, -, - , ' ,4 % 411111411110 6,,lasaavea ;~, 4 :;Ei: BEATTY ~ EDITOA~ ; ANJ~,~pRbPNI~TOA ;:i ME WEDN'ESDAY`'JuIy 3o;`l'e4B:-" BM •,141;T:Blr:R. has nein lecturidiiiiiri on .nnti-sla ---,4ory,s-itiinugh-eight countinn_in,-Nirginia Virginia ' Washtgton Union says: :WO - iditriildteititifiler the ehanees as against war., and:yet we-are not at liberty to assign , our reasons , for this` . • : • 11110," thintrpander -Frederick Engle - has been Alprieinted etimtharider of the United Stittes'eteanter Prineeton in place•of °apt:- Stockton; Who ' , Will remain at home to at• tend to tire. repairs—and alter a tions of the U.S.' frigate Tionaiellation. • . itdc•A town. meeting m nartisourg has swpointed. a, colleding committee in each funds bo~7tig .a farmAa - the—acighbortiond, upon which to build 'the' State Asylam for the Insane. 'part VI-of Drr Lartiner's Lectures tmrScieitce And Art, üblished by Greely iSt McElraili - , - of New York, is . o n our • ta ble. _lt contains the conclusion ()film lec ture On the Radiation of Heat, also on. Me e. toric Stones.and Shtioting tars„the. Earth', Lunar Influences, and the Physical Con stitutimi dr/curets. It Will be seen tfai the. subjects ate interesting and important, end the manner in which they are treated renders them equally. tit:Leftmost 10-the un— lettered as to the scientific man. It is s grat- Hying to see the interest in scie n ce awaken iFdirt the country by these lectures. It is calculated to produce important results, 11013.11 Writer in the National Iltelligen terrin2speakinrof the alarininiprevalence :of inTemperance inVirginia,,ikatitmil l e ttoMe stand taken by ov. McDowell, the ptesent Executive of the State, 'on the side 13 envenom, in strong terms Of approba tion, He- has had the .meral courage,"_ iduiarlitt the writer, ', l amid innumerable , thwartinge or the great, and-the fashicittable,.to . exhibit upon his table and throughout . his 'mansion, to guests,' how , - jiiter . :miriiiirisut 'or exalted; '.no - _ 'drink than pure - water, His riairie is sign ed to the tiledge'of: abstinence from all that -7. eUninieiteite; and his eloquence, iinrivalled to* in . Virginia, has repeatedly been heard ati the Cause of such tempetande." _ It_wilLbe_seen by the following from the Baltimorti Patriot of Thursday afternoon last, that, the administration has commenced an attack upon the Tariff. Pennsylva nians who. wish to maintain the present prosperity -Of our State, and the advance ment Ofita interest, should keep a watchful eye upon any movements towards altering the - tariff law. -- The -- Petriof says—.." w e -team-that the -Secretary of the Treasury has authorized at the several Custom Housefly inquiry to be instituted, with' a view,to some ,modification of the Tariff, Ite., and that Messrs: Neilson and Burk, -of the Baltimore Custottalouse, have been eeleeted fOrlltia cit Sr." 101mA Washington correponclen-t-of '—'thePelly Chronicle tiayst`HDO riot •be,surz pnieed to hear o(the re;Ostablislimetit of the .131hibe : the XtemocFatic membe*• of. 'Cciiig(*ionnot,ite is.very probable, agree , ' - .- - '9* - Ritiihlill=far.. - public_Trinting, . they will, give it to; Mate and Rives, - and they will a geln. set tbe 9lobe on its axis. The U. S. Jouriah4epreeenting-tinrYonnty penwera the peculiar friends of Gen. Jack , eon , is cogning# l openly. against Mr. Polk'. . TO ; presWmpti4 in :. tbat the - Journal Will, bet„ps . 94.,W3iiik - A;c o ., to , break dow n ~11.1r;pOlk and Ritobli;._and,fto :re-establish . itbe: Globe as tie Organ. and dictator. of the Detooersio art :'V . "Pr'QfimsqtAiOili says the Wash ington Union;le ttisitiit'to sail, ; for Europe' in 'Aiiittati huChe will return in time for, thi'!_eireiiiio or coeirees. ire will carry aith,l4ll4,filitprovideotif Of his:Cefebra tpd tehipeph; we .heve no. Odd he ivitilliteither Viatoliatinguished attention thipithe.:navansifidetatesmen of Europe CO ibioli hieextracirdipary invention for -' The ralid nOrnatunieutroo of intelligence— ' eOperlbr, 'as is le, to an ' einttl " riliarover). hipase'e.: , ..eojustly entitles him, -;VitiZrcepiiinliihn*itlicer, who, it will bite is 13 ' ' Tpil a inFlorida, ,= , , ga!,.,,,5 11 ,1,.w0f m 011) r liti4t l 4. l LOPeeir - k4:30401 - o, l 'has been lib ,''Sr#o,lll..t.ll;4l.4ti/14,01015# ' ate ri ' dara 84 7 e, tstit t hf siil3 9:9Pkr e t d, :tg i i, l lflt! him was &Poe *3W #E4Vo l * . l;houlf,...4 ., 'e*tv York house, Ai(llitilled%. l "This'ii# l ;49 o lead wae - dohe 'Llst: t lOnd'reinti'',ttittTsen of .'Walker's, '''-`' ' I ' 4 tiiiiii r drnitiner Aftificiffo'rth com t i ,5 ,714 J J ' 4 ^ ' O,tA, *C, 4 40i 0 031.9r.094194.10 - 11.0eAr„ , .{,,q, ,nt'lls , . A . ‘"(,.. , t0a41 1 ./M1!„4"i-thot,--so - mama, r,i 14 1 1 1 8 .4fPi41. iiTh°tll.4l drunkards hoe, bii4**o l /o'lliid that merf? than five h un* O„ -4- I 4 occasional '" iMd F 3 PfirMet,.acP , g ,, * *el k n: Ut akeu , PS Shied the *taiieern 6l ?t Pr , fhe ~l'efttPerehet refrit ' tr• " , 1, ', 1 11 11t, 41irge majo rity Of 'On he4l','itinor t Sf illi i ll .P , !! o ? -4n t r Yi: afe- F naliiiri cifl4 l 9 4' . .; ,; ' l', o ofitiY*,cr , ;;:rhe. , claret'4)!*: '' iii; * f t 6 Y1" ,. 0 1 * 1141 0 14 1Y' , f i... 4,, „.v, , i ,. , , 0# . . ,)4nP4stwoout ',' ',_,t ",' ..,,,,: '-. , ;,.5',1, -"A'''''' ,0 1- H. -.,: ”mm: 7- • • - POei s.":` - • tifiSt.Ze;,.,, y.: 7f161i4g, tf, --,6yet• has.l l atelilianspiied•naoligsk , Ole'4ofrfoo! I raay,'—thweaPtain .. .doei! . nOt .laY"*lttietly. wliat it 'does:ro't 'once mention the . ar - llaleantb's'Groi*t!'"N;y.-, GrAttitri!s' incirotns-exPostatatinint=iint-sovniihilg-or 'Other. which it seems be dates not speak . , ald r u ly 'Oapini, More . than to assert that the main part of the story . ifrisheer - Well;We tint.l4hOse.oPthaiNolunteeP:. the Buchanan and Dallas "Muss"' one the 4th of Julyovitich Capt. Sanderson so dis tantly and . rnyiiteriously . alludes 'to in his list paper. It strikes us an important sign of - dre - fimesitlint-the-daptain-is-obliged-to allude to the matter so d i stantly. It tillaws hOw deeply the Dallas:feeling .. has-struck its roots. Althoughlte has-lately Veceived a pretty large slice , frOM th e public loaf -through-the influence - of - Mr: - Bnchanan,-lie has not"yet dared through the tolttnini of the 'Volunteer-to denounce the Dallas men who offered the indignity to Mr. Buchanan sl Holcotith's grove f isa pretty strong indication that any 'clennociatioW of the Dallas movement on the 4 th , NV, 6111 d he very likely to Make a disturbance in - the loco-ftiao-;:anks-fully-equal--to-that:matle-by- But it is rather too severe a stretch of the truth in the Captain to say, that the main part of the story is a sheer, fabrica tion," The• Captain knows that our state ment of the loco foe° .quarrel on the 4th is stria* true. s We obtained all the in formation-wapublished.on the subjeet; from irgentleman who was on the ground from Alle_begieningito-the-end-of-the-eelebration, an 4: Who - was' an•eye-witness to all that trandpired..Tlielluchinan clique in dila boiough may stifle the feeling so as to pre vent-any sign of it appearing in the colL umnii-of , the-LVolunteer i -bui-the fight did take place in just-the manner and form de scribed, and the Volunteer cannot refute our statement. - We have no particular in terest in,these "family quarrels" of our harmonious opponents, other than to fairly and it - v . ly chronicle them es passing events. 1 . IK-P'olk-far-41Votble;' KrThe administration at Washington -is , evidently-not-getting along smOodtly.— A late number of the 'Union,' the official organ, admits Mr. Poik's failure to buy up friends by means of the governr,nent pat ronage. It says: "We have almost come to the conclusion, that the patronage of the Executive is not the thing which it has been-cracked up to be that it adds neither. to his pleasure or his pow.e,r; and that Mr. .Polk would be stronger without the dispen sation of his patronage than with it. 'tWe could mention men, who summed they had strong claims,.upon the party, re tiring from . o . • . Washington disappointed and disgnsfed- 7 -their att yu, 1 -,„ 4„ t• o lten, if not perverted—viewitg p. tion titre' the falser medium of their passions and their prejudices, and prepaeed to seize the . firiTt occasimt to censure ; and then abuse and finally - to attack." Titp, TAntEr.rr•Theletter of R.I. Wm:- Nan, to the editor of the Mississippian, in. which be says,' THE TARIFF - MUST - . BE REDUCED, will open the eyes of many allitherto blind, though honest sup porter of the Federal Locofoco party. "Polk, Shunk and the Tariff of 1842," streamed fr4m4lte banners of the Locofoco party dnying the last campaign. and the peopla'WhO ralliesLundertheir-folds,-must-I I _now FEEL and KNOW that they have been deceiired and betrayea Can they a .ny longer act with a party, the leaders of 'which' are so base and villainous, as to .purchase"vietory at the sariftee of the dear-' est interest of their country! It cannot for a moment bd believed that had the Locofo c-91,Plac,ed upon th , "thann , rstl e mauo 91. Mr. Walker; "TILE TARIFF; IT MUST BE RFDIJCED-ro TILE REVENUE STANDARD" that:POlit, 'and. much less Shunk, could ev * have succeeded. , Will mot - the people, then, who,:voteff the Locofoco ticket last fall, believing that they were supporting the , 1 1 Tariff ofili42.teach.the,minions of Great' Britain witO . :n.l - iw.powee..at Washington - , attempting 0) iarry vet ttmltigtttoitod tory., anti-tariff (limn:lnes:4Bin . .Robert Mat May,ltonently, voted for Me, ,risiiffof 1842 and »mania stand 604 In voting_, „front • the high est.to,..the,lowest.eilleer;:in sustaining it, "first 'telt and all the time," they may do CONVICTIDN: AND .SENTENDE.CIVP, Gaguir, Renry , G. Green;iwito,lme been' on' trial 4 .Troy, New: Ycirk, for a'fOrtnight past, for the murderlofhitt wife, •was ton • Saturday , afternoon, found,guiky by the jury, - and sentenced by the CoOlti to be 'hanged . .6n Wednesday theloth of September:' The uPcitilhe prisOner, was' of 'offhe rndst'atiottious'ever ;recorded;— He hutlbettti married but:(oir 'cloys when' began IC give arsenic to ilia:Wife:2 - - She ' aiimeiiresiribed; : The devil otti: htiblnio ihen'llaiiesited-Ille*sespfarseqieranclirtii - oii bOsint. lolldo ttifi- - d 7 i * votieg's -drink;'mine4s T , eeaoiii ev en 4 iiif pros i4 i d i it thi 8111 feinto:lif-mtitdei.Ailiei les t , inir' iiietie efikiisioill'id'i?liiiii ifitir, h - 314'.evee . ' ;vrollB o l ! fin ji li e* l6 ll l 44'ahe 'lltf.lcriti* 10 ' 61816- 4016 40 t hRi x, ./0 *iiikvoi 4 ii'lli&O' . ihr etr ioheri g liesti , o iri ,t i - 'ohf,hiffOttia - kliveek ifferf n6rrisie:'-;- , The. t ";Ciiiiiiil'‘f viiii i s , .';',6 3 lik Ilitiea" .l ,9l'n haMn 8 , 0 . I , „, ', Mak be in is. i lie MP ll Mjiibi:ktit, a k, ii f' '1 .: ;tll,o'iiot I:ll'o.nll,4iitOlC-10,0J,,,,V.V.,” ,; ' j., 5 a,l-,-,;,,,!„.;,t, ,`,. 1. `",,,, . . 0 * - 4 4 . 1 ' lir ' l t 1*.rg,101 1 31 0 911 1 0 1 . P0 / Wl t lifOs il'6' ft*iYageTt'V'i Pin4"*".Atatir. • ,i'' **16A0,tki:Frxu.:4041.,A.*,:."j..i77,. .. _ . 4) :4:44.:,,..: cab.,,;;!' -'1 AN6. - - - Tief i ~ P ._ Pait 00 8 g „l-0 1r0 : •.; i... 100 1 1 81111 flbre '‘"P`• ria,t,ool,Ww"' • •41 11 -Wi4' 4460 , 1 , 161vii . 'potiig - qAaigitiliroal l 4 , gr• 1 3. 4 Ins i° 6 Y l6 O94X . ibY:, tifim,;44_, The iiniee; not ripeakiiii.E.filiierdie.r.: , l izl ti.adieted:titeqi*i' s ;,„ l isliegattont ort!+to!. tirid'er; find ixijiiii,kgo #.4% IVIr:olIC . ,0 . 0 rier*Te -- 'bufiriiiighi j i,:trtri - - - -="iliere -- Availtn - , 'future, in, po!Rie,sifOr hint bexOn4ltuft lirti`: ritid." • .: ~t , - 110,,," • . -•• ' ~, ::,y,.. ' - ' - 6iit already ii4idencei of,thei'ciii;;k; _ : ~,, ..-., ntssof 'Potomee's;'asservitien•Oare gctt.,nex .; • . iit g ,•,-: Lile::-noticed: 4 n -•'- n• ,, yeetifri..Sjiitier;fe; "feler" . put out by a , totni:oce knikr i ln. Detroit: The iticlimend t nquirpi4, 7 `ise:lterir. all - the secret designs itrid . .,alsviititiOnji:',o,f' the President ate to be looked for-Jits A iiiiidf,--in Clio" peTion of - a entres - finiitletw, - who adppts; for the occasion, the signature of "A t epublitan of 1108"—deciared ftir a second tam. Deprecating, in an article published on the 9th inst., the gro;,;ink . discord the ranks of the Locofoc4;,he . .. , . sn'ys :,,,•-• - 9 "There is, however, one result which Must foltow any, dissentiona -between the supposed Calhoun•atid--Van Duren. wings of the party: The people—the patriotic people—will fa'y Alm_ contestants aside, and rally, as they .all may; Once • more .under the banner of James -IC.,'Polk. Treat not this PS a wild-idea—itmust-be-so-;--notking_ is - Lniore - ortaiTin-the feta* ilianAtatyhe The e.. e 1 rasa imui not the most perfect harmony in our-ranks; and perhaps it -will be7so i•ader any eumstances. There is no reason why ;it. may not. "I know' Col. Polk hae:aald- that he would not be a Candidate for iesetectirie, and--I--know- that-he-Voted, whileAn- the .House of Representatives, to limit the ser vice of the President to T. singie term of six 1-years,---But-these—were-the-individual a-pinions of Col. Polk, in which I do not concur, and in which the people do not. The same opinions were held and urged with great force, on many occasions, by Thomas Jefferson,- while the Convention wholtanied-the-Constitution were-in ses sion, and often since. Gent_ Washington ,repeatedly expressed his determination to withdraw- at the end . of his first-term ; and Gen. Jackson often urged upon Congress the propriety of- restricting the 'period of service to one term ; yet all these illustrious men yielded to the sense of the nation, and were: elected and served a - second term.--= cowse or these eminent men has never 1 - beerreensuredmitrirCol. - Polk`follow'w 'in ,theit footsteps, he. will -enjoy the plaudits LthatfulloWed them. If the-people again call upOn - 01. PORTI Inty,e- too high an opinion of .his devotion to - them .to doubt that he will not resipt their Voice. "Let partisans and factions. beware, lest they - - makethie nomination a second time indispensable to our triumph.". There, is--no--equivocation here.. The discord of tbe.factions, will be sure to be kept up, because MG-Polk can Control them -••so that it May now -be set down as cer tain that Mr. Calhoun, and all others who have been looking, or Whose friends have looking, for them, to the Presidency Must stand aside for Young Hickory, fctr a sec ond heat.--- 01110'ANS CAPTURED! . GREAT EXCITE DIENT.—On the evening of the 9th, lays, the Cincinnati Gazette, -three men from 0- Mr. C Loraine, Mr. bainer. and Mr. Thomas, all of Washingtou county, were seized on the Ohio- shore .by a body of men . from Virginia, and lodged in_ a jail at ear , - ersburg,-upon-the- charge-that they had aided the escape of the slaves. • • The facts., is we learn them; am that six negroes, belonging to Mr. Howard, of Wood county, Va., made _their escape into Ohio, that seven men, among whom were the three above named, met these negroes _on_the_bank,_and-were-aiding- vhetn—hrt remeval of their baggage, when they were _seized, the other four escaping. This was done without any process of law. The Virginians say that, they had knowledge of the designs of the Ohioantkwhich ... they . de- . rived unqestiontbly from one of the tie groes; and that they were tints prepared to defeat the designs of both artier. • - . The friends of the captured , whites tell this story; . that some seven weeks since they Were - solicited by a white man, an el der in the Baptist Church of Virginia, and our informant, thinks his name is -Romaine; to aid the escape of the negroes; that. they refusalo leove i this state for-thatpur— Peso but said they were-Away-Arse:oy: to help the bond in their efforts to gain their liberty; and that he returned and entered into the plot against them, for a prothised reward if they, were capturedsif fifty dollars., Th - 00 - firrua to be examined .on . Fri:? day of this week ! before a called _County; Court on-the ttuestipn of their-cpmmitment. f.r,trial'before the Superior Courtin Sep‘ tenther:, , The, excitem,ent itt.yery great, o% bolt igi . niantitthe inhabitant - 1 of Parkeininirg,sre,ermed, , and_prepared_tdo repel any attempt to' ttlsase, the priscinerir. In Wmiliingttin county; in this state; meoi inge;have been held 6 4, 1 01vhflitiPs and several others are,tO"theeiwith the object Maiidirje a ftiir trial of the Chemins,' thoughin trtr ;of them thOats have been, made to cure ilawiessiies# . a violatten of lavi-4doilter wet:deto tear deWn "ParT keriburi ,Camiuxel.—ThTe reit= G]tfaT7x)yr. eat feat of ,Criglling,twe have ever seen chronicled this seasonv-eriya-, tiftt-,Char town, Free' Press; was , done,by NT. Worty Dane; °l'4"Yer•Rdni-n,aniPshir°-(l9!4rf Va. lie comtnepeed n etting in the moio ingOlt4 Wore an 4 stopped• 43,F: MAnt PrigrOn t" ) Cu! , --ii-P-1 1 °Pfbefol'e4unt, down c utting eight acres 2 . 0 9 01634 , 0 1 7, ve ,, L , 3 ,0t 11 49P 1 ?!.a.• b 4t1,,..* / he • n oo, 9 - ' ,L#0 1 :10. 9 .ki:4h:?0! , 199 114? 4/ 1 ?qt 11 Mt5 4 019,?$V44 0 AFfe::Inil ' 4 10 4 i 214,A d a1.#44,1 1 01111 ve m, ;7-ticfrlto,}.4.ll;Uo ,4Az?,s4, • ' ditr'itkUNat ''P% ii P i *is! antlits.extractett from Wrillh3„first better to t j'e",l jtit-Y9tlt.:: trror,datettfrolll - '4*4olokfiiiio; . rilie : ContrOii t , 6- a! , ilish*-Ktipeltetinni-!anntiqft.;9,F4sl,ll6PPlr ;Ctitittiry:l4 I;;'i .: ;A4e ffilifin;thaf :pya 4,-""q4o4o9o.oßer,;#...'UY:P,eooa!i.:,9o' or•-twri:COlitrasts:preptin-ii - M y"-ditll,:ey+%' ' 'mint leffiti s ft' i ki**AS' tho,ioetiseilitt,h_Opiln the countenance orthe*orkilhitmlisseit;4,tfili'look 'or dogged dl'etidur anima ance . of they and cows. AC sliow,y. eutiipyge-goed'=6y, and they have, not tho'ettriOtiiti.to?leok up. Theit. gait is thit'"Of. donkeys, saving ;as much treAble,;laY-,leglilfaiig-- J as possible. 'Theit' riiouthti.o:eyei,tire„tihelly sensual, ex twant above food. Their'dteeisifs*, , Willieut,Ja 'though t mo,re than Ivarieth.mideeveriegi , drab covered with Theirvoices lire a half no te• above a grunt,;,4iledeed comparing. their condition' with•a-hores4.:Woultlii_refer being an En• gliiih linieete . lieing-',,,`„an , English working Mall. ' easily. see the very .atrPfig,cotttiast . .thercia'betWeen this Pic. 'lure, and iltatet . '4l.lfeAnbitiotis and lively ytrorking.temi , 'e(our eduntry.• ---Anotheraritrast_s • - IP rrcatts,*firSt.lseding-4-that Of ferri'lle7- -. dress., The:entire ibeiriffe of the orniniart, , tal—of any',llileg except - deeent covering tbeAvealthy,-is-particu• larly Lngiisli atirtparticularly en-American. V do not helieia'you would find tea femalo servants in New York, without(pardon my naming it) a "bistle.". Yet Laiow •aa ma. ny as two hundred women in the streets.of Liverpool, net,thie with a bustle! I saw sOmn_latlieti_getut-of_catriages_m_no._ them,.so !Filet because it is nottrfaTiilifon ) but be.eattse the Pride' (of _those whose backs but one line)-does not outweigh the 'price of the bran. They wore tHelt shoes such 'as scarcely a man would wear with us, no gloves of course, and- their whole' appearance 'was that* of females in whose mind never_entered the thought of ornament on week days. This trifling exponent - of the condition of women in' England, haste lake field of speculation within and around-it and .the result of philosophizing on it wuld be vastly in fa vor of our sitle;ef . the water - In- his second - letter Mr. NV illis gives the making.a sett - stilton in London„ society. io's "a - h-oist!--,-.and-nothtng I Made a couple of calls before I . meat home: The chief topic of conversation at oth houses was:the charms and4ccentrict tied-of an Am e dein . belle ti iliti iTatreately . married into Ciiiible family. She seeMs_ to: have enchanted- the - etclusives-by -treat ing thim with-the.mosturikleferential free= dont; a few .evenings.since;shechiniced . to be surrounded by a half dozen higtradmi 7 reis, and Conversation going on rather heav ily, she propoged a cock=fitht. Dividing thee-party into two sides, she' tied the legs of the young men together and _set itMm - to a game of fisticuffs ending in a very fair teprefiQtarniiof arraction between Aellig crept ri:iters! One clf her expressions was narrated wit:Nl - Met glee. She Chanc ed to have occasion to sneeze when sitting at the dinner table between two venerable noblemen._ ."I..a! , "•she exclaimed, "I hope I didn't splash either Of you!" I have mentioned only the drolleries of what I heard. Several instances of her readiness and 'wit were given, and those who men tioned:them were of the class_ she is Shill' ing in, their admiring tone gave a fair re section-of ho w - s he - is - looked - upont , as tite most celebrated belle of the nobility for the ,preien• season.- The New York Daily lEvenit Mirror and the weekly Mirror,.will contain these letters, which promise to be the. most in• teresting series that ever - Mr Willis has rritten. The — terms — nr - th - o — NeThil weekly Mirror is 'three dollars per annum and a better pagr cannot bo obtained for the money anywhere. TILE POTATO BLIGHT..---TllO Maanachti sett Spy has.,the following notice of the apearance agokt_pf-thepotato f hlight. "It grioverfiiifto say that thoblight which -•ised -- .caused sum ,teetructien to the potato — crop last year, has thus early 'comrnineett its ravages the present Season* . We have antlued st.fielil..belonging to .oov..Lincoln which we areßaStii.. e .tl exhibited:re:perfect ly healthy apipartination the 3tlinstint:w- - - - 9n_theOthipoooll.of. the vines showed indications of filaease, and'on the 7th one half of . them ; ware mmo,o,leaa many of;theni .ahreoktfitne' half 'of their forther 4ipaCnsion#;liind ilOme of the leaves already fitreesl;lwavipind nearly dry. The p! ) l l qeezi. - *l l 'o' , droi: r ed . variety, cpmc times' called the peach hhAva. The seed' >paw solectedobl in a fine'and -apparently. ketfithy-atate.,.We opened one cf the ;pile moaCereeted with tililliffletlete d-r d thefeedattll'BOung 144fifiPareptly healtb- Y.!.-q9ricia 91grOtifj. 0 14 0 itywe , a1) 0 4 m9;04,105,"a .004iiet Wa,oiraom,dieease appqar• 1-W . 04"commene it# the 'upper _part of .the „ft lowiag eitravt , from ; a, feat from ,the office 9f the P9l; Cibiifir; ender .date of J917,1*. hi: ihi/Sl'e* York tVlo( l o l 4o l 4i . er‘reie -P6:o4*ol;llKfils,w..a!l her et. .04 eitit*OPfAifilt 6 ra'& o ; -410 ' • 7 #4loo:Ontginihs-stich ate l efr 11431TA0 .MMt c ,4 tl 9:!,,t , 'Yfig'l l *getP feelings' wtll be in P9""f°l!g*AN soil 41CerlYJ'bP1101.0.e!OF#two*;01t d eowerdly„prectlee:Atthieh s MiefipMed °ri 3 nere+ ' • c 'IRM,1041 11 i4# 0 1 1 011107, ,; .t# Si, ', l ll l • Aitoq9-4.0141•1114.04,1*40' . • • For - opprid n •Expnintor.., age Viten I' i nier,enjpithlii . :..great right of freemen.thatnfvotingliound it'neCessary to •exan3i tre z fai-,,Myself 4rtto , th e-principleS. trilid7practieeti , oohOWO4reat political' per , . l 40> ofilerStifoAditilfdeidel'whic I Id lirt've . .thesgriateSiVintf efo4lie `country in - • 111y`firet inclination:was to , join . ,.the Incofedo,•-pattnbut4=Cpuld—micasionally lidifffronti some thingi did` - rot t6et • I .-heard wanted'done 'for the beneficef -their coun, :try; for me to decide betweenffiem, seemed -eurof my power; ,here I stood like the ass in thefable, between 'two bundles of:bay, 'both seemed right, both wrong. By acci dent.l called with one of ,rny good neigh. bore, who seem rd to-takb an - interest - in my Welfare,i:lyho kindly gave me an intro• d u o n-to-a ra n n tlem an rwi th - who-tit he ,vves.frebly converting at the time I en tered his house-; I was a little bashful and hardly apprehended the name given; I took a seat which :Was kindly-set for me, and listened with great interest to their resumed talk; I felt as if I could now learn some: . thing; the stratteer was a — Mr: -. H . -•=-, a•Na• tive•AmM:ican member of the State Legis laturei-wrirqdrinerlyiraii'been a li`i- , 1-,1 .0 - sat - oreign—m ' once-- ms— eon ,operating greatly to our prejudice as Amer icans, and the power of thel , , wealat of the British manufacturers, has :Alit! ..a very baneful influence ;:tn our elections in this 'cohntry ; the cry of moitopolyandunjust protticilen- has . been printed at foreign ex 7 perMe, and Thrown intoserery cabin in our •gss , • II gies of all the friends of our country, to ?•• • counteract; ho was dimly-of opinion that twenty/one years' residence now should be required for citizenship; this talk ottwenty one years made me feel as if I ought to say something—but my host come in before me, and asked how it-Was:possible to re lieve Pennsylvania 'alit of I,er difficulties ? why, says Mr. H. that is easily done; sell her public works, get a law of-Congress passed diViding the amount of money aria- . ings-froM the sal'es'- •of—the—ptiblie: landS, -among—the-St-atoll this with - a --, reasonable tax on the people will alien meet every Alernand, and havea• loge - sinking fund on the principal debt; the 'Tariff will then'be steady for revenue, all the resonrcesLof the State will be kr_oughl- eut,.. every ,laborer will be :profitably. employed, and we will •very boon overcome all out difficulties; why says My frien&-youmatiVai would . make •very good Whigs.•so far as • government policy is concerned. I 'thought 1 learned more from thisconversation how I should act my part is a citizen in a few minutes than , I 'had learned in twenty-one years before. I found Mr. II like myself had been nn apprentice to learn a trade, schwa _tell himself, stands- -high -as a- legislator, speaks well in public, is beloved as a man and christian, knows his duty and is deter mined to do it. lam convieced4p, • is well worthy of imitation,—how hartne said it was to-knock off the shackles of party had started wrong but he had overborne his prejudices, so I determined to look Well -to my first vote. lam now satisfied that the 'same ptintiples which actuated our fore fathers to hecome Whigs, in our revolution ary struggle, actuates very many uow;.:the. love of that liberty so dearly_bought "we ought to appreciate bbove all things in dila world, therefore I do think I am prepared to take and_in_the-good-114 7 -hig-eauS • . Yes I feel warm, and out of the first mono learned - .applied a portion to getting Our . :am pleased with it, and as I under= stand you are young like myself, I hope by, your integrity, frugality, industry and ,persmieranee i -you may pcipiirr a starling amongst us, that may make you au_ortla molt to toctety,and a useful citizen. 4 1 .4 - Yellow - 19, 18.15. . • perlt is very evident , says the , &nes villa - (Ohio) Gazette that the elements o discord are rite among the locoroco party and.that sooner or ater they will 'break out in open orifo. Bitherta,thof have been 'held togetherAnlVy..the cohesive power of public pluu4e . ..;: , Aitt':a meeting of the lo cpsof this coifii*MVSatuiday last, a res - 'elution woe oh, E. Church ap. „ &aviary' Pqk's aclmiiiistraTion, which wnii imimptly voted dOwnl — ' • Dagutre said to have madea diaeovery almost' as wonderfel-ts-that to , which' . hit'neine . hae been' glfen 7 It eon elate ote proceis by Mitlob' he ±earLglve, : te velopemertts,aa'in*etate of ,nature requir; ing tnenyV ytani. ; '„ This ,ie.'