Carlisle herald and expositor. (Carlisle, Pa.) 1837-1845, June 29, 1842, Image 2

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    (11 1111P1)3112914
II
R. WHITE- rigooLtroNi MTN Et PROPRIETOR,
CARLISLE, PA:
*ednesdlay, **nine gft, 1'842:
FOR PRESIDENT
• " • .
"• • VrEN.NINPIELD scan
subject to-the decision of a National Convention
. .
Gen., Seott on,the Thrift. •
" am riot only in fnior,ara tinily*. FOR Rsvx
Nos, but also FOR FROTECTION."
WINFIELD SCOTT.
Oen gcott on ROmovills.
! t hly rule would be to TURN OUT THE HAD
AT ONCE,, and displace the indifferent as last as
ft might conveniently be done." .
hold that on a change. of - parties; vocemeles--
no matter how made—l mean bx death resignation
or rentovals, ought lobe
.filkd eeketione from
Me political majority. and • always` with the best
men that can be bad for the several places." ,
•
WINFIEL SCOTT/
. .
DICKINSON COLLEGE. ;
Commencement.
July 61h, n P. M. Anniveremy of the Oratorical
Soeiety of the Grammer School.
" 6th-;•—•42th. Public Examination of th,
•
classes. " . •
fl 131 h, BA. M.. Meeting of Board,of Trustees.
emry Societies, by the Rev. President
BASCOM. •
" BP. M. Briccalaureate Address; by the
ROY. RoDenT EMoay. ' •
ei 14th, 10 A. M. Commencement, '
Rev. Henry B. pascom.
0:).By an advertisement inythe Harrisburg and
Chainberaburg papers, we perceive that "the Rev.
Hamar B. ateOast, President of Transylvania
University. will deliver an Address before the Union
Philissophical.and Bellas_Lettres.Sonlisties, of-Dick•.
'noon College, on the morning of the lath of July
ntzt, in the Methodist Episcopal Church of Car.
lisle." Our citizens may, therefore, expect an id
' (creating discourse. . • • _
,-For our Bank Note List and Counterfeit Dc
ector;aee fourth Doge, • . .
• The: Temperance Celebintlen.
ihii
Conunittee of ,:ttriangementi - for .• the Tempentnce
Celebratian on the 4th,as oleo to the Programme of
== Exercises, -- in an - other coluenrofthicpaper;: — !We
are informed that speakers are - expected from abroad
. ' l —from Pittsburg and Baltimore,also that the
choirs of the WarthingtOnSociety of Cailisl!!. and
of the: Dickinson'College Temperance Pociaty,
- and a portion of the Barracks Band, and 'another
musical association of. our Borough, will succes::
eively enliven the occasion with songs and with
instrumental music. Ltirge provision is also
making for -a collation. on the • ground; and
, • from what we know of thhse alto - haie charge - of
• " the titatter, - widoubt nofall will lie done that can
be done, to make the occasion one of great interest.
Let every friend of Temperance, then--old:ans
young, male and female—be in attendance.
Merlons Temperance Meetings.
• o;j'Tbe Washingtonians meet every,Saturday
el ening in the Conr► ,6oure —. t which excellent
additions are made, and many signatures obtained
to the Pledge. The meeting last Saturday,nyening
was a cheering one, the remarks and song' in fine
order, and the whole enlivened and cj►eered by the
presence of many Ladies! Let the meeting on
\ Saturday evening next be another good one. The
Ladies, of course, will be there—who, then, will
be absent!.
Advertising Wives.
• tr,Orte of the most disreputable acts of a man
is that igadvertising his wife after he has, by ill
treatment, in all probability, forced her to seek pro
tection among her, friends! Printers publishing
such advertisements must lovethe "almighty risk
ier" considerably to induce them to assist in casting
odium and reproach upon, and in eaposing, a help
less woman, driven from the Mid board" of
of a tyrannical husband! However much we may .
need '
every dollar we cart gether.from -the advertis
ing public, we hive refused, shall ever refuse
to give gnablicity to inteh advartirrenients as referred
to above: 'The inui sent us last week cannot, there
fore,. appear . in 7 ,the "Hrttrald'dr. Expositor."
•if• - •Favotirs have been received the past week
from Mainis: Comma and of Congress,
and'hleagra. commix, Witi.uma and Foaanan,
of the kitato Legialatnre. . :'•
0 1 4tillY Interesting Letters.
.
,oz?.Ourroadars will find thica tory interesting
le#o B 4 l Pur 1 1 01 7 r ti?'l! l .9; ,Tiyo frOm t4e . City of
Lancaiter, and one 'front • l'ork Springs, Adams .
county. It Will afford ye much pleasure en bear from
,„ •, , • •
thcauthors at often as cirentuttances, *ill permit.
Tlieirjavomwillalways he acceptable.
The Lady'. Rook.
o:)7The July number of this megegee has ,; !,eil
reci;i744.r.ll tontidni beantifiil steel *1101!Ving1
1,.0r "The' Old Beldier and Ms Tainily;" ..The
Miniature;' a, colored plitillthe,...rashions,'! and
• g r eat vailety of resaini metier: dall at Gray's
aitd'geti !wily befoiyi they- pie,sll' gone.
Gimba's% '
•Ilitivisine.•
posiddioil feebly has also been receiv
ed:
postale* two dm 'shed Ingorings or, tha
"Poi*: Mame toid 6440flibis p rayer ," and
plate ofthe ll'aaidows! It *also well filled with
int.:meeting reeding matter awd: has two pyres of
Music, Copies can be had at Gray's general news
Cflice, !oath Hake,* !faint., '
•i .
h.. Dootst,.Esq... fats of Olio ploce t lair
, slommeooo Owiriolice Of Lawin , . 4zo Cowities
°Maui
,likiltond,l l l4l. l ',. : ; .
. _
-------- 7: ititifr*fiapliiiiiiiof_ of_ the
• irrilniiiii krveiti L linitktiohbir4bottqiii, f laao
aid bath lilitighie r ii - onjOi''llii tichoO 'of nteilb
il
ti*liiialtioviatiftbk , iii*d i sOK?tkitirf, heel
hunting in the inteieintili; irof trout thiting over ,
''
- sill, cre094,46 - 96 1 0 4( 4 4: #4 .ihe "eiiitit , Priho
l ' ele'- - ) 124 . 14 4 11106 5akg•0u 8 00 3 .0 1 4,-
me* 11 *94° 1 0;itt #.0446 :` 4l- fOr lot New
litettr:::•‘ - ',. , , . , ,
' rolia
,'" 4 407 .
f ii i i iir 4' iltC*4 4 i 6 , l4 4" 6 4i Baiiie;',,
jufni
t,3i,ieiiP :" 44- :: o! itro, or ;Co
h r
Viiiiiii4 11 #104300 ot, geirin-L1
- &lON ihe 'N'itiV.. ii4, 1 !4r./...E 4 iiii:kneisi4
on espendund - . ' ..:
• s . • • ' " --- •
u, '" ` " ,li " • d"rrofweiteitAajoisiKiiite: ,
w , , , 2 „ L1 it , ) , -,„ • ;
If o ti
4 '
— r .:
Where
• -
- a , nw sari - mp?! of !hie paper valljxi i i ued.
enSiturdo nest = Ay whic h tune empitiooing.
" ire, 'Ocoee ioittl u the :nem.
Amy—a communication . from
our paper of week
: before last
r ‘ olunteer of last . week over the
ce of ! , Cold
WGater." -
which the Editor avows be has
done his correspondent by thipiAllcatiorr of hie.
article, might have been "dcnied• lkim by some of
the papers of his owes parry,"but ampuredly would
not have been by the, Herald. This truth that
small: e!la4fgmeiat in the "upper end of the coun
ty" Were aware of from the fact of our not having
shrunk insertion in our, paper of their
communication ~us . above alluded to; '•which,
though ostensibly' furnished for 'publication, was
thought by them to be so severe a castigation of us
thatwe would reject it from our columns--thus ac
knowledging ourself whipped, and screening. •
the odium, which they knew would fall upon them•
from the pliblication of their lishanarket vulgarity,
We chose, however, to give them their deserved
notoriety, and hence they are entleavoniing-to make
peace with the inmate of the "whited sepulchre"
down in the alley! The organ Of loocality.is well
developed in.our head, and although lint once in
th e "upper end of the county" in our life, we can
point out the very little worksliop of ilhiatnre,nea•
the railroad, in which was concocted • the: one. and
the other of:the spiteful effusions of Which we hate
been speaking! -._r
:When ,Cold 'Water' tells us that "either atelier:.
.ald' will be Washingtonian-iced, or the 'Wreath'
Anti-hfasowize?;-:-And as philosiophy . ittstructs us
that, two antagonist forces the stronger will alwaye
prevail, the friends of Temperance , might calculate
upon the latter alternative," he pays a compliment
to the strength of Anti•asonry which we are sure
is the result, not of desi g n, but of ignorance as to
the proper use of words and the - right.construction
of a sentence! •- • • •
The fellew need not apprehend that either the Her =
ald will be '$ Washingtontarrized," or the Wreath
Ante-litasonfzed. Each paper shall pursoe Re own
proper course. • The politician whose opinions are .
in harmony with our own and ,who id not a
Washingtonian, shall find no fault with tin; Herald;
nor shall the Washingtonlau,who,like us,ispkger to
guard against the Temperance cause being tainish
ed by politics, discover any tbingzto- blame in the
Wreath. "Cold Wster7' ought to know and docs
know,"that we are:capable of defending our.Politi- 1
'cal creed' and the Temperance Reform without
blending the two: “Differing" is he does "in pol
itica" from the figunteer, he has learned that when
•we come to battle for Temperance, wo are not
awed; into silence - by the fact that the -individual
with_Nhomwe come in coniliet beingtharkedPoit
ically as we are. When we strivefoi, Temper;
ince, we-neither ask-nor-care7whetherour-oppo
nent be Whig, Anti-Mrston, - Loco Foco or-Tory.
When we struggle for our political faith, we nei
ther ask nor care whether our adversary .be
a Washthgtonian, a toper, or a sot. _ •
Our main object in the establishment of the
Wreath', into separate from the Herald all Tem
perance matter and promulgate it through another
channel, so that there may not be even the suspi—
cion that 'we would Buffer the holy cause of Tern
pertmce and politics to be touched , by each other. _
-- The true friends of Temperance. have inuch _to
fear' fiom such brawlers as "Cold Water;' nothing
from us. The gruniblings about the - dangers of
the Temperance anise becoming identified with
Politics, anemic from its open or secret foes. -Tem
perance men dread no such result.
The Wrath shall be published in .spite of the
growling. of 'Cold .Water,',' but -for his consol e - .
tlon we -will say , we shall endavour to interfere,
as little as possible with the business affairs of the
firm in the "upper end of the 'county!"
We could suggest a thing or two to him of the
Volunteer, which might benefit him, but he would
not heed our counsels, and it would therefore be
folly to "cast pearls before swine!"
Wicked Folly.!
az"-Wa call alteration to Friday's proceedings of
the Mouse of Representatives, In reference to the
Tariff and the Distribution Act. It will be seen .
that both BARR and CIJLVER voted for a reso
lution declaring that Act unwise and inexpedient!
As the U. B. Gazette justly observes: "To call
such proceedings wicked,
~ y rould do to suppose
theme who voted if the majority on tie final vote
knew what they were about. And yet folly in
such a place, and at such a time, seems to be wick
edneasi. Pennsylvania, with her coal mines, her .
iron works, her cotton factories, and sheep fields,
all languishing, all dying,with , the cursed pressure
of British capital and induet-y, declaring against
a protective tariff! !!! . . •
PennsyNaniti, with her forty millions of dollars
debt, without a dollar to pay her interest, declares
heraelf against receiving ler dues from the sale of
the public lands! !! I . • „ •
The madness of this devotion to party is znjua
dee; not only to the Stale, but to her cznditoiS.--
We throW away our own; and that : With which we
could pay eur'debts!!!
Will ho . people-the PiPeYere--Uf cumber:.
land
r sustain parr , andCelverin their winked course
of assisting to prevent Peansylvania from,nsviv44
her just duty - dues that will go far to plimie - her
of Ler enoiniouti ptate debtl
,
WA. duel was fought on—Saturday; morning
lattyrithin,the Delaware line„ between,the_Man.
Tnorcsa.F. ManstraLL, of Ky., and . Jaime W.
Wain, of New York—which resulted, after two
shots, in the latter receiving wound in
. the fleshy
part of , the left leg. isir. Marshall 1i a 'Member of'
Congress and ,an eloAuent TeMpenmerk lecturer.
Mr. Webb is the, Editor of the 'New York bowler
& Enquirer, and aomewhat notorious fer
,the via
lent and brackgmtrd manner in which he Conducts
his paper, as weltm for the affair some yeirs since
he had, with his "mohair.* '140'4 - in& pertsslint
«p".plOolorith D9iT therm, and 'alai . es ' beln
of the inforturiate duel' between' Graves'
an , l 2 .4lilayl 'We have - always
. regarded hint 'air'
b }seined ; blustering cowar d and a disgracer as
niturirelowerdi Marithritonitilist a stringetr,'and
lehtniiug on rempenuicS; in'.';New York, - his not
gonna (i
nt 'opinion "pfhiiiiin, tiiii '
Carlisle Esseinispittelat; ,,
VC
irojeat;
ram success Ao4ho "profettiis; Viat 'thirte:orii
roimiistion'ibeilaleit dii tilt ithiit
if b'y Torn tic 14.tpliclei 0,4;610 tuid'
Oki, atilt ttsblit +jab- the &genie* =`'of their'
,A,her, Wake' Olottitt Odjohilaremptleig."
viirliti#_NelOnig ll %Jivei.tniitt;•wilP ped thkeig
loolonnonatelatothilitation. , ' «:,71
'. “<2
79 H‘
l iroo
' ' '43.4 , 4;4 6 '.. -' r '
' ''... ' . '''- . • ; ' '" • '
, . rill ow •.,- , e. h ik ,
..• to • .... ~.,..t -, ! :::
11,14440 .... ~ . .., i 1 .1 ;.0 - ; ! . 2 i : 111!7.-7.k -,...`, 11 r*: 4
l e .' .:'':li 6 iiail'idoWinni - 41,7i4r5.,Pf. Aiii: "ciii,
-'' ''' •`' -,•• • • ,7,-", . COrniiii. '' ' ' ',,, tr , , ; ? i
;`i TPanhl 10 Ole
- , - . ^',-,': ~.,-;,:,,,.,
.:-.. Utp ~-. . • - . A. O.T Pr,:;;L. ---
lure Expiried:
Duel!
EMEMI
The; dbbel7t. Colifestig fp
irpTim , irclunMerOlaya the Canal lit , tiouniseion7„
,ort , yava Maiiii:aMpor from which. ikempiars tut :
prOts• of elie,ColiOis Raikjimid,foriliityvn*
atimetimated at 5206'618 •
Ifilieread'ef wffi trim to the. ripen of Canal
Commiesionera for the year ending Dior lB4O, k
he will nd that I to•e• 10 1,
same v 7
Wad, when nplerflyer managraymtof .4 1
aTont.FFR 0350,686.4 e;.
So here is a confession that in 4840, the road
'yielded a lose to the State' of $200,585 98, whilst'
in 1842 the llaMeroadyieldsuprojil et $2110,6181 . 21
What a soup 'avowal.. of the ROB;
BERT. practised !men the State by the F'ortic
ti
Administration ; and what, a proud• di ca o of
our expOsure of such robberies.-im exposing made
even at the risk of life' It'. verifies tba. truth 'of
the saying, that-' , Truth is mighty and; will pre
vail!" What was'then charged upo n ' us as false
,
hood, is
,nowacknOwiedged, e r the signatures of
the Stitteiekers'lo - the-Legislature; arid publish- ,
in 'their *rig papers; to!' have Nam the truth,
•the whole truth, aid liOTting GP 11 VT*TICE !"
• . , • , •. •
07 . Wi1l our brother editors—those who witness
ed and applauded our course whilst conducting
the Lancasier ,Examiner Heinld, in exposing
the bold peculation* committed by the then !ciao
and efficient Superintenjent " - Of the Columbia
Rail Road uptin the State, under thee:int:lkm of the
Governor and . his Canal CominissionerS-r-pass this
vindication of our then course before their readers?
S!tealings!
co" - .The Secretary of the U; Tleafgliy, of June
21, acknoWledges the receipt' of an anonymous
letter, postmarked at Baltimore, Containing one
hundred and ten dollars in Virginia:Bank nutes,.
which the wriftv says are to pay a debt due the U.
States;. and being, no doubt, aportion of the "steal.
inge" of some officeholder under the fete • adminis-,
treakm !: if Trims would only be rie Wriest, and
-return to-the peo . pft-that-whieh-he stole-from-them
under the mantle of the sainted MARMON, what a
blessing it would prove to the country! We.
would freely ogres to "throw in the salary."
It is reported here that the Editor of the "Car-
Aide Herald" has not shot at any person since he
came to reside there.—[Perry Democrat.
.11trNo; .but "reported here" that you have
been 'several times shSt—in the neck—since •we
"comer
. .
0::::yA friend - MOWN s - Why - did - not
neighbotir Sanderson, ivhilst: giving the proceed
ings of the'Sionth Middleton Anti-Tax meeting in
hie last papim, give also the naives of the speakers
on that occasion! - Was he.feiliit that the names
of Messrs. Moons, STEWART, - WZARLIi,•EOL
and Losozazenan—all4rOminent inembers of
his party,-,niould have had a bad effect on his darling
seheme. of - retaining - tho -- public improvernentsl :
Pray neighbour, tell us. •
_Mr. Culver.
the organ of the Taxitet in the corner
inform us whether it is trite that Mr. Cuevea, one
of the Representatives from this :county, addressed
letters to several persons requesting them to attend
the meeting at It 4 l'Glaughiin's and Oppose Its .pro-
Ceedingal It is rumoured that he did; and it it
known that some orthose to whom he wrote either
stayed away, or grumbled a.goed deal during the
progress of the meeting!
lion. Jesse 1111111er.
•
, ffirWe learn from the Perry- Freeman that this
gentleman, having '.resigned" his past at Wash
ington under President Tyler, has'retumed to his
home in Blooinfield,aml intends remaining irk retire
inent, wakes prevailed urmato accept of a , seat
in Congress or dui State Senate! Such is Jesse's
dislike to hold office, we fear he cannot be pre
vailed upon to enter again ui,►ha political chess
board! Can he, Mr. Democrat?
Scott Meetings.
"Meetings have been called in Allegheny,
Erie, Adams, Dauphin and other counties, to, se
lect delegates to the state Convention. Chippe
wa Clubs are also being formed in many Coun
ties, and we have no doubt.that name of "OLD
CHIP" will 'soon become el familiar with the
people as daft of "91t1 Tip" in 1640. This - is
might. Let the good 'ciiitse go on. it will find
fienty of supporters after awhile. "Old Tip" when
first brought before the public, was sneerorat and
denttunced; Out the People---who never forget
those, who risk their lives and spilt their blood in'
defence of their country—rallied to his suppOrt and
elevated him to the Presidency * So will they do al
golly "Old Chip." 'Gen. SCOTT, it is admitted on
all sides, is in faicii,ortho great and leading meas.
urea contended - for ,by'all the opponents of Loco
Foco misrule, and Is less objectionable to our op
ponents than any man out of their. ranks. Then
let as all rally to his eupptirt. ,
Buchanan , vs. Jackson.
inorhe friends of Mr. Buchanan ask the Jar
son-Van-Buren-Loco-Foco-party of Pennsylvania
to supporthim for Ihe_Presidency, yet withhold
fmtit-thefriende of the "Hero 'of Ne* Orleans"
,the film thitMr.'lluchanin, 'n few weeks
War earn!, refindinithe fine of $l,OOO imposed
upon Gen. Jaaksed by: Judgid Mall;' or New Oir
-
leani. duririethelitte Wirf 'The Whigs Ivied 'in
Atior' 'reiolntion;' but Mr.'lliichanan'RE- -
FUSED "I l if RptrEVE 'THE nOl.ti HERO OF
,
THAT FINE!' Ahd yet he 'stake the (deride
the old soldier to elect hint4resident or the Vet
ted Statile! ' Will they do iti
• . 141-The. denpantown Telegraph. brags abent'a
tall stalk ofOaM grown i tippn the farm of, Joseph
Middleion. --- Ittskakthehliddlaton't - .to grow Ink
.ones!- ,We know rine of the name in thlrl- county
who has . a -'bunch of aeven,"•eaelt one a ' , Step
/alley than the other!" ' -- • • • •-••
go-TheLancaster Intelligences states that fi Ma
sonry is rapidly on the, inonfiese,in, Philadelphia,
ann. that Mr; Chandler still presides over a regular,
ly increasing society." Hu our. old, neighhour .
"iohr: 41 * 10 , 10 ‘" --43 ,r hat
}We are Obliged to 'oils friend of 'the Reading
burns! for “lieft soap, ~a nd titi'cOiri.:
sityirig,:thet if lie' cOntglii . tes"iiti ., inith
airgema as tie.
Gov. Porter.
;PT/If; Philadelphia Cggiq",.t.iea that qa17071-
rr , l*er; P a., *lted , :
a!?!.Pril'
'pre*.
I ! . .res - o!o ' O'e]veSiger get roethe! ati
• n,
MEI
itYChlit iflMk i tOr Ari a rpi thlY
' Omit.of Xasob, Aftsgaiipliilo.6llAptiien
Couit that Enna of the
;otilakio;_partookvf oilrhu&ss Itquorgipou:4lekVie
JoitiOiiiihtiN , ordiottoside•klootod!ibl
neicttial;itiditniotoadv fel* who trailoole of ;the
Rich.; 1151)...”; Meld,e. fl r•C P
U. 04;4400 , 2 , 13;;;PpOy . c.91.1*i . iiibei3i)'e , iectiliol
'lhP'Alg.i,°-.4 uro . 9, ° ..,,,,,9. 1 Y 1 ! -
-.,...,
ExcelFlent , Itespritrkil. •
OCrln another : column df
to.be
and to tiaspuiptise.: Mr. lEtteniefii a good
and what ii very acceptabletlie makes hie
e, - eeo-
l"and l , an sweet, n an ' .lot est ent in
gni& that never tires and always sure to carry con
y:l4l4n. to the
MIE
CS'ltifit.'Tyler'llir commenced commenced`operatione upon
Whit kW kcistMefiteri'ithat; were ailiSilintedloy the:
ilarrirovf Mayter , Generali Mr. Skiiiner;i-Sd
fienerai;Mr. Porter;' M.:atHare:
TentE t t.: and all die rcist. : kariters (sage his Orgiiii
the Meditionien,).,".ther Orirriger emnaled into' of
-flee" 1 . -farper; of
Churrr
bersburg, ie , also'proscribed!: We supposethatMr.
Ven'Orider, of GottYsining, had a Ifint.of What - onus
going to be duno,that induced hini , to issue his Circu
lar to the Editors of the Adanas Sentinel am! Village
.Record;, - koseribing Iheni.fOr . tipeaking tad' free.
ly of "Cape Tyler." gin 4 we euppose .Emsekiah has
"saved his bacorr, -' •
- • . -The 'tinily. •
07
rit
the U.'B. Senate, on the: 2 h____Cinet.
.
Pnicaroi,Zehairman of the Cemniittee on Military
Affairs; made a report upon the proposed , reduction
of the; Army. The report proposes the reduction
of 'the Army moderately ' , and in a manner very
different from the ivfiblesale reduction contemPlet
ed in the'.proViso ' of -the House• to the Army
The Wriny,WoW nninbers 11,884 men. This n
bell the Reuse proposes to indece to 7,827 on pa...
per,'Whieli--Will 'not iritch'e Wlere" than an effiCient
force..Of sAioo.' , The Military Committee propose
• reduction of the preseiit numerical force of .11,-
.804 to 8,884. The committee discuss the merits
of the-whole question; with ,great interest, and in
addition to the reduotion, they' propose fnrther that
the office of Commissary. Gerieral 'of Purchases
end_the_.office_of_Superintendent-of-AxmOrierr-be
abolished. •
st
. .
,
.
C:7The Hagerstown "News," like most little. fel
owe, is a "saucy. rascal." It struts into our Sena
turn twice a week, full of talk. We wish it success
QUA letter from Dayton, Ohio, says: -Mr. Van
Buren remained here only tine day: In the even
ing ho visited the house of a prominent Loco.Fo
co.% 'Many ladies wore present. One of them on
being presented, took the liberty . of kissing the Ex-
President:t Ha remarked thatsttch an act, he aup.-
posid, -- alioidd be regards .ae a signal to him to kiss'
all the girls, which he proceeded to do forihwith.—
On approachingane of them, however, a beautiful
creature, she very archly and significantly: drew
back,and no Matty—l have sung too
many Tippecanoe songs..__The 6.4 e iiriunit . must
stop here." This ended th,C kissing business fur
the evening., _ . • • - ,
/Co Purchasers at Sheriff's safes:.
--- In - volumald - erWatts' and - Sergeaut's - Reporth
°leases adjudged in the Supremo Court or Penn..
sylvania,. just published, wo find' a principle laid
down, which may, be of importance to purchasers
_at Sheriff's adept and As It is established by, the
higherst-tribunal in this St'e;as law,persons interest.
cd must govern themselves accordingly. We give
it for the benefitoriuch as , may not have seen the
decision:
"Voinstns agairart FREEMAN.
"The criterion of a fixtufe in a mansion house
or dWelling is a.tupl and permanent fastening to
the Fteeliold, butting is not the criterion of a fix-,
Info in-a Manufactory or a - - .
"Machinery, which is a constituent part o&the
manufactory, to thenurposcs of which the building
has. been adapted,withnut which it would cease to
be such manufactolt,is part of the freehold,though
it be not actually fastened to it; and this criterion
has aillace iliquestione between-the vendor and veil
dee, heir and exeeeter, as wellas debtor and exc.
coition creditor; but not between tenant and land
lord, and remainder-man." (Syllabus, see p. 116.)
In the opinion-ufltt.s Court, (p. 119) Chiefitlll , .
Lice Gibson says: "Mine ther fast or loose, therefore,
all the machinery of a manufactory which is ne
cessary to constitute Lit, and , without which it
would riot be manufaaiiry ut all, must pass for a
part of the freehold." ' .
•
•
• The Apportionment Bill.
An Act for the apportionment of Represen
tatives among the . several States, accord
ing to the Sixth Census:
Section 1. ,pp it esacted: hrthe Senate .and
House of Ropresontativco oftho ljnited States of
America ' in Congreetr assembled, That from and
after thp third day of March, ones thousand eight
hundred and forty-three, the House orß c preatm.
tatives shall be Composed of memberti elected a
greeably Wu ratio of one Representative for every
76,680 persons in inch State, and of one addition
al Representative for, each State having a frac
tion greater than one moiety of the said ratio,
computed according to the rule prescribed by the
Constitution of the Unitee States, that is to say:
Maine ' • 4 7 South Carolina 7
New Hampshire 4 4 Georgia 8
Massa:6l4°Uß, 10. Alabama
_7
Rhode Island 2 Louisiana 4
Connecticut
'Vermont
New' York • - • 34 Kentucky
New• Jersey 0 - Ohio
Pennsylvania 24 - Indiana •
Delaware .I Illinois •
-Maryland- = 6 Missouri , 5
Virginia •, 15 Arkansas . 1
NOrth Carolina 9 Michigan . 3
Section 2;, And be it fuitliet enacted, That,-
in every case, when a State is entitled to _more
than one Representative, the number to which
each State shall be entitled Under this appoition.
moot; shall be elected by, districts, composed of
contiguous territory, equal in number tc the
number. ofßepresentatives to : which - said State'
may be entitled—no oneTtistriet electing more
than ono .4bpreicntitive.
The above pill has been signed-by the
sidont and -is now the law; ;;
• alor- A meeting` Of the Tax-Payers of Toboyne
and - Itiladison•townships, Perriy county; is to be held
in the Borougt?of . Germantown, En the 2d of July
next. Go ahead.
arThere are at_:Ore§ent._ residine:..)n -
rica
Fra 6„672 tilitiCallpfugies, of whoni 11.:779;
are Spaniards, 4,471 Poles, 410 Italians. and
‘ l2
from other countries. • . ,
The trade 91 Great Britain in'lB4l; 4
eMployed 17,886 . Britieh„ships,
.11nd 172,404 men.
The .trade oc,lB42;MiViiye.d :18;626 ship' 'and'
178,696 men. • ' - - • • •
Sir The expense of , tlje
,Yprk.Ous ! ,
tom House dorumiaslon.,wiw $17,728 up
ary last, since when the convorissiouera;luquip,t-,
, ceivtd no pay. a
~_r
—Lodi*
a
rTbe stnannent &pouted Idle' Item
.
from Polio, that' the King of French is labo;ing•
rrerimilioimMmentlff_notthe-psace-orthe-world;-
; depends in n good 4higiectipon :hid nisi obi e4ky
thing that endengera it, is therefore tel.* -looked
;upon with apprehension.:, : ;
ti cothrpergf - tiria. manufactures
- 4/
are;latioiii),iiiilliti.4o' undo? 44iffitnitie4-41inilalti;
.ouroi:viar• trauspansiem 4 cit entoorievatO oCidq#,
until a Tariff
, ie settled.- The ery oldletneeffttan
theßritieb miiufehrng
cY l • generflrul
i . -t, • ;4
Per f!, , P9 , #)l9,Mqns PAY krAi,
" 3
. 044 0,140,:a clielEorprokgicuf f i k s
"-inefi° 4, :m
ThFT , l*Pudoe'r
big a 4 P r n a t u ** l 4.l 4, oi J AXOP i ior . if
t 49 real 4-4
_ _
=I
Tl.l
re:;_ 2r: - • • •
'glir Tito! nuniiiete of men diisaherged from
five NirriYardiemincilune, loteio 1538..%.
‘sl",:rllo,,:rgilis",Q4stri*,
p‘ , 9l . ficte vs into idnottinfryt , it and stilt! luty..free•
::: : ;t .-- ,;:i.. t. 9-!L,'
aiial
*Vai:NOttirit therokt Mastersi
.4 Tippecanoe Beauty.
4 • Mississippi
4 ',Teinibssee
eortingmbrtnce.
nevoitit to4'
- Mignetliing.""MrYlei too"
• orrespondenoiibf tl a Hleridd ' dc Exposltor:)
MIMI • n Afron..tioo “WeareirTthe mi so a
iiifinifelfyitiorsa than'that •whioli,cihnesi
deluged ~hittie Rh ~dy~ with'the beat' blood 'of her
OtigtenspAn the/imes that -tried .t.he 7 patriotism-of
soiet Where 'it. will end, or what
awful cataitrephe niaY fallow this suddeil •commo
tion,le not., in the power of mortal man lo det&mimd
ioiir;*liole;pimulatien, , men, women s and'children,
arertinning.stark mad alter -a substance ,or , a tha
dow!
merism!!!';eries another t;.!!:..Plireno.mesmerism!"
roars a third! //inn ... keeplion, Collusion, Gal-
4.l,c„are the soundsthat I
, Ege. ,
assail your ears on all sides , and a Stranger;enter
ing .our townovould readily iceagine that he had
wandered intea modern Babel!' ' .
Verily, there are more - things in heaven and earth
than we.dreani of in our philosophy, as. Dr: John-:
son has rully:deniinstrated, , ' The Doctor htia•been•
very, auCeessful.with his ea , prin!enta, and converted
many an unbeliever and forced him to aclpnoaledge
the trutirof the abstr.useaciencel-Fer our own part,We -- .
are free to bonfesathat we sire sceptical, but open to
-cOnviction. contivinencenFour heteredoiy, we
are iegarded as a heretic, wrote' doWn as an iginr•
raMus,,talked of as. one who having eyes.Will,not
see, and ears that will not hearken unto the •truth
,)
ofthat which concerned . our temporary peace! That
there is deception conne cd with the - subject we sin
cerely believe, but ar of capable of detecting or
revealing, it! .The doctrine of Varivoyance
,is sot
dieectly at antipodei with tht lawi of Isfature, that'
it is absolutely, repugnant to the human ilaind to ad
mit even the possibility of Its oorreoluetia.., But, as
we profesientire ignorance:of the subject ; we leave
ittiltivtittise whbie Understandings' are not Sc,' be
nighted as our own, hoping that a ray of numeric
'light may yet penetrate the cogs and vapors that en
aompass our, mind! -
±..Winotioe by the laatnumber_of:the-fferald-lit ,
Expositor thap yoolinve'caught a " 2'yier , man" some
where about your"diggins!" Send him on'here.,
The, ci ti zent of the "Old Guard" s 'are,extremely ante:
ions to see What kind of a '"critter" it is—whether
it will bite-41Mber it iiamphibions, h * erbaceous or
hermaphroditiakl We are fend of curiosities; and
many of our Naturalist's Weida' &Aimee the occasion
their titiark-4 knowledge! ' Iftitere is an inditidual
in "Old Mother Cumberland" that can procure one
of these noudeacripts—thette puerile abortions of "alt . -
stractions";-he can realize Li fortune'inn very short
time by exhibiting it in the "Banner County," pro -1,
'videil he can gi7 the public strong assurances that
the animal, when irritated, will not break his Cage
if the boys 'should iriodvertently"stir it'up with a long
pole!"
~ . ' -.
We are•tp'havea great daY on the ever-glorious
Fourth.. It is rumored that the' great "Lumber Mer
chant" and hitaitls are to be , here!, so,youand your
readers mud keep a ahrirp look out for "moccasin
tracks," - aOd - "lnklian talk,"..in ' My. _next, if you ca.
.keep-the trattl-s-------:----,-*INNEDAGOE,
'Our correspondent is.in error here. We lia•ve
no stich "critters" in - our" - digititia" is we yet 9inows
on:" it - was caught over in Gettysburg,-and is:now•
under the careen(' attention - of the Adams Sentinel.
Mr. H. musn't apart
. .
York Springs.--linprovements.-
• Iriatticen*cring. - ---Thaddens
Stevens.--
- YORK SPRINGS, hind 20th, 1842.
To Me Editor of the Herald & Expositor:
- DEAn doineilieited, for
theliMe being, in this interesting district and amongst
many of your warmest Adam's county friends, I am
induced to believe that s few lines of local news will
interest you, and accordingly write as follows: _
You can scarcely imagine thet•apid improvement
which this part of
.Adams county is undergoing. I
venture to assert, that in few sectioii of the State
is the quality of the soil improving, or the state of
,socic i ty.progre sling, with much more rapidity. Our
farmers here (at least many of them), are rapidly
bringing Adkms county into the front rank of, eoun;•
ties, so far as the true theory and successful practice
-of agriculture is concerned. Then, in relation to
the improvement of society, this part of the county
is reaping tho full benefit •of public and private
schools; the county is pled with debating clubs,
Lyceums, Etc.; and perhaps in no other rural district
of country in the State will we find public men
anrlput , die measures canvassed more diligence
or Correctness. Then, in addition to all this x they
are on the ere of commencing the publication . of a
neutral and literary newspaper in the town of Peters;
burgh, for the purpose of assisting in the conserva•-•
lion and elevation of the morals,and in aiding in the
developement'of the latent intellectual energies of
the people of this section of the country.
• But when 1 took up my pen to commence writing
this later; it wastoutinly-with.the intention of saying
a few Words in -relation; to a few; of our 'political
charitetere over here, and also in relation to one or
two specimens of political minceuvering which have
recently ocOutted near by. You know that the , legis
lature wltichisnow in session will have to apportion
the State.. Well, of course, some of our prominent,
loco foco politicians Over here' would would like to have
the 4 ',toting puard " of Adams county shorn of
their strength, in order that their schemes of poilti
preferment might prove Suceeisful. Forinstnnee,
some' of 'them WN . 1.10
_.iik , Very well to itave the,
Latiroore township. , b4s attached to' York cosine*:
in . theformatic of I::ongrossional districts, In Order
that tice „wholesome ..j . idli , te c ncel4. that sierPng,ilitrii
ia9n toi;tliktyp:lmYght be neutralized it;• 'the Iheavy .
loco foci) idtuitiest over 1.1!C border,and in „order
that the . fferiticini tell in it; ts" coil Tlii igiii be thereby ‘
weakened'., But I don't think they can comeit, 'even
though.' some some soch,. arrangement night result, in
,tumbling '
some one or More of :their number into,
the Hall of Repre,sentstivCerat'Washingion;,
Bye-the-bie,we recently had Some fine illustrations'
of locOboo s.onaistenoy, on th i a side of the mountain,
in the matter ,of 'the next presidency. liot , ore'
khipi_tikree..oFiouptmtitlniag9l_distiiwtl3:-reotenii ier
haVing,heOrtl 11COC,01:,1:i111:, m o st prominent ?Loco ; fool?,
politicians in this oonoty.eny,that it never would do
to 'place Janni Buchanan in nothination 'ter ',the
pr
vsidenay., , They were honest epougls. to' coo.'
fess, that 'was an , .old . pederalitit, 'of: the fret
Witter,-and that his 10. cent.. wages' speech would ef
fectually .use biro up werele'befei the People, for
their eat - rages. this Waatitr:fairreitgh, but
lo! rndliebbfil; ihese Sett dime Men, Or eomp ,. of
thens,,lieA one or tivoino,afitiaio activelyelirgeo;
in Reif:witty meeting;which met in Gettysburg for the :
avowed - 'purpoie.,of pressing . : it pret/reire fos; ,
James
. 11dehamin Vvelo and lietbre
eandidaieei P atihiimse tUneineti are ' obis ' te&lously
engtigett in' pushin g hie OairriStiolke-ifirty,:tioMlati
' tim! Colisistet4.4,lajeWei of r0,1•/..yalue
Tiimot t r.e . is issid county
and iiiiiiifeltinatieif . fri' Cnneluttli
dont/test dwegtant:Qf, inflUotWelit.oe
,00noty: , o,f ble'reildettep, 7 =ifskot
ed is
tijaimitagee k tijai,,eamet•p ! atiilAiranaintspbsor,;elli.Fist
generally--auch an onearouldhalelnanisittrafned,
ro
firAtikitiflublAtliiiblihnilly;bo,4llll4ll°l'.Fre l
.5/47.8.y.exins iisitmutvitioitrquittinuctiLpoiloq,i
and pindentiat conebilerstOciital - tiettly .. 4vaveti,
undo MiSti'litimcitr true
stnveir tie
of. such - an .110 I.:testimoniai
me. P4I I ,F 4. 4 71.F'0r hoTe , ~Pviv-Tfod pi
itNtit Itfelkevkits 'd6tenni Edon'. ` - Adarna' 4thtnif
t}ogaaot et rcef (
,q 41 ./ 1 .1'q!!" ) 9 1 ". 7.1°4 !ili n rt i r t tg
nitkilleitAtiosit 3 4 - N0::9 4 20.
herintereati o hervielfatit her gondestuieittniMiea
hei+ eater' tahntieb: niStrlinn not aiihalittml,
vitneist of Mr: Stevens, OEI you will thesTfore mot.
~'~ a..~~
LANCASTER; Pa.,June 23,1842
'be diap p sed to question rataincgriy in saying this
rauclo io Man in. ourlkitate has (1; verily(
believelbeeit:mirekunjustlimisrepresenied',4llified'
and abtlbed. ..lt doioeallyat tiratt seem to ;tie that!
merely becaiisn lie %is a Man of e*fimordintiril. rnindp
every
~.,hold,Yad;lSeherins;:itil dOpbtful
charged to hiroliy hiu; s unseruptilo'us enemies. They!
think r tlutt hP biz 4stintellectuat
superibrityitherarejnitifiable..in attAbutingtohim
all that is doubtful in morals or had to politics
amongst his politieatfriends:• .This,is,a fruitful.sub
ject, and I will say more upon it hereafter. 'Suffice"
it noW'to say; that afterAedtieting all these slanders
Mr. Stevens stands aniongst his vilifiers pre-eminent
in all the attributes of gooiliitizensitiri. This will
be conceded by all who know as much of him—by
all who havelosrined his character and actions is'
closel i ras - you and SI hive." Adatrier,: , ..onifry 'is the
place. of some 'of kr:Stevens' earliest and noblest
intellectual triumphs; Itia,the hotne.Of ,hundreds of
his most enthusiastic friends, and .should - he ever
.
'again return to live within her borders; hewill'find
her riot tabs ungrateful for 'hid past labors' her
behalf, •
rOXP.. 9k . ", THE "YOUNG GUAIIII"
:Thingsirn>>tatitaster
• ' •'- r
Correspopdence of tho nerald &Expositor.
. . .
LANCASTER, Juan 27th, 1842.
Mn. -Enrroa: Agreeably to st,sort of half-promise
i Made sonielinte ago, to drop you.a line occasion
ally to 'say how the world - wagged in 'Lancaster, I
sit down this Morning, to give yoga litgetown gossip.
Our good old city=lds not' unfrequently - been com
pared to 'Sleepy Hollow'—and the general o f lniow
is, that we arc as stagnant : and torpid, as the 'envy
sett which rolls: its dull waves over the Cities of the
Plain: We repel . the Mahn/don., with. scor4ind .
hurl. back: the charge into tile teeth of.those who
utter hi, and I shall, entleaior.to shim in pew:Ml.3e
of ihy epistle thiit . iO tale . of scandal, was evermore.
groundless.
. .
, •In thefl flesi Plocek thei.e his been n grerieconiiiio
(too Jately. alt out the painting of the Lutheran steeple,
(Qnero?.,l.a it , quite , correct to speak of a steeple as
adlieri rig to the ;tants - of Luther?) and the removal
prthe ball and cane from its top--a height 1f
y two hundred' feet.' There - were n' great • many
traditionary reports afloat as to the csact size atlas
ball, which fluctuated from the dittiensions of a
hogshead, to those small-sized meeting-hiMse.
It is4not surprising therefore; that every body was
agape to see this Vontlerfiil hall taken down and re
placed. This event - afforded topids of conversation.
for a whole week—and as the folks of Little Pcdling
ton bled to refer all events to the time when a new
' iron Mille was attached to the to WO-p u MR; so, I doubt
nol,our citizens hereafter will say, "ouch and such
a thiMi happened the year Before, or the year'afteh,
the Lutheran steeple was painted!"
But, what is more curious still, (could you be
lieve it?) our whole, city is in a Jliagnetie condition!
We. have all been Mesmerised! Mr. Johnson, who
use been, fOr some months - lecturing on Anitiial I
Magnetism, came here about a week ago,and held
- -
„ .
forth every. evening of bast week.' His experiments'
,
upon twosubjects,a young lady, and a boy who travel
in his combany, were truJj wonderfid—Agearly:tdi
become have witnessed them have becoc 'converts.—
Riml.editore here meet on, common giound t rind for
the first time:Within memory of man are.fountLto be
-..
of the sittneopinion!.. Wehanies taaryeri and doe,
tors all unite in believing that "there are more things
in heaven and earth than Were_ fornierlY Aretunt of
in their philosopky." A few still profesi to-be. in
, credulous, but I think they tin not belong Lathe most
scientific part of our Citizens.: They are rather such
.-- ti.s are found of routine, and jealous of innovatiorit , --
From the surprising nature of-the phenomena, they
deniand a , reasonable,-proof, "ataintleed Imestion
whetrier'any.amon - nt of evidence would satisfy thein.
They remind , me it 1 ittle or at!c wise doctors of
who gravely heard the Conjectures. olColum
bus respecting a western continent, end the shape
of the world—and scouted the bold. pioneer of dis
covery as a knave or a madman-:.thus 1 - .01(104
immortal the redo rd of theirown igoorancel ; Private
experiments, here Sind tddtsliere,liuve abundantly
proved that there is a reality in the Magnetic sleep.;
and this once. admitted,:the idea of collusion in the
publ hi cxhibitiOns is rendered prePosterous. A doubt
is easilyesprebsett, and very hard to be refuted. It
looks wise to seem more incredulous than others,
but it ii the part of true philosophy to seek reason
able proof, and having found sucli, to give a willing
assent to the facts so established. •
The Fait' foi" the benefit of the Mechanics' Jnat
imp, is tp come off about the 20th of July, and wil
m doubt, be a very handsome affair
On the Fourth of July, there, is to be a meeting_
of the neighbouring Lyceums of this and dther coon.
ties, at. aradise... 'An address will be delivered by
a representatiie from each. Tho, plan is an excel :
lent one; and ought to become more general.
•We are also vua r lciiirpreparations to receive two
flue Companiei &OM Who`will be here
on the 4th of July V> present a `epte o 114 flag to the
Lancaster Fencildes,who dial thernselveimuchhonor
at the late encampment at Baltimore,— • • •
In politics, there is a perfect , stagnation. People
will'not even take the trouble to abuse 'the Captain;'
they fear it would give him an undeserved notoriety!
Our most ferocious stump orators are, asAmild as
cooing doves; audit, is al mostimp'Ossible to. recognizo
in thent the douity champions who blazed away so
valiantly in the Champaign .of last fall. No doubt,
they, are ydaking very hard; , and when the time for
action ontwmore comes round, they will be air" in
the Eeld, ready. to uncork the vials of indignation at .
A moment's notice, • .„ .. .
But it is time' to Check my prm, or it 'night ramble i
on in thin fashion until my wordti became _ as titirner:-
ons aI CoverntePorter?s,a44, tn,,tvlatott event, you'
nigh want room for this desultory dosiument is
ygur,PapPr. / eni,Nery respectfully, youri, -• •
'(~ ~! `
..Sl9msiitiatil4
Oorresponsionceofthis Ilorald& 114poi#ter.
~t HARRISBURMune 23;1842.
In Senate on' Tuesday, the. Speaker laid bufore
the House 4 vonun'unietiticin fiom tile Auditor
ttleneritli transmitting the fiftti
speussment-Orftato-Theitin tiitt ueseral Counties
ih0."444. ../i4r..,ll: o lntock prturiinted.i. petition
Att. the dierr?imal of nil °Tiverton the ?unfinished
line t tstr the' public-improvoments.,
',The bill relative to the 'elaini of, Dickson, ItTek'
eta, 44116_0 i ,
.cikine seCtind reading. and y was ,
spendeo yadiling;thereM, among othe'r things,
nn amendment to exempt , t,handepen dent Guards -
in Lebanon count,y,fitim training tritk'thd
and elite; an airM a ilittefit;gratitinetWp;:terniSlef
the District quirt in gitrer,couaty,
1 . The bill,
as thus °Mended, was theit.passo. ; -
_ ,
'The Holum took: tiththe. amendments of the
,Siunte seiiPreisien'of the Relief
I4etleit,4o.•'• aid the Attention 'l;tut'`tylieth'et , the
House `would. igeitit oft_
BPC*llW
eiender forthe. reflomptibe Of Relief- Notisii:eridf
nal !niter , itetes ; 6o2lolibief paying Banks . ? TliSiiw
:of Yeas 61; Nitysesf! it: .w:-far. •
The Ilousellishiteetin its itifiinidkitint, struck
otitthrthepniiiditig:ferTtheeitte"affhtiAs
tii Afgn t; She msiriwdblth '. '
I one milßodirdelio(-410,441.1teiM/
„ A
Mt ?,1 - mm!t?,atsf . 3 tttLee,l4,,,,,,Merft for
. 6 1; 1)40 40d . 4,2Vi3ffitAl Vlo.soltr:lißottirkz , ..f,l:4
The remainder of the day wekepentift notudderz ,
;Croili '-
• :f •A
It/.4,9gi
ffrf tjt?lxtl 7ll ,c4 iu m er
qt 4,64, up , hie "resointion, , offered "tune, Ave 6154_
instructing the Committee ezr'Fiettuce'lft tiring
4teigeMAntir'iC9MlV,Tli !0,1 1 5 1 01t5 . uglittlit:9f
silk; fbe: five svais.-, ' , Ailey:, the ttitittlutioii
beef ' - iit'xifellti oil mourn of §tiorao,
' strrict 14cOmmittee to inquire into the'expedi,
ency of brihging'.in such a...bi11, it was agreed to.,
'....The bill intinaide Prothonotarys and other WE: '
tors to collecf:theirlees in certain cases, was aP
teirmte debate; negatived on third rescling. , . .
%In - thirgio;t4se "of Representatives, Mr. Kieffer
and Mr:. Musser presented x petitions in ra‘.or-of—.-
ling - the public Improvements. Mr: Straub pre- -,
tented - ti - petition for the abolition of the Court of
General Sessions of the City . and.Cbunty of Phil
'deljihiri:-'" Mr."'lVl rtin' presented"a petition that
the, charter : oft he . .MOnOngna,lelil Navigation Com-,
pany may, be amended or annulled. Mr, Clark
submitted a %,,rOttol#loll;tequitiOVi VOrtfottur the
act to provide 'Revenue` to reedt ., the'dinnand a on ....
the' Treasury, and for other yarposesi t to be so con
efrued is to exteridtke tax on salaries to those of
the Clerks and Akents connected With the several
Departments, of the Government"; Mr: Deford re. :.
pofted 10411 (sUpPlernentarA alliiim . the , Banle
of 'PeUne'ylviMilite make , an assignment.. Mr. _
Rush reperted , ,a bill to extend the charterof the
-
Fa e rriter's! - :Baiik i4.-iitteks . county. Mr, Stek , ens
reported a bill for the , sale of the Public Wo rks .
M
PROTECTIVE TARI—The House , , nuse, on motionof
on motion,oi
Mr,.;Kains, -. took Uji fire sd`eolution ; ' on hie 'sub•
-jept,-whieb=Were•tiniler-Con'sideratiorritillib - w
Session' in second reading...:The 'question
pend
ing was on: the following.onicnilinent, offered by
Mr. Bonsai] to the amendment, and ae a Substitute
for the *original bill: - ulleeolved.:-That the Com
monwealth of P'eniniyiVanta, do hereby refuse to
accept her portion of the, procceds:of t tlic sitiles of
"the public , liinlie s . and- she • receinniende inL'
stead of increasing. the taxation, Congressahould
• .
apply the sa nne to the liquidation of the 'National
Debt, and for the support of the Nation 4-:'
meat."-' Beneall said that hie opinion bnihia .
question had nbt heenchanged.sinee the ittai .
sion, and he went on to support his amendment.
Mr. Macmariusdelivered aiorearle'rigth
in oppbsitfon toaTrofective Tariff; rnd Kr. Boone
gave hie sentiments decidedly in' favor of it in a•
short but excellent_speech. .The subject was nil-__
der consideration until the hotir of adjournment., :
p
In the Senate. on Thursday, Mr. Plumer,pre.
Rented ypetition to prevent Brokers from shaving
Bank paper. • Messrs. Darsie and -Flaydpresentect -
petitions for a law to prohibit the sacrifice of pro
perty under executions. Mr. Mothers presented
a petition for a Stay Law. •
Mr. Ileister,reported a bill (supplementary) to
promote the culture of silk, with a recommentla- -
lion thatiLbe negatived. _
The Senate then went into Committee of the
- Wholer - ,on the bill - relative - lo - Election - Diatioti.: —
It was afterWards,finally read a second and third
time and 'passed. ' ' • •
.PiYMENT.OF DOMESTIC CREinTIS.--The
.bill - •
for the Payment of the 'Domestic Creditors, which
passed the (louse two days since, was taken up,
and" after some , discussion aMended byr'striking '
out the' clause • maki4 provision for those who
did work alter the of May, ''.The vote
was—Yeas--16;-Nays44 r --,Tlie-Senate- then dd..
journed. .
In the House, Mr. rtru4ner presented the pro
eedings-of-i-meeting held in Lebanon county in
favor of polling - the public iiiiprovertents,' and
agraiust .an increase of tax-mien. Mr. Griffiths
presented'three iremonstranceS ngainst. Vie creel
Lion of an .Outlet Leek at Mr : .-
Cortright presented petitions froinLuzerne - for the
reduction of the •nuinher of officers and their
salaries, on the-public works. Also, a petition for
a law to compel! the Susquehanna Ca mrlCompany
to-receive their own notes in payment of toll. Mr.
Dunlap pretienteda remonstrance against the sale
pfliroperty, unless it shall bring two-thirds of its .
appraised value. Mr. Packer presented three poti: •
tions from Northampton for the einistiliction ofan
cutlet,Lock at - Ellick's Eddy. Mr.Trego present—
ed a memorial from? the Philadelphia •-priaird of
Trade,. asking that no Ch - argg . iiilly . fru+ in
‘.
the existing law relative to the inspecurin of To
bacco. Mr: .Mrahen presented a petition for the
abolislirnant of the CoUrt oeGencral Sessions, and
that the Mayor's Court' may be restored. " Mr.
• Ryan presented a petition, from the City \ and Coen.
ty of Philadelphia, asking an investigation into
the conduct of the Recorder-of said county. Mr.'
Led presented a - petition for abolishing the offices
of.Superintendenta and Clerks, and: that the col
lectionsshall he given to the lowest bidder. •
Mr.Eharstirood, on leave, introduced a bill in
relation to Executions . -Mr. Elwell, on leave, in
troduced a bill to incorporate the North Brandi
Canal Company. RELIEF BILL. PABFED.—The bill
for thc suppression cf . the Relief Notes, and to
prohibit the, further issue of them,. &F., was re
turned from the Senate with a : Message that they
had non-concurred in the 'amendment of the Hausa
providing for the sale of the Bank and other stock .
held by' the Erimrn'onwealth in private corpora-
one, and had aplyin.ted a committee of confer
once op, theirpart:
The House immediately resided 'frOne..the
amendment; it being the genordl impression that.
if the House adhered, the'bill. would' be /est. 1.1
Mr. Itoumfoit submitted a johtt resolution •
tive to the sale of the stock °Weed, tbe"dOpl:
monwealth. Laid on the table. • Mr.: Elwell. re.
ported back from ' the Cornmittee'te whom it was=-
referred, the bill from the Senate, to'secure to
.mechanics,_ laborers and others , cheir wages in
case of the insolvency. uof- their ernployers,:with
recomnityadition that'itli negathiad; Mr. Wright '
mudq'drepdrt on the ' petitiona front of thii •
14th' qudicial Diatriet9,-„eemplatnipg o e
cial conduct.ofitidge - Greerr,statipg that although
thb petilleitie,eeinttiined charges:l3f 'his - hiving 1b....
they
, stitdained by any: proof;: and,evapoig
they are not, the • subject of legislative impeach- '
(QUID NUNC
•
Mr. Belford, fiom the Committee on the- Judii
ciary, made an . adverse report on the,,patitions I
frorritbo_Couny oiramberitcApysyhigthe ,
'attire to report a bill excluding the: front; ,
pleading thastatate , of ThipOrtirnit:
tee sa y the: law is tossed ,on the:prhiCiples - Orscitil4
chiding a Bank any more than en individual fit&
the benefits of it. So fayLfrom it, that*Com
rnittee c.micelve any rOstriaioc upon ith operation
would defbai, the very ohje6t - olut casein" The
9919,01 if tee *M° then dieCltal-ecd fhttlicr•
consideration of the subject, and ifiq feiC?ti... was'
adopted: 3 v. 44111 0 C ftlar4:o nttgi '1,1"
Mr. Tu rn° rPrwiqq ,a V 9! •
t.raicingli In ama i n, Mann, an no . • !kV
perigee of the Inihi4a , nYn!nnlt 7;er 1...v4:7,2i
On t rit • thid.hf:Mr:'il!att°lll,3lte.resbluliorkulk •
(lok , tO:Fri4r,,n k 4e"o ii*ortni"of*6s '
ci ' c j h a y themonrt, of. „Appeal! woterAe la w jn _
was Mikol!•ups e nhP4qcd % .4f n ik, a4 ..?o . l l .':* ...>,
' The Speakeriaid..befun..tittaloWseiettn s tAnn%
th°.President of the tient of , -.Tratic;,;.Pbßadek
.It&iiel;thib
atl , 0 •
-00:4, 1 1441. 1 PS'aPeriliStarlA
, roidwotonl4 Snattisho thev.ttnime basitt.44o*
itiChelititY on itiligettrdikell
o,:a .):,9..^0 ;Ow ill( EStt ,
:sp.; o,l_2ora,s teria
i•-•?l'voir s eu ßG. Li tih e.g is ifien t i g .l , o7."-
dtionsi wayation4ekticio
fc - Ailife'§ta Fiat - d
•
ruPP7rAcm..,Rie:Viet.49l64 4% W l '. -
hsqleil Pefiii9ofilltYing thatno chtneimP9ibtVade
ht•theiaWlialatiqet to theicsiKetion-nr
Mi!, , Plumir , Oesented:aviition , that Brokitremir
fnrit Astilk i tie
tweignietra ietitromfor - fhb'salearthWpibliy ;414
sodsgainst the imposition of tuttiter taxstipO t , The
11