Star A' Republican Banner. BY ROBERT WHITE AIIDDLETON GETTYSIIIIR9II. PENN. TUESDAY; JUNE 5, 1838 The 47andansus, (•-• The folloiving article is copied from the Philadelphia Ledger: here is h pretty predicament for a State to be placed in! If the mandamus should be granted, and the Governor should continue contumacious, ho would be imprisoned!! If one co-ordinate branch of our State govern ment may thus be locked up, so may all; for the same judicial power that grants a manda•- mus against tl.e executive, may grant one against every member of the House and Sen ate, and every judge ()revery court, those of, the Supreme Court included. Thus would our State be without a government, because its whole government,its whole body of pub lic servants had been locked up by order of a portion of them!!! Should our Su lireme Court grant a mandamus against it self, it would be in the predicament of the Dutch justice of New York who tried him- Self, and without the benefit of his tight squeeze; for if true to its own principles, it could not refuse a mandamus against itself on application of a corporation, nor keep nut of prison, if it should not obey the process, Ittsuch absurdities is any branch of our gov ernment always involved, by departing from fundamental constitutional principles. The constitution of Pennsylvania has pro vided for .the punishment of official miscon duct in a governor,by the process ofimpeach ment; and the people,by providing this,clear ly intended to dispense with every other mode. No gubernatorial ditties can be inter red from Common law principles. Our execu tive, like every other branch of our govern- Inent,is merely a creature ofthe constitution, and derives all his powers and duties from that instrument only. Then no power over him can be'inferred in favor of any other branch,which is not expressly granted in the constitution, or necessary to carry on ex. pressly granted power into operation. The power to issue a mandamus against the Gov ernor is not expressly granted to the judici ary, nor necessary to carry into effect any power granted to any branch of the govern ment; for all that such process could effect, is accessible through impeachment. lithe mandamus should be issued, we can easily predict the course of tho Governor He will not obey it, and, if the Sheriff tnsis will go to prison. Ho has too much mora courage to be infimidated,too much sagacity to be entrapped, and too much honesty to be seduced. Should he go to prison, the State of Pennsylvania will exhibit a curious specta cle, novel in American annals; that of hav ing one branch of its government suspended by another. We hope this process will be issued, and be carried to the utmost legal extremities; for it is time for the contest be- tweets the sovereign people and corporations treated by themselves, to come to an isSee. Let us understand who are to bo masters the sovereign people or tho corporations. The Baltimore American thus introduces our statement of last week to its readers: An unusual and, it would seem to us, ill _ judged measure has recently been taken by the Cumberland Valley Rail Road Company in reference to Governor RITNER of Penn. Sylvania. ft appears that among the pro- visions of the Internal Improvement Act passed at diciest session of the Pennsylvania Legislature, was one authorising and rcquir. ing the Governor to subscribe for the stock of several incorporated Companies, (one of which was the Cumberland Valley Rail road Company,) the appropriations for which as well as for the continuance of the unfinished State works, were to be supplied in part by a temporary loan of $600,000, bearing an interest of four per cent. In approving the Bill, the Governor, in a special message to the Legislature on the subject, among other matters adverted to the difficulty of obtain• ing leans at four per cent. per annum, the rate of interest which he had determined not to exceed; and declared his determine. tion to withhold his subscriptions to the Companies until such loan was procured to meet them. He immediately advertised for the loan, but until within a few days past no part of it was taken. Such was the pos. ture of affairs when the Rail Road Company in qaestion commenced the measure to which we refer,and which is thus detailed in the Gettysburg Star of Tuesday .In noticing the appointmont of Mr:f3TEvarrs as Canal Commissioner, the Harrisburg Chronicle says— Mr. STEVENS is known over the whole country as a man of transcendatit talent. And it is not saying too much of him,that to him we aro as much, and perhaps more,indebted for the overthrow of the Jackson party to this state, than any other man living. His bold and vigorous intellect and indomitable energy of character, have made him a ter ror to the whole Van Buren party in this State. His direct connection with the in ternal improvement system of the common wealth, in the State Legislaturp, for four or five years, as a member of the improvement committee, where his public dutiesondepen dent of the deep personal interest, which he ever displayed in every thing that tended to developo the greatness of the state, or ele vate her character as a great - empire, have enabled him to become thoroughly acquain ted with her whole improvement policy `which- . admirably qualifys him for a corn . missiener. IMPORTANT REBOLUTION.—The follow. ins resolution, which looks to a practical re form where it is most needed, was proposed in the House of Representatives on Monday, by Mr. MERCER:— Resolved, That the Committee on the Judiciary be instructed to inquire into the expediency of vesting the power efappoint. iug tho attorneys and marshals of the seve. rat Courts of the United States in the judges thereof; that the Committee of Ways and Means be instructed to inquire into the ex pediency of vesting the power of appointing and removing the several officers of the ens- toms in the Secretary of the Treasury, with _the restriction that he shall, in case of every removal, transmit to Congress his reasons therefor; and that the Committee on the Post Office and Post Roads be instructed to inquire into the expediency of causing the salary of the Postmaster General to be re• duced to the sum of $3,500 per annum, to take effect whenever a vacancy shall occur in the said office, and of requiring that offi cer,on his removal of any deputy from ofbee, to transmit to Congress his reason therefor. . From the Philadelphia Inquirer of May 30. l'he Canal Board and out P.i4Uc Works. Messrs. STEvENs, DICKEY and PINNY• PACKER, Canal Cornmissioners,lnive been in town for several days; and have transacted much important business connected with the State Improvements. 'They all appear to be in excellent health and spirits, and will leave the city to-day for Lancaster; making such delays and observations on their route, as the nature of their duties may require.— They will be accompanied by Messrs. ME lIAFFEY and Itussma,—two highly efficient officers of the works. We mentioned a fortnight since, as a matter of just pride and congratulation, that (luring the week preced ing that period, .fifleen hundred cars had passed over the Inclined Plane at the Schuyl kill. We aro now enabled to make public a fact of a still more gratifying character. During the week ending on Saturday last, the unprecedented number of sixTßErl, HUN DRED AND FIFTY-SIX CARS passed the above mentioned plane. The present period may be truly said to form an era in the history of our State Improvements. The tolls received during the present fiscal year, already n• mount to more than half a million of dollars; and the business was never more active than at this moment. Only yesterday,tho trains that left the depot at 8 o'clock, carried up wards of FOUR HUNDRED PASSENGERS!— These are facts that cannot but cheer the heart and stir the pride of every true son of Pennsylvania. Specie Circular Repealed! Our readers will lenrn,we doubt not,most of them with great satisfaction, that the Joint Resolution repealing, in effect, the Treasury Order of July ,1836,and prohibit ing the Executive from making any discri minating and partial orders concerning Gov ernment money in time to come,which passed the Senate on Tuesday evening, passed the House of Representatives yesterday almost with the swiftness of an arrow, and now needs only the. President's signature to be a law. The unexampled majorities in both Houses show the strength of the general dis like justly entertained against this celebra ted Circular. Here is the end, then, of one Experiment, and most sincerely do wo rejoice at it. W e congratulate the country that Congress, in so decisive a manner, has extinguished one of those measures which have so much an noyed and distressed the community. It is remarkable with that pertinacity the Executive has withstood public sentiment in regard to his pernicious measure. The soli citations of friends, and the reiterated deci sions of Congress,have alike been unavailing to produce its repeal. Three-fliurths oldie Members of the last Congress pronounced its condemnation by the bill of February, 18:37, which General JACKSON put in his pocket, and would neither sign, nor return to Congress that it might be passed into a law without his signature. Then there was the sub-Treasury bill of the extra session which passed tho Senate, and which contained a clause repealing the Specie Circular. Next, there is the sub-Treasury bill of this session, ' which has also passed the Senate, containing (in its 23d section) a similar rescinding clause, moved by Mr. %VEIiSTER. And now, here is the joint resolution, in the identical terms of that section, substituted by the Senate, on motion of the same gentleman, for the proposition of Mr. CLAY, which has received the sanction of overwhelming ma jorities in both Houses. Thus has the Sen ate four different times, and the House of Representatives tivice,declared in effect that this Jacksonian Experiment No. 2 ought not only to be revoked, but that it ought to be made unlawful for the Executive ever here. after to issue or authorize any similar order. Yet, up to this moment, has the Executive clung to the measure, regardless of the in jury which even his partisans avow that it inflicts on the country; regardless of the public will,most emphaticallyspolion through the Representatives of the People. Yes, clung to it with a tenacity which is totally unaccountable upon any other hypothesis than that the Executive will has been con trolled by some "malign influence," either proceeding from the Hermitage, or exerted here by the original concoctors and advisers of the measure. Be that as it may,tho fate of that "experiment" is sealed. The odious acid unconstitutional discrimination must now be given up. Congress has pronounced its fate in a voice that must heard, and with a unanimity that leaves no hope to its friends, oven from the VETO. Blameable,however, as wo hold the Presi dent for adhering with such obstinacy to this oppressive measure, which he could at any moment have abrogated with a dash of the pen, it must yet be admitted, in candor, that he has only acted in accordance with the solemn pledge which he gave, on enter ing upon his high trust, "to tread in the foot steps of his illustrious predecesser;" and those who approve of such pledges, under any circumstances, must award him praise for the fidelity with which he. has redeemed that pledge Ho has certainly "trod in the footsteps" as long as he could, though they have led him through a thorny path. Gene ral JACKSON'S popularity, it was arrogantly asserted by his adulators, "could stand any thing." A sad popularity it has been to the country! Fortunately, though ho left his obnoxious measures as a legacy to the in cumbent of the Presidency, he could not be quest!' with it that popularity by which he was enabled to sustain them, and trample in the dust the acts of the People's Represen tatives. The President signed the bill authorising the issue of Treasury notes, in very short order. He is, as all good_ Democrats are, very much opposed to any kind of money, except gold and silver—but nevertheless, he could not withhold his signature from a bill to emit ten millions of irredeemable paper. Lotter from John Q. Adams. The following letter from Joni Quriver An- Ams, was received by the Managers of Pennsyl vania Hall: AV A Sill NGTON, 10th January, 1838. Samuel Webb and William 11. Scott. Philadelphia: MY RFNPECTED FIIIENDS.—I learnt iv;th great sat isfiction, by your letter of the 18th of last month, that the Pennsylvania Hall Association, have erected a largo building in your city, wherein liberty and equality of civil rights can be freely discussed and the evils of slavery fearlessly portrayed. The right ofdiscussion upon slavery, and an indefinite extent of.topics connected with it,is banished from one hall the States of this Union. It is suspended in both houses of Congress—opened and closed at the pleasure of the slave representation; opened for the promulgation of nullification sophistry; dos ed against the question, WHAT IS SLA- VER Y? at the sound of which the walls of the capitol staggered like a drunken man! For this suppression of the freedom of speech, of the freedom of the press, and of the right of petition, the people of the FREE States of this Union (by which I mean the people of the non•slnvehokling states) are responsible, and the people of Pennsylvania most of all. Of this responsibility, I say it with a pang sharper than language can express,the city of Philadelphia must take to herself the larg est share. And this consideration would cumpol me to decline the invitation with which the Managers of this Association have honored me,to deliver nn address at the open ing of the liall,were it otherwise in my pow. er, as it probably will nut he, to attend at the time proposed. My friends, I have a long standing,high. respectful,and alThctionate attachment to the city of Philadelphia, and its inhabitants. It dates from the day of the Declaration of In dependence, and if I were to address them on the opening of your Hall, I should com rent upon some of its self-evident truths. Now a great multitude of the present in• habitants of your city have grown sick of the sound of these self evident truths, and ex ceedingly adverse to hearing any comments upon them. If I should make any practical use of my freedom ofspeech,sorne would say, he is doling out a farrago of abstractions.— Others, what is the use of commenting upon self-evident truths. Others, not a few, would kindle into indignation, and say, he is inter meddling with the peculiar institutions of the South: that's unconstitutional! 'What's that to hind lie's a fanatic, he is an iacen• diary, he is an abolitionist!! he is attach• rag the rights of the States, he is provoking the people of the South, and,Lord have mer cy upon us, they will dissolve the Union! All this I could hear and endure with com posure---att. hie I --.1.1%ve •hon rd Won), and shall hear again. But if, while I Should be discoursing, a native citizen of Philadelphia should rise and say, What right have you to come here, and dogmatize with us upon the right of freedom, and the duties of freemen? Is not this the city of William Penn, and do you come hero to lecture us upon freedom of conscience? Is not this the city whence issued the Declaration of Independence?— And do you come to teach us the doctrine of inalienable rights? Have we so far degene rated from the virtues of our fathers,that we must go to Plymouth for our political creed? Have we no native sons of our own pity, ca pable of explaining to us the principles of hu man liberty, as well as you? My truo•hoarted friends, I should have no answer, satisfactory to myself, to give to such enquiries. I rejoice, that in the city of Philadelphia, the friends of free discussion have erected a [full for its unrestrained exercise. I know that the people of Philadelphia need a voice as of one from the wilderness, to rally them to the standard of human rights, but that voice must come from amongthemselves.— If there is not one native, I say not of Penn sylvania, but lithe city of Philadelphia, who dares to tell you the truth in tones that shall reach the sepulchres of the dead, lock up your flail on the same day that you shall open it, and wait for the appointed time : it will surely come. I must apologize to you even for wri ting to you with so much freedom. I hope it may be without offence, for to avoid that is precisely my reason for declining to de liver the address which you invite. Noth ing could delight me more than to address the inhabitants of Philadelphia upon the opening in their city of a hull devoted to free discussion, could I speak to them my whole mind, without giving to many of them great offence. This would be impossible. It would have been perhaps more dis creet to answer that, independent ofall other considerations, my detention here in the discharge of indispensable duties, would in all probability, preclude the possibility of my engaging to visit Philadelphia at the in dicated time. I shall therefore request yoU to accept that as my answer, and to consul or the remnant of this letter only as a tea tirnonial of my respectful sensibility to your invitation, and duly fervent wishes that tho Pennsylvania Hall may fulfil its destination, by demonstrating proof, that freedom of speech in the city of Penn, shall uo longer be AN ABSTRACTION. I am fitithfully your friend, JOHN QUINCY ADAMS. ABOLITION IN THE WEST INDIES.—The following extract is from a letter received at New Haven, and published in the Herald of that city. BARBADOES, April 30. "In my last,l alluded to the prospect that the slaves, apprenticeq in this is'and, would all be made free on the approaching Ist of August. It is now reduced to a certainty that such will be the case. The Governor, in a special coinmunication, to the House of Assembly, some time since,' recommended the measure in the mast explicit terms.— The executive council, on the 17th instant, came to a unanimous vote in favor of it, and set forth their reasons, us published in la paper which 1 send you herewith Last of all, the House of Assembly, on the 24th inst. after having laboriously canvassed the whole island, to obtain possessionot tll views and feelings of their constituents,' appoin. ted a committee, with "instructions to bring in a bill for the entire emancipatind ofrill classes of slavery apprentices, on the first of August,lB3B." I doubt whether .. any measure ever passed in this island hde given such general satisfaction as this. I speak not of the apprentices themselves, or whom there are upward of 80 000 to be rosuriked to their "unalienable rights," but of niter. chants, planters,proprietors; from all clasiici3 . there is a general expression of conuratulii-' bon. ......8 0 fore.. A SHORT SERMON•-"A word spoken i 4 season, how good is it," and never perhaps, was this proverb more fully verified than by the opportunity 'improved, as all opportuni ties should be, by the late Rev. Rowland Hill. He was once walking in Cheapside, on a Sabbath afternoon, when ho overheard a conversation between two young men of gay appearance, who were close behind him "Where shall we go to this evening?" asked one of them. "Wherever we can have a bit of fun" replied the other. "Thou let us uo to Old Rowley's chapel," said his Com. panion, "there will be some fun there." It was accordingly agreed upon; and while the worthy divine was reading the lesion in the evening, his eyes discerned in the uallery near him the very two persons whom he had beheld in the street but a few hours before making the above remark. His text was ta ken from Psalms ix, 17. '.The wicked shall he turned into hell with all the nations that forget God." For a moment the minister paused, and then pointing to them with all the dignity of his calling, repeated to them the awful denunciation of scripture, ad ling at the same time,"There's FUN for yo,boys!" Goon Lueg.—The following remarkable ns •ertion was made by Lord Exmouth, one of the nost famous of the British admirals: "I have never known what fortune meant. I never chose my station, and never had a friend but the kines pennant; but I have always gone where I was setit,at.d done what I was ordered, and he who will act upon the same principle may do as I have done." Sueh an idea it would do well to impress upon the young, to animate them to the ex• ercise of judgment, and habits of industry. Dr. Young has somewhere observed: "Look on those you call unfortunate, And close reviewed, you'll rind they are unwise It is one of the strongest arguments a gainst gaming of every kind—that it tends to beget a dependence upon the chance of fortune, and thus to teach men to undervalue industry and skill. Why then should we in all our business transactions recognise a chance? Why should we continually erect an altar to that unknown god, and refer con• tinually 'to his gifts, all those advantages which are the rewards of industry and virtue, sent ;II tt, a.c.Alreac. ivy "lit-. "from whom cornett' every good and perfect gift." The bell rings fir fire. Every one starts up, but feels certain it is not his house, be cause he kpows the chances are so widely scattered. Anon a hearse with its long fune ral train goes by. No one thinks it will be his turn next, beVtise ho never has died yet; but when his house burns down, or death claims the body, he makes as great a fuss about it as if it was smoothing new, and he had not had warning upon warning, uy, and continually. HIGHLY IMPORTANT.-"Stop her! stop her! stop the boat, Captain," cried out the shoe black of a steamer, after the boat had been some time under way; "I've left my brushes on shore!" flow many men there are of tremendous importance,in their own est ima. lion, who think the world is coming to an end if they happen to leave their "brushes on shore." FRENCH' PECULIARITIES. -- When fire breaks out in a French town, the folks do not cry ‘!fire !" They sing out "L'eau,reau, l'eau!" t e. "Water! water! water!" This is thought by some to be a much more ap propriate exclamation than ours. In the same way, we suppose, they cry "Honest man!" when chasing a thief, or "dog! dog!" when they see a wolf in a sheep fold. Old Johnson, the player, who was not only a very good actor, but a good judge of pain ting, and r.emarkable for making many dry jokes, was shown a picture, done by a very indifferent hand,but much commended, and asked his opinion of it. "Why, truly," said he, "the painter is a very good painter and observes the Lord's commandments."— " What do vou mean by that, Mr. Johnson." said one who stood by. "Why, I think,"an swered he, "that he bath not made to him self the likeness of any thing that is in Heav en above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth." =Xl=l THE CUT WORM.—The cut worm is an ash.colored worm with a stripe almost black upon its back. At its full growth, it is the bigness of a goose•quill, and an inch and a quarter in length. The greatest mischief that cutworms generally do,is to young cab bage, corn, cauliflowers, &c. They never choose to appear on the surface in the day time; but keep themselves buried about an inch or two beneath it. In the night they come up,` eat off the stems of young plants, and again bury themselves in the soil, often attempting to draw in the plants after them. They sometimes cut oilfields of Indian corn. They begin their work of destruction in !Any and cease in June. A writer in the New England Farmer, page 129, say s: "1 once prevented their de predations in my garden, 1.4 manuring the soil with sea mud,nowly taken from the flats. The plants generally escaped, though they were cut off in n spot of ground that lies contiguous. From the success of this ex• pen merit, 1 concluded that salt is very ()fret'. sivo or pernicious to them. Lime and ashes in some measure prevent their doing mis chief; 'but-sea water, salt, or brine, would ho mom ellixtuul antidotes. The moat tual method, and not a laborious remedy even in field culture, is to go round every morning and open the earth at the foot ofthe plant,and you will never fail to find the worm at the root within four inches. Kill him, and you will save not only the other plants ofyour held, but probably many thousands in future years." CORN STOCK FODDER, chopped up with a culling machine, and mixed with a small quantity of bran, shorts or meal, (if mixed with warm water, so much the better,) will be wholly eaten by cattle. The advantage ! of this practice is, that the centre stalks, ,commonly rejected by cattle, are now en *sly eaten by them; and as they are the 'sweetest and most nutritious part, a great loss is prevented. By lessening the quanit to of meal gradually, cattle may be learned \ t• eat the cut stalks without any addition. ' „a ' DESTROY TILE FLY ON TURNIPS.— Li . 4 sown by the hand, or distributed by a cnat, inb, is an infallible protection to tur nips n ainst the ravages of the fly. It should be appUed as soon as the turnips come up, and in the Same daily rotation in which they were sown. ' 'iThe lime should be slacked immediately before it is used; if the air be' not sufficiently moist to render that opera. Lion unnecessary. COTTON. —The Cotton Crop this year is an extraordinary product compared with pre vious years. Rets aro iniul9 at New Orleans that it will not fall short °clime milli I/ eight hundred thousand bales. Major Noah says, " Phis 1 , 1 the real gold of Oarstaples,and the excess of two or three bu'pdred thousand bales over last year will keophe foreign ex changes in our favor while w(iare backed by such wealth, which is mark , . eubstantial than specie." IttoN.—Tae rapid progressOf the Iron manufacture in England,may bf , titiiierOood from the fact, that in 1740, the quer - kitty manufactured was 17,000 tons; while'in 1836 it has reached 700,000 tons for the single year. The quantity made in 1820, was .100,000 tons, which shews an increase in the Annual product, of 300,000 tons, in a period of sixteen years. .11alters. Look at this! At n late Van Boren meeting, the following esolution was adopted: "Resolved, That the present Executive, Joseph Ritner, is totally incompetent to di4- charge the high duties of his station, be cause ho is an ignorant and illiterate DUTCHMAN." Stand back ye Dutch. and make way for th learned and talented David U. Porter,whose Grand mother was a Du tchman.—Mil/union. JI/DOE BURIVSIDE —A 'weak invention oldie enemy" 19 thus contradicted by the Mundy - relogralik for about the tAVenlieili. "A paragraph has been going the. rounds of the Van Buren press in the western sec tion of the State, stating that Judge Burn side, of Centre county, had come out in ap position to Gov. Ritner; thereby intimating hat the friends of the Governor are hecom• ng disgusted with his course. We have good authority for asserting that the gen tleman alluded to was, at the last election A DECIDED WOLF MAN. PORTER IN BRADFOLD COUNTY•—The Bradford A.rgus says, that the Young Men's Convention recently got up in that county, and about which the Loco Focos made a great noise before the time of meetine was "another Porter failure." ' , When the time came they found to their mortification that they had only delegates from three or four townships." It adds "this is the second failure which the Porteritos have experien• ced in this county! These failures are but forerunners of the fatal failure which will overtake them on the second Tuesday of Oc tuber next. Alas,for Porter and hisfriellds in B radian'. z. arty.`' Rif nci• , s Prospects We are weekly receiving from every part of the state, the most cheering news in re gard to the prospects of our Farmer Gov ernor. Let the news como from where it will, it is good; the farmers say, we have - 11 man from nur own ranks at the head of Gov erment, who manfully sustains our interest. and we are determined to Itec,p him there yet another term. Our Ge• - man friends say, Der Joseph Ititner.i.;t der Mann, Der unser,' Maui regieren Nunn. The merchants, mechanics, and menthe hirers say, it is our interest to support the man that has done so much to advance the prosperity of the "Keystone State." Be cause, when prosperity reigns we prosper, when ruin and misrule is desolating our country, we suffer. The wagoners say Jo seph Ritner was once a wagoner—he has lent a helping hand to aid turnpikes, with which our whole interests and prosper ity is connected, and they sing out . ”huzza for the old Pennsylvania Wagoner,"and so it goes. Joseph Ritner is undouhtedly'the people's favorite, there is no mistake about it, and if they will but turn out on the sec ond Tuesday of October nett, there cannot be a shadow of doubt as to the result. From tho Harrisburg Telegraph Democratic anthallasonic Mational Convention. The National Anti-Masonic Convention that met at Washington City in September last, adjourned to meet at Philadelphiit to nominate candidates for President and Vice President on the se-ond Tuesday of Novem ber 1838. At this convention the following resolution was passed. "Resolved, That we will nominate no can- didate for either of those offices from any State not regularly represented in said Con• ven—tion." 'o have expected for some time to see the Anti• Masons in the different states, not regularly represented a , that Convention, make some movetnents to send delegates te Philadelphia. At that Cumention,the ben• tlemen who represented Ohio, asserted that if the nomination of candidates for President and Viee President were postponed until the period mentioned, Ohio would be fully re. presented in the Convention, but thus far we have seen no attempt to elect delegates to it , from that State. It requires not the presci.i once of prophecy to foresee that the clues. lion as it respects the candidate for Presi. dent in opposition to Mr. Van Buren,.. will be settled by the Demo&rn tic A ritOlaSonic Natiminl Convention—and that whoever they may take up will become the 'candidate of the whole enti•Van Buren party of the Union, unless all prospects of success are abandoned, by the different portions of the party. Our friends will therefore see the importance of having the different states ably and correctly represented in that con vention—and also that on time be lost in making preparations for that event. That that Convention will meet and make the no minations at the time specified, there can he no doubt. Wo aro certain of it, and therefore urge those who desire to see the claims of distinguished individuals present. ed there, to activity and vigilance. VAN BUREN RETHENCII3IENT AND R rortm!—lt is stated in Poulson's Daily Ad vertiser that the present national adminis tration has paid, within about nne year, TWELVE TDOUS.A.ND noLtArts for pictures of General JACKSON and MARTIN VAN BUREN! NEW CANAL BOARD.—The new Board of Canal Commissioners receives the con gratulation of the friends of Gov. Ritner, on all sides,wli i le it strikes terror into the ranks of his enemies. They little expected to see Iles•srs Dickey and Stevens occupy the sta tions they have been called to; and while they admit their ability and energy they also say that they will make "TEN THOUSAND VOTE FOR R ITN ER." This will se cure al least 20,000 majority for the Old Farmer—so the Loco Focus may lay down their arms and save the mortificatinpfi feat after a warm contest [Harrisbahr, 4 4,1:,,. ~ 05.,, HARD TIMES IN Missiissxm.4-4hS• Lou isville Journal says:—"A *if id has sent us a copy of the Raymend,l4 lea ! Times. There is not a single editorial reinatiOar a single cominunication in it. 'fhtis , Oliele paper is tilled with advertisementSOf*Mres sales" and "trust Sales"---83 in number. How beautifully sounds.tho lato boast of Senator ‘V ALK EU: "There IS no distress among my constituents • Ilow true the assertion of the official Jour ml at Washington—" There is no pressure hat any honest man should regret." LAST END OF TILE WICKED.—The Louis villa (Ky.) Journal thus notices the unhappy career and miserable death of Amos Ken dall's paper, the Frankfort Argus. The Journal says:—"There is no longer a Van Buren paper at the capital of Kentucky.— The Frankfort Argus has groaned and kick - - rn•amorol.)l43 life and died a miserable death." The Poor Indtansl United States and the Cher okees. OFFICIAL.-FROM TILT GLOBE lofor Gen. Scorn, of the United Slates Army, sendslo the Cherokee People, re: mailling in North Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, and Alabama, this Address. CumtoKEEs:— Ile President of the Uni ted States hav4ent me,with a powerfttl army to cause you, ihlhedience to the Trenty of 1935, to join thu, part of your people who nre already eotablith e d in prosperity on the other side of the Unhappily, the two years which "ore allowed for the pit rpose,you have sufferet to pass away with out following, and withou molting any pre paration to follow; and no% or by the time ' that this solemn address shalt oath your dis tant settlements,tho emigration ~ u st be com mer.ced in haste, but, I hope, wAiout disor der. I have no power, by grantink t farther delay, to correct the error that Y'l have - connitittz e t. , -;rhe full moon of May is t.. ea d y o n th e wane, 7and, before another shall yvo p asse d ma ..., every Cherokee, man, won. n and to join theirin those States, must be in milli] brethren in the far West. fylY FRIENDS:—This is no sudden deter. . I .7;maiion on the part of the President,whoni you and I must now obey. By the treaty, the emigration was to have been completed on or before the 23d of this month; and the President hus constantly kept you warned, during the two years allowed,through all his officers and agents in this country, that the treaty would be enforced. I am come to carry out that determina tion. My troops already occupy many po sitions in the country that you are to aban don, and thousands and thousands are ap proaching, from every quarter, to render resistance and escape alike hopeless. All those troops, regular and militia, are your friends. Receive them and confide in them as such. Obey their" when they tell you that you can remain no longer in this coun try. Soldiers are as kind-hearted as brave, and the desire of every one of us is to execute our painful duty in mercy. We are com manded by the President to act towards you 4141E4 spirit, and such is also the wish of the Whole . Peeple of America. Chiefs, head-men, and w urriors!—Will you, theri;iftretlistance, compel us to resort to arms? God 'forbid! . Or will you, by flight, seek to hide yourselves in mountains and forests, and thus oblige u 9 to hunt you down? Remember that, in pursuit,it may be impos sible to avoid conflicts. The blood of the • white man, or the blood of the red man,may be spilt, and, if spilt, however accidentally, it may be impossible for the discreet and humane among you, or among us,tu prevent a general •var and carnage. Think of this, my Cherokee brethren! lam an old war rior, add have been present at many a scene of slaughter; but spare me, I beseech you, the horror of witnessing the destruction of the Cherokees. Do not, l invite you, even wait for the• close approach of the troops; but make such: preparations for emigration as you can, and: hasten to this place, to Ross's Landing, or to Guntur's Landing, whero you aft welt be received in kindness by officers selected for the purpose. You will find food for all, and clothing for the destitute, nt either of those places; and thence at your ease, and in com fort, be transported to your new homes ac cording to the terms of the treaty. This is the address of n warrior to war -116 F-8. May his ent reaties be kindly receiv ed, and may the God of both prosper the Amqicnns and Cherokees, and preserve them long in peace and friend-hip with each other! WINFIELD SCOTT CHEROKEE AHEIVEY, Moy 10, 1838. General Intelligence. Eanon Comm:TELL—An error occurred in the statement relating to the new lettings, contained in our last paper. The letting at Erie will take place on the Ilth of July, instead of the 16th, as publ;shed. WM. W. Inwtx, Esq. has been appoint ed Deputy Attorney General for the city of Pittsburg and Allegheny county. SPECTE PAYMENTS. — Tho Banks ofSouth Carolina and Georgia have resolved in Con vent ion, to resume specie payments on or be fore the first day of.lnnuary next. We observe by the "Columbia Spy," that one half of that establishment is °tiered for sale. It presents a good opening for an in• dustrious and enterprizing printer. The 11011. LEVI WOODBURY, Secretary of the Navy, has been appointed Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Vermont. LABOREIed WANTED.—The Superinten• dent of the North Branch extension of the Pennsylvania Canal, advertises for 2,500 la borers between the mouth of the Lackawan na and the New York state lino e Hollidaysburg "Register" and Johns : (WALS'ky" have been enlarged and other ';'ielfix*.rs.!yed in appearance. The Ritner papers, appear ' to be growing all over the' State. • BEAUTIES SLAVERY.-A slave ship, having on hoard,6oo human beings as slaves, was recentlycapti*d by a British man of war on the cottittof Africa" ) A beautiful young Ode woman was re• cently offered for saleara slave in the city of New Orleans. She is \ ckeseribed to have been "a handsome young woman, with blue eyes, black hair and perfectly white skin." These are some of the 4.blessmas" that grow out of the Southern system of "domes tic s!avery." THE OLDEST MAN in Philadelphia died on Saturday. Ho was in the 108th year of his age. His name is William Butler and he was a soldier of the revolution. Thirty six counties of Kentucky have al ready appointed Commissioners for putting the Common School system into operation. The Rev. C. W. Howard, of Mil:edge vine, Georgia, has been commissioned by that State to proceed to England for the purpose of collecting its Colonial records. The Oglethorpe Institution of Georgia has also engaged the same gentleman to procure a complete philosophical apparatus. Mr. Howard sailed from New 'Y ork for England by one of the recent packets. ABSENCE OF M IND.-A tall mnn in Vir ginia, having held a conversation with an other person of inferior dimensions, made a low hew to his cane which stood in the cor ner, and seizing his friend by the scalp walk ed off with him. A TEMPERANCE MOVEMENT. -11 is stated in the Cincinnati Gazette, that near two hundred voters of Harden county,(Ky.) have published a pledge that they will vote for no candidate who treats at election, or suffers others to do it for him, directly or indirect ly. A little more of such nerve would soon make election treats unfashionable. A VALUABLE. DISCOVERY. —The Brussels journals mention that a Pr. Bernhardt has discovered a process by means of which he is enabled to form out of the refuse of fish, a pure and limpid oil without any odor, soap of superior quality, fielt-glue, Prussian blue, and bone black, in quantities sufficient to produce a profit of 400 per cent.; and has founded a factory on an extensive scale for carrying his processes into effect. K BALD EAGLE, weighing 20 lbs. am measurin g 6 feet 7 inches from tip to tip was shot a few days since near Jonesborough Tennessee. A GOOD SI:MT.-A boy, only 13 years o age , in w iQconsin Territory, recently she seven wild gear, st once. FLountstima VILLAGE Q 'TURCLIES are mentioned in nine instances to hav, „ rung from Sabbath Schools in Rhode Island. lii tural cause .and effect. The Frederick papers hint that another Court of Inquiry may shortly be expected to assemble in that City—to investigate .the conduct of Gen..ksur. A bill of indietment.for tirite r has been found by the grand jury. of Pulaski county, Arkansas, against John W ilson, the spanker of the House of Assembly of that state, who left the chair, and murdered Joseph .1. An• thony, a membor, on the floor of the House. A LIBERAL SUBSCRIPTION. --The Corpo ration of Wheeling subscribed one million of dollars to the Baltimore and Ohio Rail Road. CINCINNATI. Fifty years ago this day f7th April, 1828,] (says the • Nashville Union,) as we learn from one of the party, about sixtv•four riersons landed nt the junc tion of the Ohio and Muslcingum rivers, un. der the command of Gen. RUFUS PUTNAM, mid commenced the settlement of the State of Ohio, in the presence of nearly three hun• dred Indians, who hnd assembled on the opposite side of the Husking/Im. Thu land. ing took place at 10 o'clock of a bright and beautiful spring morning. What a change have these fifty years pro duced in Ohio: its dark forests have been swept away before the axe of the settler; farms, towns and cities now occupy the site of the wigwam; the steamboat has taken the place of the canoe; and a population of a million and upwards exists on the same terri tory that supplied but a scanty subsistence to a rew hundreds of roving savages. Such a rapid and entire change is without a pre cedent in the history of the workl. To %Trani pun ratmad alit t'uunotia unlit (satiaS nano Jad-, •ridstuau u L 1 3 • 1! ito Jo trottuatut ou IVA% radudsrantr u Jai Iluigtaasgng—u a lquuopandun ? •indedsmou Dr.q4do It is stated in the Cumberland Advoc#te, that tho punishment of .Sala Tungg,,f ound guilty in the Alleghany Court, of mur rin he first dpgreo,and therefbre liable tosuffer denth,has been commuted by the Kxecutive, fifty en years confinement in:the/Peniten tiary. IN A HURRY.—An old man with a wooden leg was walking the road / apparently much way worn, when he caine up to the mail conch. The conductor taking n pity on his apparent debility and helplessness, invited him to take a seat. "I thank you—l thank you sir, but I am in a desperate hurry" re plied the old codger, stumping ahead at a furious rate. A Curtiosrey.—We were shown a beau- tiful specimen of the ingenuity of birds, a few days eincizi, by Dr. Cook,of this borough. It was a bi rd's nest, made entirely of silver wire, beautifully woven together. The nest was founrtiin a sycamore tree, on the Cador us, by Francis Beard, of York county. It was .the nest of a Lariging, bird—and the material Was probably obtained from a snl -431.'4 epaulette, which it had found.— West Phester Village Record. Vertr SFNSITIV E.—The Baltimore Re publican is greatly scandalized at the re port that whites and blacks sat side by side in the Pennsylvania Hall. The beauty and consistency of the thing is, that the same paper labored zealously to elevate Col. John • son to the V;ce Prsidency !—Pa. Freeman. The extensive steam mills, attached to the to the Dominican convant of Saint Rose, near Springfield, Ky., were entirely consum ed, on the thirteenth instant. Loss said to be ten thousand dollars. If all be true that the New Heaven Her. ald says, and that the explorations of Pro fessor Sheppard, at Bristol, in that State lead us to infer, one of the richest beds of copper ore exists at that place, and Connecticut has a treasure hitherto unknown. The veins are said to be 90 feet broad, are not deep, and the oar raised has paid the expenses incurred in digging. Stamping mills, smel ting furnaces, &c, are being built, and ef-, ficient arrangements for the further prose-' cution of the work have been determined upon by those interested. LATEST ERO3I VERA CRUZ, AND THE BLOCKADE.—The brig Paragon left Vera Cruz on the Bth of May, and has arrived at New Orleans. The French squadron is still on the coast, and keep up the blockade with great strict ness. Two or threo vessels, Mexican, and of other nations, attempting to break the blockade, have been captured. Baron Defraudis, the Minister of the French. and the late Charge of that nation, near the Mexican government, is or: board the fleet, awaiting the courze of events. Dates from the Mexican capital are to the sth,at which period all was quiet. Great ex citement however.prevailed against foreign. ers, and apprehensions were entertained for personal safety. The French merchants had sent in to their Consel an appraisement of their property, said to amount to eleven millions of dollars. The resolution in Con gress to expel the French from the country was not carried, and it was supposed it would not be renewed,at least for the present. Some indication of a revolt of the popu lace against the government had arisen, but were suppressed by active measures on the part of the troops. It was believed that a change in the Ministry would speedily take place, by which the pending difficulties be tween the French and the Mexican Govern. ment would be adjusted, to the satisfaction of the former. The United States, and subjects thereof in Mexico, are more highly respected than formerly. Heavy speculations had taken place in foreign merchandise at the city of Mexico, but by late advices was gradually subsiding prices having fallen, under the expectation that all existing difficulty with the French would be arranged at an early period. FRO3I THE SOUTIL—The town of Mon rovia, near Tuscoloosa, (Alabama) was des troyed by fire about the 18th inst.—every building in it (except a kitchen and hen mouse) including the Church, Academy, Billiklbs house, Post office and Exchange being swept aw..y g ,„ w i t h the bosom oues. !ruction. The fire is bent... 4 to have been the act of an incendiary, and suspicion has fallen on the Cashier of the Bank, ns it is be lieved he had embezzled a large amount of the funds in his charge. A letter from an officer at Micenopy, of of the 14th, speaks of an expedition on foot to proceed round Orange Lake to attack the Indians, who are in considerable force on the Ok-la-wa-ha, where their women and c'lildren are collected, planting corn, and' feeling confident in their security. The warriors are becoming very bold and impu dent, firing tit our expresses, and approach ing within belle mile of the fort. , Major Riley, however, must wait the arrival of re inforcements from Tampa Bay before he can venture to move against them with his present- small force.• Gen. Armistead and staff, and Major Wilson, with four companies of Infantry were to have left Fort Brook on the Ath for the Cherokee country, via N. Orleans.— Gen. Tiiylor was at Pass Creek, with Al ligator and some 300 Indians and negroes. STARP&.!REPUBLICAN BANNER. At Viper annum. half...yearly . In advance. CIETTYSBIIRGEC, PA. Tuesday, June 5, I S3B. FOR GOVERNOR, 4/14 7 2Q/U 221U1043420 Flour in Baltimore, 57 75; Wheat, $1 75, Corn, 72 cts.; Rye, 92; Oats, 33; Clover Seed; 4110; Whiskey, 29 cts. Philadelphia Inquirer. ccyWe regret that we have again to complain of the irregular reception of this valuable paper.— Wo hope the publisher will see to it. The Nos. for May 28th and June 2d were not received. Wo cannot afford to do without the Inquirer just now; and if the missing numbers aro stolen by a Post Master between this and Philadelphia, we hereby authorize Mr. Harding to furnish such P M. with extra copies, if he will only let ours come on re gularly. (0 -Dr. WILLIAM 0. MTIIEIISON will accept our thanks for a copy of the •Fourth Annual Re port on the Common &hoofs of Pennsylvania," by TIIUM Ali H. Bunuow•xs, Esq. Superintendent. Our thanks are duo to the Hon. DANIEL SIIEFFEII, Member of Congress. for a copy of the Report of the Committee on Agriculture in refer ence to the Mulberry and Sugsr•Beet,and embody ing statements of the imports and exports of Silks and Sugar from 1832 to 1837—from which it ap pears that during 1837, there wore imported, of Silks, 1514,352,823, and exported, $1,207,802; of Sugar, imported 13E3,139,819 pounds, valued at i.;7,202,668; and exported, 41,052,035 pounds, valued at $2,650,052. Hunlingtlon Journal. co - - Subscriptions to this independent Journal will be received at this office. Notwithstanding the RICH Loco Foco candidate is busily nr, Trxo AUCOUNTS AGAIN - DT THE EDITOR AND RUING HIM. we are glad to see rt determination on the part of the People to sustain him. Odjournnient. The "New-school" General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church adjourned sine die on Tues day morning last. The next meeting will be held in Philadelphia on the third Thursday of May, 1839. We see it stated that this body has adop ted the style and title of "The Orthodox Consti tutional General Assembly." Loco Focoism in High Places! co -Judge McKi LET, one of the Associate Judges of the Supreme Court of the United States, has decided, at a Circuit Court for the District of Alabama, &c. that a Corporation, deriving its power from a charter granted by the Legislature of one State, cannot make a contract beyond the limits of that State. In other words, that a Bank incorporated by the Legislature of Pennsylvania cannot compel the payment of debts due to it by those not residents and citizens of the State! A decision calculated to produce more atrocious frauds, wee never pronounced by the organ of any Court—riot even by the Jacobin tribunals of Rev olutionary France! Besides, it must have the effect to cut asunder the tics which, most of all, arc cal culated to preserve the integrity of the Union, by destroying the sinews of trade between the differ ent States. The real case decided by Judge McKinley was this: A man by the name of William D. Primrose, a citizen of the State of Alabama, became indebted to the U. S. Bank of Pennsylvania in the sum of $3,460. When the debt became due, Primrose refused to pay it,and the Bank brought suit against him for the amount, and, on a case stated for the opihion of the Court, the learned (!) Judge decid ed, that a corporation deriving its power from the Legislature of Pennsylvania could not compel a citizen of Alabama, in a court of the latter State, to pay a debt which he had contracted to the said corporation!!! The Supreme Court, however, has power to reverse this decision; and we are told that it con travenes all former decisions on this subject, ex cept one made by the same Judge about a year ago. God save the country from Loco Focoism! Important Letter from Oh' Biddle. The intelligence (says the Baltimore American) of the final passage through the House of Repre sentatives of the Joint Resolution repealing the Specie Circular, was received in Philadelphia on Thursday, and on the afternoon of that day the following letter from the President of the U. S. Bank was published in the Nationnl Gazette of that city. The Philadelphia papers concur in ex pressing the expectation of an early resumption of specie payments. PHILADELPHIA, May 31, 1838 My DEAR SIR.—In my letter of the 7th ult. 1 stated my belief that there could be no safe nor permanent resumption of specie pay merits by the Banks, until the policy of the Government towards them was changed. The repeal of the Specie Circular by Con gress makes that change. I see now, what until now 1 have not seen, the means of restoring the currency. I rejoice very sincerely at the termination of this unhappy controversy, and shall cordi ally co operate with the Government by pro mating what the Banks are, I am sure, anxi ous to effect, an early resumption of specie payments throughout the Union. With great respect, yours, N. BIDDLE. Hon. J. Q. ADAMR, Washington D. C. "Porter at home!" c r zy• For the Compiler Folks/!!, (0. The Harrisburg Intelligencer says,—Our friends in Huntingdon are in most excellent spir its, glowing with enthusiasm, and the delegates assure us that Runer's majority in the county will not be less than FIVE, and may exceed EIGHT H UNDRED. The Carlisle Volunteer (Loco Foco) may well cry "Woe to the Loco Foco Democrats of Ad ams county!" We intend using them up com pletely— barely leaving a Major, a Sheriff, a Post Master, their Printer and a "small spot" of a Law yer for seed! The seed, however, being of the rotten-house raising, is not expected over hereafter to germinate. This is all the consolation we have for the "Volunteer!" May the Editors live to en joy it! 11• WILLIAM GILSON, Eq. has.heen nomina ted by a Brute Convention as the Van Buren Loco Foco candidate for Governor of Maryland. 11A.CKEI) 013T1 ci.We learn from Harrisburg that the motion for a Mandamus against the old Farmer has been withdrawn! We hope the next time the parties , concerned will "count the cost" before they at tempt nforce-work." The following upon tiro sub ject, we cut from the Baltimore Patriot: RETROGADE.--.We learn from the Harris burg Telegraph that the application by T. J. McCeLLoucri, President of the Cumber land Valley Railroad Company, for a rule en Governor RITNER, to appear before the Supreme Court of Pa. and show cause why a mandamus should not issue, to compel him to subscribe a certain amount of stock to that company, as authorised by the improvement ' bill has been withdrawn. In this case it appears that second thoughts were deemed best. It would certainly seem to be rather an ungracious mode of proceeding, to elicit State liberality "on compulsion." When the condition of the State treasury will admit of this appropriation, there seems no suffi cient reason to conclude that the preliminary measure for its application will be withheld by the executive. --Baltimore Patriot. Disgraceful. Aisgraceful "fist-fight" took place on the floor of Congress during its session, on Friday last, between Mr. BELL and Mr. Team ay, Members from Tennessee! cr y Wo learn from the Harrisburg Intelligeneer, of hst week, that Gen. PORTER HAS NOT RE SIGNED HIS SEAT IN THE SENATE. The statement in the Compiler that he had, is there fore uutrue. 3 - Porter ralschoods. co• --The Compiler states that Gov. ItrrsEn re jects the “claims of Anti-Masons and appoints Masons to responsible offices." This is false, and we call upon that paper to pioduce its proof. " - -VVe see it stated that among the appropria tions by Congress this session is one of ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS FOR PRESIDENT VAN BUREN'S HEAD GARDENER!!! No wonder that the Treasury becomes empty so often! l'iturriss and Worm, Members of Congress fitirn Mississippi, appeared and took their seats last week just in time to vote for the repeal of the Specie Circular. We have received several Nos. of the "Lou isville (Ky.) Enquirer," a spirited, well-conducted paper. It is published tri-weekly, at 10 cents a week, 60 cents a month, or 5 cents for a single copy. Although an "odd-fish," It contains a great variety of interesting matter. The New York Mirror. (1-1. We cordially adopt the following article from the Germantown Telegraph—containing as it does a tribute justly bestowed upon one of the best Journals in this or any other country: As a literary periodical, the NEw-Yollir MIRROR may be set down as the best in the country. The number issued on Saturday last, is composed of enti rely original articles, which are of a character that would not suf fer .tet comparison with those of any other similar work. They are accompanied with a quarto engraving, "A View of the Bay and Harbor of New-York from Staten Island"— which, although not a masterpiece of art, as the embellishments of the Mirror usually are—affords an excellent view of one of the most magnificent bays in the world. We are under obligations to the gentle. manly proprietor, for his general courtesy to us; and especially so, for his attention in one or two recent instances. We are not, however, "obligated" to puff the "Mirror;" for so long as it reflects its present beautiful proportions—the index of its intrinsic quali ties—it needs none of this sickly aliment to sustain it in healthful vigor and gratifying usefulness. From the Columbia Spy of Saturday last. COLLECTOR'S OFFICE, COLUMBIA, Juno Ist, 1838, 3 WEEKLY' REPORT. Amount of Toll received at this office from Nov. 1,1837,t0 May 26, '3B, $109,034 54 Amount received during the week ending this day, Whole amount received up to Juno 2d $116,001 59 R. 13. WRIGHT, Collector. RYMENIAL REGISTER. MARRIED. On the 15th ult. by the Rev. Mr. Watson, Mr HARVEY SWENET, of Washington co. Md. (for merly of this county,) to Miss CATHARINE H. M , ALEtsvER, of this borough. On Tuesday evening last, by the same, (at the residence of Mr. H. Denwiddie, in Gettysburg,) Mr. EDWARD A. SAGE to MISS SUSAN WILLIAMS —both of Rochester, N. York. On Tuesday last, by the Rev. Mr. Albert, Mr LAWRENCE BRANDT to Miss ELIZABETH STET FY—all of Littleatown. On Thursday evening last, by the Rev. Mr. Smith, Mr. DANIEL E. Kuria, of Pittsburg, to Miss Suserfica LEFEVER, daughter of Mr. Ben jamin Lefever, of this place, and formerly of Lan caster county. z-The Printer was not forgotten on the above occasion. And we tender to the fair Brune our best compliments for an abundant supply of cake, as well as our heartfelt wishes for her and her part ner's future prosperity and happiness. May all her wishes and expectations be fully realized, and may she nover repent her determination to "tread in the footsteps" of her forefathers! OBITUARY RECORD. DIED. On the 30th ult. Mra. CATHARINE BENDER, cousort of Mr. Jacob Bender, aged 38 years, 10 months and 9 days. On tho 22d ult. SOLOMON Chums'', infant son of Mr. Stonesifer, of this county, On tho 26th rat: ELLEN hits, daughter of Mr. Samuel Kitzmiller, of Conowago township, in the 7th year of her ago. On thii 28th ult. in Germany township, Davin SELL, in the 10th year of his age. RELIGIOUS NOTICES. co. Rev. Mr. BAUGHER will preach in the English Lutheran Church on Sunday morning next. There will also be preaching in the even mg,at early candlolight.by Rev. Mr. KELLER. co. Rev. Mr. WATSON will preach in the Presbyterian Church on Sunday morning and afternoon next. • PUBLIC NOTICES. THE C 116113 *IT Ali D. Piri HE subscriber respectfully informs the AL public generally, that he has now on hand A LAROE ASSORTMENT OF Flour, Bacon, Iron and Steel of all kinds, and of the very best quality. The flour Prices to be regulated by the Bat. timore Market. Bacon 1 Ores per pound. Iron .'acts per pound Tho hammered Iron Manufactured at Codorus and Spring Forges—Rolled Iron at Iluxthei Works. KrThe pubheare very respectfully re quested to call and examine his stock now on hand, as he is confident ho will be able to sell as low as any now in market. DAVID ZIEGLER. Gettysburg, June 5, IP3B. 3t-10 rzatra.Erts, lIERE THE bubscribor has opened n Shop, on Second street, n few doors east from the Market House,in Chambersburg, whore ho will build SMITH GARDNER'S PORTABLE HORSE POWER THRESHING MACHINE, which he will sell in Franklin, Adams and Bedford counties. These machines are now in operation in this county, and are equal if not superior to any other —and may be had, by persons wishing to obtain them, in any of the above-named counties, on the shortest notice, by applying to the subscriber, who hopes by strict attention to business to secure a share of public patronage. `J — An advantage which this Machine has over others, is that the horse power is constructed to work under the overshot of a barn, so that rain does not interfere with its operations. JOHN TAYLOR. Chambersburg, June 5,1838. tf-10 VNI 0111/20[44 141pHE undersigned, Auditor, having been IL appointed by the Orphans' Court of Adams County, to apportion and distribute the assets in the hands of the Administrator of JOHN ADAIR, late of Liberty township, deceased, to and among the creditors and legatees of said deceased, will meet for that purpose at the house of Nicholas Moritz, in Freedom township, on Wednesday the 20th inst. at 10 o'clock A. rt. when and where all having chums against said Estate are not ifi• ed to present them properly authenticated for settlement. ROBERT SMITH, Auditor. June 5, 1838. 3t*-10 FRESH DRUGS AND atm,a)llaEGYPlßace JUST received and for sale, at the Store of the subscriber, in Baltimore street, Gettysburg, A FRESH SUPPLY OF DRUGS AND MEDICINES, of the beet and purest quality—together with OILS, P MINTS, dr.c. &c. JESSE GILBERT. tf-9 May 29, 1838. WANTED, on the Gettysburg Exten sion of the Pennsylvania Rail Road, 2,000 Hands! To whom CONSTANT WORK and the BEST OF WAGES will be given. Oz The • Gettysburg Rail Road runs thro' the most healthy part of this country. Apply to M. C. CLARKSON, Sup't. Gettysburg, Pa., May 19,1838. tf-9 6,967 05 0* - eltliddle-Street Store OF BACON, FLOUR, IRON, &C. &C. A few Doors West of Fahnestock's Store. T HE Subscriber has just received a large supply of very superior and well•cured BACON (the Hams are particularly fine,) Superfine Flour, Food, Szo. In qddition to the above, he has a large and well•assorted supply of IRON, and expects to receive, in a few days,a large quantity of STEEL', Of all kinds and sizes. By giving to the above business his undi vided attention, as well as his determination to sell with moderate profits, he hopes to be patronized. GEORGE LITTLE. Gettysburg, May 22, 1898. 3t-8 Look out for Bargains! SECOND RUN or o2manco cooaugto TRIOS. J. COOPER RESPECTFULLY informs his Custom ers and the public generally, that he HAS JUST HACEIVEU A FRESH SUPPLY OF 0 1 002)52 CONSISTING OF GOODS, . anUtt,..el aCitZta4 9 Marti-ware, Queens-ware, and almost every thing that is necessary for the comforts or necessities of life. Gettysburg, May 22, 1838. 3t-8 PUBLIC NOTICES. NOTICE. THE Heirs of PHILIP LONG, deceas ed, aro hereby notified that the (re count of the Administrator of said Estate has been audited and confirmed, and that their respective shares are ready for distribution. J. C. FORREST, Adm'r. June 5, 1839. 3t*-10 NEW AND OZE.LP SPRING AND SUMMER aooDs. J. A. WINROTT WISHES to inform his friends and the public in general, that he hos just re turned from Philadelphia with a well selec ted Stock of D 447 6 , 010D102 Groceries, and Liquors, all of which he will sell cheap for Cash or Country Produce. KrHe also has, in addition to his for mer Stook of it BOOTS A *bp SHOES a large quantity, which ho has manufactur ed expressly for his own sees, viz: 100 pair best calf stitched Boots, 50 " " Fudged do. 100 " coarse do. 50 " Morocco & seal-skin do. 100 " Calf Monrocs, 100 " do. 500 " coarse do. 100 " Men's Fine Shoes, 100 " Men's Calf and Morocco Pumpti 100 " Boy's Monroes, 50 " " Gaiter Boots, 100 " Kid Slippers, (Women's) 100 " Morocco do. 100 " Sealskin do. 100 " Prunella Slippers, 100 " Calf do. 100 " " Slippers, 50 " " Boots, 100 " Misses' Morocco Slippers, 50 "" do. Prunella do. 50 " Children's Red Morocco Boots, 50 " do. Red Lasting do. 50 " do. Black Leather Boots, 50 " Infants' Kid Slippers. Gettysburg, April 24, 1838. FRESH GOODS. Cheaper than ever! THE subscriber has just returned from the city,and is now opening at his store on the north-east corner of the Diamond, A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF V of the . bestqatility—eutlarer eing every variety ot DRS GOODS, GROCEILIES, &c. which have been purchased on the best terms —and which he can sell cheaper than they have ever been offered. He invites the public to give him a call, and judge for themselves. SAMUEL W ITHEROW. Gettysburg, May 15, 1838. tf-7 0111.111 ti• D Fashionable Barber and Blair Dresser, INVITES the public generally to call at his stand, in South Baltimore street, Gettysburg,two doors north of Middle street, and nearly opposite the store of Mr. Samuel Fahnestock—whero he has on hand, and will always keep, a general and very supe rior assortment of fancy and other articles, CONSISTING OF EVERY VARIETY OF 00.117230T10.1TAR7 : Gentlemen's STOCKS, SIMMS and COLLARS; WIGS and SCRA TCHES; BRAIDS, PUFFS and CURLS; SOAPS—best Castile and other Soaps for washing or shaving. Razor Straps; Colognes;all kinds of HAIR 01L; Clothes and Hair Brushes; Children's; toys; Candies. and a great variety of other articles too numerous to mention—all of which have been bought low and will be sold cheap for cash. IMIR DRESSED in the most fashionable_ style, and beards shaved in a manner unrivalled among the professors of the tonsorial art. Ladies and Gentlemen will, he is confident, find it their interest to give him a call. May 15, 1837. VALUABLE PROPERTY AT PRIVATE SALE. THE subscriber, Administrator ofJAcog FISHER, late of Franklin county, de. ceased, will sell at private sale, and on rect• sonable terms, all the right, title, interest' and estate of the said Jacob Fisher, deed, at the time of his death, in a certain plantation IP Tract of Land, containing 200 acres, on which are erec ted a first rate MERCHANT AND • tit iita'ST IA AL8() A Saw MID I situate in Liberty township, and formerly the property of Alexander Mack. If the said property, shall not be sold at private bale on or before the 10th day of Au. gust next, then the interest of the"deceased in the same, will be offered at public sale on Monday the 27th day of Avgvet, at 1 o'clock P. M. of said day, at the Court House in the Borough of Gettysburg. KrApplication to bo made to SAXES COOPER. Esq. in the borough of Gettysburg, who will make known the terms to those desirous of purchasing. SAMUEL FISHER, Administrator °throb Fisher, deed. May 15,1838. tf-T