elation. to the feelings of the brave men who are Lisne*Ben Intriguirfc tegtelatureerrhas I &larding mete than life for the welfare of us and • been held—a oar children, and respectfully hope that the Exec-. held -. ere will thetteire Birt h utive of this Republic will very soon find reason to tkeite true anti Bound Meta:l'oi rep{ig•rit neaten its revocation upon th© receipt of the let- • --- pddespatches of Colonel Morgan, the COM. " V" Orient out by him to control the navy,and !OW-Whose auspices and sanction they have done tNo'Steta such noble service . itesetwesi. That the foregoing resolutions be of• feted rot , publication in the papers of this city and vtlietir Orleans, and that copies thereof_ be trans- WOW to the Executive of our own Republic and Matt of Yucatan, and also to Commodore E. W. Attsrliind COlonel Janes Morgan, now lying atitiWour naval force off Campeachy in the Gulf of Mexico. An extract of a letter from Col Morgan was read by Dr Jones; and, on motion, a collection was en tered into for the purposes referred to, and in which the citizens again manifested their satisfac. Lion by liberal subscriptions. The meeting was addressed by Messrs Meggin atm;Jones, Swett, and Yates; and on motion, ad journed. JOHN M. ALLEN,Chairman GEO. B. livies, Secretary. A. gun-boat, bearing despatches from Comm dors Moore, had arrived at Galveston from Cam. peachy. A lever from Col Morgan is published in the Galveston papers,in which the gallant Col onel assumes the responsibility of taking the Tex an squadron to Yucatan. He says: WI have Swerved from my orders or duly in a ny way, by taking lbe Mexican coast on our way to Galveston, it wits for the benefit of my adopted Country—fur which 1 have risked my life, and am perlkctly willing to lose it, provided I can only see her free, and at peace with the world. Com. Moore could not, and would not, have proceeded to this coast without my sanction; indeed, we were bound direct to Galve.ston, but for the infor. illation we received Lt the Baliz.. on our w.,y out, which was of such a character us to care we to believe that the Government would It tee r ,cted upon me, u ,der all the circu ostances, if 1 'n al not done so. The fact is, ttut we have done more t , humble the pride of M.:ciao in this ex..aloloi, and filet! caused her more real injury, licut any and every expedition sent against hug lreak ing the charm of the great i uttibug 1' Lllruns! That Ampudia was arranging to concentrate all Abe Mexican forces in Yucatan, au 't trai-port them - \direct to T. xis, there call he 1,0 donto They had about 5,000 troops in Yuerc an, t•2.,0 to of which had capitulalci, under Bert ; T ao and mus, near Merida; and Ampudia was ilis ; ,,,a,al to treat with the Yucatoes, finding he c told not sub. due them. Then, w - th the troops tt•tv were to join him at Vera Cruz,and T a in t ,i,ta—inhle, 700 or 800—he might have given 'l' ,xas soot,. IA (intik on the eoist, while troops mi . ;;lit Ix! In:lathed in by land to annoy our border again —all of which oar expedition has frustrated beyond doubt, for Dungan and Lemus cannot now get away ac cording to capitulation, and wit have to - surrep h•r at discretion. Ant podia's tr,ta,is are desert ing every hour as fast as they e tit get oil'. 1 see them coining in constantly; and every One of Le mtis and Barragan's parry 'that can make tile peace with the Indians, is likewise deserting; so that you may put dawn the 5,00 C troops in Yuc atan as nothing; their fleet worse than useless; and if we catch one or both the steamers, you shall soon hear something still more pleasing. FOR PRESIDENT, lAMBS BUCIIA-NAN, Subject to the decision of a Nal lona' Convention DAILY MORNING POST. MILLIE'S tT' V/ la. IL 13 NITII, EDITOR 341:D Pg °ram oils WEDNESDAY, JUNE . 7, 1843 Individual Liability in Banking . Ohio, (says the Statesman) has the hon• or of having taken the lead in the just and wholesome principles of individual liabili ty in banking, It will be seen by the fol lowing, that Connecticut is about engraft. init the•sarne principles in her moneyed in stitutions. Let the good v rk zo on. Connecticut Legilattire.—We learn from the N. Y. Evening Po=t, that the question of the liability of the stockholders of banks, has incidentally come before the House of Representatives of the Connecti cut Legislature. The Bank of Fairfield, which has a branch at Danville, made aim plication for liberty to divide her stock with thr branch, and each become a separate in.. atitotion. A billiwas brought in for the pur- pose and an amendment proposed that the stockholiers of the Danville branch should be.bereafter individually liable for the debts of the institution, This amendment was. a4cipted by a vote of ninet-two to seventy ni ne. —Balt. Sun. .And where is Democratic Pennsylvania, on the most vital question? Has she main , tained her position as the Keystone of the Democratic Arch? Has she come forward in support of this excellent principle, with out which the people can never have secu rity from rag-money makers? With pain and mortification we confess that she has not. She has been cursed for the last few years with la•w makers who have been en , gaged solely in weak inventions, shameless Intrigues, and vile expedients. The ma , jotity of her Democratic legislators has been chiefly made up of time servers, of fice huntere and man worshippers. In stead of meeting the question of Bank Re form manfully, and keeping pace with the; Democratic party of other States in Anti- Bank progress, they have been guilty of mean vacillation. , One day they would adopt the "individual liability" principle • ---the next, they would get scared, and tremblingly retrace their steps. And we blush, to state that there were men in the Legislature, sent there as democrats, too, who were so lost to their duty as to Kips port a proposition to permit Banks to is sue email notes! Such is the lamentable position of the Democracy of Pennsylvania on the question of Bank reform. The rank and file of the party, it gives us pleasure to stale, are perfectly sound on this ques. tit*: :They see with deep satisfaction the 4 progress of Anti•Bankism in sister States —and can only regret that they have been mien/presented on the subject, by those they have chosen to carry out their views. We live in the hope that the last , of these See First Page. Canal Transportation. The following statement furnished us by Mr Wm. McEllroy, Esq., collector of this place, shows how prosperous has been the business on our public works doing the short time they have been in operation the present season, and is the best assurance the people can have of their future useful. , ness: Tolls reed. fur April corn. on 7th $4,446 70 May 9,136 31 $13,583 01 11,206 04 In (flyer of 1643 8:1,376 97 The receipts fur the Lbove period this year are about $lOOO less than they would have been had there been no obstruction by high water. There were but two boats cleared in three days, 17th, 18th and 19th of April. _ . . Same time last year The following statement of the princi pal items cleared at this city. will give the public some idea of the immense amount of Timings sent eist‘x and by nor public Imptovewei,u , Flour, bant•ls Clover & other Seeds, bushels Bacon, Butter and Cheese, do. 158,319 Lard and Tallow, do. 1,196,292 Povisious not specified, do. 641,166 Tobacco, 4,329,054 Groceries, 595,180 Wintlow Glass, boxes, 1,986 Blue Nose Anecdote. We were told a good joke that was play ed upon one of the delegates to the blue nose convention by his better half, after he returned home last Wednesday evening, and as we can do no injury byhopeating, it, we will tell it to our readers. The lady had been anxiously waiting for the return of her husband for some time, and when he did make his appearance she resolved to have a little spots with him, and punish him for being absent so long. As he came in the door she rubbed her finger on a • I wet ,blue-rag that had been used in the day's washing, and as he approached ex claimed, "la! husband, what is the matter with your 7 - Lose," at the sam , tine manipu• lath' g the gentleman's proboscis in the most tender manner. The husband declared that he did'itt know that anythinir was the mater Pith the.t prominent fent,ire of hi s good looking countenatw.e, but on stepping up to the glass to make a personal inspec tion of the cause of wonder, be was shock ed to discover that the whole surfuee of his nose was "deeply, darkly, beautifully blue." He was completely dumbfounded! What on earth could have changed his nose to that colon He knew that he was one of the most devoted of the patty known as blue noses, but he did not think that his zeal was so warts as to give an azure tinge to his countenance. He was greatly per. plesetl at the "singular coinci,lance ," as Mr Craig wool call it, but after his wife hail enjAyed her sett for a while, she !o beyed his mind by letting him into the se. cret of the blue.-bag, whon the gentleman blew his nose and Liughei heJrtily at the joke, although it was playe I 4:Hat his ex. pense. The G izstte says that under ”Locofoco Government," the Delaware division of the Canal "has sunk in keeping it in re , pairs from S to $900,000 more than its in come." Even this would not afford suffi cient apology for giving the work to stock specnlators at half its cost, but we have doubts of its correctness. Will the Gazette give us the figures—a statement of the income and of the expenditures? Nfr Jeremiah Goodspeed, tax collector of Newport, R. 1, had a day or two since, stolen from his desk, a package contain• ing $770, and two cancelled drafts on the town treasurer, one for $7OO, and the oth er for $5OO. This )1r Jeremiah Goodspeed must have come good speed in collecting. We wish him good speed in pursuing the thief.— Let him forego lamentation till he finds the rascal has entirely escaped, when he may cqmmence his Jeremiad if he will. By the way the robber luckily met with good speed in the ex-!rcise of his profession. r, '174; Steamboat Wayne arrived a t 9 unit, mi c ht-ra o , on the 25th ult from Sandusky, vith 200 steerage and 40 cabin passengers. While at the wharf at San dusky. the whole of her engine room was discovered to be in a blaze. The fire was extinguished with great difficulty, and and the boat saved, by th.i strenuous ex— ertions of the offitiers and the crew. We committed a material error in say ing the Delaware Division was t ) be sold for one fuvrth of what it cost, and that to be paid in State Stocks, The purchasers, bad it been sold, would ha+e got it for a built one-half of what the State paid fin it. It gives us pleasure to state that the nota ble schemers who - planned this sale, only meant to rub Pennsylvania of half the money she had spent on the Delaware di— vision. They are not so bad as wethougbt them. 1110" That Jabohill:mists of- Boston -, had a grand 14rip'up un'the,2nd 4ust. They bad become ‘earied, says the Bulletin...of %ht.- ing the slave.holder, the church, the cler gy, "et id omme genus," and had turned their fists and their tongues, and their wo men's screams against each other. Foster it seems, had said some things 'out of or der,' as the chair thougnt, but as Foster thougnt not, and so the convention spoke their thoughts about it, and sustained the chair, whereat Fostet rose in all indigna tion, and said 'he could nut be gagged, no how,'—'couldn't have spears thrust into his side at that rate,' and taking a last look of his brave associates, and glancing at Aunt 1%41)4 Folsom, a whole world of meaning, he bade farewell to them all, and departed amidst the shouts of the multi. tude ! 53,862 13,958 Pounds 10,899,755 For the Pest. • VOthe Th.v.Payers of the CitY of rttllP harygh. elloau Citizens;—As an election will be held In a few days to obtain the approbation or dissent of the people whether they will consent to an addi tional imposition of $25,000 a year to be added to their ahnual taxes to pay the interest of $300,000 to be subscribed by the city authorities towards making a railroad to Conuellsville, would it not be well to weigh the subject maturely and with re flection, before we take hasty measures on the subject that we may soon repent of. As a tax payer, 1 claim the privilege of imparting my views of the subject and of laying them before my fellow citizens. I am opposed :o apy further taxation, as the a mount already levied is absolutely oppressive and burthensorne beyond reason and justice,nnder our boasted free and cheap government. It is such hasty strides taken under a feverish state of ex• citement that have brought our state into its pres ent embarrassinruts, which can only be remeiiied by oppressing the people with heavy taxes to save the credit of the State; men may boast and have boasted of the willingness of the sovereign people to submit to still heavier taxation to repair ths. hasty measures and difficulties in which we have been involved by Quixotic legislators, but I would ask such free boasters of -rite honor and state credit who pays the piper? Is it not the property of our citizens that is taxed to raise all the funds; these men are exceedingly liberal with the emp'y purses of the people, and if we arc to believe the weekly reports of businiss and statements of Edi tors, persons at a distance would he led to believe that business is extremely brisk in Pittsburgh,but let us examine carefully the nature of the business doing at the present time in our city; we see our wharf crowded with Eastern and Western pro ducts loading and unloading, our streets thronged with drays,and our warehouses at the canal basin filled with goods and produce; all this activity and bustle, to look seriously into it,will readily be per ceived to be doing almost exclusively by transport. tin; cumpanies, or tterially atr..itin g the community at large. It would not at all be surpri-ing fr rn the puf fin., and hoisting of our city pape,s, that threulii their representations hundreds of families wonlil be indueed to move ruin distant parts to our city, in search of employment, and meet with disap pointmetit after expending their little all lo bring • them re and ut of einploym mt,and pennyles-i, become chargeable under the poor laws of our ci ' ty, and conarqu• oily render necessary an addi tional taxation) In provide for them. I think it is well known and fell, that the times are extremely hicenlit , e to 211 - alrimony.—A company Ggid, as ail CJII readily ittstiYN cc from the of their pockets, and from my intercourse widi SOCA ofvoting Mall at Lincoln, England, have sty I ant candid y or the, opmio, that there is wit originated a new club. Each member n dollar more in circulator at this trincollan there pays Is weekly, which is placed Su in the the dell Dr wln ' er. pp that the railrhati we- rustic ai d win savings bank. The first of the party who f u ll . I , m i:ion, w i n , would be alino,t entir ly ben matt ice i s t o rece i ve t h e whale ~,„,„„n t d e _ ,fittedro i it? why our hotels an.l traneporters, as no dhoti: a great p..riion of the Carrying trade and posited, together with the jolt rest. travellers would he brought through our city, but like our canals, Lc. , that has op e ressed our eitit. A Kiss and the Consequences._Siteriff 'ns to pay for and iti•ep tin, the beitefi's and pro- Ware of Gloucester county, N J gave Mr fits go into the pockets of trauspartittg -impanies, and is the same scene of t violin Wm Bateman a severe horsewhipping at - ,ed and aog,nenttd by an (moral° is adiliGonal tax Bliteliw3cAtovvit on Sunday the 21st, al the on the treperiv or our eitiz•• ns to enrie'i a few inoriodolizers at tl,o cost of our nlrt ady oppressed door cf Vie Presbyterian church.. The ana ;ramplitd up •n industrious citizens"? Ido provocaZion, we under s tood , wax kissing lore th it fvu may profit by our Last folly and It arn o.isdoin from experience. !limy no doubt or attempting to kiss the sheriff's wife.— ~ supin.rt the prupoied ruti ure with the view Mr Bateman was flogged till his clothes of profiting by contracts, and other: in hope of obtaining employment, like diewhing, men gasp hung in tatters and his whole person was • mg at strnw.. entered with blood. His kissing propen. I would not i t to h e e ,,, ter5 ,„,,,i that I am opposed to die eont:anpl.ited railr tad; on the con- yoUBLIC NOTICE.—Two Flat Boats, each : about r.elongaclfnnlnreetwidelavele'n ' teary I alt inuct in futon of but I wish it to be in of the unde r signed irride by the