TERMS OF TUB " AMERICAN." IT. D. MA8SER, JOSEPH ET8EI.Y. ; PuatiratSAo i PaoMtiiToai. ft. B, MSSBH, Editor. . , Office in CmtrTAlieijf, in the rear of ff. B. XiUh see's Store. THE" AMERICAN lipubfiilied every Satur day at TWO DOLLARS per annum t be paid half yearly In advance. No paper diecontln ued till Atd arrearage are paid. No subscriptions received for a lete period than six Hdir-ras. All communication or letlera on business relating to the office, to inrare attention, most be POST PAID. PETER LASAIIUS, Northumberland County, mm 8TX.VAnriLf TrE8PECTEUI.LY informe hie frl.hdssnd D ibe public lit general, that he baa taken the Crick Stand, formerly occupied by George Prince aa a public house, (east of the Slate House, and opposite the Court Home,) where he if prepared to accommodate hit friends, and all othera who may favor him with their custom, in the beet manner. " In ahort, no exertions nor expense will be ape red to render hia house in every way worthy of public patronage. Sunbury, April 4th, 1646 flm "" f ' ' ' OAR7ETINOS AND OIL-CLOTHS Al the "CHEAP STORE" No. 41 Strawberry - ' ' Street, ' -' v ' Philadelphia, fTVUR Store rent and oilier eiprnaee being very ( W "a""'. wm n ''' " CARPETS, 'mC-CLOTHS, Ac, wholesale and retail, at the lowest pricea in the city, and buyer will find it greatly to their advantage to call and riamine the arge assortment we offer thia season, of 't lleautiful Imperial 3 ply ft ' Double Superfine Ingrain " IcARPETIXGS, Fine and Medium do j Twilled and plain V nitien J ogether with a lirge s ork of OIL-Cl.OTHS rom t feet to 84 fret wid. very cheap, for roome, is II, &c ? alio, Mattinga, Floor lloths. Ruga, Col on and Rat; Carpet, ice., Ate., with a Rood af ortment of Ingrain Carpets from 35 to fiO cent, nd Stair and Entry Carpele from 12 to 60 eta. ELUIUDUE & BROTHER, No. 41, Strawberry Street, one door above Ches iuf, near Secimd Street, Philadelphia. ' " '' March 3Ut, 1840 8m. - - A CARD. TO TflK CIVILIZED WORLD!! ' T U. PALMER, Hie American Newspaper yr Agent, July uuihorizcd and empowered, by le proprietora of mo-t of the best newspaper of II the cities and principal towns in the U. S. and 'anada,' to receive eubscrip inne and advertise enla. and In g ve receipts for them, respectfully dtifie the public, that be U prepared to execute dera from mII parte of the Civilised World, em. selnir Individual, Firms Societiee, Clu'ie, Rea ng Rooms, Corporations, 4tc at his several offi ce in ihe cilice nf Pbilad, ltihia, Baltimore, New ork and Boston, and wheie cnramunicaiione and .quiries, pet paid, msy be d'rectrd. 1 Address V. . PALMER, Philadelphia, N. W. corner Third TJ Cbesnui stnet; Baltimore, 8. E- corner Bal nnre and Calvert streets; New Yuik, Tribune uildlnga opposite City Hall ; Boston, SO Slate et. As no other person or persona are in any man t cennerted with the eulecriber, in the American ewspapei Agency, all letters and communieationa him, shoukl lie carefully directed a above, and no other peron. Thi caution has become ne sury, in order to avoid misukts, end put the pub 'on Iheir guard aeninst all pretended A cents. - V. B. PALMER, ! . , . Ameiiean Newspaper Agent. . Editors throughout the United 8iate fir whom U. Calmer i Agent, will promote the advantage nil eoncerued.hv v"blishtug the alve. ' IMJIIXIC XOTICE. V. B.P .Imerislhe iy authorized A$ ul for il.e 'SDmr Amkiii. .," in t e ciii a of Philadelphia, New York, slon and Baltimore, of which pub'ic notice is by given. M,rcn U l846' ' ALKXANDEH l. H1CKEY7 RUN IC MAKER, No. 150 Cliesnut Street, PHXXiADB LFBIA, (THERE all kinds uf leaner trunk, valises and ' carpet I'Srs, of eveiy style and pattern are nuf .f tute.l, in ihe lust mariner and trom tne uest lenats, hiid sold at the lowest r te. s bdad..pbi, July Ittth, 1845 ly. ' SHUr.ERT'S PATENT '"ASHIITG MAGHI1TE. iHlS Machine his now been tested by more than ihirtv tamilies in this neighborhood, end given entire satisfaction. It ia simple in its istruetinei, that it cannot get out of order. It ileitis no iron to rust, and no springaor rollers to out of repair. It will do twice es much wash- , with less than half the wear and tear of an; of hte intentions, and what la of greater Import re.it costa but lit'le over half as much aa other hi rig machines. rhe nherriiief haa the eiclui-ive right for Nor mtrerland. Union, Lveoming. Columbia, Lu re and Clinton counties. Price of siriRie raa- ,e6. H. B. M A8SER. 'lie followinc ceitilieate ia from a few of those i haw ihcj machines in use. Sunhury, Aug. S4, 1844. Ve, the subscribers, certify that we have sow ise, in our families. 'Sbugert'e patent WtthJ Machine," and do not hesitate saying tnat tt ia Mt excellent invention. That, in Washing, ill save mora than on half the usual labor. t it does not require more than one third the ul quantity of soap and water and that there o rubbing, end consequently, little or no wear or teartna. That it knock off do buttons, and (he finest clothes, auch aa collars, Ueca, tucks, 6lc., may be washed in a very short time .out the least injury, and tn fact without any rent wear and tear, whatever. We therefore rfully recommend it tn our friend and to the ic, as a most useful and labor saving machine. CHARLES W.HCU1JNH, A. JORDAN, CH8. WEAVER. CHS. PLEA8ANTS, GIDEON MARKLE, . Hon. GliO. C WELKER, .... BENJ. HENDRICKS. 1 " ' ' GIDEON LEISENRINO a's HoTti, (formerly Tremont House, No. t Cbesnut street,) Philadelphia, September at. 1844.; jave used Sbugert'a Patent Washing Machine y house upwarda of eight months, and do not ate to fa that I deem it ona of the most use- nd valuable labor-saving machines ever inveta , I formerly kept two wo man continually oc d in waabiug, who now do aa much in. two aa they then did in on week, mere is no or tear in washine, and it requires not mors one-third tb usual quantity of soap.' I bav number of other machiaoa in my family, but e so decidedly superior to every thing else, and tie liable to get out of lepair, that I would not ithout one if they should eoet ten times the they arevsold for. uajijsi, HEKK. CilTSEEi The highest price will He giveo for Flax Seed, at the store f g. 9, 1845 HENRY MASSE R. CJ TTTTXT71D TTT1TD W Absolut acquiescence in the decisions of the By Manser & Elsely. RPRKCHOPVHB HsmllNOgOtHBROH, On the RajrlaclUn f the Tartar f 1849, DELIVEftEB IN TUB SKItATf Or TBS t KITED STATES, juli aa, 1846. . (Concluded.) l i" The honorable chairman of the Committee on Finance haa undertaken to show that there haa been a larfo increase in our exports for the Inst half year. The correctness of hia conclu sions are rendered doubtful from the very par tial view which he has taken of the subject, lie has given us only the exports from the port of New York. It will be readily seen that they mey be greatly increased there, and yet the whole amount be scarcely varied- Owing to the restrictions heretofore imposed upon our trade with Great Britain, and the regulations of their colonial system, our agricultural products were taken first ; into Canada, and exported thence into England. ' The recent changes in her com laws, while they have materially af fected the interest of their Canadian enbjcte, have had no beneficial effect upon our prices. This the honorable chairman' has kept out of sight. The only change has been to export this produce directly to England instead of through Canada, without benefiting , in the slightest degree the farmer here. .The chairman speaks of the anticipated re peal of the corn laws. He ought to have known that thia repeal . haa been abtolule for some months. When Sir Robert Peel , introduced is new corn bill into Parliament, Die custom- hoiiee officers were directed to regolate the du ties by its provisions, taking bonds trom the im porter for the difference to be paid should ti e bill not become a law, "" i ' It Is probable that a larger amount of bread- stuffs will bo shipped thia ytar than heretofore, bot for reasons very different from that assigned by the honorable chairman. One I have alrea dy given. The anticipation of the new British tariff regulations gav a sudden and unworan ted advance to prices here, last fall. Unusual ly large amounts were purchased bv specula tors, - Their expectations were not realized: nd, after holding as long as their 'means and credit would permit, they were compelled to sell at any price. From these ruined specula tors it went into the f hands of shippers," who have sent it abroad. 1 1 ahould like to see the first farmer who' undeceived the slightest be nefit from the modification of the English corn laws. It is an indisputable fact that we never have fend never can compete with northern Eu rope in supplying England with breadstuff! The lawa of nature and of trade render it utter ly impracticable. ' The history of tka flour bu siness of this country proves that when it ia at the lowest price, ex ports t ions are Ian-eat. When the farmer sells his flour for half price, when the dealer and miller are ruined all over the country, then, and then only, do the British buy breadstuffs from us in large quantities: at no other time can we compete with the low-' priced wheat and rye shipped into England from the Russian and German provinces countries where literally the "ox is muzzled who treads out the corn, and where the laborer who pro duces the grain is permitted only to eat the huaka from which the wheat i winnowed. We are referred to the recent action of Eng. land upon her corn laws, as a reason for redu cing our tariff upon foreign manufacturca. Who ia so blind as not to see that there ia no parallel between the cases? In England it ia an effort of the laboring population to t id .them-, selves of llio oppression of the Isnded aristocra cy, by which they are deprived of their bread. Here, it is an effort of the aristocracy to deprive the laboring man of the means of earning bis bread, . ,' ,t ; . ,.-.. The great market, and the only certain mar ket of this country, ia that created by the manu facturing interest at home. Those who look to Europe for consumer of the products of our soil will be disappointed j and, in the end, the aurplus population and increased capital of the wen will seek manufacture aa the meanaof employment.' ' '' - (n proof of thia view of the case, I need only mculiun the fact that the aingle Slate of Maaea- chuaetu look last year from ibe other. (State latt year one million of barrels of . flour-winore than the whole export of that article from the United Statee to foreign countries. - It ia also true that for . the laat twenty years the home market baa generally kept Ibe price of bread stuffs above tbt shipping price. These facts ought to settle thia question, I might aak, in conclusion, what beneficial effect can the re duction of the price abroad have upon - our pro ducts here 1 , -. . The objections to thia bill itself are so nu meroua, that it ia hard to tell where, they begin or where they end. ; I am glad to be able to ac quit my honorable and able friend, the chair man of the Committee oa Finance, from i all participation in concocting a schema ao well calculated to do mischief, so badly adapted to the legitimate busine of the country, and so curtain to fail in producing a sufficient revenue to meet the expectations of the government It chief evil on the business ol the country is AND SHAMOKIN JOUllNAL. ' majority, the vital principle of Republics, from which Snnbtiry, Northumberland Co. tie inefficient provmiona to detect and rranirh t frauds on the reveittie. .Our citizens might in time, to some extent, overcome the inadequacy I of its protection,' but there is no method by which they can guard againit the frauds that will be practised under it My friend the chair-1 man felicitates himself upon the security a- gainst fraud by the absence of motive. He I produces an array of figures to show that the I gain upon an invoice of goods undervalued 15 per cent would produce a profit of only 2J per cent, if successful. He thinks' this a very small matter ; and to the large southern planter, accustomed to estimate wealth by his immense cotton and rice fields, it may bo ; bnt the result of his own figures will show it to be no ineun siderable aum. . Let ua take a single case; which is by no means Uncommon. ! A foreign manufacturer sends an spent, .who opens a countinghouse in New York osleneibly fot the purpose of importing good. He receives on consignment - 800,000 worth annually,1 upon which the 2J pcr Cent gain, by the udervalua tion, is $20,000. ! I am assured by the most ex perienced and intelligent merchants that it would be utterly impossible to detect en under valuation of 15 pcr cent, on cloths. I venture to affirm that you could not find a man of char acter who would be willing to put his judgment in the scale for the difference of 15'per cent, an valuation, when the sum in dispute was 1,000 This being the ense, how unlikely is it that ap praisers, appointed as they are for their politi cal services, with but little reference to their business qualifications, would ever. detect thia difference in . the . valuation. . Tho , profits of large mercantile transactions are generally ve ry small on the items. Commission houses, do- ing business; to the amount of a million of dol, lars will guaranty their aaloa for 2) per cent When the consignment is very large, the guar anty is frequently given for 1 J or 2 per cent." . Now if a house on the other side can save an amount greater than they would have to pay for the) guaranty of the whole amount of their consignment, I ask, ia there not motive of gain sufficient to induce the undervaluation ? particu larly where the morals on the subject of reve nue lawa are aa loose aa in England and France, where they avow it ia not wrong to cheat the government. I am assured by a respectable merchant, that of the large number of foreign a genta doing business in New York under the compromise act, scarcely any of them are now to be found there. Upon the passage of the act of 1842, they closed their stores and went home, became they, could no longer defraud the government by la Ise invoices. Another serious objection to the bill is its uni form discrimination in favor of tho foreign me chanic laborer against our own. - This princi ple if -principle it may be called-abounds throughout the whole bill.' Every class ofnio chanics ia to be affected, and the business of ma nr of them to be destroyed by it. The tuilor, the hatter, the ehoemaker, the saddler, the tin n. an, the blacksmith, and all others, will aee their towns and village filled with the work of foreign pauper labor underselling them at their own doors,' lo pay for which the country is to be drsined of it specie. To exemplify this, I will refer to a few only of the many gla ring instances of this character in Ibe bill. There are, by estimate, in the United State, a- bout 5500,000 men employed in making clothes, and we may to thia add that number of women engaged in the same pursuit. Readymade clothes, by thia bill, as in schedule C, are char. ged HO per cent., and the material of which moat of them are made ia in the same schedule, All know that the labor upon clothes in Europe, particularly France, is done by poor women and half starved men, who eat meat porhap one a month who give no education to their children. and who never expect to see them elevated a bovetbo wretchednes of their birth. These persons, who literally work for a ahillwg a day, will flood Ihe country with ready-made clothes, and drive out of employment thia intelligent tnd worthy claa of our people. ' ' ' Ia further proof, I will cite a few cases of smaller manufactures. Tske the cam of gin- ger, for inatance : the raw materia! in schedule B paying 40 per cent ad valorem while the manufactured article ia, In schedule C, paying 30 per cent,' thua a-ivine 10 per cent of a pre- mium to foreign labor over our own. The like case occurs in iron to be converted into aleel. , The raw material is, in schedule C, paying 30 per cent, and the steel itsell is, in j the policy of our fathers, we are, In time of war, I the honors of the nation whom he hat ear schedule F, paying only 13 per cent. Again, when our expenses are' necessarily greatly in- red are to bo distributed, none are given to we have the case of Peruvian bark to be conver - ten into quinine. The raw material is char- ged 15 per cent, while the manufactured one ia charged but 20 making only D per cent in order to encourage its manufacture jnthiacoun try. The amount of capital invested in thia i tero apparently so unimportant, ia very large, A aingle bouse in Philadelphia haa ia ita maou- factura mora than $100,000. Thia branch of manufactures, like all others, adds largely to the commerce and navigation of the country. lire - quires 35 pounds of bark tomake ona of quinine, The manufacturer hero purchases the cheap do - A TAtT ilN II D there is no appeal bat to foroe, the vital principle Pa. Saturday, Augunt S2," 1946.' meettc fabrics of the country, ships thvhi to the western ' coast if ISoiitli America, and barters them for bark, with which his ships return la- den.; The bark is made into quinine; end its 1 crent va.uo is the labor which is here put upon it. Our great competors in this manufacture arc the English and the French. If you de- slroy our establishments, you transfer also to those countries the commerce and navigation connected with them. Western Senators may perhaps not be aware of the great importance attached to this article throughout their who!e country. " It ia used in almost every form of di- seaee that present itaelf, and it haa become Iho almostconstantcotnpanion ofevery farnilythere. Will thev not only aid in destroying the labor of their fellow-citizens ; but will they also do- prive their neighbors of the pour consolation of procuring a remedy for the diseases of their cli mate 1 . ia there no motive sacied cnouoli to arrest this unholy crusade! . Further investigation haa satisfied me, that wh.t pretends to be provisions for producing revenue can have no other effect than to act as an absolute prohibition, preventing entirety. the importation of many articles that are very im portant to various branches of our industry, and some of them even necessary to our nation al welfare.' 1 have already trespassed much longer upon the time of the Senate than I had intended; but, to show the incongruities ol this measure, and that it ia unwine, considered as a revenue pleasure alone, let me give you the instance of cotton poods which are in schedule C, and clmrsrd SO per cent. . Jimt ns many of these goods will be imported and need jl the du ty were three timea that amount, aslbey will Al thai est t9 itv mtm srlirl.a iiaott nonArsllar fc the Wfill,,yf tnd ,re purely luxuries, and none of them made in thia country,' J hey are cambrics, jaconets, mulls of various kinds, and very fine muslins, generally of the kind known in the trade as white goods. :' A wire financier, in a purely revenue bill, would collect his du ties (rom the articles need by Ihe rich, and, so far as he could, leave Ihe poor untouched. No such principle is inthis bill. I annex a rate of duties upon cotton articles, which I atn assured, by active business men would produce at least 50 per cent, more reve nue than the same goods will under the House bill, and at the same time protect our own man ufactures, and opcrato less oppressively on the poor J, ... ., . . , . Nal, All cotton goods Under 41 picksto the square inch, li cent the Square yard duty. No. 2. All cotton good urrd-er .r0 picks to the rq. inch, 3 cts. tho Fq. yd. duty. N. 3. All cotton goods under CO picksto the eq. inch, 4 els. the m. yd. duty.' ' No. 4. All cotton goods under 01 picks lo" the rq. inch, 5 cts. the eq yd. duly. ' No. 5. All cotton goods tinder T2 picks to the eq, inch, 0 cts. the sq. yd. duty. . k , r - No. 6. All cotton goods under 1U0 pick to the eq. inch 0 cts. the eq, yd. duty. . . No. 1 embrances all. kind if hejvy brown and bleached cotton sheetings and shirtings, and Ihe common prints and Urines, that are used by everybody, end necessary to the labor ing people and the duty would be about 18 per cent. No. 2 covera printing cloths, of which cali coes are made that sell at fom 0 to 10 cents. common bleach cottons that sell from 10 to 11; and I lie duty would not average over ou per cent. No. 3 embraces fine print cloths, fine sheet ing and shirtings ( and the duty would average about 33 per cent - jMo. 4, same Rinds or roods, liner grades, a bout 33 per cent. ' ' No. 0, do., still finer, about 33 percent. No 6, all kinda of very fine "white goods,' about 40 per cent' . , i have aaid, Mr, President, that 1 have been utterly at a loss for the motivu which prompted the introduction of such a measure at lb is time. ia first effect must inevitably be to deprive us of the means of paying even the interest noon the debt we are now incurring t and the con- I sequence will be, that a debt will be entailed on the nation, embarrassing all Ita opetatlona for years to Come.1 It haa been the policy of the democratic parly to avoid a national debt The payment of Ihe national debt under the admin isiratlon of General Jackson caused rejoicings throughout the country.' Now, as If forgetting 1 creased, entering upon an untried experiment which, it I admitted on all sides, will gfeatlj I decrease our income. Can this oe done for x"9 pecial purpose ot creating the necessity of - j direct taxes, and hereafter the entire' abolition - 1 of our revenue lawa V ! this the end to which I It looks! That aection of the Uoion which controls this bill can control any other, if north, I em men will crouch before them." It will be found very convenient, in laying these direct j taxes, to exempt the negro population bf the south, and lay them en tho properly and labor J of the north. If ihis be so, lh nullification IC AN. .t .i and immediate parent of despotiem. JarvaaaoaH I Tol.' C Xo. 4 S.Wliole ffo, 30S. " which we have heard may not be eo remote a' good men have imagined. wili I could induce my southern friends to pause, while it is yet not too late, ere they strike a blow which must recoil on themselves, They cannot be prosperous if we are prostrate. It ie a great mistake to suppose that the prospe- perity if the north inflicts nn injury upon them The foundation of Ibe evil of which they, com plain will be fottrtd in the over prod net ion ofe single article. In 181, cotton bronght2l cent per poond. . Thia produced such art immense profit, that men went in debt to boy slaves, and ery southern man became a cotton-planter. M0'8 increased the amount from 176.ttr0.000 pounds in ItSM, to 8f3,U00,000 pounds in 184o, rcduced the Pnc ,o6 cen,B Pcr Pund We are told there i never a surplus Block on hand, aa an argument against this fact. But tbnt in accounted for, in my mind, by the fact Ilia I the necessities ol the cotton-planter com pel him to push hia cotton crop into the mar ket tn pay his debts already made in anticipa te ol it, A little northern thrift, which teach es our manufacturers to live within their means, would do them much service, and in tho end cure many of tho evils attributed to the1 tariff Much stress is laid Upon the cotton crop of the south, and the whole legislation of this coun try is lo be regulated by it 1 do not' wish to detract from ita value, ' but I ' will show how small it is in comparison with the other agricul tural products of the country. The entire cot ton crop of the last year was 930,098,000 pounds which, at 7 cents per pound, amounts to S0.v 200,100." My southern friends wilt 'perhsps hardly credit the fact, thnt tho' value of the hay crop, upon which our cattle and horses are fec is more than 100 pet tent." over this s amount ing, at $10 a ton, to 110,005,000.' The whole value of the tobacco crop, at 5 cents, is $9,371,- hri ; tne wneat cropaione, at sti a bushel, ia )100.rjP4,000; theoals,"at 30 cents, !s worth $M,902.400; and the potato crop, so lightly estimated, is wotth more lliftn one-half the' en tire cotton crop, being, at 40 cents a bushel. $35,366,300- Why ahould all these important product be loet sight of in our commercial rcg ulatioiTst ' ' ' '' ' ' It is said thai letters have been received here from my own Stale, approving of thia mea sure. It cannot be possible, " Although it may pass here as a political measure, not a Senator, as I believe, would be willing to adopt it as hia own; and 1 cannot therefore believe that any business man, anxious for the welfare of the e-mntry, can advise ,il passage. It may be tre thnt soma individuals in that good State are mad enongh, or ignorant enough, or die honest enough, to natter what they believe to he the majority here, by crying hozannaa to turn in power. If auch lettera have been re ceived, they must have been written by men who have no. interest in common with their fellow. citizens ; men who would barter princi pis for office, and see the whole State in rnin, if Ihry could only batten upon the offals of the government We are told out of the house that this bill is In become a law by the casting vote of the Vice President. I am happy lo say that I have seen no evidence of such intention, nor will 1 be licve that there ia audi a design, until I am con vinced by the evidence of my own senses. .To all the inquiries that have bevn made of me, I have said that it cannot be ( that no native Pennsylvanian, honored with the trust and con fidence of his fellow-citizens, could prove re creant to that trut, and dishonor the State that gave him birth. Ilia honorable name, and tho connexion ol his ancestry with her history, for bid It' ' If is own public act and written ecoti ments forbid it ' If, ss haa been said, this ques tion is to be settled by the casting; vote of the Vice President, be will not, as a wis man, a dopt a bill which no Senator will father, but will rather, taking advantage ol hia high and honorable position, make one which ahall contribute to the happiness of our people, and the glory of our common country, txt him not be allured by the voice of flattery from the sun ny south. No man can be strong abroad who la not strong at, homo. ,. Before, a public man I rUka a desperate leap, he ahould remember that I political gratitude ia prospective j ; that d'eer- - 1 tion of home, of ftienda, and of country, may be t hailed by tho winning party when the traitor ia I carrying in the flag of hia country j but wbaa I him. ( .Will any mm belie va , that a son . of South Carolina, occupying that pbair, elected under uph circumstance, wub the casting , vole in hia hands on. this bill, would give that. vote coo I trary to the almost unanimous wUhes of hi I own Stats ! And ahall it be said that a Penn sylvanian baa less attachment fus his common- wealth than a son ot Carolina f ' 1 have said I that I will not believe ft I and aa evidenee I that it cannot be an, 1 give, ia conclu sion, the following eloquent passage from a of I ipecce of the honorable George M. Dallas, ' ; 'rniras or adterthkg. ,i "( 1 . i ' I squar I Insertion, . . . f 0 50 s t" do 1 '.'.'to ' 0 75 I " do . 8 do . . t 00 Every euheeeaent insertion, 0 tA Yearly Advertisements i one column, fS.I half Column, t 8, three squares, fit two squares, f9( one equsre, 5. Half-yearly t one column, $ 18 t hslf column, fit t three squsres, $8 ( two square, $3 1 on square, $3 60, Advertisement left without directions aa to the length of time they are to be published, will be eontmaed emit ordered out, and charged accord ingtyt .. i. ! : - rx-SUteen line or less make a square. . when occupying the seat t now hold, on a ques tion precisely eimilar to the one now beforo tie. i1 ' t. Extract from speech ef Mr. Dallas on the Ta riff of 1832. ... .., i ... , . "I am inflexible, air, as to nothing but sdo quate protection. The proces of attaining thai may andargn any . mutatinn. Secure that to the home laanr of thia eonntry, and onr oppon ent shall have, as far as my voice and suffrage Can give it to them, a 'carle Manefte' whereon textile any arrangement or adjustment their intelligence may suggest. Il might have been expected, not unreasonably, that they who de- erred change shoe Id render their projrl; that they would designate noxiona particulars and intimate' their remedies $ that they would in voke the skill a ml assistance of practical and experienced observes on a subject with .which few ot os are tamiliar, and point with precision to each parts nf the extensive system as can b. modined without weakening or endsngering Ibe whole structure. They have forborne to do this. ' They demand. an entire demolition. Facts tRiPE is the burden of their eloquence the golden fleece, of their . adventurous enter prise; the goal, abort of wtirch Ihey will not pause evon to breathe. I Cannot join their ex pedition fot each object - An established poli cy coeval, in the language of President Jack son, with our government believed by ao im mense majority of our people to be constitution al, wise and expedient, may not be abruptly a bandoned by Congress wilhouta treac.herotu de porturo from doty, a shamcles dereliction of sacred trust and confidence. To expect it is both extravagant and unkind." Prrt.rc OrtMoft The Democratic Union says, There are eighty English Democratic papers published in Pennsylvania, Seventy nvK of which openly dissapprove of McKay's free trade Tariff Bill The Five free trsdn papers may be classed thus : . , , . . . . Penney Ivanian;; by John W. Forney, an of fice holder under the General Government. .Perry County Diaorganizer,' owned by Hon. Jesse Miller, , ... ., .. ,,. , . , j ... Bedford Uaaette, by the Adjutant General of Pennsylvania, another office holder. 'Lancaster Intelligencer,' formerly owned by Forn'y, and still influenced by him. ; , Dei. y Keystone,' enjoying a floe, share of pa tronagi from office holders. . Ltcrrask ot the Anxf no NavV. The ratik and tile of , the Navy haa been increased STrOO men dunng the late session, and the rank and file of the Army 7300, or 100 men more for each of thecottpantes. ' The enlistment ol the additional men of the Army isfbr five years. Crops or Illinois lite Alton Telegraph states that tho wheat nrop all over tho State of Illinois is good, and there is every indication of an abundant harvest One tlAtr nf the whole net revenue of Great Britain is devoted to paying the interest of tho cost of former Were, ami nearly one half cftho remainder ia spent in preparing for future wars, viz: in maintaining the army and navy. : u- :" ' ' - Mtcuioiv ftoae. The Michigan or running rose, ia ol growth so rapid, that ahoola have been known to run twenty and even 30 feet, in ona season. It can be trained to almost any height, and js magnificent when seen trained to a large tree, which it will climb and cover with a pro fUeion of flowers, Z, , r , . .. .. , i . A Very Coon Stout.-We like a gooi Story, and the last number of Blackwood furn . ishes one aa follows;. ,. , , ., . , f3ome years ago when all the world werd mad upon the lotteries, tba cook of a middle sged gentleman drew, from hia hands the say ing of .some years. Her master, curious to know the cause, learned that aha had repeated ly dreamed that a certain number was a great prize .and she had bought it lie called for a fool fot her pains, and never omitted an occa sten to tease her upop tha subject One day, however, the master, saw in the newspapers, orafhia book seljei in tha country town, thai the number , was actually the 20,000 prize , Cook i called up, palaver ensue bad koowtt each other jearo, loth to part, &.Ci in abort bsj , proposed and is accepted insists on msrrisgo . being celebrated nel rooroing. -Marrid tbejr were; and, as the carriage tooktbeaa from thd , church, they enjoyed tha following dialogue J i 'Well, Molly two happy events in one day . Vou' have marriod, t t;ust, a good husband j Vou have something else V,ut first let tne atk . you where vou have lockr.d opyoor lottery tit j,.av .i'S t' .. i .. . - i She hlnktng that' Yei maalef was only bfna tering W bpor, tha old point)' cried, 'Don't yet eejr no more about it. J thought how it wonj.' be, Rnd that I never ilvaoCd' iere the rw ou t ao 1 oU U tn I As, biker t oY pur ills ge tor at guinea profit so you need ievcf e angry wivhj iffia "about that.'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers