• &Mi.=WO - '-.603ME54 1 D 3 - I ffipi W fr f Froth I )4Z'Arnercli i„t WOI4E. ribn MEN E*l OV ..•• • • L 44 I In entering uyenthis p tthe4,4taakkrtvallpapke• it may not bo inopportune:to remind eitrrotidCrs, that!there are mac, thinge,to,be'iletm,atal duties , ...loo,oVatili.ll!_if*4ll•!.#o6lo,llot4tYlifff, asprance to the succesti'pf thelr_ldbor,s during the giftir 4 Ao4,ol 6 ,"airTAMWAft 4 4*tiolf . kkltat; Paripftht? PAClPA4#,4; l 44A44lo4opiii?r.'l 4 J! , ptorp Ittio4tilp ipromt.!,VrAt - thp t 9tl, , the tountry,•'that '11100:41;j0ta , :ftaVa .;.,V4VOil ei te . get in their win. sa n to our ;-'doubts- 009i,i4riett 4, mr:olll'4tfthe same Aim Q hays,been gropndfdia.i 4 . , rf14)11 this, we arc care t!eshdll' from,ev,ery heart ,Swarmed,■ , t geney o utteMotions,:fertherearonenp, _more.; entitled; Rn' the ;SyMpathies,..of rimy y; ,nds; their li ving ittuidst•ilie 'afille _field, in ihe 'laudable ,Lindedvour suit aln the physicel wawa of the. comniunity;and nylon .the secrete or.tho reenlts of ',whose tdije So much „cif their t emnforts,!nepessitieS, and luxuries, brief renantlia; let tts.dizeet Sour attentio n to m a fi.,,T7OF the duties which de. Niel= neon iollttoinnienee " ' *ON Tilt :, • • heat..--It atay be, that; inving'M the drought, you hare been ;unable to get'. in your - wheat. _lf so pee all f p,ossible diligence, Divert all your ener gies to gct;it in".'as speedily as'peasible; - for :al ' thinigitit is, Very late,,iiiid vve'never:would advise, . 'ender : ordinary, circumstances, that, this grain shotild be'roWn solute, still as necessity liaa no htiVi Weidcem it better to Out it in even.nowthrin to, forego 'ao.wipg altogether. • But in getting it ._._in, we. certainly_w.ould adviso_deep_ploughing. tquiuld the season prove mild, and next spring and summerprove propitious, good crops."fruni *groin - -mown even as late as this , may be elitaioed, though % - the'chanceS are not, in our estiniatiOn, very flat. ''Qt.cring. , . , - , . . Rye.—lf from the amnia cause, or 110110 other, - :Your Rye be not seedecktligo is time to put it M. Although •we would advise the seeding of the grain. in Septembe4 still when delayed thus late, we Would not despair of a crop, naive havoknown a good one to occur Boni a sowing , liti lute as the. . 94th of-November. The seed was ploughed in 4 inches deep, and never made its appearance above grim nd lielbre the March following. '.' ;),. Fe/Iffougliing.—We. would call the nitention of farmers us may have stiff clayey groueds, which they . intend to cultivate in 'the - spring, to -the importance of :giving - them -a fall or - winter ' ploughing,. as a means' of bringing them into a state; i,ritellownesa. - As' we have repeatedly pointed out the advantages to result from the 'ex: posure of such-lands to the 'operation of frost,.we .Will not iterate• them 'here; but before We close _ this_paragroldi 'we would respectfully_isuggest_the prom:ieleo.rinaliing on experiment of at least an age m all fields of the characternamcd, by giv , ing it tho advantage of a subsoil ploughing, Those • who may do sti will by comparison . with the re- Maiticler of the field and it; test the efficacy of the prOcesa and be able to ascertain how far such plong,hingcomPertswith their interest. - ,10 grounds" addicted to being wet, we believe it would add fifty per cent to their productiveness, 'while it • would improve the-character of oil tenacious soils. Fateetiing Of Hogs. 7 --See that the hogs you may have up fattening are well attended to. -Regularily in feeding; watering, ,salting, &c.,- arc quite as necessary as food itself, and has the-effect tot on ly to shorten the period of feeding but to_saVe food. -Breeding iciows should receive additional care - ' - and food, as the woods affords lint a stinted allow• . mice after the 'Consumption of mast. ';Cirtl/e.of all kinds shoeld he sheltered, if pox .silde, of a night; and receive gene - Foes allnoances . -of fodder of some kind, as neither the. pastures nor 'Wood's afford, at this period, a sufficient (pion - tity of food tonrcvent the cattle from falling off 'in flesh, a thing which should be obviated, as it is highly' impcitant to comnience- the winter with them in good condition and vigorous health. Cat tle thrive best in cold weather in good dry warm lodgfpgs, where they may bid defiance at least to the rain and snow. Wo. 'don't say that a close —4.table-ieintliSpenaable-tetheir - Imalth - and - comfort ,- hitt we do riffirin that a good - shod, timing the eolith, with a tight roof, defended from the north and west, tends greatly to retinue not only the' conifert and health, but enable them to live upon less food.. ' Sec' too to their being salted twice a week: . • . • ; • . Vcraciing'Corn.—As soon as your corn is theronghly dry, gather it, have it husked out and ' put under lock end key. ,Corn Heaks.----As you may, have your Corn !MAC.); kayo yoii- Basks' carefully • packed away' in sonic safe place, taking care to sprinkle a little • salt over them. Thus-stowed-away they will,provo' excellentfoodfor Our .milch cows. - - Cerii - Color.WO have' frenticiitly told you not tolet theimgoto - waste, and we repeat it here that ' there is aa much .nutrition'in &bushel of cobs as there is in two BM'S Of ii beehel'of Shelled corn. This isnot guesswork;' but he result of actual common ,senso trials; so .coirducted as to reduce thii - thingtO aCortairity: Why . then,,we ask, 'Medd thetnot. be husbanded, as among henvail. able,fooding.resources ol' a farmer? , Why should nOt:eiery . fariner raffler provide himself, With a _ crusher, ana.tladentible himself to -uire them in the mos; prpfitahle way, .Those, however. who haVe no crusher, riniy have them broken in the . hominy; -- Mater. ,' Thus Managed, if soaked in boiling:water, ; steamed, or, boiled, they will be br,iight to a condition easy of digestion by cattle, andifTed idthiri-Wityle 'mild] , covva, will be far mate velnahle,menaure.formeasure; than the best ' hay, no ‘ runt r t#What. the kind inarbc. ' ei4i;;.t•tOla.-- . -This is another valuable pro _. ~__Vehdiir_whicli_itifierinitted.ito.be wasted.....A.ten 41 1 4, 04 1 f .Pf.e9113 stalks: cut up and soaked is as good if yot beiter then, a ton of the best hay for mileh'enWs..'s'Atid'itis.,,not 'defining too much to sa.V.tbat; cows thus. feint - od - them- will look as -well and give as, much milk as when fed upon any ether lengfodder. Presciveyour Coin stalks; andifnetl'theirioutto yenv'cowe, and you'rnay soil more htip .. t ,...,,. - ,; • ' .. Birit bud' Catife Yrikea.--:Coie'r thee° a foot deep with mould, leaves, and vegetable;rubbish of any kind, and tif iisiiiiCydu . r 0:60k - will have don. vetttuteferrsPideftit efitAntO:as.good: Manure as that,m - adv-,hy..yourborses,.for it will have ab. sorbed' iiid,.prifserved'tliiii -linisid 'Salts, eVerigi 11 , of ,tirldtih bitprolifid'Of tilhtliet , -elorticnts of vegot orSiies.-:ZGive your store and fattening hogs plelfty of Widuld,lldrives:; stralir; lif fino. , plenty of • everl thing e„ . ale.ulateitto foment 4ma ke manure: Horses . ami neg.! Cattle: -Tile time has arrived, when theta should be cared' fir: ''.:l n - all the'atten.; tiona.tbOrtntiYill', l 3oeive recollect ihal. regular 4 in' the ~.h....ura. ,of fee'Bing is 'a material ,olinient in dui eite'Cs-of_anY Plan: . Both lioracalind cattle shmilithe"isalied± twice dA , Nveektzatlittle good Well siftediiiekofy ashesoif mixed' witli,thoind.Lonco a aidritK.waiild CeirjOictiiiitiiiiddilliiii: -'.."."' ..!..,. fhireptheifti,'Sninsalsishfeuld lie prOvidedivith an , ppon e sl4 - .34thin4rfouthr,m-expees ore, I,n which. . thd citiilielltyt -eV' Critiifottilblii' I'deelVelalt . t witiOittikeeiOteidJgbail hey_lirifotld ' ei: , and; teete r thtll9.llpitifliqti ;;i;''..'• i - i,"'s 'i •.!..., , "."-^,' - •'.3 VOlifc nfllitleg Cptae.—Tlecellect Oaf tryou atidWhattkOitiditifyilaiitotethilir;grOWth-z•-feeib sv e n i ai) ,oo d'i c b a n i g , t'A r . 4 . 1 .. 2 . °I,I.P'• '..1: ., 22 -''. ' : 4 41qp . L— 1 k - o - iiur keeping' apples' Carefully piebidhCristilfdaindafikrgolde thrimgh thetorm I . • ce.,tgOrtittilto9g",- , ,.' h ,„;S g l4 l 2MV 4 .! l V l Y.j!L a l 4r A r : . , , m : 01 0A43.y W/n. notfreeze. , . 1 ' Attaf„,iirtLiiiiii/Witiee6ittilY oil' i ad , .teritteni7.4:o4,4 ,AT rai :,t3,11`,AP. , 4a 4,1 cr: ~,,,,,i.:,..t.i, .. t f - Orekirrkp)papmple orchard ;. . i n' 2 7.1 1 .: kft 0 1 1 a ge r ef4 i Xp laß e r51n14) ,-,,:.,,.. midi Oil , la. t* t i ` eutut duiVutY you it7'';:•04040.000-s, 0dtggen,,,,...,.._.,,,„ „,,.,..„ j o gi n t .o l.,! ~, de,,,,rfjpir ? god . Per. . .dAlorrtaiVanirrit*4 l 0 I,,nlifilfOr tit' ilfeVillertte VlS#lolll4otritiditiiiihilArittiltuPt hneht*tin3purtatit •."- 4111,11-_•,ZeMaitMt l lOWA aocello r p*Ok eraPST At Aliq vs blwecstAile ifirtottike 01 .1 14 rb . NOtti 3 . rtr - Wit l e.44 lll4 ir 40 r444. 1 001AP4 1 . ittlticOM i rtc r i ' t0*t'0.0 . ",7 4 i. 6 '. ,_! . 7 , 1 1E61410* k l ee lifi . .' 1111 11k3 I .: , ..•-r';.' ' ',` . ' i:- 4 1 1 M 5 V 4 0.14114; Oft '-; , -.1 • 0,. „ 1 !), 0, 66 tiptet. itet 414e 6 4 1 . 1 0 4 4t PI: ? -aitOt r v , 4l4A'tt 4 l7, ii" , 1 04- '.:-..• -Tf4in'teifeAAttuotftfa - a• ‘. .. '•;.besatteriderfito: :. , -1 ~*. .. :;• ..,, ' . •I,.l44aops4o4*4444ist4fttifiktati i3lO, . . .. . mill.444,ooYitrei 4 W u ldegf •,, 0. , ' . , Oqi 113 samosa e., . 4 . 0,0,43”4 011 t4014 .. AO ft04, 4 1#4.. - 04 .#01711 11 0 19 100: 14 Z , : , V" - ..,.',...Vittlol)644 4 4Wrkilferit/4,1444 t .in thlifvOletheMiligiss3lo ll *;6 l o4o l 9Veut-lee . . et Shd'etirefully housed. ?.;:. 4 AV:44i6,2.41/ ) 'AITA t1•14,,--Glve an eye to the procurement tof fhl4andtiehopt,lip in theviods havejt drAwn, InilA,,b,.litylki fiYeftletell.,tlf Lk,. 4X 1 4 -`4,PiV e 4 1 R,- , „,,,,,_., „„ itig ....; t 4 , . „, oki„„ g .....„..„ ..,,,.. ~„ „.. , iforoll3 60 , 1 54 1 44 koific .. rt , ati , o 4 g nivitc -F. 4! ,:w in ” it is but proper that you should take care ofYlur "rege4ttb,,,l'n• - , --=. , ,,...,---r.l. ..=-• zti,Jr., --..----, ~--,-,, :' latlier;-31gt , itlitil3FVFItliiR,r 1 iinTilave l'iot' , already dons so, ha taken upland . put 'when, tue Al ik t vtunnt,tntictr,tttnitreq.,' . , :l't.': ,'.,,,-, ~:t 'Cabbh:oB:—likforpAtio, h ard frosts aft i,ns !heap mai:Cho taken up' end ate/idly - Put ,uw,lty. ' i'' . ' , Asparciqu'eXe4z-444:104Ahttlp pot-,Airetifly, cleaned off these, do so without diilay.' , Strawberrie&—lf you , desire to set out new beds of Weil% there issWl thnsi provideil *0146, at irwitlicitt forthdfdillaY,,mtd take piths to cover Ws plants with ktraw'whett wintbr'conusi ori.' , But' you must manure , well. Beds planted , now. will yield fi•uit next year, ,provided yeil clean and ,work them will on the openhig of next spririg. ' , C'airien Hobs of kin& may still be set out. , Cooleberiies, Currants and Raspberries may 'etill lye transplanted. • ' ,Bulbous Roots should now iy, planted out in beds. . . • Dahlias!, Tisberoses and hindred,bulliodd Omits must fie. taken up. ". • ,• - ,Small 0. should now ip thin. Flotociing of nil kinds • may be det'ou ;with the eertaintrof bloprnThe ne?ctrfeueon. , U 8414 / 4111'4,339(01 E. BEATTY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR, s CARLOSLE, PA. Ircebitszl4l,t, .fratleaulivr 9, 1542. Volt .PRESIOENT lIENPtY CLAY, Subject t the decisionof a Nationcii Convention DEMOCRATIC WHIG' PRINCIPLES, SPECIALLy..FOIi THE PUIiLIC EYE." OUR CREED. 1. A sound.Nalional Currency, regulated by the • Will and antlioiity of the Nation— An'adequate Revenue, with fair Protection to American Industry. , • • 3. Just - restraints on the'raceuttivo. power, em. brueing a further restriction on the.exereiso of the Veto.. , 4. A : faithful administration of the public dgMain, with.nn equitable distrilnition of the proceeds of sales of it among all the States, 5. An honest and economical administration of the. General Government, leaving public officers. perfect freedom of thought and of tho.right of suffrage; but with suitable restraints against improper interference in elections. 6... An amendment to .the - Coristitntion, limiting the incumbent of the Presidential office tcra 81NG1.E TERM. • - - - These objects attained, I think that-we should cease to be afflicted with 'bad administration of the Government.—llLvav CLAY. V. Il PALMER, Esq,at his Real Estate and Coal Office, No. 104, South Third Street, Phila. is authorizedid act as .Agent, for_procuring sub• scribers and advertisements for the "Herald and Expositor." • Onfr. Jens McCenair, Itaspyrehascd the es tablishment of the "CumherlandVa Ilcy" in Ship. pcnsbnrg, rand conies in with a strong arm and a warm heart to the support .of _Henry. Clay. \Vc cordially ivelcome •The Lancaster Examiner the old Maim. sonic organ of Lancaster county, has hoisted the flag of Henry Clay. This is an intrepid step in , the Editor, and we hope and think will be sus. trained. A rrivof of Troops. . A company of S, Light or . Flying Artillery, from Fort McHenry near i3altimore, under com, mond oft'apt.. Washington, arrived in town on Monday and took up thei — rinarters at the Garri. son., The . company numbered about .seventy in all, and formia iine.looking body of men, though they appeared considerably fittie9ed from a long march:: • The Baltimore American of Thursday lasthas the following notice orate 'arrival and destination ofthe Praggons which left hero last week.. "•A detachment of ono hundred and seventy dra goortrecruits of the lat. and 2d Regiment U. S. Army, under command of Capt.. Lloyd J. Beale of gd Regiencnt_of .I).ragoons,ficeemPanied_hy, Capt. May . , Lieut. Thonipsors, Lie nt. Saunders, 'Lieut. Hamilton, Lieut. Staunton; Lieut. Mason, Lieut. Noble, Liciit. A. ' !ON and Lieut. Ham mond, arrived in this' .. :on Wednesday, eve. ,ning by the Susquehanna Itailroad' from car. lisle Barracks. The Offieers and recruits are • all , fine looking young men, hfityerY much fatigued from having marched - from Oarlielejo York, a (Natalie° of more tha r n . 30.,inilei. • They IMencdi. atcly march ed 'down teFell'a Point and. embark.. -ed on board thc,ship,Aapier for New ',Orleans.'... Those of the tat. :Regiment arc destined for Jef. -. . ,:.. .., ,•,..... • • • .. • Torsim Barrack! 'Missouri. Thes e e ofthe 2d. Regiment' for Fort jefisuP 'and 'Baton Rouge; Lorisianit, and Ports 'TOWSonandilie-Ffilli:'Wif chita'; Arkansas. ~...,.:. ..: ~ f ...-:. ... ‘'. - 1 .;,_ v f.. ~.• , ~ , . •., 'r.irWrr; 'uridertaitd that - "Atchaint "Tial,Ciit Lumps, sold in "itarlisle'-14.'' Alli:ei. - 14. - 11iirrit;, utter cry grebt inducenienta"to3hoso vrlio_iirould coonoinise in Light. We Likorditadiflae.thCpulor, lic to call and examinollient.. -,. :---;-...- (altr.'Webitir 'made Otiee c ah 'Friday l a st in 'NSW York, before a largo easerriblage,'l4:%in; Y44tlon of -Charobir. uf.Ccanunerce. AC' was ° ll 49tigerls. altogether 111 1 109g,lo:th9:lata:Tteaty. 'and .our 'Foreign 'relation; generally. l'fot e. ward ofpolitici in it, at which '.the Loco roeqs as were particularly disappointed, as. they expected enbthen.iiwida PerlieforiAlf• Yebster give:WA maniGnitat 'suck as ,bvcomee. " a FarteuiLliall bet Ise don't abaseas, any more .. i , — i Nets Yong Tituuss.—This - is • oni a th 4 ~„ mokt,epir4c4 ari.. ,4 ,411;t4priehmt, petini , ,' pa pert n J tg,4,4lPiPtlAAPP.o44 l t,4ing . „,a4lot#lP Rukki , 4 o 2 o P o "ig,r4MXPP994T , PFll ,,ci fgf. 4w VtP:Q n 4 5iP 1 !1 . 4a 40 4-pFq..l B 4, o !ir , Pm....totzt i fiN4'. .904 gi:Livriiii tg‘rpiipm . i7,/041nr°9at 4.14i4r - 0ir:616W04 A6.76BTig'v. r lfikai:titdia'•, 1 i.. 0 . -3 :;, , z ,, ., :- c, , i,Li -,*,,visa o,w . 6 ., 4 ,„--. :,.. 1 ,„.„ ~4 U 4 - q ... rZ rit4 0 ,e 1,„,.11,01,1„,t0k,.19.,y,..ti i t iAy . iaroliid t ed 4i an Wlllilo,to fill likr 1 1 talCifti t iWAttlie?Oft.‘iii 4iiiilitAkilt: o - , ' , ..i 1 „2, , , A ,ty,,:-. 4 r+idthi: , ttlY itt.b ILS :41 ~Krrhis Cliest i lytyst•ir Arritv vtl.l on If4gx. egif it iValignii ' ',Afiga , .. l ~ , 4 3 1 4 1 1 ' . '.. .- at' ''' i 44 to - ~ , ,tort, , (0 4.11 9 hissoisopp! „. Eiet. orililly . , l pp1,n,.....8n I. ` 74 40 1 )i a1 i tr3. 9 ' i z 4214:014. 1 .,trii , .. k 1 4. ii . tr. - ii tilbection ' .1414itifet; , ne*Rtwhigtot *. 6400 ' t•il c:O4 ei' witti lA--'';•:,;,4..`fT.,.E1. o -.,,0.-,4,,1, L . t ; t',,. t,e. 'z ~,-; .:;, il .':.-v::, -'' i!'..:,,,;146 a d.4.r.i.1t101ia4- -., •:-, .. k:"2-:,.:.-•-• • 1 ' ;,v;,-c, 1. 4 ,, 1 1 !!! . ! " , „ .'p”! T y t . s 4 uh'irr?l:A .wi th : aid .T! liiprivo,,*4calliac,,iii4 top),no 444'-40 :4 0 1 ifIAN4 1 11; 1, 1 4 reicr 0044 1 1.Yi* ilai . t;llloti, Pi4W46lisVitid,lit44 l *eit 4 ,ila v ,ol.l;iqiitbi.:34ofileCliieleilltVirilOkilq: *Yt, I ,r 4 rg'i . e. , ',P'::: - '''•:' ,,, l,Z. , ~49 1 10toeli:iiii#ii;giii&k.;i.lii0iifqiil,i1,;Iiiiii: i iii,ii.- . ii-6 . 6lC ., :'iiiiiiitnit; - 'gl.'4,iiiiii,'aikifteil•4:ilW 04ia:; , it . t ,- Of iitetOrkt:thet,rilOiiii;644(lokg4'taith.; cow, k tictail6tl;noolito,olllifnOp,pectei,tet4 . littinbn,.. leg disbursed-41e itlau-nf' Iti- , :urgiulltiutiorii-i*ikte. of iustr ue!ipn, tick Stp;':•::: , :, , ',.l. 41, ' .?..(.,.it '-'; ,, ,,,,,1., .:**f.,Rlc#o - otokifil*iiio;s:.liiiiiittiot' , Jaiit;,' ;yitpd. to It!sppt the liroke . !. `, Illey,l, , jlk,be, clieofully exhibited. at uny , tl mu, aul„,uop i i, u sq ~,. ullr any; part; rosy iiCTialr:Un','oi• it,prpferieti'Will 'lio furpi;lluil, au es: to give full hurl 'ainplu I utiiiiitiiiii 4 iii " r uiiis;* . pUllit; conheoted 4itlt-tlie InstilUtlOniiiid, hi riniiiiiterri6ni,', (Om tllu.).)egipping., ; A.repillutt uptl, detailed. retur n ' lin 5 lveirUnuually „pude , to_ - th e ,S u perl rilepilitpt, .or tommod Schools; agreea bly to law." ' Ca:4ovlficelinglin UarrisbOrg.' . As waynerttioned , two weeks ago, the groat de: monstration in favor of Gen. Lewis Caos,for. the Presidency, is'nb - out to ,be made at. ..Harrisburg. Themeeting is called on the - of November. It is of course - by order of the: grout Klckapoo . chief, who-is to be settled on ticket with-Cos-I, fot tho 'Vico Presidenci, and the tretiti manage. tnent of the meeting is in the hands of one ofthe Canal Cornmisidepors and their clerk, a pet of the Governor's. G.: Porter will 'play second fiddle to' to' neither Buchanan or Johnson, but is determin. ed to niakc'himsslf the embodiment of Portnoy!. vaniti Loco Focoism in the Islrition - alConte'ntion. ng:ainhitiesiw ill, bvery' apt to o`erie - Op itself this time.• • • Thd-Pittsburg Post (loco fbeny says, John P A ndetion Mo clerk of• the Canal Ctitirrnissioners istfranhing some thousands of .the handbills for the Cass. meeting sent 4 to different, places, all of which are charged to the State and will amount, Soya the Post to some ten oetwelve thousand dol lars. -We can't complain of this agnandiring of the people's money, however, as the perople'of the State—though Cumberland had no hand in' it.-- have undoubtedly given the. A:dtninistratiort full autbdrity ,to_sPend their money in whatever amount titid for w o liitt purposes they plouse, and we Merely record this as thin of the public occur:, 'fences of the•dayti A good deal of oditinv . hasi)een heard ulinn the_ pressiii Congress for the alleged sin Of . "Presi. dent.making,'!—ls the popular tllsplesinire to ho sabot toward.the ef£orte,of,thc state Administr— ation in this same business of Presidcut•makiug, inwhieh it is so actively engaged? C. Spencer. Theeonduct of this man has_ mote, disgusted the public - than any: thing of ilie t- 'saine nature' Which has transpired for some time. A Mare shameless apostasy—a more degrading instance of abject servility, with the mercenary motive so palpable, has Heiden' if ever been 'witnessed. It has earned him the contemprOf all parties. :41r... 1 Webster defended the Administration' but avows himself still a whig—but John C. Spencer - Makes no halfway matter of it; he is content with being nothing less titan the most humble spaniel,'erawl.: ing with the utmost obsequiousness at the feet of John Tj ler, anticipating every command and obeying it before the lash descends. The Multi., more Clipper, an able and independent neutral paper, notices him in the followiegsevere The Whig papora arc severe on Mr. Spencer for his recent letter,und his conduct must be condenin. ed by every man who regards consbstency..M.-htni... esty, for he has been "all things to all men," A nli sinceo~Ctinie hem , rotirifirati sn hr - whi el air denounced President Tyler in harsh language es. pecially for his exercise of "that remnant of kingly power," as he termed the veto and' now he approves. not only of the vetoes of the' Presi. dent hut of all his- ineasiires. - Such shameless profligacy should exclude Mr. Spencer from the confidence of all parties. A celebrated English statesman said that." every man has his price," but he was supposed to. have. uttered a slander.— The conduct of Mr. Spencer howeier, proves that if, airmen cannot be puichased, some are always in the market to the highest bidder. It is the ex ample of such men as Mr. Spencer, that has so pernicious an infltience on the moral feeling 'of 1 the community, and causes political corruption to be tolerated. The government 'of Roma was set up at auction, and our own may not fare better, if such men as John C. Spencer are permitted to occupy responsible offices under it. We would have political knaves and hirelings spurned and kicketkasido by the feet of honest men. . • The Albany Evening Journal- 7 ,who has stood by Mr. Spencer in many a trial, who everr.now honors and respects him for'his talents, — and who licard of his apostasy mcireirr sorrow than in an. ger—when 'adiriseil through the columns of the -Albany-Argus--a paper that se lately teemed with abuse of Mr. S.—that the letter was 'published, and filled seven columns of the paper in which it first appeared, says: " We wait for this extraordinary development _before making it the subject fir extended comment. In the meantime we will only observe, first, that John C. Spencer never wonted seven columns to vindicate a good cause; and second'that through out the length , and breadth of the Empire State he will find not one response in the Whig • party, and those who have most respected and esteemed Itir.Spencor wkll most deeply lament and umiquiv. ,orally condemn the course he has adopted, These are times which try the fidelitykof whigs —when blows fall,nlion the party from men who have been made strong by its generous confidence and support. But the result Wlll prove that the cacao Is impregnable, and its misguided assail ants will be speedily left ,without the • •respect or gratitude•Of those `what) present unhallowed pur poses are served by such defection." The Washington. Globe thui gives the great dethrters the "cold shoulder," which shows that they are not to be permitted to go into the• Loco Poe° brother-hood. Their mercenary motives are palpable to all : .. . , '" And have these lendin g personages—once so strenuously, engaged •with the bank power, to crush underits notorious wheels the maims of tho peeple that opposed it—no Motive in col - rnoff, no tumid:4.om to promote thenvimultaneausly to announce this extraordinary and sudden revolt from old political associates—from principles and purposes se long Cherished by them'?. "We think there ,jsvand a deeper one than that• is which lies on the surface. These gentlemen are,not mak ing liciato,ne :some suppose to deseit the fallen 6 , 1 4 10 ; 0 °A Fe4o4lfillni and enlist themselves in the honest train of those Viiho,would,pregs tocon. 'Summation the cause which" embodiel the Manor,. TSP-4.9C, the Uni9n t. 1 TheY AIWA vorY, difforent do signs in the Very posture they have assumed. „In another in tide we ahallifitdeavar to epostrihbm to 931!,0iticelfriqndso" :- . 'II--; TlM.public knmar but little of Mr,,Sponcer, and therefore it 'rn!ty not, tio 40E010 state, that he has, during - hie — polt ma career i heen upon .. bothsides inktierk toirtest-4: for 'eaag#itnit'Wdairm- - -for and niainatJaiskien—Tor'stiti d;iiiiriiii'diiiitoti 7 .4oi:l6i ' efikfroatA,Mank*Atfot 'dna nkalnit Diettibniion of. 'UM TAW! Me4e.tis - rlOl4 43 *ewe° MOPeeeir ! I ,, vlao:ogoto,tlik4oldrest itglipLgAl eyrftsitmcmln. 1 tiniinnirkoatlra,inivbialkiticcryyt in , ,lratnd, 4 4 ' .., 1 oi a traitor,to o hil priticitoos Alcatiiiiintki. ,, *, tiditiintinli4sllllwlViiitffitiqVatnerved, lictliiirwrifilego • airtgegm bsigi iiit4gtfiitit , , . gr. EL ,was a "InamdValkivtirtOtetiNeflini id 4 / I tt4 o A *UP $ 4 " * 44o , ' ltiltei th44 * : %ligation of ibis very edreett 7 : , 4 .,„,isc ot ' 00, ig4tiVfetiliiii r trai *li"lirar it i ti nf I t += 0, ' fk , s e , ~, .t J. likidte 07 . 10 14 - 4 rlW' 4 °3 l ! 1 &Ai iiiiiWll4lo4 114111ela PiY-0 ' , j magi*: ' , _ 1•- .., ' • . J , ' '. ' ...: ~..', 4 4 -` 4 4,1 " '•' 4 ~ -s ' rill gladly atitelblitfa :..,,...,.; - Va t tcefte Ali 'ttniqes, ' ':!,-....? - 0 - 4 ~.„. \d ' ik.:l,4,4lfifii .11 'ln , old iifoliiititirW '.- 4 ...;..-4 , 4. : ) , , i ti , 'o,!'li v itit6,4 todlingliglie*Wl t dithlf : ' ' Ng :', Wk)) e ihitln a Ace murrain a. 11arihi,, . •c',.?yi' :. •,'''" •-,1 -Or fneteers daZzlingto•betray, ,- , • i• i 'And'bowliefote his purer beam; 4 ; ‘ 444 1 k i f e *M i fk e lA i #4 14-114 "At 44.4 • 0 6) . . ' . i.:,: . . ' ~ , r . ; .' ,'',•-::''''''. ~,':,- - r'l.r: *11) 1 3, . iiiiiß,ztO '', oIeGIN Nit t i_ f';...r4 .-.lo'r ;•:: r, 'A; ;,: Ir , , . . ,,.. :4'V. '*o ; loqPliknbtir OM FitmNba : o r , 1, , ,T1,* 'o4i i' . : 4 oiff(Wii; ; 4:46*.i4 4 o :- lieilt:* 6- o=i4nia'i'iiitliiiie'.4r oict 'A 4'40014(0: pr,irctfr#74olkYqw,r,ifer,eoy : ~!,..c,e*Y,? ' !IOPT.F.rIr 104"Ahp .F.:eliOd' ,rorti th4act l o 6 'vq•*, cult# i 6 tio"teiiiiieitiiin; ii'liliiibiiiiirell'isiilined'io'pk,bp iiiritioiii' to ; iniiiktcliiii:iiiiieltilretillie and ine ' eeeti •ful Wien rieeded. ,= ''), l :.'- ' ;, ;-' • ''' ,/ - 'Need we addiSce, .anY, • aiguraents „tosProve•the •importture Oftheso . ptelmratiepil7 ; 4ro,thero any 'foolish doubts to be removed, as to,tho time ot ne amity fOr . .iminedloto . organization ?,,If the r e ar , let' blii whe' i':lotibts'loidi it Clio `difficulties and rib itieles'Whieli beletllie jiatli of the W.higiiiii 0- eryside, and ",:the minishapos iri: whiClibittet, deadly hostility to Henry Clay presents itself, and ho will be convinced .that. ; all, our Limo will , bp needed to overcome 0401.0C8,1?grent, and oppO. oition so variousand active., . ~ ' , ,•• •-,., '• - . lelliero ttelear-siihtedindividual Who cannot see the irecetaiily of imaiidiate end 'effective oran'. ization ? ' Let his doubts be removed by the re sult:of the late elections. Let him rememberour defeat four vneks. 'ago in this. State,,ca.used alorlP by our Gwent-of harinony„coneert and united ef fort—and the 'route of :Or part); In' Ohio, solely froth the want_ of compact organization, through ‘Vhiclonineieen thousand Whig votes 'were not deposited in the ballot-boxes! Let him - reeollect how often our scattered,straggling forces have been hewn down by the well-disciplined battalions of our foes, antimolonger impede the exertions of others by his unmanly doybto. • . _ . Does any one fear to compromise' his dignit by entering into this organization and becoming a member of a Clay'club ? He is vety much mis taken in his solgoOtiritation. The principles to which we would tier.ure success • are essential to the happiness of the people 'and tile safety and, -prosperity, of the couritry--:the man we - Would have to teprSsent those principles, is -one whose high nobility of nature: eliallenkes the admiration of the worhl,--to enlist In elicit e' cause, to follow oncira loader, theyroudeat and haughtiest of the land may not disdain. , • • A rotise, Vti h igs ! Let all fears be. fin:gotten, .., " - Yer ta - Tia. DIE!" — In' the inspiring language of our own Henry day, wo wimilil invoke you to or- . ganize for the Coritest--46"" arouse from tho igno. ble.supineness • which encompasses you—awake froriz the lethargy in which you lie,bound—cast from you that Unworthy apathy which seems to -maitrelow-indilferent-to-tho-fate-ofyouieountry." We appeal now to - eVery friend of Henry Clay in Cumberland dounty, - ndt to neglect his du ty in thin matter. ‘Ve appeal to him by the sin, cerity of his attachment to the cause—by the gen uineness of Ills professions in favor rif Henry Clay._ Let the organizationbe commenced immediately :-4ct Clubs be formed in every town and town ship in the county—let 'each Chtbihave its consti• - • tution, and every ioter . who can be enlisted bro't into the service for the war. lay these means we will•be enabled to know our trim strength, and adopt measures to make it effective and Eillcess• fth. Without this organization the year . 1844 will roll around, leaving the land still in dcsola tirt and the Whig party overwhelmed in igno minious defeat.— ..... It it not intended to organize these Clubs for any other object than the advancement of the claims of Henry Clay to the Presidency-;. It is not intended to diStUrb by them the Union and harmony of the party, which exists relatirin,to our countrtickets. *ln our local affairs; we should :always remember that we , aro brethren together and ought not to fall out by the way: The single object of the Clny•Cliths should be to use every honorable elution to promote the prospects of Hat:ay. CLAY, and without disparaging 'any rival candidate, to 'endeavor by persuasion and argil incnt and reason to increase the number of Ids friends, and secure his success in the nes.tiPresi j .eontest. Let us again .urge our friends to niganii•e—ik it be commenced without delay. Mcetinge should be called immediately in every election district in the'county. Friends of Clay, let us hear from you, and in the proper spirit l Let us have noth ing to reproach ourselves with hereafter, but let us do our duty to .Henry Clay, as ho his most faithfully done his to the people Mid the country.- IMportant Movement. The Washington eor'respondent of the Dultinrre Ameriean,under date of November Ist, writes as follows:—" I learn to-day that the Constitution, the Marion sloop of int., nird thcochooners jpst return:. 'ed. from Florida, are ordered to proceed forthwith to - Florida. This sudden movement Indicates sotne thing," . Liird Oil. The new" mode of manufacturing Oil from Lard is beginning to. attract attention; and is likely to prove a most important discovery, The Zditer'of the Germantown Telegraph, who ep. pears to , have considerable knowledge,of its good qualities, says in hie last .paper—”the manufac ture of Oil from Lard, suitable for . all purposes for.which Spermaciti is used, and equal to it in brilliancy,.wl.ile it is entirely free ftem all un. pleasant smell—is one of the most valuable die coveries, especially, for the western and south. western portion, of the Union, which has been made for Many years. The inordinate price which has been demanded, eflatiyeXre, for apes.. maciti, has driven ingenious people , to devise va rious substitutes., Camphine was thought, for a biinfOrtod, to builtthat WeideTsired: • Its cheap. nese and brilliancy was, extolled by all; but the. unpleasant smell omitted; the unhandy construc tion .of the liinips—:and their liability 'to get . out 'of order, toiother with the danger 'encountered trom their use by eiplosion—cOMbitied to make their day' and generatidn'shart.'' One the cheap: pet 'when , used. to any•extent, and_ in all respects to be preferred to any other deecription'• of light, is only adapted to largo eities. geneee • it. wan !di for the ; later:diecoyery of pH, fnt ro: lard.,. •• to, supply tile' community generitliy:giith a cheap and •delightfulnietins of dispelling the dark shed.' owe of ••nigitC'and of rendering all thiiige as bright abioet tut unto the perfect • * Weare, now IWO tit • ' Es` o f o ur summer g. e „remain o o • gi•PPI.V-°f-Wd oil; end olthough,, tlis;,co , 'e} ha s t scurtewhut hum with 1911 brilti cy s as ,dul• ,Wirskirmaelti Itaio conentned, for.Ysaph-_-.4 Ito Virehnsedli&galigriit4hen ' tt - Wee firittti: Itmilado6i g hti t-(fltitt .olrts then selling at sl l 2s);l4tuti,it, Can •:noys'‘•EW 11 ,t4A 1 M 01 1 . T!,relbA n PVI U #S 4 iVr 4 t 90111- -t r,M 4 t l l": irhinf p r eparatidii. . .% clu,eo".J.* - 4910..P.070010)0 4,0 11.0141 q 7 teir . party, txtie",theilleunocgatic cltedidatg, Ltti "14 office in 182. His 0110 7 ?,,to n ,„Cil t ' W 1 , 0414 4 4454414414 1 ,13 P 41 t:1N d 0it fitioV, 7 ==) Aliftattetrito V'"•-1,, , "' • ' -•••••p ' 4 tb4X4070 1 ; rakt into: P.P*, Yi4f4106 - ity46l- , *keiit agiar - 4004ilotii i4 , 40*4 l 'qfqov4n - 44q";: 6 0. 6 ! , p4tti1q-',P,Fr•(rioriil n k , w.4 wiii4:ivin;td be th e'lnovitable,e4ii • =`• `1 1 9.. , 1 1 49.0.. - , 0 3 0 Fuoo sPccessr y e !' in ,‘ trims means of their ; own ilyPinopOelf,lor--9cf'9911951 Py-9 1 9 1 4Y4 9 thisoP99 l ?.4f9 9 .9. 6 10 1 9t 9 9;!t9. 1 ! 9 9 91 ° 9 ,i• the , , and Bailey; and 'Eger, and their adjuncts who represent yVhieitild'A'ktinii4 sonio•countiesin the'! or.branchl see 4 • of' , feet of their dishonorable etuiduct:.;. ;The only nity i Is that. l'4o t.Fhole,fitirty;is,eoinpelled: to endure di evils, el:tailed on' A: by the delinquency of a few:' The Keystone, in an.aytiele :upOn.the 'Appor tionment of :the . State, has the following,preciotw, c iiriciip is of barieStiatal jnitiee, to guide thin intuit.; •beie in arriving rat fair dis phs it 'of the; die,. • • • •''' `The democracy of Pennsylvania ie sn•lstreng;t la 'it stands In no, possible nem, resort .the graceful priteess QP gerryttninileiittg.'' Its pi asperity-' and nacenilencrara', dependent upon Ato-such ncean, conti encY. 'Tlie republican, party ilesires.inst ' and fair tjettling;land beyond That itArilkstever con-. sent to go, tip the advancement efaitypurpotie ever.' , Upotra - fail. anti' ratironar asstimptiOn,' the Whig party will be entitled 'to about FOILIELor the Congressional, districts in pennsyltaitia,nrid,attliese, I the republican membersoviliManifest to deprive them. That a Com mendable care will. be taken to secure the 'ascendency of the democratic party in the State Senate and House of Representa tives for the next seven years; no reasonable man, will. feel disposed to question. This' precaution is etnin ently consonant with . t he irue and lasting interests of the State,li having been long since unanswerably demonstrated, that the whips, as d party, ore (otalig tuffit.to adminietrr the alga:4 of government., lt is, therefore the DUTY of the democrats to keep er nut of their handsvwheneter, and FOR. 'AS LONG A PERIOD,ns they possibly can. But in arriving at this end, no dishonest & fhtudtttent means will be, resorted. to. Nor is this necessary.' _We •Itare airabtindattee of materint to construct it strong anti efficient Apportionment, withourany 'clepartiiro from the plain and palpsble,precepts of honesty.—, Whilst, therefore; the detnneratie party at the next session wilt take good care of its interests for the, present and the future, it will resort to• nothing that could call a Blush to the cheek of the most fas tidious.. . . PennsylvanWis entitled to Ytwentylleur,iner,n berslof Congrea, and out • of this number' the whigiare to, lia vc F0t111! And this party, whom 'the whigs_tritimphaetly-defeated-three - years ago in a fair fight, anti whom they in their worst times go within a thousand or Iwo of balancing in tho popular. vote oft ho Stela—this pure, noble, mag: nanimous party, which Would."resort to nothing that could call d blush to the check of the most faAidious:tWill giVe_ the w,bigefour,outof ty t fottr mentbers—just one sixth—'•and Of these they will-manifest no disposition to deprive them!" - Ye godtfl what magnuniniity, honesty', justice end 'fairness there dwells in Locofocoism Tills Outrageous proposition , of the keystone hasbeen thrown out at this - tinric, -as a ;feeler, to try how far public opinion in -its tameness and indolence will permit the Administration•to go, in ititabuse of-power: parifof Pennsylvania may rest assured that if the party now in.-power can prevent it, [heir voice willbu• effectually smothered in the halls of Pennsylva nia legislation'Ter the next seven years,--Reform will become !‘ an obsolete idea."Retrenchtnent a by-word—and Lecolocoism revel in unrestrein.: ed enjt.yment of the spoils, throughout the term Ot its ill-gotten power. Does any one suppose that the Keystone has not regulate the apportionment of the State? • If any do tern look at Loco Foe° Apportionmentla Oltio,.as exhibited in - the fulloWitigi In Ohio, three Loco Peso counties, hating 13,- 511 voters, elect seven Representatives, or one for every 20 00 voters, while four Whig'eounties having :21,933 voters elect but four members, or less than one for each 50(10! This barefaced robbery of the People is called PEstoenAev!" , in North Carolina, also, where the Whigs eailled their GoFenoi by 5000 majority, but the Locos seeiti.ed the Legislature, the Lou! Foco pa, pers'Announte . that the State will - be . aid off in seven leaci Fneo-ancltti , o Whig 'districts ! One althorn reinarks with the same cooinss as the keystones too, "that they intend no errymAtt de:in h" toltimbia Rail florid TIM contract.foi. carrying the paesengers on the Philadelphia and Colombia Railroad after the let of January next; we leant *O6 allotted to Gen. Porter-Wilsom-the - Governor's nephew, and limn Cameron, Esq.. at 35 cents per passenger. The State finds.the motive power, the carriers the cars.. This arrangement it is thought Will be tff advantage to the State, and will no doubt have the effect of considerably -reducing the fare on the road. lily. Clay at Home! KENTUCKY''STATE CONVENTION On Wednesday, the 26 ult., the town of Frank. fort, Ky., was thronged with good Whig dole. gutes from varlous - purts of the State to th 3 State Cmivention. • dovi Metcalfe presided. Rosolu• tions in favor of a sound national currencris of checking the veto power, and ofalfthe chertehed principles of the Whig party, were Unanimously adopted, and the nomination of Mr. Clay was received with continued and enthusiastic Amite. -Mr. Clay address'ed the multitude for about an hour.: --In reply to his nomination for the next Presidency, he Maintained the ground taken by' him in the speech on the .11th of June lea f . and which has formed pis invariable _ answer to all-ap plications for his consent to the use of his name in this behalf. lie advised the Whigs not to be discouraged, but tp_rally f round and they must . triumph. • 'He thought out prose pacts more flattering now than they were two years before the electicin, of 1840,: and as we uniplied;then, eo must wi triumph in Mg.- Crittenden also . .,sp . okit for munch time.—. 'ARM the inekiag, there was, tteplendtd barbecue, 'in the Market house in Friinkfort; at which no - intoxicating were Pernilitich ' " . . The glory of, Clays ivhilom ' rend` isarde•le de.=• partmlomd, WI mac ;has atolls- tato, almost utter cobtempt in the citimktion Of \ tbe imOs Of the,. 'Ame -- rican.people. / Eatining , Expres a: - '' :"' ''--• • • Thie 113 from the organ of Tyler,inPhil'idelptilao 0°, 1 4 1 411u!gP, - °f:t!la - PaPPO% B,- M 457 4 1 " ) " 12 P01 a tractor cor.!•! 1 9,1 1 tt 10 g,!)vq 3l Peqt, Pitrclro he,)• 4 " able to 611;444; and who iiMild deify . .,,aelfer hiM. self if he meld give him the pOlicatian ',Of b!'s brtmatOnsi COntriiiisited praidiciliF ' , The Video'of CanteMpe never htikbeeiCandluTiVcan he -1111414: . 14-4 (1 ::YVI1/40140,Inailr, , Or:"Iranfr -, 9 11 3 i bb ia lg Olitiaal 11111411101 1 ,filflioi*Int !lam not.49.pitp-khnt 1011.. 4 i6ice bail too often been raised in thetfirM ems," 1 of univereo thedomomd,be rr s tM,.retillicee. l . osts. asiii s oiitillialaiNillaii;itApilitt l at'iointiel .the4loiiiiiittVaillitlliflitiftWiiiiihteitrfalW 1 laltproelf Goieeelatil"lialt Sginiti*.ikOirlesit ,03 1 0°P.,%4407,.,1*43.rt4. 4 9 1 t h114V74 1 0 14 wilt!" itntimeat, oflito Express, and sOfLe.,* . gpir44*, 1 i 4 1 t th-. 71:1 1 , st r! rjt: •- r it.ii-, s - " • ' ' ' t t 4 'i: ! ,'9 l .*. t i, ' • ' '' ,149 :- 3 , 1 "•,.,, - -,, ‘ _' , o - .."''''? ,- P '4" - ','.. liottl'--ilitrrtiari 7'e eirarkpi A 'WOO , , ~ ~, 7 ,,.,0,,,1,,,,..: - :0,,,4 7 :,Z0i. it0 h:7, •.; 2, 4 ,; 0 k ,,,, .. x : , i,...A ... as , , , p ::` ..:s .19R1; ° Ai . ''AI ~ :'"'-'4.l'-.."?.?? . . i•1'4'• 04 Ag:,; ( 7-.13 : . if f 0, ii/P , '-eitlTP . r t t i. A... 4 4kkattiTw t'ill..T 'alp", ofi, f e l. t iTo 4 . 6, loirgAt!'htiol i kte lLi rlfi.r B ls wiiiiii atAbr die' reiiitletief in 1844: Titrr1 1 ,c!r-,.,7, 1 ly `ekliit's a dirubt tirly'loiiiier but be Ite hill lisi' - 1!!?: . ':tinlici';;lo - r:',pii6iiiinsin.ip, i )ll4,onthe 51T1f c ..11019044, .41tiiitiirilleirt'Xitillirgint1;11;17IIIS iiio1 1 4 s,ip s fif: alii!rtile f , '-diidins 74 1 4 ,11 int thlff FiPP9 l :.9f. i )ifi i ? . i; iiiieliitia;eiiinOteiioiktii'fitis4iitiiiihithii•eiltihvaii- , • i ' oinzleciatietionlitlit ed4ritliquuelvrestlett-.irtts.lfirdts , , I ..,„ . lsitichini:AberObre.:llff,iliejlits-Arjr.!!:-.ool';;lohittitE4'. Is strong aith the rank and fire--the people7bnt , the lender! of, the pally consider hirnnn 4.0 ignornnt hrioOr v ii,i4 th j oOtinlWniii,With4tidlng,;;Ciii: = .enits is 'a' good au abd, the ititi:q;#od,'Wlititie , )lierse: thtui,ftlittt:to"*lirOught out by:ti4;*.lettitiiiirt faction at-tiairiCborgov)ll kilt ever. heleatin, , , , ,itini'. that ketlo . 4 bein g him into theAeld. Mr. Nan' Buren Inn,' been playing skilful gamed and_ if: any ; one:" heads !'_ Mr. Q,ltioiin it will. Jneksiimlinelting leis claims—Arldt.st logichotly of ol4radistil•frietidir-Who' think he had not ai,fnir chaneo inl 840,1'4111. clinging to itim.--tyith,lkie tr.vn,.gt:entOntlegl'unsurßa"ed an ! ! connplishmen!...lin,finesser,:iteaysuceeed in getting; . . • • . , thenoinination.' 'The great contest,...willbetetsVeen. him and 'Mr. however ttitrat it mny be, we: incline to . the opiiihan that Mr . Cailaiun will be . vietoribus'in the '*end. Not ,Withont'n large niid poi4rful ,liedy . ni friends in the M Wale States, ; -Calhouti`cOmmands the undivided' strength of the .South and South West. ' icut' if he . should find:his chance in ',the least. degree doubtfdl inn Convention . , he is prepared to take the'snme'steli agalaarhis par ty thatttetank avitist the Government—to-nullity their action by an intiepentlent stand and detertnina- on to be !Ite candidate, uotem volens. His friends in the South now insist on his being accepted as . the candidate, and entrees their detcrminaihm to adhere to Min nomi,nalon or no nomitition.' - . • ' party in Mr. Callioun's own dia. plat has - hoisted • bia flag and opened the campaign with that ecelanition;nod the other newspapers of the party through the South :are' Ilk folleiving; its lead. Let Mr. Calliouk ' but adhere to this' detei mi natiou and 'the matter is settled ; and thia he 'very . well underatands. It was his declaration thk the Locos " are held together by the coliesite potter or public plunder," knows perfectly Ave!' that if le Smith stands firmly to her ground, the Northern kococw,i!l knock tinder rather than run the tick of missing the spoint.by n division in Melt-ranks. They will not halt lohg to quarrel about differences oropitt ien, they can hut .ccttre the stteceiit of teir s neon and , get-into power. - 7NntraiisTaill i ifit is w:thin the meant of that party ;..make John C. Calitinin Prod- dent of the United States in • One or the sorest indieations'in this matter is ko .be found k the course or (lie cir;lnbc • ,' the great;epti- •ollitig ()rpm* of are Locoti. 7-'he Gtole ie ktiowt.l4.o. •bare been Warmly in favor of fitr. Viin.tUren, bu circumstances which have lately transpired render .ing, it certain that Mr. Calhoun will be the candidate, iliel3lobe.has industriously set about healing up old Sores and making fair weather—with . the man whom it once stiganitised as 'John Calaline Calhoun.' One 'of it's late numbers says: • "As to Mr. Calhonm, we' think that our paper has long since shown - that with us " bygones are by-' grooms." We olid,in former times, say , Some pretty_ loatel things of, Win, and-4e ore afraithirirOFtizen, na things were said of us. lint welrave long since sat down in the same council house, nui d smoked the calumet together. Our war hatchets are unburied only to wet them to the eyes in the blond of one com mon enemies; and should a National Convention appoint him our great chief, we will follow his war mth soul light in loos shade, as long' as 'a' fee to the grentlhometratic tribe remains to darken our skies with the smoke of lois wigwam, or leaves his track upon the leaves of our hunting grounds." What a wonderful charm there is in the" spoils or victory," to obliViale all former hatred, to'reemteile all enmities, and being men into frietnlshiliwho once abused Aztels other with the malignity of (lends r • if.koVe and Raeliciors. That quaint and humorous sermonizer, Dow, jr. of the N. Y Illeicury, thus discourseth i in one ofhts last sermons, Upon the tender p ass i on, Wind. ing up with a good lambasting of those cruel wretches, old bachelors: ,My friends not to love is painful. To have uIT our thoughts entombed in the dark sepulchre of m.clliishness, and our hopes lost in the Cold .mists of misanthrophy, is about as had as living confin. ed lit a dungeon, to beled with the fragments of one's former follies. ',The light of love, admitted thrMigh the windoivs•of the heart, warms and nourishes the soll' , ' - bf the soill—cattses the buds of benevolence to expand, andd the capsules oftharity to be filled With the ripe seeds of sympathy.— Witlitut the genial influence of love the nosorp frecies, and beconics as batten as a goose pasture In winter, , If a flower chalices to Worn, it is destitute br fragrance, or; if it have any, it wastes its sweetness, as the poet - says, upon tho desert air. To be without love, is like being without a fire in winter, a lamp at night, and a sun-nt' dap-- -The heart - that never lovas, is as hard as a brielcdtat, as losenslble,as a pickled clam -- ill the finer feelings, and a'etranger to every delight: ful emotion. An old bachelor, my friends, whose heart is never warmed with affection, ia's mtsera. blo nobody in the World. Ile is as cold blooded as a turtle, and looks as melancholy as a clam.;- llis hopes die as soon . as they . hegin r otpioffetith, - e - r:- . 41i - Orifis no more ' Sentiment in his soul, than there is music in a cornstalk fiddle—his thoughts are wrapped up in the shroud of self—he knows not the pleasures attendant on the 'sexual amalga. motion of soulshis abode is fixed in the solitary wild of celibacy, where all is cheerless, comfort. less and dreary. There he lives and there he dies, unhonored and unwept; and when ho' is finally carried away by the current of time, we:can only say, there goes another parcel of rubbish into the gulf of'eternityt . • • The Wheat Crop. From a circular of •Mr GcOrge It. Budd who has established a Flour sad Grain agency at St. Louis t .Missouri; we extract the -following pare. graph:— Tile wheat crop of the United States in the year 1839, was: by the Marshal's return, eighty. four flatirons eight hundred 'and ttoenty.thrce thousand bushels. I estimate the clop of the Ares. ant rear to exceed that of 1830, by 30 per cent., or nearly one third:.-giving an aggregate produc. tionin 1849 of one hundred and ten millioni" trio - hundred and eixty nine thousaiurbUsbas. This great increase, (tor I estimate it at 40 . per . . cent, on lastyears pro:Metier:Xis readily accounted for, from two prominent ,:caused:. .First, wheat •irt 1841, paid the farmer better than any, otherpto. 'duction.Ofthaltoil, and secondly; the 'eitratiiiiinti: ry yiuld of thetswhich wife stewn..•Tho stutieties consumption in,the United .States, in. ordinary , yearti; ie four'bushels of wheat'or n fraction over foor•fifths,of , barrel;'.of pet. ° mom.. t o every inhabitcek (this also d ,allows .fer,ttle quenti. tY'used In'titattufaeturlnk and 'other purposes,) ,consequently, with-onr! predent pripulatitin, hew short 0f,18,588,00Q,Jhe empumption will be soy.. fluty 60' liuslitila; on - aCcount, tho, 104,:priee i iiowevorittostimato.'tho;.eanstiiiiiitioe, this,yeatalfourtitgA • poi . Imßliels • per head, "mitkuta att aggregate eonspinptteri 0f.113,2.50,000 bushid4llmai -tbexuttill-be'tc - suitikus" . o . 2l,olo, dOO bushels, to supplor,Soreige, demand.' • . • . _ ~ ,Tior .onarcrr , #4urinuor.4-Tlie lie:ir .Ir9ik: 'Tribune' girtAilieljengthuftbo, Aquedtiet tit; 41', 1 :- ,itilF44 T tpacitol' thf9lt nhl64elfl gealsctl. i flr i ,2 1, • 00 , 000'010 7 2, UniuChi 4fivi.le79ifvi9gliot; I, ervatiq3o4 b Oifrgaoi ~ne xii#4*,4ityor th - CitioftTnki , Riiiuith3 o ; ooo : o nniisi • *solituTo.A 16044 10.0h 14000 • 1100)0001006104 ,li4. l klfillAi fl V 444l . lS9o44iol(.63;9l4lPthiv i i fs l 4Vl l %tecgitOLPll l -,,44## 1 1* ir A t _174 4'14 4 1 0 1 g Vt i P ir I tO nl o 4i ' ll , ill 44.11 1it t 1:1 1 itt' i rfitk9rloo4ol. 414: 7 44 .0 . 04 14 V 41 .01ArgictitinPV ' • !01,001it,,, gti , , 0 ~.,,-;.,•,,,, ! , , A ',-,, ivti• ipky,..,:;4' ' i fia';`,‘ -..'' , '-':: ~: •'ilkitgititivrtgi, . ' trz tv , irs '' , -, -_,.-,1,;,- -` . --•4 6 . 4 1;, 1 ,-,.. 3 4.7t-Pea, ~-11104 ' , , . -''' . °' •t bk.q:" 'l''' Ifit i o,-;," 1 ,',.. I.'- ! ~, 1 - , joitopLoitiohillryieW 4 - ",o a fki:i ir 6,"::4 46 1 ,.' i4i ) ;,;:1.',i;i4. - ii‘dii:eised hi. f' ,'',,1160404,0,41'11h 4iPSeptember last, and ' 6 '.itiOirittiliiTillittlgtlithe Proceedings or con.' Vi i 4l iiilifAliiii;htio Administration, &e. This l Aidresi,`ildaeteredit to the ripened intellect, the • nallre.,,OudgemrinC.of the Quincy sag, The killiti4lidire liar „f 4 bh., Tyler ere reirievired,atid his, timelierlP: (double-dealing - 'arid'hypocrisy are et rofth , bytlie'filthriii andSttenttve'eli-witnees korl4iiS. , ':::flalirrqiiilteiiddy,lrern ', - iyhese.,l penetrating 46Shi,rirrithitifOOttiresi, with:. soverittand a • '' I'll ''"f' - ' la -'. '''''' "' dr , J I RPM!!. - 71 1 tJM..,.: 6 1 0 )f1,1q113 1 !;„.e: The HOUR] '2l94o(ptil?lisliiiteOrspecell' Tr/Marks: iri. - *44l4iy4i.r4tiitrleil; olialdiliftailtellWii l rPioe:qiiooo 4 lZ or'W:o4P*s94d tePtive peftkqiifitsaY,til-he can, with' WithS ,' onesty andaincentyoll4.the Winga,ear—utberoenis t nlly or tepee tlyI dv d a n ything T u ft. t cf i c ,,,ith the con c eited niartdf mil , ggiigdtiin;feeiteiassr and treacherjr ,that,haff,Stolen ,into the People's F-HO l3B O BA lirlillilinlPPirt.P:" ail l se A 4- i.n ll 4'ilt "*. • .' .... '' •ta int.& bl,!tiecident. and thiplieityi - .... The character . ~.. .„ 'of Jolifi Tyler a s 'painted by ; „l4ViAdituis;'ia One ':iihigi r firtV.. would flesirS-eitheifor.ppOef!ii•ttiem kvie)veN,erth have mud) to do . .with: in anot et.- I,T,hat.itiraktiecia, truly and faithfully 'drawn, who .caii. question? - Add tieing as painted by the lira. • , . . tor; whb can think that oio.Whig Cony - ea - 6*mi at. . .. paiietill H m Hall were a onierrt top soon iiidliclaiing , the full and' final Separation ' f the Whigiref Mita: sachasetts' froardrbith • Tyler? -Ile is more Mir . rept, more &apt - midi , , a intolerant ordifferci'of en . opinion in his o ce.holier d far more, tyren. . nicer, :even thin Andrew Jackson;'and so Mr. Adaiiis liao.paitited Ifini..' ' ..' '-'•/''• In the ,of his speech. Mr. Ad a ms,says : . , .ri "Mr: Appleton remarks that.nullification, sap& rat ion„ arid - the forty -bale theorY have passed away from the minds oflhellonili, and this obiervation is true,'so far rjavegards the arrayment of the Pal. metto 8 taViTrd against the banner 'of the Union; .. but you would entertain a very erroneous opinion of your own condition, and of the ruling spirit of the .present day at the South, if you should flatter . your/wives that Southern nullification has either Changed its datum or.relented from its purposes. It is not the intention of Mr. Appleton to convey to, his eonstitnents and. :fellow-citizens of this Commonwealth that idea. He knows that the principles of roillificatir;ii were never more index. • ibly Maintained, never more inexorably pursued, then.they have been by all that portion of he South 'which ever gave them countenance, from the day of the death . of - Williani Henry'llartison,- to the present. I cannot•doubtbut that he knows - that nullification is the treert - •of the so inansioh at Washington [ and has been so frOm the.. 4th day of April, 1841. I hatard.nothing when , I say_that nullification. is 'Op acting.President's'_ Coniciehtt.That it is at the root ()fall hieiretoes, as aroll as of that masterpiece of Executive legis.- !MIMI .a rid 'itaterimaiiship, approving" and signing a bill. And depositink in the Department of State _ teasons against it,. .._ . . Fellow.citizmis, I wish to s peak .to you of the Present tenant of the People's house at Washing ton will, all the respeeldue to his present acciden. int dignity, and with all the tendernesi due to the affliction of his domestic bereavement. I. would even gladly spore , his public character iri consideration of his private virtues, but that the deepest' of 'all moral obliquity, of donble.dealing, is insuperable from the public official actidn of the man; mid that this-mend obliquity is urging hint at once to•his own ruin and to tharof his country. " Allied, alas ! forever to the crime,: - . .1. , No, kind exemption can the prrson claim, I ' - Bat hlackettsflowtmaril in.the lame-of time, - - The equ i al partner of eternal shame." . . Charles the first and George the third were• men of exemplary.private characters; but it Is re marked by Blackstone that the greatestof Charles' misfortunes was the loss in the opinion of his peo ple of the reputation of sincerity. . ' And let me observe, that double-dealing' men; thong!) 100 well adapted, under every form of gov ernment, to make their way in the world, and to attain the summit of.pnwer, can seldom hold their course long Under the inspection of the Iliadic eye withimt being detected; and when detected, seen through forever after in all the. windings of their career. , But, fellow-citizen's my constituents—and lila -urinal-that-eapacity_thad_now_earnestly invite_your . _:: attention to a topic affecting your Interests more vitally•than any other thing on this side ofheaven —Nullification,-portentous and fatal as it is troth° prospects and welfare of this Union, is not the only instrument of Southern domination wielded by . the Executive arm at Washington." In the course of his address, Mr. Adams draws., , the !nutria of John Tyler in this wise: * * * * John Tyler who stole into the camp. of the Whigs in 1840, in their triumphant struggle to put down the standard of the Northern man with• Southern, principles, under the colors of retrenchment, reformond Whig resistance to Ex ecutive usurpations, has crept olio the summit of power, and there proclaims himself a democrat - dyed. in the wool—claims to be ari independent; co.ordina to department of tlio.legialative power— declares in so many words that Congress can en. act no law without his 'sanction, 'stigmatizes the leadiirg 'Members of Congress,' of the party by which lie was chosen as the coadjutor of fiarri.., son, to uehiiive the great and glorioui work of re form, us mousing politicians—sets all the trumpets of the pleas, paid by his dispensation of patronage with the public money, end all the hungry and unprincipled office-hunters throughout the Union, i . to railing against Conhl4BB, the real logielative power, for failing to restore the public prosperity, tvhile lie defeats by his vetoes almost every salu tary measure devised and matured by them, and believed by them to be indispensable for that pur- • pose—turns out of the Executive offices under his controk•honest and honorable - men;trefe . republi: - cans and ardent patriots, like Jonathan Roberts, , and foists into their, places, sycophants and time serveralevies money upon the people, upon au thority so questionable, that his own Secretary of the Treasury helierearit to he without and against law; and to crown the whole system of misrule, approves land signs tin . act of Congress, and de posits in the Department of State, an, argument, to nullify the most important, width° Most whole- - ' some of its provisions: ~ . • - - Fellow-Citizens, it was this glaring act of double-dealing, that stomped the character of the man in - my estimation, in letters. never to be of. faced. ' That duplicity' was his uneradicable vice. I had long had reason to suspect, .but ' wee- es.. tremely reluctant to believe. Long"before he:had been thoiight of as a candidate for the office of ' Vice President of , thirUnitecißtates, I had read at' letter from the late Hendry Lee to him, charging him with that pollution of the heart in. other • transactions of hit; life, upon testimony which it was not easy to . withsta.id. I had witnessed his . wiiiiering, inconsistent, - and yet obstinate conduct i throughout the whole of his proceedings - with his first cabinet until his dissolution—had eomparid his *elf:contradictory reasons for hie first and le., cond bank vetoes, and had Jiotieed the direct' hi.. mks upon his ., veracity, made' by the 'seceding • members of the, Harrison 'cabinet: I knew not all indeed of the mass of irrefragable, evideneiti, On - that point; which‘has r since beendiet:lased, btit it 'woe - already ~exposed:lin : iitieli' tainting.' light, ' that I coulillatrely4ceettailk him 'limey* terns of , such pereonal 'Civility;.,trAtif. tat'obietved With ' politital adieriarliwerholielerstMaJlita* : uriirripeaeltert; - The'.iipprorattorlhi-;*- 4 6 . , ment. bill; ,withtheotovear l- fiepisilted in the D c . partment‘of State egainit fats- 03illost jmport l irtt . section contained In it, was in my it traud,„ , which. no man of moral honesty could have emit. mittedi:Whiehliitii'i.etitobistrYs-'6euld disguise, and n o ingenuity could palliate: - I-ennlithasetto'SW. ther e nianterimetnt.ty - yekienutlntwototeltth' its author, and duty to expose AtOltotjlekinnetee - A6 the v - Winne; end to %hoot:warp ~,, ....4. , ~,-) i ...,, ~ ,t ~,•,,, :., y, „ . , t :!4 .... J'Allrliod a resolutimrof the' HOUse,iallief oti', the Department; of fer,,,thitpepet‘..ltee)kbk: Tylefluttioetnetelx , taferan* the . floitee'lkitlka: had 4 ,4ppoettet.., theONhierteasloafor,,ein bill;&/itheittt istaitngoilibit they invariably yeetingklift*With•deAlietioe,,entendeel 1117 1 - 14 0- 1100 Vig: a 7cr i n. 14, (4 ,, _ r i . ‘i..rot. „..4,•l4ll.l4PoAetaullui 111110Y40.4.., tilf:V.Oilt;, lectiOnatirilltite lobltMen...Aq ettony.totooketkut , oCkto6trAloo 0 013101 , 1W4 ..,t11M1.41-IkresolutOn.9-iriptOlitli.lt ', q 4 0 .: te l t kpiAtillentfiTl3l2,iValut•Vortber4t4*ll. "t'''°!*: 4 - ,btifiaa4altifearitaditlOlVloitretfi tli ii,otitt,--,i qfttys.likir a of, 41 A nriA4444iyint *OUngi 4,sriltycOo. iiiittrAdet4loo l,l o l :44 ( tilietEet , . it: ::" t; ' , * s t• • %84,,. Pi.)„.... 10 r.i vmdU► au,— Itn;gr, , ,,IITP,XV-,•,, * 7 10113 1 ,- ~.,qt,,, ~ ;,...t. i ,„1.4.3,:,., !..72 0 )744 0 V ' - o ,, , Jw s -4,4. 1, .9YOr- ' ' • " llilta ltiiv,!o i) • ' iIIe:YON.. of 'Wu- sir, . .'7' ~ , .