e* ^ • • THE JOURNAL. JOURNAL. ~ t .: HUNTINGDON, PA. Thursday Morning, April 29, 1552. 3. SEWELL STEWART—Enrron. TERMS OF PUBLICATION: Tun “HuNTirtoDos JOURNAL" is published at tke following rates, viz : if paid in advance, per annum, $1,50 If paid during the year, 1,75 If paid after the expiration of the year,-2,50 To Clubs of live or more, in advance, • • 1,25 Tun above Terms will he adhered to in all eases. No subscription will he taken fora less period than six mouths, and no paper will he discontinued un til all nrrearages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher. V. B. PALMER Is our authorized agent in Philadelphia, New York And Baltimore, to receive advertisements, And any persons in those cities wishing to adver tise in our columns, will please call on him. FOR THE PRESIDENCY IN 1852, WINFIELD SCOTT, OF NE\V JERSEY FOR VICE PRESIDENT 1N 1852, JAMES C. JONES, OF TENNESSEE. ?I= • FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER, JACOB HOFFMAN, OF BELIES COUNTY. J. & W. Saxton and George Gwin have magnificent new goods—Bricker has groceries and liquors of all descriptions— Ed. Snare has a fresh lot of fine jewelry— A. S. Harrison has bacon, fish and feed— Alex. Cartoon has a fine lot of goods at the Elephant—C. S. Black has good boots and shoes—Graffius Miller and Christian Couts keep good taverns; and Dr. Miller is great on a tooth. ADMITTED.—John N. Prowell and Sam uel T. Brown were admitted to practice law during the late session of the court.— Mr. Prowell is about opening an office in town. We have not heard the destination of Mr. Brown. Err It will be perceived by the veto in to-day's paper that one of the cog-wheels in the Locofoco Bank Factory has become somewhat damaged. Mr. Bigler thinks ho knows more than all the Legislature put together, and is lecturing the boys about things which they are as well acquainted with as his. Such a season of vetoes has never been witnessed in this country. The people send representatives to make laws and a little pile of dissolving dust blown into the gubernatorial chair front the banks of the Chickelacamoose, says, that they are not fit to do such things. Oh liberty and equality ! What a humbug ! Kr' By the Senate apportionment for members of Congress, Blair, Huntingdon, Mifflin and Union compose our district.— By the one passed the House, it is Blair, Huntingdon, Bedford and Somerset. Both these are too decidedly Whig. The object in to make the Whig strength in the State as inefficient as possible. _These Whig counties should be arranged in such way as to carry two Whig Congressmen instead of one. [Cr The House has agreed to adjourn on the 29th of April, but it has not passed the Senate. The most important business is still to do. The adjournment will not take place before the sth or 6th of May. The appropriation bill is very large. The State debt will be very materially. in creased. The people will soon find that the man who keeps down the State debt is not Governor. When Bigler goes out of office the debt will bo about forty millions. 0:r Col. Wm. T. Wilson, lately enga ged in this office and favorably known in this county, has become a co-editor and proprietor of the Clinton Tribune, publish ed at Lock Haven. He has our best wish es for his success. II?" The Whig State Journal and Har risburg American have united their forces wader the title of the Whig State Journal, and published by J. J. Clyde & Co. The Whig State Journal is now, as it has here tofore been, a splendid weekly paper, and merits the large patronage, which, we are informed, it enjoys. 0:7 - Tivonty tliouaand dollara have been itubseribod to the stook of the World's Ex hibition, in New York, Homestead Exemption. Go it, Juniata, you rascal you—you know us but wo don't know you. If we did, we might pick a hole in your moral constitution, for you are evidently a great liar. You say in the last Globe that our notions on this subject tend to dishonesty— that we are trying to break down the cred it system, and are opposed to the payment of honest debts. Why dear Mister Juni ata, you have certainly "mistaken the scope of the. Apostle." We are the friend of a flush and healthy business system—one that will never have to call on the lancet of such money-shavers as Juniata, to jerk the blood out of it. But you say that you are a friend of the laboring classes. This must certainly be a mistake. If you were to take a ramble through the gloomy cham bers of your heart, you would soon discov er, that instead of it being garnished with love and friendship, it would be tenanted with crickets and nerway rats and all that kind of vermin that delight to revel in the, shadows of desolation. The laboring class es don't appreciate your friendship. A Tut Er. We would like to have some intimation of the carcass that travelled into our law office during the first week of the court and stole three numbers of the N. York Week ly Tribune, hanging there on a file. Why didn't the thief steal our Bible or Penn sylvania .Blackstone, or some book that we could replace? But to steal the best pa per in the world, when it was evident we were trying to preserve them, is a crime so deep that the English language cannot fur nish words sufficiently strong for its de nounciation. We close in the expressive language of Dan Eiseubise in the midst of a big fight—" Hold me ! I'm pustin with intignation!" P. S. We will give 12i cents a piece for the numbers of 27th March last and 3d and 10th April inst., of Weekly Tribune. Cam' The Court at its late session refused to grant license to any one, against whom a remonstrance appeared, no difference how small the same might be. This is carrying out the Maine Liquor law before it has passed the Legislature, and very consider ably running the same into the ground.— Some important points are left without a public house; Fhile at others, whore one had been granted at January and an ap plication for another equally as unexcep tionable was made at April, the latter was refused, because it was assailed by a small remonstrance. This is granting a monopo ly of the liquor traffic without in the least subserving the purposes of temperance; for one tavern in a ylace will sell just as much of the combustible juices of hell as would two or wore. One can damn as many hus bands, haggard as many wives, and manu facture as many widows and orphans as two could in the same place, while at the same time, one could not accommodate the travelling and business public as well as two. Two respectable men in a place, in this business, will do no more harm than one reputable person will do; and will do noth ing like the injury to the public that one brutal character will do. If the applicants are honest and good citizens the number of houses licensed will work no extra barns to the community. The Huntingdon County Mutual Insurance Company. The following persons have been incor porated under the above name, by an act which has recently passed the Legislature, to wit : David Stewart, John lsett, David McMurtrie, John Oaks, James Gwin, John Hewitt, Dutton Madden, John Rung, Jas. Moore, Kenzie L. Green, David Fraker, John Stever, James Ewing, James Entre kin and John Brewster, and are constitu ted a board of Directors until the first Mon day of May, 1853 or until others are elect ed in their stead. The above named per sons will meet in Huntingdon on the first Monday of June next, (1852) to hold their first election of directors. The business of the above company will be conducted in Huntingdon. Dow,themthor of the Maine liquor law, was a candidate for Mayor of Portland, and the Maine question was made the issue in the contest; the affect of which was that Albion K. Parris was triumphant ly elected and the Maine law defeated. This certainly looks as if the Maine laW was a failure at the fountain head where it first obtained au existence. [r_r The place in the Supreme Court, made vacant by the death of Judge Coul ter, was tendered by the Governor, to G. W. Woodward, who declined. It was then tendered to Thomas S. Bell, member of the late Court, who, it it said, will accept. [From the 13.eading Journal.] " HEAD HIM OR DIE:, The Locofocos are just now engaged in the interesting though somewhat difficult game of •heading off' Gen. Scott. They evidently think the old General an ugly customer, who, if made the Whig candi date, would be likely to spoil their sport in the ensuing presidential campaign.— However much they disagree as to who shall be their own candidate, they are all united in the opinion that Gen. SCOTT should not be our's. Indeed, so prevalent is this notion in the opposition ranks, that 'if the choice of the Whig Candidate were left to the Baltimore Convention, it is ab solutely certain that the old Hero would have a very poor tow. They say he is 'unfit' for the offialt-that ho is in the hainis of the Abolitionists--that he is not sound on the Compromise, and putting all these things together, would be by odds the weakest man the Whigs could select. It is certainly very kind of them to take such an interest in our affairs, and very ungrate ful in us not to follow their advice and give old 'Fuss and Feathers' the go by--very ! But what in politics is good for the goose may not be so good for the gander. A Whig candidate to suit the Locos, might not altogether suit the Whigs. If they prefer anybody else to Scott, that fact alone forms a pretty good reason why we should prefer Scott to anybody else. In matters of this kind, we incline to the opinion,— warranted by past experience—that oppo sition prejudices, like Rory O'Moore's 'dhrtunes,' should always be taken by 'con traries.' In the case in point the 'reproach on their lips' is merely intended to pull the 'wool' over our eyes. The trick is too transparent. Gentlemen of the opposition, it won't do. You can't come it ! But badinage aside, Gen. Scott is our man if we wish to succeed, and the Loco , focos know it! They are afraid of him, and there's where the shoe pinches! They didn't like Harrison in 1840;—ho was an 'old granny.' They abhorred Clay in 1844 —because he was a 'gambler' and a 'duel list,' and Polk was a 'much better Tariff man!' They opposed the nomination of Taylor, in '4B, as 'not fit to be made;'—he was no politician, fought Indians with 'blood hounds,' owned several hundred ne grecs, and branded them like a heathen.— Just now they are great sticklers for the rights of the South, and Scott is suspected of a leaning towards 'abolitionism!' It is really curious to note these mutations these idiosynoraeies of the opposition, pe riodically manifested on the approach of each Whig National Convention. If it be asked why, like the heathen, they are al ways "imagining vain things," the answer doubtless, will be found in the words of the Psalmist, given in the same chapter—" B ecause they fear to be dashed in pieces like a potter's vessel," at each quadrennial re turn of a Presidential Campaign. To prove that Gen. Scott is sound on the Compromise, we quote an extract trom a letter to the Washington Republic, written by the Hon. EDWARD STANLEY, of North Carolina—the same STANLEY, who recent ly gave Mr. Giddings such a drubbing in the House, and who will hardly be accused of sympathizing with Northern Abolition ism in any shape or form. He speaks by '1 the card. Hear hint : It is, I believe, certain that no man can receive the vote of North Carolina who is not known to be in favor of maintaining the Compromise acts as a final settlement. There is probably no man in the State who holds a different opinion. Our greatest leader, Mr. Clay himself, if, in answer to the prayer of millions, he could be resto red to health and youthful vigor, with all the enthusiasm which he only could excite, could not receive the electoral vote of North Carolina, if he were a candidate, and op posed to the Compromise bills. But it is duo to myself to say that I have never said, and will not now say, that as I can't' and won't go for Scott." On the contrary, I have always said I knew he was as earnest, ardent, and zealous a friend of the Compromise measures as there was in the United States. I know, of my own knowledge, that he was so, before their passage through Congress, and after wards. I heard him reprove northern men who were opposed to them, before they passed Congress, iu such strong terms that 1 thought would offend them. 1 know he is a southern man by birth. The country knows be poured out his blood on the north ern frontier, under the stars and stripes, receiving wounds, the scars of which he yet bears, while fighting against England's haughty power in the war of 1812. The world knows the wonders he achieved with northern and southern, eastern and western soldiers, in that unparalleled march from Vera Cruz to Mexico. I know he is a true Republican, and has always been; and I have no fear that such a man woud not prove as true to his country's best interests in peace as he has been in war. 1 do not believe, at this time, th;re is one man in Congress, from any section or of any party, tVhig, Democrat, or Free Soil, who does not know General Scott! is in favor of maintaining the Compro-1 mise acts." This is a clincher! If anybody opposes Gem Scott after this on the ground of his presumed hostility to the adjustment mea sures of last session, he must be either a knave or a fool, or something of both.— The Locofocos must now try some other game. They must warm up the 'hasty plate of soup,'—hire Ex-Secretary Marcy, (who has had some experience in 'mending breaches,') to harrass his 'rear'—depute the renowned Pillow to throw up another 'ditch'—forward a new 'pass' to Santa-An na, and urge him to take the field once more against his late rival—get up a drum head Court Martial as they did' in Mexico or do some other desperate thing, and be quick about it, or it will be too late. In a few - weeks more the 'conquering hero' will be on his way to the White House ! Let the 'old fogies' and the 'young fogies,' arouse! " Speed, Marcy, speed !"—Up James—(Fits) James ! Arm Douglass, arm ! Lewis, gird on your 'broken sword,' No 'stump' demands its rusty blade ; 01,1 'San Jacinto: pass the word— "Go it ye cripples !"—"who's !druid !" Onward !—be this your battle cry— Head WINFIELD SCOTT hint or die!" Whig National Convention. The Whig congressional Caucus re-assem bled in the U. S. Senate Chamber on Tues day evening, agreeably to adjournment., and after a session of several hours, agreed upon Baltimore as the place, and the 16th of June as the time, for the meeting of the Whig National Convention to nominate can didates for President and Vice President of the United States. Seine difficulty was oc casioned during the session by an effort on the part of several Southern ultras to oh tain the passage of a preamble and resolu tions, re-affirming the Compromise, intro duced into the first caucus, but the Chair man, Mr. MArlaum, very properly ruled the resolution out of order, as it was no part I of the duty or business of the caucus to lay down a course of action for the govern ment of the Convention. An appeal hav ing been taken by the disorganizers, the i decision of the chair was triumphantly sus tained, whereupon nine factionists, most of whom represent States that are always against us with drew in a huff, Among the Southerners remaining were Senators Jones and .Mangurn, and Representatives, Cul lom, Moorhead, Dockery, S.tanly, and oth ers, who although warm friends of the Com promise, agreed with the majority that the caucus was not the proper place to pass resolutions of the kind proposed. The ma jority of the Southern Whigs acted patriot ' ically, and do not appear to have been in the least disconcerted by the course of their intractable brethren.. No harm was done by what took place, and the Conference, after the 'secession' of the ultras, conduct ed the proceedings in good temper and ad journed with the best feelings. The Caucus having thus attended to, with out exceeding their duty, it will now de volve upon the Convention, when assem bled in pursuance of the call, to lay down a platform that will be generally accepta ble to the great body of the Whigs, South as well as North. With exception of a very few agitators, whose numbers are too inconsiderable to occasion any disquietude, the Whigs of the country approve and will sustain the Compromise, everywhere, in good faith. Our three candidates for the Presidency, upon whom alone the nomi nation can fall, are all known to be not merely favorable to those measures, but ready to give them their unqualified appro val. There is no Free Soil or Abolition candidate in the field on the Whig side, and if there were, he would have no earth ly chance of procuring oven a respectable support, much less a nomination, at the hands of the Convention. The measures of adjustment advocated by our leading Whig Statesmen, and endorsed by our pres ent Whig Administration, have a peculiar claim upon Whig support, and will be re endorsed promptly and eheefully by the representatives of the party when called upon to act in their collective capacity.— ,We have no fears on this score. Those who anticipate a different issue, will find in jla few months that they have alarmed them selves to no purpose, while the intracta isles who have conspired to breed a distur j bance iu the Whig ranks, will as assuredly fail in the accomplishment of their design. [Reading Journal. LEATHER INSPECTOR.—W. M. ARM STRONG, has recieved his Commission as Inspector of Leather for the city and coun ty of Philadelphia, from Governor BIOLER, and has appointed ANDREW NOBLE of the Northern Liberties, and Wm. FLAKE, of the oity, his deputies. ELEVEN BANKS VETOED ! VIE co ita To the Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. GENTLEMEN ;-Bill No. 590, on the tiles of the Senate, entitled "Au Act to incorpor ate the Meadville Bank," with a capital of I $lOO,OOO, has been presented for my colisid eration, together with others, providine: for the establishment of sundry new banks,' to be located as follows, to wit : one at Pitts- I burg, with a capital of $300,000, another at Allentown, Lehigh county, with a capital of $150,000, another at Eiie, with a capital of I $150,000, another at Carlisle, with a capital of $lOO,OOO, atiother at New Castle, Law rence comity, with a capital of $lOO,OOO, another at Tamaqua. Schuylkill county,. with a capitol of $6100,000, another at Mauch Chunk, Carbon county, with a capital of $lOO,OOO, another at Phwnixville, Chester county, with a capital of $200,000, another at Monongahela city, Washington county, with a capital of $lOO,OOO, also, another, to add $160,000 to the capital stock of the Southwark bank, in the county of Philadel phia. Since the General Asssmbly has thus indi cated to me their views on the subject of in creasing the banking capital cif the State, I have given the question, in all its bearings, my most anxious consideration—have con templated the probable effects of this propo sed measure upon the interests of the whole I people of the State—upon the laborer, me chanie, flamer, merchant, and manufacturer, and bringing to the aid of my judgement, the lights furnished by the past experience of the country, I have arrived at the conclusion that it is my solemn duty, however unpleasant, to differ with you on this subject. To dissent from the wish es of the representativcs of the people, on a question of public policy, is painful to me in the extreme, but to shrink from the respon sibility of performing a conscious duty, would be cowardly and criminal. in returning so large a number of bank bills without my sanction, for the reconsid eration of the General Assembly, I deem it right that I should present my reasons for so doing at length, in one message, and have reference to this as applicable to these mea sures severally. On assuming the duties of the Executive office, I distinctly announced, "that, in my opinion, no pretext can justify the creation of a superabundant amount orp.,per money, and that it was with painful alarm I have witnessed a growing disposition in the en tire country to increase the use of this me dium on a small specie basis, regardless of the inevitable effects of the large accessions of coin which California is furnishing to this country and to the world. Every people should have a circulating medium as a mat ter of convenience, and should have what ever amount the transaction of wholesome business affairs may demand; lint unfortu nately we are too unwilling to stop at the proper point in the creation of this medium. That as coin becomes abundant it should supplant and render unnecessary the use of paper, is to my mind, the plainest teaching of common sense. Such practical effect Js demanded by the true interests of the people.' The sentiments thus announced, I have long entertained, and their correctness is the more confirmed by every day's experience and reflection. I should, by assenting to these bills, agree practically to reverse this doctrine and maintain that as coin becomes abundant, the paper medium should be in creased. This position would be so mani festly unsound that argument is not necessa ry to refute it. The proposed new banks would mid to the present banking capital of the State an aggregate sum of $1,550,000, or over ten per cent. on the active capital now in use, and thus swell the present amount of our paper circulation to the extent of four or five mil lions. Whilst I am not prepared to say, that at the proper time,a bank might not be useful,if properly managed, at Borne of the -points na med, I have had no difficulty whatever is satisfying my mind that there is, at this time, no real of for such an extensive in crease of paper money, nor that if such in crease were permitted, the effect would be prejudicial to the true interests of the mass of people, and that it would exercise a de moralizing influence upon the busbies affairs of the State. The immediate effect would be , I have no doubt, to enhance the nominal prices of all kinds of goods and property, by the depreciation of bank paper, stimulating thereby a spirit of wild and fanciful specula 'lion, begetting prodigality arid idleness, the legitimate fruits of an inflated curreney.— All violent movements on this subject are unwise and especially injurious to the unwa ry citizen. Experience has demonstraled that all sudden expansions and contractions of a paper currency, exercise a prejudicial influence on the real prosperity of thu coun try. Such sudden convulsions, it is true,are sometimes turned to the advantage of tho shrewd capitalists, but the unsuspecting far mer or mechanic, enticed from his safe pur suit by the fair promises of the expansion, is crushed in his new experiment, by the vie lence of the contraction. If it be True that "experience teaches trio don"—and none will doubt this—the peo of Pennsylvania should be wise on this sub ject, :Ind a mere reference to that experiment it seems to rne, should be sufficient to awa ken them to the dangers of the measure in gnes,tloll. * Thu consequences of a similar policy, adopted in 1814, regardless of the admoiii ; tions of the sagacious and patriotic Snyder, are still remembered by setae who partici , • paled in the scenes of those days, and are known to all of us as a dark page in the his , tory of the State. Let no mita flatter himself with the belief that the same cause will not produce the same effect in the future that it has dune in the past. The country, it is true, is now inhabited by. a new generation, but the nature of man has undergone no change since the days of Snyder—his impul ses acid objects are the saute, and, the lairs of trade remain unaltered; end assuredly, if we rush into the errors of that day, we may justly anticipate a similar retribution. Nor Is this the only practical demonstration of the danger of the proposed policy, to be found in our history. Who does not remember something of the condition of aflitirs that ex isted thiough the whole extent of our vast country during the years 1834—'35—'36. Who has forgot the warning voice of the pa triotic Jackson, admonishing the people against the consequences of an inflated cur rency and an unrestrained system of credit, which then pervaded our business circles, arid affected, deeply domestic arrangements. But his warning was not heeded until it was too late to arrest the evil. The. Cleat bank exidaesion of that pried engendered a spirit of desperate speculation and habits o f prodi gality which distinguished alike the career of States, corporations and individuals. And who can contemplate, without regret and shame, the disgrace anti misery which fol lowed as a leghimate consequence. The imaginary fortunes of individuals were dis pelled as fog before the rising sun, and the rheshes of the speculator were rent asunder as cobwebs_ before the torrent of revulsion that ensued. States, corporations and indi viduals were prostrated beneath its weight— then plighted faith became a by-word and scoff, and their credit was hawked! about in the market and offered for a mere fraction of its nominal value. Whilst the unwary citi zen who had become misled by this artificial state of affairs, including widows and or phans, whose meatus under the force of the delusion, had been invested in schemes pure ly speculative, found themselves thrown houseless and penniless upon the charity of the public. Nor is this all. The effect of extending the banking capital of this State, in 1836, by the charter of the United States and other banks, from a little over fourteen to exceeding fifty-ei,„olit millions, and its sud den reelection, in a few years afterwards, to an active capital of less than nineteen mil lions, were scarcely less disastrous. The consecinences to our State credit, to the trade and commerce of our people, and to the hon or of the Commonwealth abroad, are topics too unpleasant to be discussed at this day, and I only allude to them as so many admo nitions against the tendency of the effort now making to increase the amount of batik ing capital, evidently calculated to produce a somewhat similar state of affairs. These expansions are delusive and unprof itable, and as shown by their past history, dearly inimical to the rights and interest of labor. From an able report made to Con gress on this subject, in 1840, I have gather ed some interesting facts, which speak a language that cannot be misunderstood.— They are to the effect that, from 1834 to 1836, the Increase of paper currency in the United States was near 98 per cent.—that the ad vance in the price of that kind of real estate, which was constantly in the market, was over one hundred per cent.—in stocks real and fancy, about one hundred and twenty per cent.—in flout, pork, corn, &c., about sixty per cent., and in the price of labor, the source of all real wealth, but a little over sixteen per cent. But not so when the con traction comes, for then labor bears the first shock, and depreciates most severely. In every view, therefore, is a fluctuating cur rency prejudicial to the interests of the la borer. Labor is the last thing to rise in price, and does so least, with au inflation, of the currency, but sutlers first and most se verely under the contraction. Besides du rin„q• the times of such inflation; the laborer is forced to receive his wages at the stan dard price of a sound currency in that which is depreciated, and purchase his necessaries at the high prices consequent upon such de pression. Such expansions, in addition, aro adverse to the real prosperity of the country; retards rather than advance it. The artificial growth produced by the expansion is more than counteracted by the paralysing influence of the contraction, and the aggregate pros perity is less than it would be were the coun try left to its steady natural advance. But how clearly impoverishing is the ef fect of an inflated currency upon all our State and national interests, now closely pressed by foreign competition. It virtually opens our ports to invite such rivalry against all these pursuits, and no rate of twill that the wisdom of Congress eau devise, within any reasonable limit, can counteract its in fluence. It greatly enhances the nominal prices of goods and commodities in this, above what they will bear in other countries, whilst at the same time it retards rather than facilitates their production. It thus gives the foreign producer the opportunity of man ufacturing at the low rates of his own coun try, and selling at the inflated prices of ours; for he receives his pay not in our depreciated paper but in gold and silver. It is this state of the currency, more than any other feature in the policy of this country, that enables the foreign manufacturer to compete, it not to undersell the American producer in our own markets. ' But where is the evidence that so largo an increase of the banking capital is required 1 and why authorize such increase all at one time? During the official service of my two last predecessors, covering a period of nine years, but four new banks of issue wore created; and when has Pennsylvania been more prosperous than durity , ' that time?— Whet, since fi rst injured by her heavy debt, did her credit stand higher, and when did the labor of her citizens reap a better reward? She has, during that whole time, stood erect, maintained her faith, and by the proper ex ercise of her own inherent elements of wealth, has been steadily extricating herself from the embarrassments biought upon her by a spirit of prodigality, transfused through out the whole country as the consequence of two expansions of paper money, to which I have already referred. There is now near nineteen millions of banking capital in the state, of which about four and a half millions of dollars are invest ed in stocks, bonds, &c., a business not ne cessarily connected with banking, nor con . tetnplated in the creation of banks. This fact furnishes some evidence that at times there had been mere banking capital than the legitimate business of these institutions seemed to requite, and certainly there is nothing in the present condition of the coun try to justify so large an accession to our pa per medium. The present petiod is one distinguished for the great abundance of coin. The mines of California and Australi have recently been contributing to swell inordinately the usual supply which other parts of the world still continue unabatedly to furnish. Money is unusually plenty in this country, and has not been so much so, liar su cheap in Europe, for many years. The Bank of England now contains the enormous sum of near ninety millions of gold and silver, whilst in France and Holland there is an evident excess above the demands of business, In the United Slates we have a full supply, which is new being rapidly augmented by new re , ceipts. These receipts, as I learn from reli able, though unofficial sources, by imports tion and coinage, fur the months of January, February and March, amounted to over thir, teen millions and a half, leaving in this country, after deducting all experts of specie, for the same period, a balance of near seven millions of dollars. This ratio of increase would soon double and thrible the whole cap, ital of the country. And it is worthy of IT.