VoL. V, No. 34.] rEnme or• THE HUNTINGDON JOURNAL. The 6. inURNAL" will be published every Wednesday morning, at two dollars a year, If paid IN ADVANCE, and if not paid with in six months, two dollars and a half. Every person who obtains five subscribers, and forwards price of subscription, shall be tarnished with a sixth copy gratuitously for one year. . . . Ns) subscription received for a less period than six months, nor any paper discontinued until all arrearages are paid. it-" All communications must be addressed to the Editor, POST PAID, or they will not be attended tn. Advertisements tint exceeding one square, will be inserted three times for one dollar, and for every subsequent insertion, twenty ve cents per square will be charged. If no definite orders are given as to the time an rwlverOsement is to be continued, it will be kept in till ordered out, and charged accor dingly. AGENTS. The Minting - don Journal. Daniel Teague, Orbisonia; David Blair, F.sq. Shade Gap; Benjamin Lease, Shirlrys burg; Eliel Smith, Esq. Cfrikottetown; Jas. Entriken, jr. Cefii,- Run; Hugh Madden, Esq. Springfield; Dr. S. S. Dewey, Bir mingham; James Morrow, Union Furnace ; John Sislrr, Warrior Mark; James Davis, Esq. TVest township ; 1). H. Moore, Esq Frankstown; Eph. Gilbreath, Esq. Holli daysburr; Henry Neff, Alexandria; Aaron Burns, Williamsburg; A. J. Stewart, fYater Street; Win. Reed, Esq. Mo ria township; Solomon Hamer. Arff's Mill; James Dysart, Mouth Spruce Creek; Wm. Murray, Esq. Grausville; John Crum, Manor Hill; Jas. E. Stewart, Sinking Valley; L. C. Kessler, Min Creek. Intere•stin Correspondence. HUNIIICDOI, June '23, 1810. James !IL Bell, Eq. The undersigned citizens of our borough, feeling anxious to render you their thanks for the able end indepodent course pursued by you in the Hall of the Senate in behalf of them selves, as well as the great body of your constituents; earnestly request the honor of your company at a dinner of the 4th of July. . . . _ In doing so, they seek not to offer you any of the fulsome adulation of partisans, but simply to show you their gratitude for your faithful and fearless course. Ile whose conscience tells him he has 'done his duty" needs not the praise of party spirit. He who has shown himself the ltepresen• tative of the whole People, and not of pa ty, merits, and should receive the thanks of all. We wish to race! you, thus publicly, that we may say in public, what we say in private, that your duty has been honest. ly and faithfully performed. You will except from U 9 the consideration of our highest esteem. J. G. Miles, Thos Fisher, John AP- Cohan, Daniel Africa, Jac3b Miller, 0. Jackson and o'hers. INNTowner', June 29th, 1840. To Messrs. J. Geo. Miles, Thomas Fish. er, John MeCahan, Daniel *ice - 4 fa ce) Miller, George Jackson, and others. GENTLEMEN:- I have received your communication of the 23.1 instant, expres sing your approbation of my Legislative! course of conduct, and inviting me to at tend a dinner in this place on me 4th ol•. duly next ; for %Well favorable expression of your opinions and feelings, 1 return you m thanks. • In f orming rming an opinion :led coming to a conclusion 1.11 regard to the conduct of any particular member, or of the whole of the members as a body, it should always he borne in mind, that the sessions of our Legislature commencing in January last and ending (luring the present month, were held under circumstances, and a situation of things, positive and relative, the most difficult, the most perplexing, and the must momentous, as regards the interests and prosperity or our State, of any which were ever hold in Pennsylva nia, excepting only those held during the period of our revolution. That ender such circumstances, any member, or mem ers, or any other person, whatever hisj situation may be, should have come to an Arroneous conclusion, and erred in judg, built and in action, seems to me, from an •enlightened and generous people, to call rather ,charitable forbearance of con demnation, than general, indiscriminate and . wholmiale denunciation. For myself, I will not presume to say or think, that what I have done, the course I have pur sued, and what 1 wished to have done, was the best that could have been done, or proposed under . the existing state of things : but I can truly say, that notwith standing whatever errors or failings, indu ced by the force of surrounding circom stances, or constitutional teinpernment, I • may have committed or fallen into, that in what I have done, and desired to effect THE ; .1 4 • • 4-1 '" e) in my legislative capacity, I have been in fluenced, governed and impelled by the wish, single and alone, of advancing the permanent and substantial interests of my native State, and of promoting the wel fare•and happiness of all the people with in it, according to the best of my judgment and abilities, and to effect those desirable objects I have used and exerted all the mind, industry and powers which have fallen to my lot. In the present rosition of affairs, it may not be deemed amiss, nor the time and occasion inappropriate, as I intend decli ning the homier of the dinner you propose, if I should, as briefly as I can and the na ture of the subjects will admit of, state the views I hold, and the opinions I have been influenced by, in regard to some of the more prominent matters which the last Legislature were called on to consider, and requieed to decide. Foremost among those, and indeed, that upon which all the others depended was the question of the currency. All agreed that our monetary affairs were in a most deplorable condition, and that something must be done to remedy them. All agreed that in order to apply a remedy properly and judiciously, it was necessary correct • ly to understand the cause or causes of their present situation. But on this sub ject, when they came to be assigned and expressed by different individuals, as well in as out of the Legislature, they were as different and numerous, all their various shades being considered, as there were individuals to express them. This is not at all surprising when it is considered, that it is a subject which is connected and intimately intermingles with, and influ• ences every transaction in life, and that each person will view it through a medium differing from that of all others. It would be an impossible and useless task to at tempt to enumerate those diGrent opin• tins. '1 hey may he exemplified by each person reflecting and clearly fist% in his own mind what his own opinion is, (a thing by the bye, which not one third of those who talk most on this - subject, and complain loudest ever have done, or ever will do,) and then take it for granted that every other person in the known world, in a greater or less degree, differs from him. D9y opinion on this subject is, that the person who attributes our present sit. nation in reference to money matters to any one cause alone, is in error:—.That the present result is produced by a com• bination of causes, many of them very , difTerent in their character, but all tend inn to the same point. In the first place, and one among the principle causes of our present situation is this;—we are lit erally and emphatically a go•ahead peo ple, possessing, and constitutionally stn. bued with more enterprise and energy of character, than any other nation, on the globe. This national characteristic has its advantages and uses, and very great and beneficial they are, especially m a new country like ours, the resources and capabilities of which are as yet, but par tially developed. But it has its corres pondent disadvantage—that of causing us occasionally to overstep the bounds of prudence m bqsiness matters, of which money is die principal ingredient. While this energy of character induces us to, grapple with, and enables us to overcome difficulties, which those possessing less of this quality would utterly shrink from, it at the same time renders us heedless of those causes and their consequences, which du not attract our attention, and cause UR to feel their pressure onerously at their commencement, and which alone' become of vital importance, and arrive at such a point as imperiously calls our at tention to them, by reason of their pro• gressive accumulation during a series of years. Looking back, this point seems to be arrived at by us at once, at least, in about every twenty years. For the last five or six years, or more, we have bought inure than we sold, we have bought much more than we paid for. This can only be remedied by our buying for a number of years, less than we sell. For the last three or four years especially, during which there has been a pressure in the money market of Europe, more particu• lady of England, the merchants and Man ufacturers of that sountry being pressed to raise means, not content with filling the large orders of our merchants, have sent in to us very large amounts of goods to sell on their own account at auction ; and our citizens led away by the induce ment and temptation of getting them, on time, for less than they were customarily sold at, have iecautiously and without re flecting on theaonsequeuces, purchased, when they did not need tkem. I know it is the fashion, the custom with many to blame all this on the banks. But in my opinion this is doing injustice to the banks,' and is not in accords nee with the truth. For I believe the banks are as much if not more influenced by the opinieas and actions ut the people surrounding them, who have no immediate and direct Inter est in theso,as the people are by the banks. "ONE COUNTRY, ONE CONSTFTUTION, ONE DESTINY." A. W. BENEDICT PUBLISHER AND PROPRIETOR. HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1840 (No doubt the banks, or rather the persons 1 conducting them have their share of blame ' and imprudence to answer for, as well as the residue of the people. But the truth is, in my judgment, our present difficul ties, to a great extent, have their origin in that go-ahead principle to which I have alluded, which seems to be so deeply en grafted in our natures. And the fashion able clamour which charges all the evils with which we are beset on the banks alone, has its origin in another principle inherent in our nature, that is; that when the evil (lay comes upon us, we are diss posed to blame every other person and thing, rather than admit that we ought to take any share of the blame to ourselves. If what. I have last stated be not correct, how comes it, that we often see the in habitants of a section of country, distant from any bank, applying for, and anxious , . ly endeavoring to obtain a bank for them selves? Surely no person will pretend that any existing bank would urge or in. duce people so situated, to establish a new bank, and thereby restrict or prevent the circulation of its own paper in that section. Another of the causes which have tended in some degree to produce the present state of things, is, that within about three years there has been, beyond the ordinary amount of such casualities, destroyed by tire in our principal sea port towns property to et least the value of from thirty to fifty millions of dollars. So great a destruction of property in so short a time could not lake place, without eventually producing some perceptibly unfavorable effect. Another is, that for the last two years previous to l8:39, the principal article of export from Pennsyl vania to foreign countries, grain, failed, and instead of exporting we lied to import it. And another among the many combi ned causes producing tie present state of things, which is the last I shall now men tion, though I do not acording to my judg ment, by any means, consider it among the least, has been the action of dte General Government of late years, and its interfe rence with and in regard to, the currency of the country, ostensibly avowing its ob. ject to be, the bettering of that currency. I do not say this in the way of, or with the view to controversy; nor by way of taunt : but front the most solemn and de liberate conviction, after the fullest re flection, of its truth. Nor do I say this with the tiew of raising or discussing the question, whether the late and present Executive of the General Government have in their course of action, or rather courses of action, which have been at dif ferent times respectively pursued by them been induced thereto by any objects of a sinister character, or were other than those they have ostensibly avowed. But it seems to me that the results mud con sequences justify this conclusion. And when it is considered that it is admitted by all, at least by all who have any cor rect understanding of the subject, that the currency, especially in such a nation as ours, composed of different govern ments, to a great extent independent of each other, is of all others the most intri cate, delicate and difficult to arrange and properly regulate.—That it is generally conceded that it is doubtful whether a man of the most capacious and powerful mind, although his attention be exclusive ly devoted to the subject, can fully and correctly understand it, in all its bear ings, and foresee, and prov;de against, the, to him, unforeseen contingencies, which may influence it--That it is not pretended that either the late or present Executive of the General Government, in the course of their busy lives in other pure suits, ever turned their attention to it, to any considerable extent. Can it be sup posed, is it likely, that they or either of them while pressed at all times with the cares of State, could mark out a new course on this perplexing question, radi cally change the existing state of things, and that too with but little, if any, pre liminary preparation, even though actua ted by the purest and Ink intentions, without in all probability rendering what ever there was of evil, worse, and that which might possibly be complicated and confused, still worse confounded? So acting, under such circumstances, if they did not, it would % )p the incrust accident, and almost a miracle. One assertion very commonly made, and promulgated with an untiring zeal and industry worthy of a better cause, by the particular favorites and especial friends of the present and late adminis trations of the General Government, I feel compelled here to notice;—that is, "That the reason the people cannot get specie, is, that the banks have it all or nearly all hoarded up, in their vaults, and under their owe control, and are unwil ling to give it out to the people of the country." This, so far front being the truth, is directly the reverse of it. And that this assertion instead of being true, is directly contrary to the truth, can be readily perceived by any one who will take the trouble to reflect un the subject. INB can and do derive whatever specie there may be in the country at any time, from two sources alone: Ist, What is coin ed at the several mints in the nation; and 2nd, NVliat is imported from foreign coun tries. No one I presume will pretend that the General Government, which alone has control of what is coined at the mints, being as much opposed to banks as it is pretended they are, take the specie as soon as soon as it is coined at the mints, and place it it. the banks,—in what those es pecial friends are pleased to call "char tered monopolies destitute of a soul," to keep it from the people. That is not to be presumed, and is not pretended. The General Government then has the com plete and sole control, direction and dis bursement of all the specie coined at the mitts. It is paid out to members of Con gress, officers of Government, and it is lair to presume, souse of it to those espe cial friends, for their disinterested cla mour against the banks, in payment of their claims, while other less faithful, and therefore less favored creditors are put off with, and are fain to get and be content with "the filthy rags." 'Phis specie thus obtained by those persons is sold by them to the brokers at a premium of 5, 8 or 10 per cent., or whatever the premium at the time may be, who again sell it, to mer chants to ship off to Europe or China for the payment of goods; or to pay for duties on imports, for public lands, or postages. So well is this known, and so perfectly understood, that there have been Signs in Washington city stating, "The highest price will be given here, to members of Congress and officers of Government for what gold they may receive." And a similar notice was given, as an advertise ment, in the official paper in that city for a short time. It is perfectly obvious that' the banks never will procure the specie of : the country, by purchasing it at a premi- i um, because it is directly against their' interest to do so, unless where they are compelled to procure it, to pay out again in discharge of liabilities they are forced to pay. And it is likewise obvious that no man will pay a debt due by his► to a bank, at least not one of any considerable amount, in specie, especially when lie can sell that specie to a broker at a premium and get the notes of the bank, or those of others, which will answer his purpose equally as well in payment of his debt to the bank. Again, of late years the Gen eral Government has required the pay ment of all duties on imports, all purcha ses cf public lands;sand all or neatly all postages to be paid in specie, or the notes of specie paying hanks. The payment of all which, it will readily be percieved, will require and absorb a very large pro portion of our specie, whether imported into or coined in the country. All this large amount of the specie id the country is thus again placed under the control and direction of the General Government. On the other hand it is manifest, thnt the Banks never can, and never will, hoard up specie for the mere sake of hoarding it up, because it is directly contrary to their interests to do so ; and I can hardly think that even those especial and pre tended disinterested friends of the Gener al Government, to whom I have alluded, will pretend that those institutions—,soul less monsters,' as they are pleased to call them, though they be, would do that which was against their own interets. It never can be, and never is, the interest of any Bank to keep—to hoard up mere specie in its vaults than will be sufficient to meet the current demands for specie of the country in which it is located. Whatever amount any Bank has beyond this, is a dead loss to it ;—no interest ac crues ott, and no benefit is derived from it. And it therefore follows as a natural consequence that no Batik ever will close its vaults and refuse its specie to the peo ple of the country, in which it is located, except to prevent the exportation of that specie to foreign countries. What would be our situation if a large proportion of our specie which furnishes the basis of our circulation were withdrawn from the coun try altogether 7 All can see and under stand it. All these things being considered, no disinterested, intelligent and candid mats, wishing to ascertain the truth, can doubt, but that the General Government and its different officers have the possession, the control, and the direction of much the lar ger portion of the specie of the country ; and that if the common people of the coun try do not get a proper proportion of this specie, that the General Government and its officers are principally, if not alone to blame. The General Government and its officers ought not to, ( though no doubt they will), complain at being so blamed, when the promises of that General Gov ernment and its officers, while "the cur rency was being bettered," are recollec ted,—that specie—the "yellow boys" should shortly ascend our streams, and descend upon the yeomanry of the coun try in golden showers. The troth is the more intelligent of those especial friends of the General Government ashen they make the assertion to which I have allu ded, perfectly well understand that it is only one of the many "humbugs," "gull• traps," and "gilded hooks" which are to be used to catch the Gudgeons. But whether I am correct in supposing what I have stated to be among the prom inent causes producing the present state of things, I will turn to what was admit ted to be our situation at the meeting of the Legislature in January last, and was done, and proposed to be done in that Legislature. Our Banks hail suspended specie paythents in the previous October. It was admitted that the people of the U. States were indebted to Europe, princi pally to England somewhere from 60 to 100 millions of dollars, independent of the debts due by the States, the interest on nearly all of which had to be paid in Europe;—being an amount of foreign in debtedness, (without including the prin cipal of the debts due by the States), about equal to the whole estimated amount of specie in the United States.' The people and institutions of Pennsylvania owed their full proportion of this foreign debt. It had been contracted in the manner I have stated. The goods for which it had been created had been sold by our citizens to the citizens of the South, the South West and the West, who, their monetary affairs being in a still worse and more em barrassed condition than ours were, and those goods remained unpaid for, could not pay for them at the present, nnr for some time to come, but who it was expec ted and hoped, if a reasonable time was allowed, would be enabled to pay at least a considerable portion of their indebted ness in produce, which would be equally as valuable and available as specie for the payment of our foreign debt. The people of Pennsylvania, it was admitted on all hands were abundantly able to pad all the debts due by them, if they could but get but a portion, a moiety of the debts due to them by others. In this state of things what would have been the result and consequences of com pelling an immediate resumption of specie payments by the Banks ? The result is obvious. Every dollar of specie in our Banks would have been immediately drawn out of them by the British and other European agents resident in New York, Boston, and the other commercial cities of the North and East, and forth with shipped to Europe in payment of this foreign debt, which they to a great ex tent had created, as I have before stated, by forcing in upon us their goods, and in ducing our citizens to purchase them by the temptation of offering them, on time, at a less price than usual.- This having been done, our Banks would have been compelled to call upon our citizens fur what was due from them, which would have compelled the payment of all, or nearly all, the specie among our citizens in the country, into our Banks,—to be a gain swept out of them by a similar pro cess into this vortex of foreign debt. Tile consequences of which will be but too well understood by every reflecting mind, and need not be described at length. For whose benefit, I again ask, would all this, producing one general scene of wide spread ruin and distress among our citi zens, have been ? Not certainly for the citizens of our own State. Not even for the citizens of our sister States. But for the benefit of those British and other for eign merchants and manufacturers who had created this indebtedness, to a very great extent by forcing their goodsi n upon us, as 1 have previously stated, thereby in effect creating our citizens, their factors to sell those goods to the people of the South, the South West& West, and then calling upon us for the payment in specie, before it could be obtained, or its equivalent val ue in produce, from those to whom they were sold. If the Legislature had com pelled during last winter, the immediate resumption of specie payments by our Banks, I firmly believe, that not one dol lar of the specie in them would have been gotten and retained by the people of Penn sylvania, and not only that, but what little specie there was among the people of the country would have been eventually drain ed from them, excecpt, perhaps, here and there a single dollar, solitary and alone, mourning the departure of its likenesses. NN'hile on the other hand by pursuing a contrary course, and ,giving to our Banks a reasonable time to prepare for resutnp tion, there was reasonable ground to hope and believe, that our institutions and cit izens warned and awakened by the despe ration of their present situation, would be rendered more prudent and economical, fur a time at least, and during this period would be enabled by means of produce and the collection of debts due to them from others, to pry ofra considerablapor tion of their foreign indebtedness, and arrange to avoid a demand in specie fur the residue, or the greater part of it; thereby saving and keeping within our own limier* and limits, in our own Banks and among the people of the country, at least a considerable portion of what specie we' now have, subject to our own control, and for our own ties. [WIIoLE . No. 242. What was done by the Legislature on this subject is already Itutiwn to you. That resolutions were introduced into the Senate by myself, which became a law. providing that the Banks should resume specie payments on the 15th. of January next ;—that if any Bank within the Com monwealth after that date should refuse to pay any of its liabilities in gold or silver, on jproof being made of the fact before any President Judge at the expiration of ten days froin the period of refusal, and the money being then unpaid, the charter of such Bank should be absolutely for feited on this proof being filed, (which the Judge is forthwith required to do), among the records of the county of %%Inch he is a Judge; and that the false swearng by any officer of a Bank in relattion to any of the statements required to be made by law of the situation of the Balk, should be punished as perjury, by confinement in the Penitentiary, not less than one, nor more than six years. It will readily be conceived that no one person would be successful in getting en. acted into haws, all the propositions which he believed would be beneficial for the re gulation of our Banks and currency. Such was the case, as regards myself. While acting as one of the committee of conference ou the Bill previously before the Senate for the regulating of the Banks, 1 had drawn up a Bill, which, in additions to the foregoing provisions, provided tat. That from 'and aftgr the 15th of January next each Bank within the Com monwealth should take and receive, at par, in payment of coy debt or debts due and owing to it, the notes of all the oth er chartered and specie•paying Banks of 'the Commonwealth. Prohibiting. the several Banks of the Commonwealth under the penalty of the forfeiture of their several charters, to b 3 declaredr: rfeited as above named, from issuing after the passage of the act, any note or notes in the form or similitude of Bank notes, or otherwise, payable at a fu ture day, usually denominated Post notes. Sd. That the making of any loan by any Rink in the Commonwealth ou the security, direct or collateral, of any stock or stocks whatever, or engagements or ob ligations in the nature of stocks, should 'be a forfeiture of its charter, to be decla red forfeited as before mentioned. 4th. Prohibiting the Banks of the Com monwealth from making directly or indi— rectly any loan to, or for the use of any person ostensibly engaged in the business of a note or mortey Broker. sth. Prohibiting the Banks of the Com monwealth from purchasing and holding any Bank or other stock, except the stock or loans of this Commonwealth, or of the United States, under the penalty of for feiting a sum equal to the amount thereof, 6th. Prohibiting the Banka from loan ing to or for the use of their directors beyond a certain proportionate amount, in the aggregate, of their several capital stocks actually paid in, graduated from not exceeding twenty-five per cent of the capital stock, when not exceeding $300,- 000, to not exceeding two and a half per cent of the capital stock when it excee ded 82,500,000, sad requiring the aggre gate amount loaned to directors to be sta ted in the quarterly statements made by each Bank. And 7th. Provisions to prevent fraudu• lent or impreper conduct or operations by the officers of the Banks, and to prel'ent the evasion of the foregoing previsions, of such a character as would have ren dered it utterly impracticable that suck things could take place, without imme diate exposure. Together with other pro visions of a minor character. To pro cure the adoption of these provisions by the Committee of Conference, is addition. to the resolutions alluded to, I exerted my self to the utmost extent. And I do firm ly and truly believe that they would have been adopted, and would now be the law of the land, if it had not been for a pow er and influence front beyond the limits of this State, which was brought to bear on the Committee of Conference, and Legislature, some time after the Commits tee of Conference was appointed. Ido riot say this unadvisedly, but from, facts and circumstances within my own knowl edge. Aided by this influence, that por tion of the Legislature, which in my opin— ion went for ultra—destructive measures, were enabled to prevent the adoption of those provisions, unless the period for resumption was fixed in the middle of the fall business, (during the spring and fall business seasons being the worst, and must injurious to the community of all possible periols to fix for the time of ie sumption,) and just beflire the fell elec tions to answer the purposes and advance the interests of a particular political par ty, and without additional provisions were added, which according to my judgment, went to destroy the objects they professed to regulate, and others which were clears ly uuconstitutional. I for sty part, hav ing never had any immetliato interest, di• rect ur indirect, in any Link, Lar•ng