ItESOh U T I 0 N Relative to an Amendment of the Constitution. RESOLVED >hall not be diminished -during their continuance in office, but they shall receive no fees or perquisites of office, nor hold any other office of profit under this Common wealth, or under the government of the I nited States, or anv other State of this Union. The Judges of the Supreme Court during their con tinuance in office shall reside within this Com monwealth, and the other Judges during their continuance in office shall reside within the dis trict or county for which they were respective ly elected. WILLIAM F. PACKER, Speaker rf the Ifa use of Representative 3 GEO. DARSIE, Speaker of the Senate. Is THE StKATE, .Virch 1, 1 -40. It "lent, That this resolution pass.—Yeas 21, .Nays 8. Extract from the Journal. SAML. W. PEARSON, CUtk IX TIIL Hoi 3E "f Hep RF. 3 EXT ATI A ES, ) %9pril 2, l2i'J. i s. Rest, Drum, Frick, Ives, • King, fvor.igmacber, Pottuigcr and Dai sic, " Sj.taL ■ . ' . '• Ho : ic i tio i was determined in the af " Urinative.' 1 "JOCKKAE OF iitr. lIOFSE OF lil.i'kl <• IST AT IVES. " S.iail the resolution pass r 'i be yeas and " nays were taken agreeably to the provision of •' th- tenth aifi-lc of the Constitution, and are " as follows, viz : " YEAS—Messrs Gideon J. Hall, David J. 1 Bent, f 'rai ■ Riddle, Peter D. Bloom, David M. " Bole, Thomas K. Hull, Jacob Cort, John 11. 4 Di. hi, Nathaniel A. Elliott, Josi pb Emery, •' David G. F.shfiman, William Evans, John ' Fausold, Samuel IVgely, Joseph W. Fisher, * Henry M. Fuller, Thomas Grove, llobt Ilainp " son, George I . Hens/ey, Thomas J. Herring, " 1 -seph liiggiit*, Cli.is. Jfortz, J veph B I lower, ' Robert Klotz, Harrison J'. I.aiid, Abraham " Lambeilon, J.iiucs J. Li. wis, James \V. Long, "Jacob M't.'ariney, Joim F. M Culloch, Hugh " M'Kee, John M' I.augfilin, Adam Martin, Bam ' uel Marx, John C. Myei ~ Edward Nic.kleson, rffi wart l'earce, Jam- I'orter, Henry 0. Pratt, " Alonzo Robb, George Kuplcy, Theodore Ry man, Bernard S. Bcho6.iov-r, Samuel Seibert, "John {sharp, Christian Snively, Thomas C. " Steel, Jeremiah 11. Stubbs, Jo*t J, Htut/.man, "Marshall Ha ortzwefiler, Samuel Taggart. " George' T. Thorn, Nicholas Thorn, Arunali " Wattles, Samuel Wciri. h, Alonzo 1. Wilcox, " Daniel Eerbey,and William F. Packer, Hi. uk "er—s 8. " Nays—Messrs. Augustus K Oornyn, David •' M. Courtney, David F.vans, Henry S. Kvans, " John Fenlon, John W. George, Thomas Gil " !< *pie, Joim i'. Gord< u, William Henry, " James J. Kirk. Joseph Daubach, Robert It. " Little, John t>. s!'CaJniont, Joim M'Kt-e, " William MTV n v I -i:iii Miller. William T. " John A. Otto, William Y. Roberts, " John YY. Koeberry, John 11. Rutherford, 11. " Rundlc 1-injth, John Smyth, John Soudcr, " George Walters and David i\ Williams.—-ill. " So the question w as determined in the allir " niative." SECRETARY'S OFFICE, I /l.trrisburg, June 15, ib'l9. $ PENNSYLVANIA, SS. AUU/. 1 no CERTIFY that the above and foregoing is a true and correct copy fflfe of the. " Yeas" and " Nays," taken on the " Resolution relative to an Amendment of the Constitution, as the same appears on the Journals of the two Houses of the General Assembly of this Commonwealth, for the session ot 1 ->4l). Witness my hand and the seal of said office, the. fifteenth day of June, one thousand eight hundred and forty-nine. *T< )WNSEN D 11AI N ES, ju23—3m Secretary of the Commonwealth. THE GAZETTE. LEWISTOWN, PA. SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1819. T II 11 M S : OYL DOLLAR PER AYXUI, IN ADVANCE. For six months, 75 cents. NEW subscriptions must be paid in advance. If the paper is continued, ar.d not paid within the first month, $1.25 will be charg ed ; if not paid in three months, $1.50; if not paid in six months, $1.75; and if not paid in nine months, $2.00. Notices of Ailvcrtisemcnls. RCBTXSO.N EMIRED'N New York Circus with, as rumor has it, an excellent company of equestrians, will be here on Wednesday and Thursday next. Those fond ot seeing the ups and downs of life, as exhibited iu these per formances, will of course goto see the actor and take a laugh at the clown, whose portrait, as drawn in our paper to-day, is said to bear a striking resemblance to the gentleman "down stairs." Mr. DRI M ofFeia fur sale a Dwelling and Lot of Ground. 'Phe County Commissioners invite proposals for furnishing wood for Jail and Court House. The assignee of J. R. Philips publishes n notice. Our German citizens request attention to their call fur a meeting at the Town Hall on Saturday evening to aid the heroes who are now struggling for liberty against the despots of Europe. \j~y~ AN EXTRA, containing eight cc|- umns of advertisements, accompanies to-day V Gazette. The conclusion of an interesting sto ry will be found on our first page. DEATH FROM A FALL.— P.Y a letter from the Postmaster at Elizabeth town, we learn that a man named SYLVESTER, fell from a mulberry tree on the 3(Jth ult., ( it Lock No. 2, Youghio gheny, Allegheny county, Pa.) fracturing his j skull and sustaining other injuries, from the ef- j fects of which he died on the Ist July. He is described as a young man, 25 or 30 years of ' age, common siz.e, light complexion, yellow ! hair, a ship tattooed on hi-> right arm, arid a star on his left—no papers, nor money. lie bad been at work on the improvement but one day—stated that he was partly raised in Lewis- j town, had worked last on the railroad near this place, and been on ca. Fur the information of friends, the postmaster states that he had good medical attendance, and would be decent ly interred. Captain HOOPER, of the cnml pnekt ts, died at Newton Hamilton, on Thursday of last week. He had been unwell for some time, and on thet day overheated himself in over taking his boat, on reaching which ho drank a considerable quantity of ice water. Ho was shortly after f.eized with violent pains, and died the snrne afternoon. His mother was at Newton at the time attending to another son who wag severely injured by an explosion some weckseince. On the return ofCapt. Hooper's boat, Tobias Tyson, bowsman, was similarly attacked, anc died near Alexandria; arid sub sequently a colored man was taken with it in Juniata county, but recovered. GOIEY'S LADY'S Barticular interest. Home still held out against the French—in Hungary nothing decisive had taken place. IfouaiHLK.—The Blair County Wing states that an Irish woman died with the mania a potn, at Huntingdon, on Friday of last week. T1! E Cll 0 LER A. At Alexandria, Huntingdon county, there have been altogether nine deaths by cholera, with no new cases for more than a week All these had been employed on Shuman &. Fertig's section. There are reports of some deaths on McCord's section at Newton Hamilton, but we cannot trace them to an authentic source. Sev eral cases have occurred on canal boats, but at a time when every petty ailment is tortured into cholera, it is difficult to say whether one half we hear is true. In the east, the disease prevails in most oi the villages near Philadelphia and New York— at Brooklyn, Albany, Rochester, Buffalo, Jer sey City, Newark, Wilmington, Arc. In New York, the report of the city inspector for the week ending on Saturday last, shows bill interments during that period, being an in crease of 289 on the preceding seven days. The cholera interments were -184, being an in crease of 1(17 on the preceding week, and an average of C'J 1-7 deaths daily during the week. This is the heaviest record of interments in that city, exceeding the maximum week < f 1832 by 104, while the cholera interments of that week were 232 more than during the past week. It must be borne in mind, however, that the pre sent population of the. city is about double what it was in 1*32. Among the deaths arc the only son of Horace Greeley, James Reyburn, A. R. Wyckoff, Dr. Brainard, and David li. Ogden, all minent citizens. There were 453 deaths in the city of Phila delphia durin c the week ending on the 14tb in stant, of which 158 were by cholera. The to tal number of deaths by cholera in the city since the breaking out of the disease, up t > the 16th, is 550. The cholera has appeared in the Alms House at Baltimore—4s cases, 20 deaths. The city is still comparatively free from it. In the west it continues with but little abate ment in the citi s, are! is rapidly spreading into the country. In Ohio, cases have occurred in Rossv.Ue, llainii' m, Mil for J, New Richmond, Batavia, Tipj ecanoc, l'iqua, Wcstville, Cam den, Cleaveland, and at Dayton 6 deaths arc re ported on the 11th. At St. Louis the reports were as follows for the dates named : ♦ Cholera. Other diseases. Interments, July 12, 157 124 Do. ' 13, 138 105 Do. 14, Hi) 87 Total, 403 316 The aggregate number of interments at St. Louis from 9th to 13th, inclusive, is 714, of which .563 w ere from cholera. The whole number of deaths at St. Louis from January 1 to Jul) 12, was 3650 by cholera, 2374 by other diseases total Gu24 Among the deaths at St. Louis, reported on the 12th, was Dr. Harding Lane, the oldest physician in the city. Wrn. K Titcomb, a lawyer of premise, died on the 11th. At Bellcvilie, a -mall village in Illinois, near St. Louis, the deaths by cholera since the 20tii of May arc 92. At Graves' settlement, five miles from St. Louis, led have died out of a population of 700. Electricity and fholcra. Dr. Andrand, of Paris, has communicated a paper to the Academy of Sciences, upon the connection between cholera and electricity.— According to hi. experiments, which extended over a period of three months, he found great difficulty in the months of April and .May when the moisture of the. atmosphere was variable, to procure sparks from the electric machine. Clear and fine weather in June, when he antici pated an increase of electricity, " only gave more and more feeble indications of it," and at length the machine remained entirely silent. This new decrease of the electric fluid coincid ed perfectly with the violence of the cholera. On the Bth the electricity returned, a thunder shower followed, and by the 9th the atmo phere returned to it-. proper condition, and the elm! ra decreased. The rationale of the matter is set forth by Dr. A. a<- follows : ••Nature Ims infused into tli< atmosphere a mass of electricity, contributing to the service and support of life. If, by any cause, this mass of electricity is diminished, and sometimes de creased even to exhaustion, what follows? liv ery one suffers ; those who carry within a -ufli ricnt supply of electricity, withstand it; those who tan live only by borrowing electricity from the common mass, perish with tiic < xbaustion of that mass. This is a clear and perfectly ra tional explanation, not only of the cholera, but, per haps of all other epidemics that at intervals atlliet humanity. If the great fact in question were recognized and admitted as a principle, 1 think it would be ea?>> for medical science, pro fessing, as it does, countless sway in producing and restraining electricity, to prepare for a suc cessful resistance, upon its rc-appcarancc, of a plague, which I regard at present as, at least, arrested in its course, if it lias not wholly van ished. 1 ' In connection with this subject the St. Louis Republican mentions that an old and familiar experiment was tried a few days since, acci dentally, by a gentleman whoso attention has been called to the subject of the effect of elec tricity upon the atmosphere in producing ozone gas. Reflecting upon the v arious theories ad vanced, lie made, an attempt to attract paper by rubbing sealing wax upon woollen cloth : and, although scaling wax will usually attract a piece of paper at the distance of one inch or more, immediately after the friction, yesterday it would not move the slightest fragment at any distance. In these times the most trivial cir cumstance may be important. Docs this fact denote a want of magnetic electricity in the at mosphere, and if so, how does this aTcd the nerves of sensation and the circulation? The attention of scientific men i-> railed to this fart. It may have an important bearing upon the pre vailing epidemic. Wc icarn from the Huntingdon Globe that on Saturday evening last, MARTIN GATES, while bathing in the dam near his residence, at Graysville, Franklin township, in thatcoun tv, was drowned. After swimming about for some time fie sunk. His young daughter *.vas watching him from the house, and when lie disappeared shcdiJ not immediately raise any alarm, she supposing him to bs diving. The water being very cold it is supposed he was attacked with the cramp. His body was not recovered until late in the night. The Will cT the Fct)|le. I A locofoco journal having charged the Wash ington Republic with the design of abandoning I all unpopular whig measures and doctrines, and shaping it* course so as to make it acceptable to the largest number of voters, that paper thus ably answers the charge This is precisely our object. The Government of the United States is a government of opinion. An Admin istration can sustain itself only by receiving a majority of votes. It can receive a majority of i votes only by making itself acceptable to a ma jority of the people. Our system rests upon the idea that what is acceptable to a majority of the people, within the constitution, ought to he the law of the land. If the majority is not competent to determine what ought to be the law of the land, within such restrictions, the 1 idea of self-government is an absurdity. " We believe that in the main the doctrines of the WHIG party arc acceptable to the Amer ican people. We believe that the American people are in favor of peace and neutrality. We believe they are in favor of "good roads, good harbors, and good laws," and of "going i ahead" under an administration that shall se -1 < ure us these advantages. We believe that they are in favor of a national policy, arid op posed to sectional parties and issues. We be ) lieve tiiat they think a "change of men and measures" quite as indispensable to the national pr .spcrity, as the "reunion" of the Locofocos i and Abolitionists on the Buffalo platform— : which is now the leading object of the Opposi tion in CoKvr.criCT T, WISCONSIN*, VERMONT, and mure especially in New YORK. " All these notions we believe to be popular, ! and acceptable to a large majority of the voters. We adopt and advocate thern on that ground— and because they agree with our own views of administration. If the Opposition can persuade ( us, by fair reasoning and argument, that they are not popular and acceptable, we shall cer j tainly be led to diHrust our own judgment—be j cause it Is our belief that a majority of the peo ' pic are competent to decide upon all such ques tions-—and because, think about them as we may, the will of the people, developed through I the organs recognized by the constitution, must ! ultimately prevail. " We should be pleased to learn on what other ! basis than this a man can lay claim to the title j of a believer in Republicanism, or a friend of ' the Constitution of the United States." j The whigs ot Blair county nominated the following ticket on Tuesday last: Assembly—Jos. Iliggins. ! Sheriff-—David Denlinger. Frothonotary—Samuel J. Roycr. (' tnimU-dnner—Jacob Burley. l'oor Director—Joseph Feay. j Auditor—David Tate. DEER, AI.E, AND PORTER. —From a publica tion made by Mr. Samuel Lucas in the Balti more papers, it appears that the use of malt liquors, during the prevalence of cholera, ii of a beneficial nature instead of being injurious, a- many persons have supposed. Professor Du catel coincides in this opinion, and the brewers in Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York, and Poughkeepsie, cite in proof that not one of the persons employed in their establishments died of cholera in 1^32. A destructive fire occurred in Mauch Chunk <.n Sunday, which laid the business portion of that flourishing town in ruins. About thirty liouii s were consumed, and the loss is estimat ed at $ 125,000. Thirty buildings were destroyed by fire in Allegheny City on .Monday last. FEVER AND AGTE.—A friend from Pottsvillc, who has had ample opportunity to observe the beneficial effects of the subjoined remedy for this annoying disease, has forwarded the same for publication to the Danville Democrat. Receipt for the Cure of Fercr mid .?guc. Take 2 oz.'s of good Barks, > lvcrizcd 44 1 oz. of Rhubarb, S mix in a pint of strong Brandy, fourth proof- — take, aw ine cla no quackery about the cure.—Physi cians here approve of it, although they do not prescribe it, and it has cured many cases w hen the physicians could only stop it and as soon as the patients ceased taking their medicine it would return again. This cure is effectual. The only merit is in mixing the ingredients together —taking them separate they would fail. Try it on some and judge for yourself. PHYSICIANS. —We. cannot observe, without the strongest admiration, the conduct of the physicians of Richmond during the present epi demic. It is only at times like these that wc fully realize'the. value, and the excellence of these true-hearted sons of science, these heroic men, in comparison with whose calm courage the fiery valor of the soldier shrinks into utter insignificance. A period of ordinary health is to the physician like a time of peace to the sol dier, hut the visitation of the epidemic is the war in which lie goe> forth to the front of the battle, and to the struggle with Death, that be may save the lives of others, and perhaps per ish himself in saving them. There is no hovel so poor, so loathsome, so reeking with the foul breath of the pestilence, in which those messengers of mercy have not In en found standing by the bedside of (lie most miserable an,l destitute wretch in the commu nity, no matter what his color, anil exhausting all the resources of medical skill for his relief. In cases like these there could have been no re muneration. None was expected. Hut that mattered not. Life was at stake, and as rapid ly as others would lly from danger, have our phy-details hurried to it, to save their fellow men. What is said of the Richmond physicians will apply as strongly to those of Philadelphia, and indeed to the profession generally as a class. There is no body of men more distinguished for their humanity, or so ready to risk their own lives for the bent-lit of their fellow men. It may he said that it is their business and they arc paid for it, but money could scarcely be a recompense for the fatigue and exposure that many of them undergo uncomplainingly at this period, and they arc found in attendance every day upon cases where the hope, of remuneration must to small indeed. Nothing but a spirit of humanity and a noble sense of their professional duty would induce so many personal sacrifices as physicians are railed upon to make during the presence of an epidemic.— Pkiht. Lclgcr. Annexation of the Canada*. The subjoined letter from the hero of Chippewa and Fmndy's Lane, cannot fti! to excite attention throughout the Union. W BST POINT, June 21), 1811). My Dear Sir : The news from the Parliament of Great Britain, this morning, must 1 think, in crease the discontent of our neighbors on the other side of the St. Lawrence and the Lakes not a little; and that those discon tents will, in a few years, lead to a separa tion of the Canadas, New Brunswick, Arc., &c. from the mother country, seems equal ly probable. Will those Provinces form themselves into an independent nation, or seek a con nexion with out Union ? 1 think the proba bility is greatly iu favor of the latter.— In my judgement the interests of both sides would bo much promoted by annexation— the several Provinces coming into the Union on equal terms with our present thirty states. The free navigation of the St. Lawrence is already of immense impor tance to perhaps a third of our present pop ulation, and would be of great value to the remainder. After annexation, two Reve nue Cutters, below Quebec, would give us a better security against smuggling than 20,000 Custom house employees si rung along the line that separates us from the British Possessions on our Continent. I am well aecquainted with that line, and know a great deal of the interests and char acter of the Provincials. Though opposed to incorporating with us any district dense ly peopled with the Mexican race, 1 should be most happy to fraternize with our north ern and north eastern neighbors. W hat may he the views ofour Executive government on the subject I know abso lutely nothing ; but 1 think 1 cannot err in saying that two thirds of our people would rejoice at the incorporation, and tlie other third soon perceive its benefits. Of course, 1 am opposed to any under handed measures, on our part, iu favor of the measure, or any other act of bad faith towards Great Britain. Her good will, in my view of the matter, is only second to that of the Provincials themselves, and that the former would soon follow the latter— considering the present temper and condi tion of Christendom —cannot be doubled. Tho foregoing views 1 have long been in the habit of expressing in conversation, 1 give them to you for what they may be worth. Faithfully yours, PINE LIMBER IN MAINE.—A corres pondent of the Maine People's Press , writ ing from Moose head Lake, June 19, tells of having just taken across said Lake, a distance of 17 miles, the largest raft of pine logs ever seen thereabouts—conlain ,r|g, by actual survey, tict nty-one and three fourths acres. These logs are taken at tlilierenl landings upon the eastern shore of the Lake, and towed by steamboats across to the outlet or head of the Kenoe bec waters, by which they are borne to market. LAKE SUPERIOR COPPER AND IRON.— The mineral riches from Lake Superior are to be worked to some purpose. The propeller Independence arrived at the Saull St. Marie on the 20th ult, with 130 tons of native copper in large masses, from the Clitf Mine, and the .Napoieon on the 22d ult. with 10 tons ofbarrel ore from the Clitf Mine, S tons of barrel and native copper from the Copper Falls location, and 11 tons of barrel ore from Lac La Belle Mining Company. The schr. Fur Trader arrived on the 19th, with 213 tons iron blooms, 13 tons and 120 bars of iron, from the Jackson Iron Works. Clcaocland ( Ohio) J/i raid, July 11. THE MARKETS. Lewis town, July 20, 1849. Raid hy Dealers. Retail Flour - - $3 75 S I 75 Wheat, white - 90 1 05 red - 85 1 00 Rye - - 45 5G < >ats - - 25 33 Corn, - . 45 50 Cloverseed - - 300 4 (K) Flaxseed - - I 00 1 25 Timothyaeed - 2 00 2 50 Butter, good - - 12$ 12$ Fgers - - lo 10* l,nrd - - (i 8 Tallow - 8 10 Potatoes - - GO 75 Beef, - - 4 00 Bacon, per lb. 5£ 7 Pork - - 0 00 0 00 Wool, por lb. - - 25 Feathers - 44 44 The fefwislotrn Mills arc paying 85 to 95 cents tor giswl wheat, 45 cents for lvye, 1 cents fur Corn, and 2? cents for Cats. REMARKS.—A great portion of the grain in this county has been housed in good condition. \\ heat is said lo be well tilled and the yield 'air. Oats are also good. The corn looks well, but needs rain badly, none having talleu for some weeks. J\'ew potatoes are retailing from stores at7s cents per budiel. Beans (from gardens) at 20 cents per peck. PHILADELPHIA, July 18, 1-49 Flour—small sales at $4.62$ a 4.75; Rye Flour Js2>l, Corn .Meal }jt2.75a#2.81). Sa'es of Red Wheat at sla I 05 , Yellow Corn 58a59 cents; Oats 35 cents; Rye 56 cte. BALTIMORE, July IS, 18-19. Flour—sales ot Howard Street Flour, fresh ground, nt $4.75. Grain—sales of good to prime reds at 95a 105 cts., and of white, not good enouoh tor family dour, at cts. Corn, 57a08 cents tor white, and GO cts. tor yellow. (Juts 25a30 cts. PiTTSBVRon, July 17, Bacon continues in request and sales are made from smoke house—sJ for shoulders; 9 tor sides, ami 7 to 7.1 for hams. Flour continues on the advance out! we quote sales ot lots from store yesterday at 8 1.25. .-lw3 copies •< -id in six months. —Years of suffering, of physical and mental anguish to many an affectionate wife, and pecuniary difficulties to the husband might have been spared; thousands now poor would have enjoyed compe tence; thousands new broken in health would have en joyed it; hundreds now tu their graves been still aiive, by a timely possession of this work. It is intended especially for the married, or those con templating marriage, as it discloses important seciets which should be known to tbein particularly. Truly, knowledge is power. It is health, happiness, affluence. The revelations contained in its pages have proved a blessing to thousands, as the innumerable letter; received by the author will attest. Here, also, every female—the wife, the mother,the one cither budding into womanhood, or the one in the decline of years in whom nature contemplates an important change—can discover the causes, symptoms,and the most efficient remedies, and most certain mode of cure, in every complaint to which her sex is subject. Its importance to the married maybe gathered from tiie fact that Travelling Agents make from/A ret te five dollars a Jay from its sale Hundreds of active, enterprizing agents are accumulating a little competence from the Ith eral discount allowed, and the great demand for it. Or dtrs are required tobe accompanied with payment. Topics w ill be sent by mail free of postage to the pur chaser. Over twenty thousand copies have been sent by mail within three months with perfect safety & certainty. On the receipt of One Dollar, the " Married Woman's Private Mtdical Companion" will be sent (mailed free) to any part of the United States. All letters and applica tions from those desiring to become Agents must be i -f- MR. EDITOR —In tonkin? OVER THE- IVnn.-yL vanian ot the 14th instant, 1 notice.! i corres pondence from Rnedsvilie dated July ft. si(( "(J," complimenting the editor of the lv nn . sylvtimrrn for his tri-vnekiy paper, which, Uiy writer says is the best paper he sees or knows of! Jle"then commences an attack on tie postmaster tit I.ewistown and the acting master at Reedsville, and winds up by sayo,, ih it he blames some of them for not attending to their business. Unless 1 am much mistaken, this (J. vn once a deputy nnd a postmaster, who was noted for sending papers directed to his office to (>,,. ter's Mills and other places, and particularly was this the case with the Washington U- t tery. published previous to the last presiden tial election. In August last, as he will p f . r , haps remember, after the arrival of the eastern and northern mails, n certain person called tor papers and letters, and (1., after hunting under the counter and in the desk, slated that no thing was there. The same evening, when the intelligent correspondent of the lVnnsy! vanian was not in, that person called again aiid the clerk handed him out four papers and one letter! As no mails had come in since the first call, perhaps (I. can let us know in the next Penosylvanian where these four papers and letter came from. Were I disposed to find fault, I might a?k G. how many years of postmaster's service it would take him to discover the diflerence be tween a bound arid half-bound book—the for mer of which is not mailable, while the latter is—but as it might not be an agreeable remin iscence, 1 will close by advising (J. hereafter to pull the beams cut of his own eyes before he plucks out the motes of his neighbors; and if tiiis is unheeded, lie may hear from me again. B. Reedsville, July 19,1849. HE L'M'REJEMCEI).—Let no foolish per sons be go prejudiced against this now truly celebrated medicine as to despise tins advice ; let it be used immedi ately on pain beine felt: no matter where it maybe, whether in the head or feet, whether it be in the bark or abdomen, whetberarieing from external or internal cause, use the Rrandrcth's Pitts,and rely upon it, that the pain will yo, the body will be restored to health as soon as na ture has received sufficient ASSISTANCE from their effect Tlie quantity of impure humors discharged from ihe body liy the action of tne Brandreth's Pills, is replaced in the course of a few hours with new and pure blood, by the digestion of a moderate meal. By purging the body Willi litis medicine the whole mass of blood becomes en tirely purified and regenerated. That the blood is the life of the body, I presume is un disputed, therefore 1 shall say that It being the .y booksellers throughout the United States. January 20, IS IS—Cm. MARRIED, On the sth inst., by Rev. James S. Woods. RUPERT I MICK, of I'enns Valley, to Miss AME LIA JANE RCSSELL, of this place. v " ''.... 0 • Jtt ' A / Jy ■< . V i - a '' 5 . C• C * (f'\ F "/ *? -L l * 72J Freedom for Germany. fTMIE great national commotions in ldurop'. JL aiming to shake off the shackles whirs have boon imposed upon them by their tyraw ' cal despots, and which have been borne - \ those nations fur centuries, are in the heart vi Germany in full progress. The siding in and near Lcwistown, have theroi' f united themselves to offer their iivi-tanf. 1 their brothers, who beyond the Atlantic arc striving for freedom. As there are but few Germans in I.ew tstoo... it was resolved at their last meeting to apF c ;'' to the generous and freedom-loving hear so our American and Republican brothers, l >ra F"- thein to assemble themselves at the T O H X II A id l oil Saturday E?eain?, the insiauL when several addresses will be delivered- Lewistown, July 21, 1849. Wood Wanted- PROPOSALS will le received by the COMMISSIONERS of Mifflin counts up to tho 9th of August next, to WOOD for the Jail and Commissioners ii„" Persona proposing to furnish wood for conn will please band them in on or before'"- day. By order ot the Board. 11. J. WAI.Ti'KS, ( krf Lewistown, July 21, 1849 td. For thff (}'<•/. ♦ {