deists in christerdlom ; co irrelragablyl do they prove the truth of ehrtsttanity,l that I ant sure a young man who h;td been regularly instructed i t 'heir meaning, could never doubt afterwards of the truth of any of its principles. If any obscurity appears ii) these pi iutiples, it is only (to use the words of the puet) because they arc dark, with excessive bright. 1 know there is an objection among many people to teach children doctrines of any kind, because they ore likely to be controverted. Bat where will this objec• tion lead us ?—the being of a God, and the obligations of morality, have both been controverted ; antl yet who has ob• jetted to our teaching these doctrines to our children ? "[he Cu? icily and capacilirs of young people fur the mysteries of retigton, awa• ken much sooner than is generally suppu• 01 that we have Iwo retivadiable proof's in the Old Testameni. The licit 14 mentioned in the twelfth chapter of And it stun come when your children shall say unto you, 6f hat mean - you by this service 1" that ye shall say, It is the sacrifice of the Lord's pas?over, who passed over the ,houses of 'the then of Israel it, Egypt, when fie smote the E 4 yptians, and delivered our houses.— And the children of Israel went away, and 'lid as the Lord had commanded Moses and Aaron." A second proof of the de sire of children to be instructed in the mysteries of relivon, is to be found in the sixth chapter of Deuteronomy. And when thy son askelh thee in the time to come sajing, "What mean the testimo• nies—and the statutes—and the judg ments which the Lord our God bath commanded you I" Then thou shalt say unto thy son, " We were Pharaoh's !iond men in Egypt, and the Lord our God brought us out with a mighty hand."— These inquiries,from the mouths of chil dren are quite natural; fee where is the parent who has not had similar questions proposed to hint by his children upon their being first conducted to a place of wor ship, or upon their beholding, for the first time, either of the sacraments of our re- Let us not be wiser than oar Maker.— ff moral precepts alone could have re formed mankind, the mission of the Son of God into our wou ld, would have been un necessary. Ile came to promulgate a sys uf doctrines, as well us a system of morals. The perfect morality of the gos• pel reads upon a doctrine, which though often controverted, luau never been refu., ted. I mean the vicarious life and death of tte Sun, ut God, This sublime and inef febte docAvine-tireli•ci n trio et otn I.he etesurd) hypotheses of mode' n philosophers, con.. corning the foundation amoral obligation, and fixes it nmn flu t, r nal and self ma virg principle of Love. It concentrates a whole system of ethics in a single text of scripture. " A new c.nnmandment I give unto you, that you lore one another, even as I hare loved you." By withholding the' knowledge of asi. aooteme Crow children. , e deprive ourselves of the best means ot awakening moral seqsibility in their minds. We do more, we furnish an ar• gement, for withholding from them a, knowledge of the morality of the gospel likewise ; for this, in many instances, is as supernatural, and therefore as liable to be controverted, as any of the doctrines ot miricles which me mentioned in the New Testament. The miraculous conception of the Saviour of the world by a virgin, is not more opposed to the ordinary course of natural events, nor is the doctrine of the atonement more above human reason, than those moral precepts, which com mand us to love our enemies, or to die fort our friends. 111. It has been said, that the division of the Bible into chapters and verses, ren ti era it more difficult to read, by children, than many other books. By a little care in a master, this diffi culty may be obviated, and even an ad vantage derived from it. It may serve to transfer the attention of the scholar to the sense of the subject; and no!person will ever read well, who is guided by anything else, in his stops, emphasis, or accents.— The division of the Bible into chapters and verses, is not a greater obstacle to its be ing read with ease, than the bad punctua tion in most other books. I deliver this stricture upon other books, from the au thority of Mr. Rice, the celebrated author of the art of speaking, whom 1 heard de clare in a large company in London, that he had never seen a book properly pointed in the English Language. Ile exempli• fied, notwithstanding, by reading to the same company a passage from Milton, his perfect knowledge of the art of reading. Some people, I know, have proposed to introduce extracts from the Bible into our schools, instead of the Bible itself. Many excellent works of this kind, are in print, but if we admit any one of them, we shall have the same inundation of them that we have had of grammars, spelling books, and lessons for children, many of which are published for the benefit of the author only, and all of them have tended greatly to increase the expense of education.— Besides, these extracts or abridgements of the Bible. often contain the tenets of par. titular sects or persons, and therefore, may be improper for schools composed of the children of the different sects of chris• (inns. The Bible is a cheap book, and is to be hand in every bookstore. It is, moreover, esteemed and preferred by all sects t because each finds its peculiar doctrine in it. It should therefore be used /11 preference to any abiidgement of it, or histories extracted from it. I have heard it proposed that a portiOn ot the B ble should be read every day by Of dren in it: But this is a poor substitute' for obliging children to read it as a scht.ol book ; for by this means we insensibly ens grare, as it were, its contents upon their minds ; and it has been remit ked that children. instructed in this way in the scriptures, seldom forget any fart of them. They have the same advantage over those parsons, who have only heard the scrip ture read by a master, that a man wits has worked with the tools of a median cal em- ployrnent tor several years, has over the ;man who has only stood a few hours in a work shop and seen the same business) carried on by other people. In this defence of the use of the Bible as a school book, I beg you would not think that I suppose the Bible to .contatt, the only revelation which God has made to mu. I believe it an internal revelation, .._ . or a moral principle, which God has im planted in the heart of every man, as the precursor of his final dominion over the whole human race. How much this in• ternal revelation accords with the exter nal, remains yet to be explored by phito sophers. 1 am disposed to believe, tha most of the doctrines of -christianity re vealed in the Bible might be discovered) by close examination of all the principles rot the actions in man: But who is equal )Ito such an enquiry? It certainly does not suit the natural indolence, or laborious employments of a great majority of man kind. The internal revelation of the gospel may be compared to the straigh line which is made through a wilderness by the assistance of a compass to a distant cr.untry, which few are able to discover, while the Bible resembles a public road to the same country, which is wide, plain, and easily found. '1 And a highway shall be there, and it shall be called the way of holiness. The way fining men, though fools, shall not err therein." Neither let me in this place exclude the Revelation which God bath made of him• self to man in the works of creation. I am far from wishing to lessen the :nflu ence of this species of Revelation upon mankind. But the knowledge of God obtained from this source, is obscure and feeble in its operation, compared with that, which is derived from the Bible, ThH visible creation speaks of Deily in hiero-' glyphics, while the Bible describes all his attributes and perfections in such plain, sod familiar language, that "he who roars may read." Flow kindly has our maker delt with his creatures, in providing three eifferent cords to drive them to himself: But how weakly do some men acs, who suspend their faith and hopes. upon only one of them! By laying held of them all they would approach more speedily and cer tainly to the centre of all happ.ness. To the askumesits I have mentioned in I favor of the use of the Bible as a school I book, I shall add a few reflections. 'lle present fashionable practice of re- i jecting the Bible temp our schools. t . sus- pect 5..6 otiginateli wills the ileit. •I hey discover great ingenuity ii, this new mode ut at tat.hing christianity. 11 they proceed in it, they will do inure in half a century, in extripaiing our religion, that Boling broke or Voltaire could have effected in a thousand years. lam not writing to this clasas of people. 1 despair of changing the opinion of any of them. I wish only to alter the opinions of those lukewarm, and superstitious christians, who have been mislead by deists upon this subject. On the ground of the good old custom, of using the Bible as a school book, it be comes us to entrench our religion. it is the last bulwark the deists have lett it; for they have rendered instruction in the principles of christianity by the pulpit and the press so unfashionable, that little good for many years seems to have been done by either of them. The effects of tire disuse of the Bible, as LI school book, have appeared of late to the neglect and even contempt with which scripture names are treated by many people. It is because parents have not been early taught to know or respect the characters and exploits of the Old and New Testament worthies, that their names are exchanged tor those of the mondern kings of Europe, or of the prin cipal characters in novels and rernances. I conceive there may be some advantage in bearing scripture names. It may lead the persons who bear them, to study that part of the scriptures. in which their names are mentioned, with uncominon l attention, and perhaps it may excite a de-, sire in them to possess the talants or vir tues of their ancient namesakes. This' remark first occurred to me, upon hear ing a pious woman whose name was Mary, say, that the first passage of die Bible, which made a serious impression on her mind, were those interesting chapters and verses in which the name of Mary is men tioned in the New Testament. It is a siegalar fact, that while the names of the kings and emperors of Ro;ne, are now given chiefly to horses and dogs, scripture names have hitherto been confi ned to the human species. Let enemies and contemners of those names take care, lest the names of more modern kings be given hereafter only to the same animals of an inferior species. It is with great pleasure, that I have! observed the Bible to be the only book read in the Sunday schools in England.— We have adopted the same practice in the Sunday schools, lately established in this city. This will give our religion (human ly speaking) the chance of a longer life in our country. We hear much of the per sons educated in free schools in England, turning out well in the various walks of lite. I have inquired into the cause of it, and have satisfied myself, that it is who'. 'v t.. be at,clltti: %,:. the Gc . ... ,- . 1 - 41 rase el the The llecisiou of the Mackett- Bible in those schools, for it seems the l e hildren of pour people are of too little zie Court Martial. The Madisonian, of Thursday evening, consequence to be guar tied bout the sup posed evi s of reading the scriptures in üblishes Officially the finding of the Com t early life, or in an unconsecrated school Martial in the case of Commander Mack house. enzie. The decision is the same as we However great the benefits of reading have heretofore put.lished—that is, that the scripture in schools have been, 1 can- none of the specifications of the charesl not help remarking, that these Lenefits m io , e w r s e : proven. The verdict reads as fol• might be much greater, did schoolmasters . take more pains to explain them to their ) ' The Court do therefore acquit Com scholars. Del they demonstrate the di ! mander Alexander S. Mackenzie of all vine original of the. Bible front the purity, the charges and specifications preferred consistency, and benevolence of its doc- against hint by the Secretary of the Navy. trines and precepts—did they explain the ..-, the decision of the President is thus meaning of the livitical institutions, and officiallyi , ally announced, by which it will be show their application to the numeldlis seen, the verdict of the Court Mar-, an-d successive gospel dispensations — did' tial was "simply confirmed''--not approv they inform their pupils that the gross and ed—hut the result is the same, Common - abominable vices of the Jews were recur der Mackenzie is relieved from all ten ded only as proofs of the depravity of hu• sure in the premises. man nature, and of the insufiliciency of As these charges involved the life of the law, to produce mot al virtue and the accused, unties the finding, is in his fa therebylo establish the necessity and per , von, lie is entitled to the benefit of it, as in perfection of the the analogous case of a verdict of not as the hest rule of euilty before a civil court, and there is no above all, did they often enforce stei re di n s - - courses of our Saviour , 'power which can constitutionally deprive life, and the surest guide to happiness, him of that benefit. The finding, there how great would be the influence of ou • fore, is simple confirmed, and carried into schools upon the order and prosperity effect, without any expression of approba of our country I Such a mode of instruc- tion on the part of the President; no such ting children in the christian religion, expression being necessary. would convey knowledge into their under- We find the following paragraph in the standings, and would therefore be prefer- N. Y. Journal of Commerce : able to teaching them creeds, and cater cltisms, which too often convey, i Case of Capt. Mackenzic.—We learn the u ? r t ' from an undoubted source, that although knowledge, but words only, into the decision of the Court Martial in Capt. memories. 1 think lam not too sanguin e Mackenzie's case was technically in favor , in believing, that education, conducted ' this manner, would in the course of two of acquittal, as before announced, a ma jority of the ineinbrs, v;z. seven out of twelve were of opinions that the charges, generations, eradicate infidelity from among us, and render civil government, or some of them, had been proved, In scarcely necessary in our country. order to a conviction the voice of two. thirds of the members was necessary In contemplating the pololitical insti tutiiins of the United states, 1 lament, One inure vote in favor of conviction would that we waste so much dine and money in have changed the result. punishing crimes, and take so little pains to prevent them. We profess to be re publicans, and yet we neglect the only means of establishing and perpetuating our republican forms of government, that Is, the universal education of our youth in the principles of cliriArtsnity, by weans of the Bible; fur this Oivitie book, above all others, favours that equality among man kind, that respect for just laws, and all those sober and frugal virtues which con stitute the soul of republicanism. 1 have now only to apologize for having addressed this letter to you, alter having been assured by you, that your °pod. n, respecting the use of the Bible ,is a school book coincided with mine. My excuse for what I have done is, that i knew you were qualified by sour nowledge. and di, posed by your zest in the cause or troth; to correct all the errors you would die cover in my letter. Perhaps a further apology may be necessary fur my having! isiesuined to write upon a subject so much i above my ordinary studies. My excuse I for it ~ oust 1 thought a single mite from a member of a profession, which has been frequently charged with scepticism in re ligion, might attract the notice of persons who had overlooked the more ample con *ibutions upon this subject, of gentlemen of other prolessions. With great respect, I am, dear sir, you sincere friend. BENJAMIN RUSH. Pliladelphia, March 10, 1791, Mexico—Texan Prisoners. The New Orleans Tropic of the sth inst. says-- Letters were received in this city from Mexico, yesterday, conveying very late and melancholy intelligence. The report of the escape and recapture of the Mier prisoners is fully confirmed. We learn with tie deepest feelings of regret that Doctor Richard F. Breuhan► was well known in this city and was much beloved. His death will be most sincere ly regretted. At the time of the escape, Col. Fisher, Col. Green, and three other officers were ahead of the main body. Capt. Reese, and nine others refused to join in the res cue. The main body of the prisoners made their way towards Texas by the route known as Col. Jordan's; they were pursued and surrounded by the Mexicans and forced to surrender. Cola. Fish •r and Green's party had arrived at Taco baya, a atnall village four or 5 miles from Mexico. Gen. Bravo immediately issued an order directing that the party that escaped at Salado, should be decimated and shut. . The commander of the guard refused to execute the order. Santa Anna then or dered the whole party to be shot! Through the intercession, probably, of General Thompson, and others, this order was countermanded, and the original order for declination was renewed. Strong hopes were entertained in Mexico that this last order had also been revoked. Messrs. U. B. Crittenden, Judge Hu tch linson, Maverick, and W. B. Jones have been released by Santa Anna as a person al favor to Gen. Thompson. Van Ness was at Tacubaya. HOW TO FIGURE UP A WHIG VICTORY. —By the following chain of reason ing, the Jonesborough Whig makes out a W hitt victory in Maitre county, Tenn: "A Mr. Swan, of the Democratic pat ty, has been convicted of murder in the first degree, in Monroe coo' ty, in this State, and sentenced to he hung by Judge Scott. And a Mr. Burton has been elected to the Penitentiary for 1 year for hog steal. ing, front the same county. 'the Loco Focus of that county only had about jour of a majority over the W higs, and fee of them have now been sent to the Peniten tiary, and one is to be burg, to that the ccovit: , i; Whig," [From the Pittsburg Matulacturer.] A liyoUgit Story. The Cincinnati Sun gives, what it calls the "Full Particulars of the Wonderful Sights seen by the Pilot of the %Van. Penn in the Sky, on Tuesday night, March 21." We do not know what to make of it up - on the whole; for we cannot think that the editor would attempt to hoax the public with such a story, if he did not think it true. About 11 or 12 o'clock, P. M., it being a starlight tight, Mr. Francis, the Pilot, saw a light burst forth which appeared to light up the whole face or the earth. The Captain, who was sitting in the cabin at the time, also saw the light anti ran to the guard to discover the cause. Mr. Francis now being very anxious to discover •r ran et. 1,11. ..worn looked diligently out at the side of the pi• lot house, in rather a southwest course, but nearly over head, when he saw the outlines of a Serpent in the sky, in a crook ed position, except the tail which was straight, the head toward the east. It turned to a livid bright red, deep and aw ful, and remained stationary in the stars. Mr. Francis watched it for two or three minutes when the tail part disappeared nearly to the middle, and the remainder in a gradual manner formed into a dis tinct Roman Mr. F. had time now to mind the chan. nel of the river, and deliberate upon the beauty and grandeur of a letter in the skyl It was veinal kably interesting to him, as may well be supposed, from the accuracy of its formation. After about one minute and a half, he watched it and the boat al- ternately, it changed, turning into a dis tinct as perfect as ever was seen, in which poi sttion it remained as before. Mr. F. sta ted that he was surprised greatly at this, but not scared or frightened in the least, • and immediately tapped the bell l'or the Captain to witness the scene. The Cap tain did not come immediately, but alter a moment or two appeared, but ere this the figure in the heavens had changed in • to a distinct letter The Captain said , to Mr. F. 'What's wanting ?' 'Come here quick,' said Mr. F. 'and look up yonder, did you ever see the like?' The Captain answered, '1 see it!' and looked at it till it disappeared. Mr. F. states that %Oleo the 0 turned to a 1) it formed a kind of oblong shape and then came straight on one side as a D should be. When it disappeared, it turn. ed into the same oblong shape as before, and gradually the sky returned to its original appearance. Mr. Francis states that he did not leave the wheel of the boat, but steered it to this city. lie declares that let others' think or say as they will, what he has re lated is strictly true. He is no Millerite, neither is he crazy or frightened, and if ladies or gentlemen will call upon hint he will convince them that what he has told is truth. Captain Pratzman remarked at the time that it was something quite inexplicable, and was sorry he did not come to the deck sooner, so as to have had a full view of this grand, wonderful and unaccountable phenomenon. An DMAD AS A HERRING,—The herring is a delicate fish, which is killed by a ve ry small degree of violence. Whenever it is taken out of the water, even though It seems to have received nu hurt, it gives a wield: and instantly expires; and though it he thrown instantly back into the water it never recovers; hence arose th^ proverb d.:a2 f; a 1-,zrt THE SUOCKIXO .711 UR. DER or 1 We are indebted to the Baltimore Sun for the particulars of a most frightful murder. The Baltimore Patriot also fur nishes us an account of the shocking tra gedy : The name of the guilty demon is Adam Horn, and that of the victim, Melinda Horn, his wife, residiog about 22 miles from Baltimore, on the Hanover turnpike 'road, near the Blue Bell tavern. 'the un fortunate victim, it appears, had mysteri ously disappeared from her home about lour weeks, since, and so intelligence could be had of her. The anxiety and suspicion of the neighbors becoming exci ted, they determined to institute search for her, and succeeded in finding the body enveloped in a coffee bag, in a ditch of a field hooting the house, where it had beer, thrown. 'I he legs and arms had been se ! vered from it, and were subsequently found wrapped up in a course cloth, in the lupper part of the back building of the (house in which the husband resided. The head had been cut entirely oft, and has not lyet been discovered. The deceased was about eighteen years of age, and had been ! married some twelve or fifteen months,— . Her delicate situation at the time of the terrible event, was such as to render the. • murder a double one. An inquest WAS held over the body by Justice Bushey, and a verdict rendered of death by the hands of some one unknown to the jury. Cir. eumstances, we are informed, tended strongly to fasten suspicion'tipon the bus b uul. Ile is said to have so ill treated his wife as to cause her to leave him sonic time lust fall, hut she again returned, and was subject to frequent misusage§ on sub. Isequent occasions. Apprehending, 'mai- I bly, that the body might be discovered, he left his home, and was last seen about live miles from Baltimore, on his way to the city, carrying a small bundle. The neigh burs are now in pursuit of him. Ile is !about 45 years of age, 5 feet 6 inches high, somewhat nock-marked, in a tailor by trade, and was, when he left, dressed in a blue frock coat, gray pantaloons, and a black tat. He had pursued his trade, and kept, in addition, a small grocery store. On Thursday last, John Horn alias Ad- 1 am Horn was arrested in Philadelphia,' and committed on suspicion of being the petpetratorof the horrid murder above detailed. The next day he had another hearing, which resulted in his commit ment:to await the requisition of the Guv• ernur of Maryland. Arrest of a supposed 11Iur• derer. We copy the knowing from the Phila. ilelqhia United States Gazette of the alud inst. There is every probability for the belief that the perpetrator of the inhuman tour der of the aged M r. and Mrs. Parthemore, near Harrisburg, has been brought within the reach of justice. It will be remem bered that the day after the murder was committed two men were arrested in an adjoining county, one of whom wag per mitted, on examination, to go at large, and the other was detained. The one who was freed went to Reading, and there commenced an acquaintance with Mr. Robert Mc Whorter, one of the hands em ployed about the rail road depot at that place; and to him he stated that he was the wood chopper who had been arrested and discharged. His manner was some what wild, and he appeared to have a dread of being alone in the dark, and was apparently desirous of telling him a secret which he had. He finally confessed to McWhorter that it was he who committed the murder, giving as his object the desire to obtain money to get back to Ireland, of which he was a native. McWhorter saw him leave Reading the next morning in the train of cars fur this city, and short ly after communicated the facts matte known to him, to J ustice Betz of Reading, who immediately took his affidavit and forwarded it to Recorder Vaux of this city. Mr. Vaux on its reception bestirred him self actively to ferret out the fellow, but his arrest was consummated in another way. On Thursday afternoon the mate of the ship Monongahela, lying at Cope's wharf, lodged information at the Mayor's Office. concerning a man who had offered an ad. ditional rate for a steerage passage to Liv erpool. on condition that lie might be im mediately taken on board and secreted. He was put into a safe place until the offi cers arrived, when he was conveyed be. fire the Recorder, by whom he was fully committed. Mason is small in size, and is between ' SO and 40 years of age. His clothes were strained in a manner which looks very like blood, and his manner of an swering questions is confused and contra dictory. There can be but little doubt but that lie is the guilty person. The Lycommg Gazette, Berwick Sen tinel, and Columbia Spy, have read this paper out of the party—not by any means out of the democratic party--but out of the present Canal Commissioner's party —of which their presumed owners are such disinterested supporters. The own er of the first being a collector of tolls at two dollars a day--the second being a col-. lector of tolls at two dollars a day— the third being a collector of tolls at two dol. tars and a half a day, and two clerks.— they are very patriotic party men indeed and who can doubt their disinterested• 11101 ! dnr,Ocrst t.az!:,•,—Berrter. THE HUNTINGDON JONI - - Huntingdon, April 26, 11442 i "Ore country, one constitution, one deafly." V. B. PALMER, Esq. (No. 104 S. 3rd St Philadelphia,) is authorized to act as Agent for this paper, to procure subscriptions and advertisements. "FRIENDSHIP'S OFFERtNa."—Whoever hollowed this Annual" for the year ISS6, trom a person in this Borough, is requested to return it to the owner, or to this office, if the owner is unknown . Huntingdon, April 12, 1813.—tr. (Kr Last week, on motion ofJ. M. Bell, Esq., JAMES SEWELL STEWARC was ad mitted us an Attorney to practice law in the several Courts of this county. Adjourned Court. An Adjourned Court of Common Pleas for this county, will be held in June next. It will commence on the third Monday (and 19th day) of the month, and continue two weeks. The causes on the list for the April Term, remaining undisposed of, will constitute the trial list for the Ad journed Court. EDITORIAL CIIANGE.—Judge TitomAs Bantu has purchased the Pittsburg Ad vocate establishment, anti announced himself as the !ditor of that paper. 0:7" We tender our thanks to Messrs. BLAIR and MIVILLtaxa, of the House of Representatives, and to Ma. MATIIER3, of the Senate, for their kind attentions to U 3 during the session of the Legislature just terminated. 07 . ' HENRY MEHAFFEY, charged with fraudulent insolvency, escaped from the Jail of Lancaster county, on the 9th inst. ' A reward of $l9O is offered fur hie appre. hension. 11e came MI with more honor than if he had got a Previous Pardon. JACOB FOREMAN.—We aro pleased to see that this fellow, who turned traitor to Ilia ctmatituents and voted to austoin the veto of the Canal Commissioners Bill, i 4 universally discarded by his party. lie must associate with T i ler and Porter. Countertells. Counterfeit 5, 10, 20 and 50 dollar notes of the Lancaster County Bunk (Pd.) have lately made their appearance. They are altered from broken Southwark Savings Institution. Signed F. Roberts, cashier; Benkert, president. The genuine notes are signed Robert D. Carson, cashier ; John Landes, president. Resumption. The Bank of Pennsylvania has resumed specie payments, not only of its notes, but of all its liabilities. It is said that the Lewistown Bank has also resumed specie payments. Ejectment Case. The case of William Foster's Execu tors against William 11I'Divitt occupied the attention of. the Court the whole of last week. On Saturday, about noon, the jury went out, and at the meeting of the Court in the afternoon returned with a verdict fur the defendant. The Reform Bill. The Bill to reduce the Expenses of the Government, usually called the "Re form Bill," which passed both branches of the Legislature,has become a law without the Governor's signature. Being opposed to retrenchment in the expenses of the Government, the Governor refused to sign the bill ; and knowing that it would be passed by the constitutional vote of two thirds, he dared not veto it. Having held it ten days without action of any kind thereon, it became a law ipso facto, or per Be, as a very contemptible personage 'at Washington would say. For this bill, which saves to the Commonwealth about THREE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLA RS annually, the people are in• debted solely to the Whigs and a small but patriotic band of Ant►-Porter The Governor and his faction were oppos ed to it throughout. 'lime following synopsis of the bill we take from the Harrisburg Telegraph of the sth instant. SECTION 1. Fixes the Governor's sala ry, from the commencement of the pent term, January, 1844 at 83,000. . Sae. 2. 'the Chief Justice and Associ ate Justices of the . Supreme Court who may he hereafter appointed, to receiv., re•ipectivety SI,BCO and BI,COO per an-