liiil Tawas . or Tam aurains , :otozarm.. SINGLE SUBSCRIPTION. - Two Dot-tams per atinrin. payable airol-onnually In advance, to those who reatde, In the County, and annually in advance 4o• those who reside out of the County. The publisher reserves to himself the right to charge $2 SO per annum, when payment Is delayed longer than one year TO CLUES pieffflo oneaddrent, E r 2 - $5OO even -" ". - - 10 00 - Fifteen ." " " " •- - 20 00 Five dollars In anvance will pay for three year's Subscription to the J•itratal. RATE.. OF ADVERTI9INO One !Square of 'He has served all the cam paigns fought, since his boyhood, and all, (with a brief exception) like the Romdn, "under himself as General." He is the he ro,of more was and more battle-fields than any—with no exception, however illustrious —titan any American that ever breathed—in all commando' ' and in all (which transcends the Roman's blast) a victor. Let Mr. PIE - RCE —I beg pardon, General PIERCE, lead forth his war-horselo the Forum—he must lead it, for should he dare to mount he must fall, as in Mexico. 14rtn Oh, what a fel was there, my countrymen!' Sad . as - the: fall which awaits his anew to mount to the Presidency. Some are born to greatness, and some achieve great ness ti but, in hig case,,a Convention seek ing• (as Diogenes sought .with a lighted candle at midday for an honest man,) for one obscure, and only obscure, with no alarming capacity, and :no 'rampant public • virtue, stumbled over Mr. Prates. He awoke nest morning from his tranquil village slumber, and found hinisell-famous. The Egyptians of old made a Divinity of a bull ; but the Lo.-- cotoco Convention reversed the rule, lind, made a bull when they . adopted such Di-1 vinity. ~ • Op the heights of Queenstown,.lSl2,,Gen. 'o*, after a long and bloody struggkfc found himself surrounded by anoverwhelrningl liritisli force: and mounting a log;-he there addressed his comrades We are in tbe beginning of ,a. national war. nulPs surren der is to be redeemed, • Let us, then, die arms in hand. Our country demands the sacrifice. Who will dare t 4, stand by me'?" " Att,," was the answering cry. We, too, are in the beginning of a national contest— surrounded by overwhelming numbers—but thanks to American justice and gratitude, they are friends : again Scorr asks—who wilt stand by me? .And the answer will be —all ! The patriot who, when poor and persecuted, still so loved his country thit declined the Presidency of Meiico, with an offer of a million and a quarter dollars, shall receive, from his admiring and gratefulcoun try. a 'loftier bffice and a- more exceetlingi weight at glory. POTTSVILLE, June 22A, 1552. B: HANNAN, ESQ. :—Dear Sir: As you men tioned my name m your-editorial otlast week, in connection with the tragical and laments , ble death of Mr. HuGn STEVENSON, in a man-• ner calculated to place mein a false position, I have no doubt but you will do me an act of simple justicti Jiy publishing, as promi nently, in your Journal, this letter. Ido not a'ectise you of any design to injure Me; Or any one, by that publication. My statement shall - be a short one, very. You said that I was one of the counsel employed on the part orthe Commonwealth, in connection wub Mr. Williamson and Mr. Hughes. The facts are simply these. I was employed by a spe cial agreement to be concerned for the proa eeution in the case of the Commonwealth vs. Herm STEvr.Nsox, in the examination before Esquire Reed and the hearing of the Habeas Corpus before the COurt of this County. at tended to that duty in connection With Messrs. Wil Lm son and Palmer. After these exam:: inations Were over, I told the parties con cerned for the, ploseention that they must make satisfactory arrangementa„with me, if they desired my services on the. trial of the case. I have noti only to say that no person called oh me to,ernploy me in the case at all from the time the first hearing took place to the present hour; so that so far from refusing to take part in, the trial, be cause my fees were not paid, I was not even asked to do so by any one. I admit that I expected to be employed, all along, from what was raid during, the first hearnig'hy the parties interested. Mr. Williamson told me freqUently that he was treated in the same manner. Mr,' Iluglies,told Me, when the caseiwas cfilled'up, that he had not seen the parties - interested ye:. Messrs. Bannan and Campbell were told by me, the day be fore the cafe was called up, that I would not take part in the trial, unless -satisfactory ar rangements, were made with me. This was not done, arid I took no interest whatever in the matter.' You and all persona can, there fore, readily conceive that I could not take any part in the trial . when. no person. had thought it worth their while even to ask me tat be concerned in it ht all. Very /Respectlolly Yours, JOHN C. NEVILLE post script. By . 7'ele . e,raph and Yesterday ' Mail FRIDAY 4 'o'cuScit Whent Flour $1 15—Rye, do. $3 25, per bbl.--Corn Meal. $3 2 / 5 do.—W.heat, lie , r99 cts. White, $1 03.--Rye, cents —Corn 6.l—Oats, 42 ets. per bushel. AV RIG ,PRINCIPLES TRIUMPHANT. A Clean Sweep in Lonsiana The Whigs of Lousiana have just achiev ed an important victory in the election of a majority of the delegates to the 'Convention to revise the Constitution. The viCtory 7 . itr New Orleans' was and coMplete, the Senatorial delegates being elected by a, tremendous majority, and twenty-thiee of tho twenty-four representative delegates be ing ,Whigs. COL• H. B. WRIGHT " Independent" of the North American. thus takes off the indefatigable boring of COI. W. at Washingtotr:--" The House very properly gave the third verdict (last week) against taking up the partisan report of a majority of the Committee on Elections, re feting the scat of Mr. FULLER, contested by Mr. Witicatr, back to the people. For four or five months. has the contestant (-WRIGHT) been imploring his political friends in Con gress to do for him what his political associ ates have constantly refused to-do at home— that is, to give him the ghost of .a chaneefttO be called 'honorable." This person has be come-an eyesore to the capitol, and to all his frequenters. He besieges the'duors, lobbies. and . aisles with a stolid pertitticity, which reminds one of a woodea statue, that is al ways in the way.. If he has \ friends, why do they* not take him' away ? The sight of this übiquitous- and ever annoying figure has become a trial upon human forbearance —it is really indictable as a stai'lding ance:7- A few more suili shots and, it strikes us, the crest-fallen Colonel, will be for beat ing a retreat. CORRECTION. The nomination of - Cleneral Pierce (says the Boston Journal) has put into ,circulation some erroneous statements in regard to the birth-place of some of our first men. .As we have also fallen mid an error in relation to this matter, we have taken some pains to as certain the following facts :—Heneral Lewis Cass was born in the town of Eieter,- New Hampshire. Daniel 'Webster was born in the town now called Franklin, formerly Salisbury, in Merrimack county, N. Hamp shire. D. S. Dickinson, of New Ircitk, was born in Merrimack county, asweD as John A. Dix. General yranklin Pierce' is a na tive of Hillsboro', Hillsboro' county . , and is a lineal descendant of the family 'of Percys and the Duke of Northumberland, the 'title being.now extinct: Judge Stephen A. Doug- Ins, of Illinois, was also born in N. Hamp shire, hut shortly after his birth his father removed to Verniont,Nvhere,as Iswell known, the Representative , ofYoung America" learned a cabinet-maker's trade.i , N. Hamp shire is a great State to emigrate from ; it will be a great State to, live in when,a more ,liberal policy is adopted in the administration of its affairs,. 00'. INEME?i9E gathering of people took place in New York on Thursday erening to ratify thelain Whig nominations. 'Similar demonstrations, we observe by thepapt have been made all over the,ooifrtiry. The telegraph, it appears, •has / not been reporting the truth of the reception of -thy nominations in some places—just what we suspected. CO- Goon.—" Independent" .suggests that everyone of General SCOTT'S battle-grounds, from Maine to New 'Orleans, should be the scene of a mass assemblage, is the old He ro's favor. Henske, 'whatsays Pennsyl mia to a meeting of forty or fitly thousand at Valley Forge ?" Why she says, yes and nothing shorter. SOMETIUNG FOR TIM Cllll4ollB.—There resides in liarrisburg• a lady, sixty-nine years of age, who has three - new teeth-griming in her mouth at the present time. The lady, enjoys remarkable gbod health', •