Rear-barrel, sur. [ mounted by a sheaf of grain, was carried :fur, a ban nor The inscriptions on this banner 'were nu merous and appropriate. . The, Port Carbon delegation, more - than forty vehicles stron,,among other appropriate and beautiful banners, carried afull-length por trait Or Henry- Play.eseduted in a masterly manner by Mr. Reed,an 'artist of ability, who was lately pass= hag a few Weeks in this region. • Tho Minersville delegalion also Carried a por trait of Mr. Clay. • There were alse several, por. limits •of Theodore Frciinghuysenr-and two or three of Me. Baer, the Buck-Eye Blackinaith. • ,We netieed a - beautiful rePresentatien •of the Coal Region, with the opening of amine, a forge, canal and. rail-road iii the background. The mot to was 'Plenty of , Coal to warm -our' , friends— plenty of Iron to' oot our enemies." On the back "Schuylkill County." Th'a was a Magnificent affair. , • • , The Schuylkill .Havenldelegation bore so many beautiful banners that . it would be really a dn.. tuft task to select any one fer , . particular descrip tion. ; t The Pinegrove delegation carried a! full-length portrait Of Henry_ clay in a gilt fraineand a Cast Irian banner, manufactured at the' furnace of Messrs. ;Eckert & Guilford, by the hands. This was unlrjue, curious and beautiful.; The Whigs of Orwigsburg deserve,' praise for the verer handsome manner in whiCh they had pre pared for the meeting. • The tire of t rue , Whigs burns brightly thire. Among. other -things was a straw' cutting machine, with the motto." We cut it shott l foi l oxen, long for calves.", This was an excellent and sarcastic reply to' an "abusive ar ticle in the Gernian Locofoco Paper. published there, which spoke of the Whig party'. as - Native Oxen." Eve r ry dale ration carried two or three, and many of them two or three !dozen banners: It is impossible fur, lack of apace, to he more par ticular. We wish we could--theh we might, per haps, give some idea, faint and inadSquatc, it is true, of the thilliant pageant. WO never witnessed such a gathering. Usu ally, on- such occasions, the meeting is partly made up from neighboring counfies-r-but here, all were Schuylkill County's own men- I r .-the men of the soil: Long will their gathering be remember ed—its.efrecte are felt—its influericeffor good is as diffusive as the vibrations of sound ih the atmos phere. ,The end of the procession was not seen at Orwigsburg at all. The town was completely filled with vehicles long before the par had reach ed it. ! The road for a mile belotv the town looked. like O. camvansary. Even the Ladies caught the fire,—as the pro cession moved out 'Of Pottsville, wreaths were showered, profusely, upon the gallant men—and smiles warmed them. At _Mount' Carbon, they were 'greeted again with sweet smilCs and fOir flow ere—some :)f the wreathes were truly elegant—all displityed the skill, taste and patriotism of the fair bestovvers. . At Orwigsburg. too, the Ladies -ivere gathered with all the devotion that characterised the wet , ship of the maidens of Rome before the Tereplo pf Vesta the fair daughters ofour land kneel at the shrine of their county, instancing sweetly 'the sympat6iOrbeeuty with manliness, the union or patriotism and love. .The countless thrimg assembled. round the speakers' stand—to Buckeye -Was announced— three full, heart-wana cheers greeted bim, and then all was quiet. The beatings of the heart were al most audible in the depth of the stillness, .so at tentively dill the assembled thousands hang upon , his words. Thep wanted facts, They came there by a proper exercise of their judgments, with the voluntary assent of the understanding—they came to hear' of 'the principles, character, and prospects of him in whose behalf were Called out and en gaged all their energies=in whose success. was concentrated all their hopes, both 7 for themselves, and for tick:country. In their countenances you might read the high resolve, the sustaining and unquenchable zeal. The great ;hotly :of the perm ple think and feel as they think and tech and aro not ashamed to confess their 'reverence and affec. tion for those sterling qualities Of mind and heart. which achieve bloodless victories for men by force of feason;and are sufficient to adorn and illustrate the age. They are not ashamed to express a pre feicrice for the, man - who Mande out among nien , the Man of the age, and equal to the age—whose labours arc directed to promoting their interests. The results of whose . toils shall'perish not with the close of hie life, but live *the years to come, and influence for gOod the condition of men , thriugh the:it - apse of centuries. i Nature forms but ex:sr: such min; one is sufficient for an ago; the or dinary occasions of life neither require them, nor furnish scope to develope and expand their powerl and faculties. The union of virtue, wisdorn,,pru deuce and patriotism never dies.' Clay shall ne. ver . die—fus name will live live;in his deedS— live in his country's grateful remembrancelive a part of the noble inheritance of posterity.. I D would be useless attempt a description of the Buckeye's speech, at iinieti sarcastic, at times humorous, and at all times clear, forcible, and con. secutively teasoned. br. G. N. Eckert succeeded Mr. Baer. The Doctor spoke in German. i't-Pm' the attet.tion of the German portion of his audience, and from the Ites. manner, we should jUdge he acquitted him sOlf handsomely—he alwayi(does--there is no tdore forcitile end correct speaker in the county than DrJ Eckert. ' Tt.e proceedings were adopted with great Ip:wi ll:pity—We subjoin them : - Presideo: JACOB HAMSIER, Esq. Viee Presits.: Daniel B. Kershner, Jiihn W. Hefner, Mark Bitter, 1 JOhanan Cockbillf Charles Dangler. Esq.. J'osepla 'Albright, J'oel Yundt, Dlicholas Jones, George Dreibelhies, • Jacob a line, 1 , • - • Secretaries, I t > B. K arc h er , Cianies W. Pitman, dotti\T \ : - Weriler; , Teigran! T. .Paylor, 1' o n inotir. the follawinti penal, wereappoint, e.mmitto dud via; i ..Jacob Men] i , ; John. P,lflobart, Simpson ' ' J. Myers, Esq., ,George Ml 13. Bensinger, Andrew Bo i Wm. Koch, : 1 _Samuel I': S. Sillym.sn, :J. C. Nevih. r ., -o B. Batman. 1 n " Wm. H. :ht •. n, i L. F. Whitney, Tobias W . terstein, ! .. I. Reinhard, A. \V. Ley urn, ' Jas. B ; Levan, .Jacob Rapp' i C. B. DeForrest, Dr. David nnter, Leonard Sholl, Peter Ldti nstein, , John Michemer, who after red 'ng ash rt time reported the follow ing which we adopt WIIEUELS, the time becomcs.the uty of tl gather and de iberate ing quesoioni: which with a good aduoiniat both National Resolved.! Tariff 'of 184' the country- Whig Congr ces, checked have redress people were s i Restdred, unfairness of depreate the duplicity and e ly called . democratic party, bbetrence on the leaders. of not chicanery toO.palPable, 4 - Ipropriato to thcrasel74s the 4n which belongs of right to principle which they neither, teeivci or the heart to advecate. .think the election of Henry 1 yof the U. S., as of the • 1 , tortanee to•the preservation of 1 I f protection to our American means of securing a sound Lth al specie basis; of preserv r • L further oppression by . I.l.irect 1 istrihution •of the proceeds of iblie Lands ;a. as the best sof:- institutions. iri the establish materrn,ri system fraught with good. , -• I . ' .-al conservative character, and one e hailed by every honest citizen with ing the only means to save us frau eeizn of artful men whose sole aim. to . that high station, is to take mess e their are -election, and thus disgrace and lastly!, as wo have seen that exerlso of the veto power, is only men to defeat the will of .he people, r r I illy expressed, as the first step to its 1 ' 1 • 1 l• , That ii Theodore Frelinghuysen we L character Which reflects honor upon i i f i l American, citizen," a firm supporter itituti ' on andllaws, a warm friend of and a consistent advoCate of Whig t r i That n our candidate for Governor , . s'ania, Genetal Joseph Markle, we re port Whese life bean in preserving out • lin the invading footsteps of a foreign IProvidence iprds.perecl him then in their it will prosper him now.when our rights 1 1 i by an !enemy whose designs are more and whose !acts are more .dangerous, 1 1 ey live in out midst, and we see t win so fatal blovi is struck. ' He is. a man I tht. rai)hs of the people,• who has lived ceful cm tivation of his farm until those • his intrlligence, his honesty and More as patrietismi filed on him as the m:fri to drive away the locusts 'who have be fu i!,the pctipte's honey until they have over. is withillebtl which the farmers, the Me: I :fe artizans. and the Prole - an:dial :ne l n , are'noty c i allid on to Pay by direct taxation.. 1 • Rewlreq. That L we lire in favor °flu. distribution l' 1 of the pro; cells of the sales of the Public 1.003, as a Inca ore wi l lich {c - ill essentially' promote Ore prosperity of the 'country at large Mid particularly the prosperity of pamisylvania, as her share would amount te! half almillien of dollars Per annum, and cunsequeetly relieve lus from direct taxation!' in •1 . I • I . that proportion. .l . • , Reiole l fd, That the! people of tha U. S. cannot consistently suport 4a.nes K. Polkl for the Presi. dency.of the U. ~ aS he is unconditionally oppos ed to a Tariff.. That notwithstanding the leaderl r l._ of the Loco foci? party. in this state say , that he is in favor Of protef.tion l , yet he himself declares that he is onl; , in 'factor of such a tariff as with the iaro- I • • 1 ~ pro coeds of the sales of the Public Lands, would be sullicien to pay the expenses of our government ; and as e bavaseert that in the ear , 1938 ! the Public ands yielded $ 24,641,970 86; a sum sufficient to defray the expenses of our General Governent, therefore in such times we woul d have no TarifT,l andl‘cOnsequently'r no protection;. and fort ter his late letter to James•lf. Kane disa vows th principle of protection. 1 I. Biz° ' ell, That we are in favor of the sale of the Public ' orks, and from, the manner in which they ha, e il t beenlconducted, that we believe ;that they on y afford a means of public plunder and ex ecutive atronann, and that it is I well known to o havelthe Control of then', that they have 1 half-i mi!lion of. dollars of the public nmually at n time too, when taxes aro so intly hi h. !Yet the last legislature, Voted le-v ,e th • Paironale of thsl Public Welk, fiew df the ' election of Henry A. Mullen: I [l'fie PIT er Of Portcrism in this is plainly 1 I ' • r Henry tied, That wo cannot- support HA, iberg for!yl GoVernor of Pennsylvania ,'4.s his 1 Lion was procured by the porter, Carrieron 'I •1 roadhere l party, and we believe our taxes is,C er be tlueed until the Porter faction is rooted out Saf all control oflour state affairs. 1 • this /red, That the Whigs of county will to the t rrangement made - With the Whigs iphin an Lebation counties last fall, with to the Ightlof Schuylkill' Coupty to have ongransional nomination chi's fall, and ' in (willw l ' i I , they alaandon their claims unde'r that !' arrangement and general understanding of the par ty, rianctioned las ii was, by Mr. RamseY.; and they hero instruct their col:Sat:earl:rem-this Bounty to sigree to thei nomination sif no, marwho'is not a resident-of the county of Schuylkill. 1 • :Reaolred, That we recommend , the appointment of the ' old Cort ' fe-es to represent this county, be camas they* can give the conferees from Dauphin and 'ebanon ;entities the necessary information 1 i inregard to our claims . . • ' • eb•L,The Co l pfeteas appointed by tha above res olutieri, are JOl:m!Bannan, James M. Campbell, and P 'ter Filbert,'Esq's., .. ', ', ,' * .• R ' teed, That I C. W. Pitnian,"John W. Rose. laerrylF P a sq., arid ituates B . Levin, be conferees to meet ' 1 eeonfemei) of Carbon, Wayne. and Pike '{es, to place in nomination a Senator 'to re-_ it this disiriet, iri the Senplis of the State. 7ireali:Tint% ii beS =Commended to she Dem. : Whiiii if . olelmsylkill coOty to aeserible in and rre too that party w. se that. the. l .principtes the whit; par have the mi. Reso!red, Clay to the most param. the great pri industry; as national cur SEE K: , ...1 , )n the, tila sllO o guard of the ' ment or the of a vita! a' Which will uy, as affor the cunning when eleoe =lt hemsch es the untimit. used by bad constitution imitation Rtsoked recognize . a the name o of the cons protection, principles Resole of Pennsy cognise a I country, fro foe, and a: defeat,that are invade prejudicial because th not until t fresh 6oth in the peaj who knew than a, h best fitted feeding on I a lielm u ed mmziv. those w ahsor. funds a PT.° it SEM oin berg. seen. Reso, Muhle .1 nomtna and B w ! . ne utterly adhere of Dan respee the Co event I , ' John Dennison. Allan Yost, .. John Roeder. Abraham Bartolet, Stones Bantam, Bertry Berger, • Henry Koch, John Bond, Bawd Bartolet, Levi Millar, - count, Ili; 0 71 angt W • led ar, Esq., • has: l again arrived, when it a electors to'lassemble to ipori those great and lead- - ,re 'inseparably connected tion of the GovernMent, e,—i-Therefore aryl in defence Of the Whig •at and leading measure of ..ofy; Bill 'perfected by a e ftul treason, in, high pia lized the power that Would griqances under which the and Sta hat we —the g I I and , tl ss, befo and pa ti allthe fferinr, hat we the Ell with o deem EMT r. teed , y. A I d to con! it= residers I Eli he only 'encl., sr I Iple fro , ugh a d' Inc Pt Sair.c.l 1 County Meeting, at the House of 9eoise KatZ man, iii Schuylkill Haven; on Saturday; afternoent the Third Saturday of September neSt4 at clock, P. M., for the purpose of forming is county Ticket, to he supported at the ensuing eil*ion. Resolved, .Tht Jacob. Hammer, Elia i h bert and 14. F. Whitney, compose the Standing Committee for the ensuing year. (Signed by the Officer& • ' PaSSIDLIVTIAL AND SiATF Et.gCTO,TS: O ".•IIVeI. give below a condensed ea*, eshibiting4he times when tl e Presidential and Stato Elections,respix. tively,. will he ho in the several Stateri during the present year ; tcigether _with: the Popular Vote girt. en at the Presidential Election. It will! be . round useful for reference during the appioaChing tions.—National late& ' ITlme of Elatioits. Ffesitt Vote' / 9 10 STATES: • • • • Slates. Presidentl :::.."; Ratrill V. ituro. r , ..-......, .-............... • Sep. 6 Nu.:t. i'4l 9; 46.6112; 46.201, Mar lt N'ai% 4 6! 263"56; 32./61/ Sept 3,N04„,,1 . 12 , 61 32,440 1 18.018 Nov 1 t Nov. , 11 \l2' l 75 0.4 \ 51,944 Ap.Ati.Nov.; . 1 4 ! 5,2131 3.301. April l'Nov.: 4 1 6', 3t.6tpi :3,20 Nov, sNov.; • 5 361225 847, 212,527, 'Oct.. S Nov. 5 61 71 33.3.11- 31.031 Oct. 8 Nov.; ' 1'26 ; 144,03'1; 143,672 Nov 12-Nov.; 0 21 5,0071 4.874• !Oct, :2 I:12c.: 1 8' 33,57,8 - 23,752 Apr . 13 Nov: .4,171 42.501; 4.3,893 Aug 1 Nov4`14;111 45,276, 33',732. Oa. 14:Novi 4; 9;11y ljegi'ylature.. • Oct. 7Novl 11'10; 40,262 21..933. Au7, 4 ' sNovi, • 4 91 23,471 33.99 t !Nov.— 4 Novi ' 5 a,' 19,081 . 16,975 i July INovi. .5, 61 1146' 7,016 lAug. i'Nori-( 413 60,301 49.289 Aug. s'Oct.; 25 12; 59.499 . 32,616 Oct. g;Nov.. . 4 23'148.1371124,701 Aug., EiNovi 41121 63,3321 51,60/ Aug. s,Novi ' 4 91 45,9371 47,476 Aug. 5 Nov: , 4 .7j .2,972 .23.769 Nov. 4 Nov', ' 4 51 . .22,933 21,131. Oct. .7' Nov. ,4 ' 31_4,363 - 6,018 Maine, N. Hump Vermont Mass. R. Island Conn, N. York N. Jersey Penn. Dolan aro Maryland Virginia N. Car. .- S. Car. Georgia. Al abama. M ios. Louisiana. Tennessee Kentucky hiO, Indiana Illinois Missouri Michigan Arkansas = No State 'Election tak;es pi year. They elect State; i citji ana that election was helll HOW thaTARO BENEFITS THE FARMING INTEREO7.'S .tln New England afone, in 1642, more-than 200,000_ barrels were censumed in Malting atarch and sizing,, being marathon was sent: to England . , in the same Period.", . . . t . ••• INfassacliussetts alone, in the =Me period, con— . slimed more flour than Was exported to all foreign, • • countries."l . . , . , Farmers reflect on the 'State . in the Union, consunies more of !your produco than lid:ported to all foreign cogniries. •Build up the different manufacturing in4iests—diversr . fy the different pursuits. and you «ifl increase the consumption at home: two-fold—lnd all taped. ence prove-s that the . . Home Market, untie; our own control, is always the best. the manufac- I ' iu , rers consinne Farmer's Prodpce—and - the Fanners consume in return, :the products of thsi Factories. - Tom' LocotO:os of L)disvilloiied a live coon. upon the erosa-tree of thcir hickory; l pole with „ the cruel and:disgniccoful design of "lit;ivingliin to death, but the 'sagacious but only freed himself as : soon as "h© began t 4 ;.grow sharp-set; but also knawed off orie; of the prin.. • cipal ropes attached to the . 11. g, :and down wen t ; the standard of LocOrocoism into tho mud .sintl dust of the's:rect. • ' - - [ • the 13f7rf s. and agitlypeiilJour!lat. • TiIE dANDIDATES fur GOVERNOR. • As nOither Mr. ithiltlenberg or .fr. Markle were of stuliciUnt aje duria.; tbe. %%:.tr -of, the R:solutida to take any part in it, the triend,skif . ttui former have stated as title reaSairvtihy . heithoultl be eke- . ~ . ted, that his father.andeldqxelativcs were Whigs.l •' ' 1 have tie doubt of the fa=t, but iti! is equally eat..,.c • tarn that the father and elder !attires -of Gen: . ', , : • Markle were acttye dud decided '‘,V,liigs , during the • - whole of the Revqliationarywar that those :who resided ,in Perks iceerUy were so, is known to , • • manynoW living.o Georee Markle, -who .was: •`,', I lately lidded by the lionqra of war in Eeading, 3 ... was otie.with the initial during the war, his youn-1 1 ger brother, Jamb Markle, served ;11s a marine otti.l,. board a : IN itional vessel, which was captured I ti,y a;-': • superioi li.trcc and he, was confined on board of*: 'i• 4 -poison allip fur several irmh,ths,l nd their c usirt - ". i) Baru MarkleWas Mauled for Wein conseq race': li of a wound he reached walk skirving as aft, , rine' on: bdaid the IlyderallY,- in one' of the ma des -, . perate rictions'fouglit during the War between that; ' ship under the cumniand of Cap,t. Barn): and the;: `•; British ship Monk. of superior force, which . lattee --';'-' vessel was captured. I cannot therefore, perceive, . ;'..." any advanta.re•which Mr. Multienherg has over ; ': General . . Markle on account of the services of hi s :l!,': anceStcrs, during the wart4theßevialution: Du.;'; ring the last ', , war with England,: both the candi dates . „ dates Were of full age, and histom informs us that:..&:!; Gen. - Markle rail d'a troop of Horse, mortgaged fins estate to procure money - to enable him to march'!' 111 tune to protect our citiFns, on the. frontiers; from being Inasaered by the savages, and quit ho;';., perfortnedhis'duty likes good and fearless soldier. AI A have'not seen any record of i!,:it. the Rev- H..> ', A. Muldenberg Wa4 doing at thtitAinr, but believe 1 - that he did not diseoVer until after the peace, that ' , ),, it Urodismeeessary to leave offprerating,if he wisti.i icd to Preserve his life. . TAM ' PLAY. • ,;, . DoiOttr Na Lo l'he eurpilaing good iffeetelf.;;. prnlluced by Wright's Indian lc t:ough Vain in the side, back, head, 11c.. hive excited a deitio and thiillinintereit in the community ' It led:antic to credit our senses; whcn we see evsdetull': in a ralnd decline. anon restored tottertee t health by,.; the power or this"extraordinary MesjVine; yet *lnv,: is a fact et daily oecnrrence.• • :- 't Wriihts Indian Vegetable Palle:are ' an&nnwlcd•ed ^' by' the best of medical msn to be the ben meth tee; in the World for the,cure of every vinery of discaiea:i.:: becaLtte they cleanse the,stomieh and bowels those billions humits, winch not weaken-the; thgesuire organs, bat cause rlecultinsa. head ich..nat sea sad vom,ling ptlhotation o' itie heart; rheumatic; ;',;' pain in the various parte of the'bedy,and many other; unpleasenveyinptona . . ; • A I 4enuiner in,d/pinc has -Wright's, Indian Veni getable Pills" neat r; prinual Ai); ho h e.des of thtt boae:,a rut ii Eihon Id vinernbeterd that of tne word r gtn'e" c•nnot he found all Li: posnivelyiwtong - ,l , _`. Furisale, Whh!e4ale and Rent', at the -eriucrital Office: No. 169 Itaci‘ street, rh:llorlnhia,... zpa • BEARD TIM 1..1.4 , 1 IN ills 1tu0',....-Let this be trus practiee of all who are desiring of cautioning to sound; Ilealth.—Do: not perinit the Mirtsrga 4.481.:" to have - the deist :Piothold; but Mar patch hum in the onset, or in otherworda Beg - rd tho LION in bis den, .Do -not allow' hint to take coin 3 plete inssession of jour system or you wit never yourself of his company. The Most ceraiii way or avoiding threatened disease, is tivoltey the Neutral Laws' of inan's Constitution and. use Dr. Steeling's 'Pulmonary Syru . and Antibiliono Piils., tsnicb,o strengthen the Lunge, purify thd Blood and_renovafis the system. l'rico sQcta . . ' The Bev. %V . tietliz. Pastor or the Luther:44 Ch ur ch, Abbotstdwn, Pa. having been greatly bens., •,,c fitted by Steeling 's Pulmonary Syrup after taking , it4 but a short tune for an Inflamed sore Throat. saps ?` char hethinks "a few More bottles will produce to radical cure." For Sale in Potiseille,be (hut titat'kei., Correqed carefully' for . . . 4 , %Vheat Flour, per Bbl. 494 3. . 25 23 , . r E1 i 0:4,...., Rye . do 1 Wheat . bushel 93 tol 06 I d 7 . .. ' - 65 - • i - "' ' , Rye ' . ' ' ' do 9. ':•-, . u • 46 :- '' . I do .‘' ` "'" Corn . Oats ' • . .' so ulOO ' 0 > -" ,r s otatoes new .. .'• . • en do - ... O TimOthy Seed, . .• , 5 , ,:da '. • Cartel ' 2 ' Closer .! ' " • 1 8 to 0 ' Scarce; ' l , nerr . . , . oozes ~ 0to9• . • '; Flew* e: Butter • N Sto 6 - id o . 0 .:. Baton Rom •• " • - SOO . Pinny i'' . ..,, , ria , 4er , ~ . Ton $l OW to 12 - : ....do. f: i iray. re d Bush . , a oo.:& ) ~./ , Dried Peaches ti red , u . 9 . 00 '- - do ' , ' '.i.. Dried 6 0 , 11n u reed " r. 95 da Dried Arr o r - . : . . . , ,., :r:,, •.. „ - El Ig MI f a • c• ~: J f , w~ ' Y , EMI - =gl ace in "riinessec this ern every tw?:yeart— nit year. I. ,--. ‘,l t', , ,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers