iju-tv-'"-1-''-' ------- VK 11- of 'hi!au1,mia ... . i rv! is our aetbonzert V. ' . L .i-mini Advements and ub- I ii cIoUku with fc:l pcwff W TUCClft .cnpu lor-ui- - v- ... e Ill for any uiomcs pmu jfi ueney inclines Kcw ! -u. r'lks. viz: JilllJJt'i.lXlJ, . ..... Vcrk. ZJaliiir.are nd BosUn. onTcr of TfcirJ nd Dock Strrcw, cj -poe Mer it's' Exchange, or 4i North fourth street, TulUuplpma, isVuhorizedla revive A. vrrt'vc went and Subscriptions for the "JILK. M .U. ind U cloihJ with full p44" 10 KCV,lK Ur mooics paid him on tliote obji'cU'. S1 tor fiovEKSoa General James Irvin, .or r .-KNxr.n cootv. Joseph W. Patton, or (T-ir-Esrr.ANP .county. run j. ASSK.MULY, S tuts JO St man X)F KLKL1CK T0WXSHII. VOn COMMISSIONER, Daniel Lepley, OF TOWKTUIP. FOR TREASURER, o n a t h a n R o of so.nr.stT boroumi. FOR AUDITOR, John Witt, OF SOMERSET BOROUGH. FOR DIRECTORS OF THE POOR, Samuel Will, 3 years, Henry Frank. 1 year SJatc ca:ra! Committee. Thomas E. Franklin, Lancaster City Thomas Duncan, Dauphin county James ?J artin, Thomas C. IIamf.lt, York Wm. M. AVatts, Cumberland Daniel M. Smyser, Adams John P. Wetherjll, Philadelphia city Joseph R. Chandler " jiobert T. Conrad " Thomas McGrath, Pliiladclphia co. Diller Luther, Berks Robert M. Bard, Franklin Thos. M. T. .AFKennan, Washington Axpketv J. Ogle, Somerset IIarmar Denny, Allegheny IIichard Irwin, Venango Joseph II. Koine, Westmoreland G. J. Ball, Erie II. D. Maxwell, Torthampton J-15. 'Salisbury, Susquehanna Eliianan Smith, Wyoming Samuel A. Purviance, Butler JIenry S. Evans, Chester Hobert T. Potts, Montgomery. Protection of Great Britain. Those vho quote the example of Great Britain to justify the removal of all protection, should read the following extract from a speech made to his constituents by Mr. Srmyfhe, one of the most efficient co-oper-ftorB with Sir Itobert Peel, in his recent free trade measures: I cannot, however, quit this subject of Free Trado M ithout VA1, .'IIJq 111 J Vlll jon on the abstract prmcnic. 1 by no means hold that the principle of Free Trade is absolutely true, nor that it is of universal application. If I were an Ji tnericaiu the citizen of nyouns country J thould he a protectionist. If I were a Frenchman the native of an old country with its industry undeveloped I should equally be a protectionist." 1 a Some of our Locofoco contemporaries sire greatly "exercised" in their minds on account of the conduct of the Clergy in freacbing upon War and Slavery. It via be remembered hat Mr. Polk in his message launched his anathema upon freedom of speech and of the press, where his own conduct was concerned,) and was duly echoed by his partizans iurottgnout the land. These matchless democrats have evidently takcu lessons of he Dutch Justice, "Certainly every man may think for himself, provided he link mit the court. Hartford Coumnt. The Mextcin Force. The New Or leans Times says:-"The forces drawn to gether for the defence of the Mexican cap ital are stated to be 25,000 men in the ;ity itself, 4000 hourly expected from Kan Luis, under Valencia, with foarteen pieces of cannon, and 15,000 scattered on the road between the city of Mexico and Puebla, to act against the invading forces as they advanced." To meet these Scott will have about 13,000 men, with artillery stid batteries of the most complete char acter. THINK OF IT! The expenses of Mr. Polk's adminis tration for the last three months were $22,483,500 being at the rate of 90 -000,000 per annum! Think of it a iuaner ef a million dollars spent every by, because J.imcs K. PoJk was elected President, and Texas annexed to the U jiion. T-hinkorit, Pennsylvanians, be fore you determine to support for re-elcc-liou, a Governor, who appreres of all Mr. Polk's unconstitutional acts B. & Jour. Melancholy Accident. On Sa'ur- 1MV weeu, a sail loat returning from St. -Nicholas to St. Aatoinc, near Quebec, .was capsized, and of nineteen individuals avJio were on board three men and six teen fema!e3 all were drowned, except two of the men and one woman. ischarged. The person arrested at' It -Carlisle, supposed to be one of the Flan-' dir i2''uns. , eaped from prison while under1 Jrnm c todv. it Iwi,,, .i ...... j ' ' . , uao ucejl UIMIIHrtTU cl b- o her ncrs-n." 1 1 pCrb ?a - - 1 I We find the following lcUcr in the Fennsyivsusia. intelligencer, published?. j ir ..:.i r '!!.- .i,r ' it that -it will be read with interest. It is an aWc production, aud embodies some wholesome truths which wc eommend to the attentive perusal of the candid of all parlies. FAYETTE .COUNTY. Uwontovn, July 30, 1 8 17- Bear Sir: Our political prospects in ihc t are -bright and brightening. l'1.10. A,!'.s. f .(:v;Vr'.u,lcrc, l.,m.ted on . l a J I a ' i v u iu v k, auu meir voie for Cos trnor this fall will, hi my opinitm, be stronger: than it was last lor Canal Ccinmissnmcr, when mir majority m the j Stale was, I believe, about 10,OOU. Since then the political current has been run- ! ning everywhere (as the election will ! l C .iM.. I the locos. oi oniy in rennsyivania oni; iu every Mate m the union. J..OOK all this lact. I:i the present Congress the ! locos have more than two to one in the House of Representatives. J" the next Congress the Whigs will have a decided majority a political revolution, I believe, w'iihoul a parallel. The people wiil Etihmit to a great deal, but there is a point where 'forbearance censes to be a virtue,' and this point has been reached and transcended by our rulers, both Slate and ! National. Our candidates are fixed, and no true Wl.hr can hesitate. Taylor is the Whig candidate for President. The public press and popular opinion have settled this question in every State in the Union, iid his election may be considered as -a fixed fact." He is and always has been a true and genuine Whig, and well they know i: at the "While House." Hence the hostility of the "Union" Polk's official, at "Old Hough which growls and snarls " 1 ..,riWr! istvK a paii:puicu luaami i who is about to be deprived of his stolen meal. The old hero lias, as usual, aken the true position, to run as the "people's can didate," and not as a partizan. His ground at Bucna Vista was no better se lected, and his enemies will soon find it out. Thousands of the patriotic and hon est Democrats will rally with us around his standard in spite of all their loaders can say or do. "0!d Rough" will always know his friends from his enemies. He .will see the journals of the last session of (congress when an eflbrt was made by the locofocos to convert a vote of thanks into a vole of CENSURE, against him, by adding a proviso disapproving of the ca pitulation of Monterey, and every locofo co vo ed for if, and every Whig against it, yet t'ome of these very men who vo ted rgainst him arc now pretending to be for him; but Old Rough will know and re member them, and the people, the friends of TAYLOR and IRVIN, will this fall remember the fact that the Shmikmen vo ted unanimously sigainst Gen. Taylor, and there arc some other voles the Shuuk mch from Pennsylvania gave last spring which ought to be stereotyped and kept before the people at the head of every Whig paper until the second Tuesday cf October. .., . LOCOFOCO VOTES. 1st. The Shunkmen in Congress vo ted uanimously for Farran's amendment to CENSURE GEN. TAYLOR, or de feat the vote of thanks altogether, (see Journals.) 2nd. The Shunkmen, as a party, vo ted rgainst the Wilmoi proviso, and by their votes defeated it. Several of them having changed their votc3 to accomplish it. (see Journals. 3d. The Shunkmen. as a partv VO TED AGAINSTTHE IRISH RELIEF BILL against giving half a million to save our Irish friends, and their wives and children, from starvation, at the same time voting thirty millions to wage war upon Mexico, (see Journals.) 4th. The Shunkmen as a partv voted in favor of TAXING TEA AND COF FEE, and at the same time voted- against uic ieasuig ihc duties on iron uad coal. (see Journals.) - What will the friend of (hit. Taylor the friends of freedom the friends of the Irixk the friends of the Pennsylva nia Iron and Coal the lovers of itu und crJJ'rr say to such men, and such a party? W ill the people the honest and inde pendent voters of Pennsylvania sustain a J party, who as such, have voted to cen jure instead of thanking Taylor for his glorious victories who voted millions for war and not a cent to save a brave and generous people from starvation who voted against liberty and in favor of sla very to tax tea and coffee and against protecting iron and coal! Will the people of Pennsylvania next fall countenance a party advocating such principles and supporting such infamous and ruinous measures? These men can not ihcy dare not deny these charges. They are sustained and proved by the Journals and they know it. They arc challenged to the s rrtiny ihey dare uot meet it. lori. Democrat. Indictment of a Druggist. The Grand jury of New York have found bills of indictment, for manslaughter, a gamst Dr. Guhiii, the proprietor of a drug store, and his clerk, Win. II. Bray ton, al so an apprentice of Mr. (Julon, on ac count of the death of death of a lady hav ing been occasioned bv the -m,, fu elling a quantity of laudanum for tincture of rhubarb. The mortality among the emigrant f Quebec and Montreal is truly appaling. j seems to be on the increase instead of !t1inic!iinp fl. I .. l l on th- i,C . .. were At .V""! "l. ne noepital 2,200. Hli .. . i . " wp-ta, near Montreal, on 1 0th, deaths 32; aunjber of sick 1,237 LATER FROM VERA CRUZ. Wc have in the New Orleans papers accounts Jrom Vera Cruz to the evening t of the 7th instar.t. There are, however, j - , , c ii i i it no further advices from Puebla, the head--, i , 0 . , ' ... I quarters of Gen. Scott. A postscript to a ! . . i . , 1 : e tr.' r ,u I j 11111,1 ititncii iiuiii till ujucet oi ui " 1 r, . ... ai vera vruz sa s: veiiaTC luuircn sews from (JeiW-Scott the aspect 13 pa cific. But no details of tins news are given, nor any explanation of the channel through which it was received. - . -Various reports were in circulation at V i,,-. t ...!.:..(. Kut Hit! rrpiht is ' jrllacilcd 0ae of them is that the enemy I has blown up the west end of the Nation- Qj rjtj,re ' wBaon (rain of considerable extent eft Ver; Crilz on the -6th instant, with an rscort of J 500 rnen jt was Xo .ave , .nmmjlll:ieil bv Colonel Louis D. V;iartn nf North Carolina, but he was ! ,,.pn e,Mrnlv ill with the fever on the J - . ! of the 5th instaet, when Major i k charT. jjav- too'K On the 3d instant a mail aruved at. ve ra Cruz from Jalapa. The lioletin de las Nolicias was received by it as late as the 30th of July. This is a .little paper, thoroughly Mexican, published in Jabpa. From it we learn more particulars of Gen. Pierce's inarch through that town than had before been received. The Boletin says that the train -which the General es corted passed by without halting, but he with 300 lragoous entered the city and addressed the following note to the Cor poralion: "Jalapa, July 26, 1847. "To the Corporation of Jalapa: A brigade of the American army, encamped near Jalapa, are in want of provisions. I therefore ask this Corporation of Jalapa to furnish, at a reasonable price, all this brigade is m need of. I will take tiie necessary steps to protect those who will furnish those provisions. If, at two o' clock this evening precisely, the provi sions demanded are not forwarded, all the members of the corporation will be sent to Pcrote as prisoners. 'F. PIERCE. "W. K. Van Bonlin, Brigade Q. M." The reply of the members of the cor poration is very indignant at whatlhey consider the harsh language of the Gen erul. They made no difficulty about the provisions; these could have been h;rt5 t reasonable rates without any threat. They deplore their unfortunate position, being deiencclcss. This, they say, should have protected them from insult. Gen. Pierce is the first American officer, they s.iy, who has thus had occasion to find fault with them. The Vera Cruz Sun gives the fallow ing summary from the Boletin: , . "The Boletin says that a Mexican was encountered by a party of guerrillas, and, bciug auspicious, he was required to un dergo an examination; but, having offered resistance, lie was killed. Three large packages, contaisiug letters from the offi cers of the army to their friends in the United States, were found in his pos session. The Boletin adds: 'In said cor respondence it is slaled that great discord exists between the volunteers and regulars of the American army, and that this raay eause them to fight among themselves.' That paper is delighted at this, and takes that opportunity to call the Aaericans highway robbes,1 Yankees' &c. It also says that it appears from intercepted letters that Gen. Pillow and other Ameri can chiefs are of opinion that the attack upon the capital will not be successful; that the commanding officers consider the capital to be in a very strong state of defence, as much for its fortifications as for the number of men who will be brought into action; and, finally, that the guerrillas had completely interrupted the correspon dence between Puebla and Vera Cruz. "The letters after having been r aJ were sent to the Government at Mexico. "Four American deserters arrived at Jalapa on the 30th ultimo, three of whom were from Puebla and one from General Pierce's train. They were to leave Ja lapa for Coatepec. The Boletin says that those from Puebla report that the de sertion was very great from the ranks of the American army, and that seventy three deserters were advertised in one day at Puebla. The one from General Pu rce's train is said to report that wagons lull of sick follow him. Wc do not be lieve one word of this." The Boletin further says that the in ducements held out-to Americans to de sert are not enough, that if the Govern ment would promise - them money or any other rewards, Scott's army would be de stroyed. It counsels the Governors of States to take measures to foment and en courage desertion. The same paper savs assassinations are licquent in Jalapa, as well of Amcri- cans as Mexicans. A smvll ir-jrricnn is required there lor the protection of the inhabitants. A small lot of-pack-mules arrived at ; era (,ruz on the 0th instant from the in- j ter'iOr. The Owners wnuli! lint ilierlnen how they passed the guerrillas, hut it is! shrewdly suspected that they paid four j dollars a head for leave to come in. The following day one hundred and fifty pack- j mules arrived from Cordova, laden with Snrrar nnit T ".i.Aii.ai, uiciuuy, mo UOUOl , i emenaincu mat Jurauta,or some of the guerrilla chiefs, have adopted the plan of granting permits in order to raise the t w-m wngmg to the 1st infantry, a prisoner in the guard-house of the palace, tried u I pass the sol dier -then OX ffuard. and. to! wind. Hopes are entertained that in this . Capt. Deving, of the Isabella Hayne, one way some trade will becarried on between h jndred and eighty square rigged vessels lera Cruz and the interior. I arrived at the port of Marseilles, ail load- I he era Cruz Sun reh,t2s that on the ed with wheat. The port was so crowd ed instant a man named Thos. Clark, be-' eJ, that at least 400 vessels were obliged accomplish his purpose, seized one end Slaves on board was captured by a Bnt Ot the soldier's rninL-pt n.,..,. n ini. -r t i.-. inn ruonsioiakeitout ofhis hands. The latter fired at Clark, the ball passing in through his side and coming out at the back. The ball afterwards, wounded a- r . . . . " -' . . . w pother man named George Evans, one of the Louisiana mounted men, and finally crazed the hir of the sentry at the other o ... . . K r, V"u IZ, Zt 7Z lev .inanity. inc)i.wui mo -man uu x r 3 t, : , , tu v,-,'! rcd is James Kouuisou. I nc w ounded . ,. , 0 . iiIO lmsm men were immediately sent to the nospi- men were urn hosp i.i i i J taL and it is saiu Llark and Evans are , , , , The correspondent of the "Times writes from Vera Cruz tliat "nothing is prising in commercial matters worthy of remark, except, perhaps, a recent woticc from the receiving wid disbursing ofucers of the Government that no more bills on Puebla will be received from the mer chants." FROM GEN.TA YLOR'S ARMY. The New Orleans Picayune- has two letters from Bucna Vista, bnt they con- taiu no news of interest. They are dated the 2 Ith and 25th of July. Rumors were as rue as ever, out iki.cuhuocuw! w. placed in aem. No signs of tin early . r . !.- . - march of the troop3 are mentioned. The health of the troops at Cuena Vista was not good. The deaths were princi pally confined to the North Carolina regi ment, which kad lost fourteen men in a week. The Virginia regiment had lost three old cases, and the Massachusetts re- giuacnt about the same .number. TIIE TIDE OF IMMIGRATION. England continues to force in self-banishment multitudes of her unfortunate cit izens some through improvcrishmerrt- some through the fear of it. Many who cross the Atlantic bring large sums of money with them other are driven out of the streets, the garrets, and the cellars of Liverpool, Dublin, Cork, and Man chester, into crowded, filthy, ill-ventilated ships, and suffer privations, and from stench, sickness, vermin, &e. only less than the imprisoned in the Black Hole, at Calcutta. 'Tis a .dreadful thing -to sport with men's lives as the English and Irish holders of the Irish soil are now doing. At the Quarantine ground helow Jue bec, arrived last week the bark John Munn, Liverpool, 100 dying of fever fifty-nine dead, and their bodies lowered in to the salt sea! 452 passengers sailed down he Mersey. How many of them will be likely to reach Illinois or Michigan! The bark Covenanter from Cork, "brought 400 passengers 0 had the famine fe ver and forty-three had died in the hold or steerage. The Rosalinda, from Bel last, had 17 deaths and 474 passengers the Oilcssa, from Dublin 21 deaths-other vessels 3 1 deaths. Eleven vessels with 3,597 passengers (less 174 who died at sea) arrived at Quarantine in three days. On the 2d and 3d instant other 1,399 im migrants reached Quebec, and it is prob able that of 70,000 'and upward, by the St. Lawrence, at least 50,000 will event ually settle in the States, or buy farms from Canada people desirous to removing hither. The --Montreal Herald" correspondent states that the deaths at the hospital there are Irom UU to IUU a week, ana tnaiine hospitals at Quorantineare aH fall, and 30 to 40 per day dying. "I learn (says the writer) that 290 of the passengers of the Virginius have died since her sailing, and it is said that very few of her whole num ber (upwards of 500) will recover. Ab sentee Englishmen, Scotchmen and Irish men have got hold of the half of Ireland; they take nearly all the earth produces, and carry itofl an absentee Clergy take all they can get, and the resident Patroons in nine cases out of ten use the millions like slaves. Is it wonderful that a feel ing shonld have arisen in America ad vers to land monojroly? N. Y. Trib. The Sickness at New Orleans. The Delta of the 18th inst says: "The list -of interments for the twenty four hours preceeding nine o'clock yes terday exhibits an alarming increase in the number of deaths by yellow fever. Fifty-two deaths in twenty-four hours is certainly, considering the spareness of oar population at present, a large number, and shows the disease has assumed an exten sively epidemical character. ' That num ber is about the usual weekly mortality Tf our city. This time last year, we think, the deaths in our city did not ex ceed sixty or seventy a week; at the pre sent rate they would be 448 per week. This is truly a frightful increase. The weather yesterday was pleasant in the shade, but very hot in the sun. The southern wind blew fieely, and altogether the atmosphere was not cnfavorable to health." Riot in Cincinnati. A quarrel took place on Sabbath ' evening in Cincinnati, l-ptwrm four or five voung men. shortly after which one of them by-the name of 1 John Halm, went to a coffee house, which liml lr-n rinsed nn account of thf? dis- turbance, and demanded admittance. On being refused, he knocked at the door and mads considerable noise, when Earnest. the landlord, suddenly onenod it and fired nnnn Tl-ilin will) n lnul!f hnrrelled shot gun. lie fell upon the pavement and was carried home by his friends. Earnest went in re-loaded his gun, and jumped out and passed through the crow J. He was subsequently arrested and committed lO jail. Wheat from the Black Sea. On ihe 20th of June we are informed by to lie at anchor outside. N. Y. Her. - A vrssrl with mnrp ihm dvn km-wlro.! miles WSW from Ainkie, The vessd was out from Congo river nine days. She was sent to Sierra Leone for adjudi cation. : v . m-r h 1 l liliG inju POSTSCRIPT. A report has just reached us that Gen. Pearce had arrived wilh his forces at Pnc "bb on ihc Gu'i inst. that the same day a detachment of the amy had advanced to ward the city of Mexico, and that the remainder were to follow the next day. We expect important new3 from that quarter in lli? course of a few days. iE WRONG ;1 AN lll'Xt,. A voting printer named Boymgton, who served his time in the office of the New Haven Pal- ladium, was hung a fow years since in A- labama, upon a charge of having murder- r . .j , . ed a compamom, with whom he uas tra - veiling. He protested hts innocence to the last; but without aval. Recently the ., ,T . knitted confessed the crime on his death bed ! Boyington was a young man of fine talents and prepossessing appear ance, whose guilt was deemed conclusive only from the fact that he was the last per son seen wilh the murdered man. Alba ny Journal. Horrors of hnmisration. The Can ada papers are still recording the ravages of disease among the unfortunate emi grants; victims to crowded ships, badly ventilated and poor'y provisioned, in which the filthy and the clean are indis criminately placed. Among the passen gers of one only -of the hundreds of ships sent to Quebec thi3 season, more Uritons are understood to have died already than there were of Americans slain at Monterey or Baena Vista, both of them bloody af frays with great armies. DISTRESS I NO SHIPWRECK. . A despatch from New. York informs ns that the new slyp Mameluke, bound from New York to Liverpool, was struck by a squall on the 15th instant, five miles from Sandy kook, by which her hatches, tc, were carried away and the ship water logged. Thirty-four steerage passengers and seven of the crew were lost. One steerage passenger, sixteen of the crew, and four cabin passengers were taken from the wreck and carried to New York. Difficulty between Generals Scott and Worth. Mr. Kendall, in a letter published in . the Picayune, dated June 27th, states that a Court of Inquiry had ! 'been in session for two days, having been called by Gen. 'Worth, on account of Scott's having expressed himself dissatis fied M'ith the terms of capitulation of Pu ebla, and also us to the acts of ihe former while in command of the city. There has been no mention of this frarai any other quarter. Marriage Extraohdinary.-Iii Kings ton, N. H.. Col. William Webster, aged 67, to Miss Martha Wins'low, aged 19. By the above snion, the bridegroom has married his sister's grand-daughter, which makes the bride a wife to her great uncle, sister to her grandfather and grandmother, and annt to her father and mother, and great annt to her hrethers anil sisters. She is stepmother to five children, four teen grand children, aud one great grand child. Extensive .MorfaJift;, The scarlet fever and the nrcslcs are producing an unprecedented mortality among the chil dren in the city of Madison, 111. The Banner states lhat the ccmetry at that p'ace is dotted all over with small fresh graves, and a large number of parents have become childless. The same paper states, as a remarkable fact, that while sickness prevails to such an extent among the children, the place is unusually heahhy for adults. Ploughing icifh Elephants. It is stated that in Ceylon elephants are em ployed in ploughing rice fields and in pre paring new grounds for cultivation of cof fee, pepper, Sic. One of these animals well trained.it is said, will do the work of twenty oxen; consequently, more labor ris performed in a given time, and the pe riod is hastened for putting in the crops. The price of an elephant in Ceylon vat ie? from $50 to $75. Commodore Perry has written at An ton Liznrdo under date of July 25, gives the fact that Lieutenant Parker is the on ly officer of the squadron who has died. There are numerous cases of sickness but lea'only have died Lieut. Taynehill, who was wounded in the expedition of Col. De Russcy, and fell into the hands of the Mexicans, is stiil alive , and rrceiving from Gen. Ca rey's family all the attention his wounds require. Mr. John Wise, made hi3 03 d serial as cension on tho 0th instant at Buffalo, N. Y. He landed on the bosom of Lake E- rie, but was rescued from a watery grave by die crew cf a vessel near at hand. The death of a son ofSrnntor Sturgeon of Uniontown at Puebla is announced by thc correspondent of the Picayune. He was a Lieutenant in one of the Peiui.3 1- vania Regiments. A Grfek Si'ecclation. Maltese pn- I pers recently state that 44a Greek vessel. having on board a guillotine, was making a tour of the Islands, stopping wherever there were criminals to be executed.' The miutat New Orleans, during th", month I Julyturned out $3,000,000 oft i EagifiB.- - i A Hint tor the Ladies. 'fr.c I I. delphia lVunsylvanian puWUhic-, t'ro:n ilu pen of a lady, the following iTM.-.rks: "Speaking of beauty, I v.-ih iV.c peo ple would dress pleasantly, bciic voie-y.iv. I saw a lovely girl to-day looking unlove ly and unlovable, because her muslin dress was stirlly starched, to keep clean thf longer. My laundress tries in vai:i t persuade me into the barbarous custom. To my mind a woman should always -..f. - - .,..u ; . i ioon as sun u iuin.ii as a n.nvi'r. nn.t ma,!e 0f tic finc?t and sof.est ma'eri.d J possible; material that will easily dispose , itself into folds, falling gracefully around j h . being liable to m.'lle it tTCry ; moment, compel her to stilt atuiuues at' ' 1 i y of Ioun?e anJ loll; why. my very j words would grow grim and precise, wen; i or potior us propriety. i ...... r.. . Science fox the Kitchen. ProiVs- sor Liebio, in a late letter to Professor. Silliman, says: "The method of roasting i? obviously the best to make flesh most nutrieioi!. Butit does not follow that boiling is to Le interdicted. If a piece of meat be out in cold water, and this heated to boi!!-;, and boiled till it is "done," it will bel-ome harder and have less taste than if the same piece had been thrown into water already boiling. In the first case, the matters grateful to the smell and taste go into the extract ihe soup; in the second, t!ic al bumen of the meat coagulates from t:.r surface inward, and cvclopes the in tenor with a layer which is impermeable to wa ter. In the latter case, ihe soup will he indifferent, but the meat delicious." A Treasure in a Tea-Kettle. Tha clerk of a hardware store in Cincinnati, put a hundred and fifly dollars in a tea kettle for safe keeping, and while he was out of the way the master of the shop sold the kettle for twenty-five cents, not sus pecting the .treasure it contained. Tlie customer was so well satisfied with his bargain that he has not been seen at the same store since. A man has been fined $200 at Boston, for violating the license law. He was given one hour to fork over, or else go to the work house for six months. Cumberland MttrkcL Flour, per "barrel, $6 50 Wheat, per bushel, O CO Rye, M 0 Cors, 44 GO Oats, 33 Potatoes "00 pplcs, OXH) -dried 50 0 CO t) C3 C CI O 35 CO 00 75 75 00 8 9 511 9 Peaches dried 44 1 Cutler, per pound, Beef, Veal, Chickens, per dozen, 1 Stone Coal, per bushel. 50 O0 C 5 25 7 rillsbiu'zh Market. FIout, M SI a 5 00 Wheat 85 a t)(J Rye 40 a t'5 Corn TD0 a 40 Oats 23 a 25 Barley, . 35 a 40 Bacon, haras, per lb 0 a 8 Pork CO a 5 Lard, 0 a 8 Tallow, rendered 0 a 00 rough 0 a GO Butter, in kegs, 00 a Cf) " roll. 8 a 10 Cheese Western Reserve 6 a 7 Goshen, 1)0 a 00 Apples green, per barrel, 1 25 a 3 CO dried per bushel, 50 a 5S Peaches, 1 25 a 1 50 Wool 2 a 35 Fggs, ' " 15 a 0 If, Potatoes, MercrT 00 a CO Neshannoeks 70 a 75 Seeds, CloveT 3 0 2 a 3 75 ,. Timothy 2 CO a 2 12 ' Flaxseed 00 a 1 00 I2aiil& Xotc Lisf. ,rEN.syLV..r. onrn. Uunkof Pittsburg pur, State Ek fe branches Kxchsngp lunik. ar Mount Pleatit Mer. A. Man. bank parjSlculitnville Dks. of PhilideJpuia jiarSSt. Cla:rsvi!!e GiwJ !wnk parjMarietta Ek.ofGcrmantown par New Lisbon ' Chester rounty par Cir.ci.-muti Eank 44 Dclawaro Co par OluniMis do ' Montgomery Co par Circlcvilto 44 Northumberland par Zdiiesvillo Columbia Bridge co par! Putnam Doyle.-jtown bank jiar Woostcr Fir. Bk Kcadinj .ar'Ma.ilioti Far bk Duck Co Far bk Lancaster Lancaster Co bank Lancaster bank United Elates bank parj.VanJuaky 44 par Geauga " parNorwalk 41 pnrClevi lauJ " JOiXenia 44 I'Davton " Western Rrve " $ TrnKh'n Bk Colurubu " i,CliilIicoihe ' " 5' Lake Erie 44 -leiota 4 .'Lanrasiler 10 iVIfiiiiiitori 13 i Granvillo 50 Brownsville '4 Washington 44 Gettysburg! " Chambcrsburg ?uquehann.i Co bk Lchig'i couiily bank Lcwistown Mi.I.l.Vtown C;,r!i-Ie I'rie barik Farmers and Drovers' Bank, Wayncsburg II arriburg Ilonesdale Lebanon PotUvilla Wyoming Yoik Bank West Branch bank Relief Notes Merchants oV Man bk Iji anners bli "wjnton J'J Lrbana 59 MARYLAND. I a juaitimore lanks par 4';B. & o. n. n. scrip to .Cuinb. Bk A lie-any 4 Far. I kef Maryland 44 ";Far.&M.bk Frederick " 4(Fiederiek co bank u " HagiTstown ban!c 44 "(Mineral bank " il'alausco bank 4 Tiits. relit f notes par.VVaobinton b.u;k tily ct C-Junly Serin i Bank of Westminster BLINK DEEDS. I a T .mi it,j 7 "tfinKiJcUUo JuiaLprJii" tea, Oil line WilUS V&mTtZliti now for sale at this office.