f: THE COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT. 'Tuoxn wituoct vrun ' sjirann.iY, iYaVTE.imnifx, iea. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION 18'iO For President, MARTIN VAN KUREN. Foil Vice Pkcsident, RICHARD M. JOHNSON. AND THE 'CONSTITUTIONAL TREASURY. OUR OWN CONCERNS. 'This number (20) completes a year and a half since our connexion with this paper, and it has nowbecomc absolutely necessary that the small sura due us from each of our patrons bo paid. Wo have claims pressing upon us that mu3t be settled, and we have no other resource to look for means to liquidate them, but to our subscribers, not having cither a Prothonolary or Collectorship to sustain us. It is true that tho sum duo from each is small, yet it is from such small sums that wo must make up large ones. Our terms, it will be remembered, are two dollars, if paid within the year, if not, fifty cents to' be added. From such as will now pay us, the extra will not be charged. We hope that such of our subscribers at a dis tance as have not paid us any thing from the commencement will forward us a five dollar bill, that we may credit them a year in advance. Wood, and Grain of all kinds will be received in payment" DON'T FORGET THE PRINTER. A PUBLIC MEETING Will be held at ORANGEVILLE, on SATURDAY, the 0th instant, at 1 o' clock, P. M. for the purpose of opposing the circulation of small bills. All who are in favoi.of the measure, are requested to attend. MANY, The public are beginning to be awaken ed to the importance of reorganizing the present mischievous and ruinous banking system of the country, that its future opera tions may be rendered more safe to its stock holders, and less dangerous to the interests and tights of the people. Tho Richmond Enquirer, on of the most able papers in the Union, has come out in favor of re- atrictinsr the issue of Banks to bills of not C7 less than fifty dollars, and making stock holders, personally liable for the debts of the bank. Tho Vermont Legislature, although a majority arc whigs, it will be seen by the following, is also moving in the noble pro ject 6f placing banks under salutary restric tions; We hope our Legislature, at their cominc-session, will not be unmindful of VV" the duly they owe their constituents, and IB 1 -. C (mn in n-ir.Mirr Kllld ir.Sieail Ol WUOllUg mull Ulliu 111 ynaanifr miiiu granting private corporations, and squan- , dering the public money on speculating and insolvent companies, will devote their en . ergies in concocting measures that v:ll be , calculated to placo our banks under 6uch restrictions and regulations, that they will , not have it in their power to cheat & defwud rthe people out of their just dues, with irn , punity, whenever it suits their grasping cu t pidity. ANTI-BANIC RESOLUTIONS. In the lower branch of the Voimont Leg islature, Mr. Patridge introduced a rcselu tifen on tho 10th inst. declaring it inexpedi ent to charter or re-charter hanks, at the prosent session, except under the following provisions. 1st. Private property of stockholders to -be holden for the redemption ol bins. 2d1 The failure or refusal of a bank to -redeem its notes in irold or silver to work a . forfeiture of its charter ; and, on the occni rt-nna of mirth all CVfillt. t 10 Coventor to . make proclamation of the uct. ad. On the suspension of a bank mm , missioners to be appointed to take charge u . tt - , - . iiiti. Tn case a nerson looses through t iim niffm. aim winu uii na muiio. 4i,n (Viliira of a bank, the President and Di rectors of such bank are liable to indictment fr Bwmdlinsand if found guilty, to be pun ished by imprisonment in the Stalo prison for from turno to ten years. . . .... i-.. it.. JS 5th. AH charters to oe unuer mo cuii it rnl of future Legislatures. The resolution made the order tor a Wo are roquested to mention thai, Thurs day, the 7lh day of November, insf, will be observed by the congregation of St-Paul's Church, Bloomsburg; as a day for Prayer and Thanksgiving to Almighty God, for the fruits of the earth, and all tho other blessings of his merciful Providence. Pub lie service and a sermon to commenio at 11 o'clock, A. M. A rumor was current the fore part of the week, that tho venerable Andrew Jackson was dead, said to have been derived from a letter received in Philadelphia from Nash ville Subsequent dates, from (he same place making no mention of it, renders it almost certain that the rumor is unfounded. Tho Hon. George M. Dallas and family, arrived in Philadelphia, last week, after an absence of about 3 years. Committees wero appointed to receive him, and welcome his return to his native city. B EinVACADE M Y, The Trustees cf this Institution have the plcasnie of announcing to the public, that the building erected for that puipose is near ly completed, and will be ready for the re ception of pupils on the first Monday of November, inst., at which time, all the schools (3 in number) will be opened. They have spared no pains in procuring compe tent teachers, and they trust the Institution will merit and receive the patronago of tho public. A circular, describing the branches to be taught in the different departments, and the price of tuition in each, will be is- ued in a few days.- By request of the Trustees. At the last accounts the Bank of France had fifty millions of dollars in specie on hand, while it had only forty-eight millions of obligations, and about eighteen millions circulation. The Bank of England had short of thirteen millions of specie, while it had over eighty millions of circulation, to say nothing of the deposits. We understand that on Monday last, a young man by the name of John Axer, while at work in an ore bed, in Ilemlork, was suddenly killed by the caving in of a bank. He was a stranger in the place, hut is supposed to have Iricnds residing at liar risburg. EfZaESZtEiErS THE PRESENT BANKING SYSTEM. There are few who defend or support tho Present Banking System, says the Lan caster Intelligencer. One year ago, it could number hundreds of honest friends, who spoko from a belief of its undoubted suscep tibility in promoting tho public weal, Now there is not a thinking man, whether inter ested or not, who docs not see the disarange ment of the system, its want of stability, its unlimited privileges, its partiality, its tyran ny, and double dealing. There is not in the Union, a State, the banks of which are not defective or rotten. In Mississippi, a series of c'naractcristing expansions and contactings has ended in a general and dis astrous crash. In Michigan, there is not two solvent banks to be found; the Wild Cat money being the medium of commerce, In Missouri, a litter of shaving shops is a' bout to be submitted to the cautery and knife of legislative examination. In Illi nois, the banks, in imitation of their pat ron saint, have commenced monopolizing the lead trade. In Ohio, they have enter ed the Pork Market, and are confessedly in a most wretched conditio-. In Pcnnsylva nia, the present suspension originated; anil so on from ono to another. The thing out of joint. It wants not mending but re suscitation. It must be controlled. The people are not such arrant blockheads as to close their eyes to all thc3e errors. They not onlv see, but they feel them. The fact of the entire failuro of the system is now nalnablv'plaiti. No one desires this ; What is tho Remedy is the question. Small Bills. -Within a few days past small bank bills and shinplasters bave made their appearance in this neighborhood. We presume they are flung out as feelers, and unless measures are taken to put a stop to their circulation, we shall soon bo flood cd with the worthless trash. Where is our Deputy Attorney General ? We should like to see him take a similar stand with those of other counties, and give them .quietus a, their birth. The Pottsville Emporium says, that the Anthracite Fumcce at that place, under the direction pf Mr. Perry, is now unsuccessful oporation, The following contrast between the ad ministration of David R. Porter and Joseph Ritner, we extract from the Harrisburg Kcvstone. PORTER AND RITNER. The Diffehence. Perhaps na single fact more strikingly exemplifies the superior policy of the pre sent Executive of our state, over that of his blundering and condemned prcdccessor,than their relative bearing under the pecuniary difficult'cs produced by tho suspension of specie payments in the summer of 1837, when'the federal governor was. in power,and the suspension of the present day, when a democratic Executive wields the helm. No sooner had the first suspension been an nounced, than almost every petty corpora tion in the Commonwealth, from that of the city of Philadelphia, down to the meanest watering company of the most obscuro vil lage, flooded the country with irredcmiable paper promises, in tho shape of 'shinplasters' calling for almost every intermediate sum from three dollars down to six and a quarter cents. This evil and pernicious example being suffered to pass with impunity, pri vate individuals, influenced by the love of "filthy lucre," deemed it worthy of imita- I tion, and in a brief period we found hun dreds of citizens, wholly irresponsible in a pecuniary point of view, adding their mite to the shinplasler era, and flooding their re spective neighborhoods with a litter of a- bominablo rag promises, which they were unable and unwilling ever to redeem. All these transcendant evils, it will be remem bered, were inflicted upon the community in contravention of the positive injunctions of an act of assembly, prohibiting the issue of any notes, tickets, or other papers in the similitude of bank notes, under the denomi nation of five dollars, and making their issue and circulation a PENAL OFFENCE. The laws were disregarded openly and flagrantly violated by men in office and out of office. Where stood vour federal Governor, Joseph Ritner, and his constitu tional adviser, William Buckshot Reed; at this crisis? Did they in their obligations solemnly attested upon the Holy Evangelists step forward and " take care thU the laws be faithfully executed?" Did they, as it was their sworn diity.,ca!l-llte transgressors of tho law to account, and carry its violated provisions into effect? Did they, as good citizens and lailnlui onieoas, come to me relief of an "abandoned commonwealth," and exercise this important branch of their "official duly?" Our own experience, alas, furnishes the answer to these interrog atories. It is yet fresh in our recollection that for upwauls of fifteen months was the rcigu of shinplasterism permitted to contin ue in Pennsylvania and not a breath of oppositien raised against it by the patriotic executive of the slate. At the end of this period, whon we stood upon the eve of the election which was to decide the political fortunes of the Ritner dinasty, it is true the scales seemed to have fallen as if by a mira cle from the eyes of oui modern Rip Van Winkle and a specious gull trap in the shape of an ex post facto proclamation was put forth under his hand and the great seal of the stale, for the fi.st time requiring an end to be put to these " open inf. actions of spirit of the laws," and threatening those who had issued notes of a less denomina tion than five dollars with his royal displeas ure, if they failed in redeeming them with in a given period. This, it will also be re membered, took place after the banks had ot their own accord concludedo resume specie payments, an event which of itself, without tho aid of the gull-trap proclamation, would have banished shinplasters and their concomitant evils most effectually from ex istence. How strikingly different the prornpt, un hesitating and efficient course of Governor Porter, and tho present Attorney General, in the crissis which at present rests upon us I How marked and significant the con trast ! Do they fold their arms in supine indifference for a year and upwards, mere " lookers on in Venice," while the spirit of cupidity lays waste the most sacred statutes and entails evils upon tho community, com pared with which " war, pestilence and fam ine" would almost have been a blessing? Far far from it. The intelligence of the second suspension of specie payments reaches the seat of government ono day and tht next mominig the mails bear to ev ery yart of our commonwealth tho admira ble proclamaliou of Gov. Pouter nipping the project of shinplasterism in tho bud, ac companied by the praiseworthy circular of the Attorney General, giving practical force and uffiriencv tn the laws, and Drotectiiic- the people from enduring a second that worst of evils, a worthless and degraded cur rency. Who with such an airay of testi mony before him, can for a moment doubt lhat Pennsylvanians have been immeasura bly the gainers by a chance of rulers. The Village Record, the leading whig paper in Chester county, has the following remarks in relation to tha suspension. " 77ie Suspension. Tho Suspension of specie payments by the interior and coun ty banks, and the consequent train of evils which has followed, in the difficulties of ob taining change, &c. is to be ascribed to the conduct of the Philadelphia banks. The bank ef Chester county, nor any other bank in the country, could continue to redeem in specie, while the maws of the Philadel phia banks, open as they are to receive, arc shut against emission. The suspension is a great curse to the people, because it operates to relieve the merchants of, Philadelphia whoso overtrad ing and speculations, brought their calami ties upon them, and throws the burthen up on the people, which is unjust. The pres sure was to be looked for by the merchants as tho consequence of their overtrading, the suspension removes tho pressure from them and places it upon the people, The guilty escape but the innocent are puuished." The Philadelphia Spirit of the Times, speaking of the New York Banks, says: " Confidence is comparatively restored, ac cording to the papers of New York, in the banks of that city, and the extra drafts upon them for specie almost wholly snbsided. A committee from the Boston Banks arc there with a proffer of assistance, if neces sary, in maintaining specie payments. Bankrupt Philadelphia looks on with what ever grace she may." Price of Farms in Pennsylvania. A West Chester paper makes the following remarks : "We have heretofore noticed the sale of farms at good prices in this town 6onie of which were as high as 9112 per acre five miles from the River, and we under stand that a friend of ours recently sold his farm of one hundred acres in Greenburgh, three miles from Dobbs Ferry landing at one hundred and fifty dollars per acre. This farm is in a good state of cultivation but tho buildings arc no more than ordina ry. IS HE RICH? Manv a sigh is heaved many a heart is broken; many a life is rendered miserable by the terrible infatuation which' parents of ten evince in choosing a lite companion for their daughters. How is it possible for hap piness to result from the union of two prin cinles so diametrically opposed to each oth er in every point of virtue is to the vice ? And yet how olten is wealth considered a better recommendation to a young man than virtue ? How often is the first question which is asked respecting a suitor of a daugh ter, " Is he rich ? Is he rich ? Yes, he abounds in wealth; but does that afford any evidence that he will make a kind and affectionate husband ? Is lie rich ? Yes, his clothing is purple and fine linen, and he fares sumptuously ev ery day; but can you infer from this that he is virtuous f Is he rich ? Yes, he has thousands float in" on every ocean; but do not riches some times take wines to themselves and fly a- way ? and will you consent that yourdaugh- i . ol.nll m n i. n mon t.rlir, lii nnlSinrr fn recommend him but his wealth s Ah ! ue ware ! the gilded bait sometimes covers a barbed hook. Ask not, then, " Is ho nchl but " Is he virtuous?" Ask not if he has wealth, but if he has honor, and do not sac rifice your daughter s peace for money. MARRIED In Mount Pleasant, on Tuesday last, by the Rev. G. C. Drake, Mr. LEWIS II. MAUS, of Bloomsburg, to Miss ELIZABETH, daughter of Mr. John Vance, of the former place. OBITUARY- DIED In Bloom township, on Sunday last, Mrs. NANCY MURRAY, aged 45 years. On tho 30th tilt., in Fishin? Creek town ship, Mr, ABRAHAM M. KLINE, son of Mr. Matthias Kline, aged 26 years A Journeyman TO THE GUNSMITH BUSINESS S wanted Jjy tha subscriber. An industrious steadv and irood workman, will rcccic steady employ and good wagos, upon application to 1 ' b JONAS ICISNER. Orangeville, August 8, 1830, DOCT. JAYNES CARMINITIVE BALSOM. A certain, stiff anil Speedy cure for Dyscntary, Diarrhea, Cholera Morbus, Summer Complaint, Cholic, Sour Stomach and diocases of the ktoinach and bownls. For sale at Tobias' Health Emporium, Bloomsburg' For ale 1L be sold, at PUBLIC VENDUE, oa the nieniiscs. on FridaV. tho 20th dav of iiovemuer noxt, nt VI o'clock, noon, ir not previ ously gold at private sale, a valuable FARM, con taining On which is erected a new gjgAftsiS AND HANK BARN, The Farm in in a (rood stale nf cultivation, mid 'if uatcd about two miles from Bloomsburg, Columbia County, I'a and one mile from E3pcvto .. and is now in the occupancy of Adam llillaid. Any person wishing to purchase can apply to Mr. Hil lard, nn the premises, or to the subscriber, near Bloomsburg, who is duly constituted agent of tho heirs to said property. II the 1- arm u not then sold, it will be let. OBED EVERITT. BloomsbtjiS, Oct. 20, 1839. (Tr Tho Easton Sentinel will copy tho abovo three times, and forward their bill to this office for payment. AND ucfewfeeat AND a 9 Will be constantly kept on hand, and sold at Retail. JOHN R. MOYER. October 2G THE Vendue Notes of John Wcrtman are in my hands, and can be Fettled with me any tune before the first of November next, at which time all that remain unsettled, will be left with a Justice of the Peace for collection. PETER MENSII. Bloom, Oct. 5 1833 23. f land lying in Fishing creek township, Co lumbia county, the estate of William ''ark. late of Brown county, Ohio, deceased, will be sold at private sale. Any person wishing to purchaso will enquire of itau subscriber, in MoUlson township, who is duly constituted agent of the '"ira of said deceased, for the purpose of making sale of tho same. Also, ft' Adjoining the above, is offered for sale, to gcther with the above, or separators may suit. Indisputa ble deeds will be made. RUSSEL PARK. Jersey town, Oct. 5 1839. 23 TO THE PUBLIC. LEGISLATIVE KEYSTONE. During the approaching scasion of the legisla ture, the Kbtstone will, as usual, be published twice a wr.r.ic, and contain full reports of t'ae pro ceedings in both bra.i.hj of the l"gi 'aturc, inclu ding the speeches of members, legklativj reports' Ac, . For this purpose, the editors will have com petent reporters in both houses of our legislature, aJ well as at Washington city, thus enabling them to furnish not only a complete report of tho proceed ings of our own legislature, but also of the ap proaching bession of Congress. Having made am ple arraugements for the bestowal of iNcui:jsi:n attention to tho legislative "department of their newspaper, they cherish the conviction, that they wil' render entire satisfadtion in this respect not only to tho members of tho legislature, but to tho reading community generally. As it is more than probable, that tho all-engrossing subject of the derangement of the currency un der which the community mow laboiing, and tho condition of the several banking instiliili'ms of out state, will con"tituto topics of speedy loirlalivs action, the proceedings cf tho approaching session will be frauthtwith unuuc'. interest, and render o. paper published at the scat government, which be stows upon them constant lttcntion, a vehicle of intelligence "most dcvou.V wishedl" Wo would also call to the minds of our readers, that tho great Presidential contest of 1810 is p proaching with sapid stride, which is to dr.;' i whether our National Government shall continue to bo administered upon the truly republican prin ciples of its present illustrious head, Martin Vun Burer. ,, .'..elher the reigns of power shall 'a committed to the hands ofulfi lVdevs'Uu and friends of a great and hlrhiinr; mo inly in t!o slinpo ef a National 1: u -. .'he Koysionc, beiii5, indissoluble ..edded to the support of tho republi can cause, will in this momcntuoiur conflict, !.: manfully on tho side uf Van Buren unJ a (.' :. stitutional Treasury, it. 1 cn'U:'1 -,K its.- ipilnti i advancement and -iti .ia.- t..f1. o" cratic cause. We thaW continue un-asingly t exposo tho dangerous hciesies of tho Federt'"' and advocates of an overpowering monicd iuon ly, and spare no 'Vicrtifis, to rcidr the "K stono" an effective weapon in the hanJs of the Democracy of tho Slate and Union. Grateful for the liberal patronage hitherto b"s towed upon them by the community a paticace, which has given the '-Keystone" a cii 'lation be yond that of any other paper at the sent of govern ment they look forward with confidence to its continuance, and will sparo neither time nor labor to make it deserved. TERMS. For the Keystone yearly, twice a week'durin; tho session of the Legislature, and once u week f'r tho remainder of ths year $3,00 During the Session of the Legislature twice a week 2,00 All Postmasters, and other Democratic ciiiieim are reo,uc6tcdto rcieve and forward subcriitious to us, ubeequent uy, A i 'V