Terms of Publications. Two DOLLARS per annum, payably semi-annual in advance. 11 not paid within the yea; 50 will be charged. Irr Papers dellverd by the Part Rider will be charg ed 25 cents elm. Advernsenieota dot. esceeding twelve lines will be charged IA for three inserttisris—and 50 cents for one i n seri ion; Larger does in proportion, All Idvertutmenit will be inserted •nntil ordered out unless the time focwhich they are to be contained it specified, and will to ctorged accordingly. Yet,.ly a4vertisera will be charged 512 per annum ibscriptien to the paper-,with the privilege of keepin4 one advertisement not eiceeding 2 squares stancLng donna thelyear;and the insertion of a s maller one in each paper fpr three succeonve times All letters addreaned to the editor must he post paid otherwise no attention will be paid to them. All notices for infietu.ts. Ste and other notices which have heretofore Mien inserted grata. will be charged 25 dents each. exce. t Nitriaaes and' Deaths. Pctokoldets. C herbs, (:ands. Bills of Ladeng and Banat'll3 of ever-M description, neatly printed' at,. this 06,, o r ths horesilrash TUE Pill LADCLPtiI.i. kit! EllA NA OPPOSITION LINE. TR I[IW B ITEK LY Reading Rail Road, Re'lL 110.111, AND NEW POST COACHES„. - Vta. Reading. Pottsville, Port Carboh, Cooper's; Shamokin.' Sunbnry, , . Northunfbrrland, and • Catia trissa. j]a•TIIBOVGII BY D i-LBai r.,rT[ ♦pi-1E Sub.cribers h tv.ng tnide arrangements to 1 1 411111 this route to cromee.lo,l Mllll the holly Line of Putt, Shottier, , Finney 4- Cu. on' its". arrival P o it a wilie Iron' P 01 1 ../ dl Iptri4. hor the purpose 01 trop-porting passengers time . rioladelplos 10 the ie h„„n a „iiirmigo the SHAUOKIN COAL FIKLOS, have started a' Trt Weekly Line ut Stages, to leave fottavtlle on MONDAYS, Wr.DNeSD-I.Y.S. AND FRIDAYSI, unwediatvly on the arrival of 1.40 p PIII,II 14111 e. at :3 o'clock. and oroceed to coo? where two iines will branch if, one gong to SHVIOXIN. where It will arr Ave al 8 o'clock. and the : pigeeligers after .lecoilig arrtee at ei trees Hotel, in SIINDURVi arid Ltes / ntel,at NORTHU.IIIER• LAND. early next inoriiing, in tune in take Inv F . ick .et Liqats. The other route from Cooper's, will proceed to Brody's ibiet, at CATTAWI.A, where it will arrive' likewise at ri o'clta. Pi, mode to take the Coach to Bermta, and Tow'anda, RETURNING; paseengera will leave Nertlttem• BERLAND at ri o'clota in the morninv, and the D r .. xi i of the Porrvi!.t.elatid Davviu-v2Ratt, Hotta at Suit bury at hall q, proceed to SMA MOE IN for wooer, and arrive the 'wile eversiaff at POTI - -WILLIC. From CA r - rawlava Retorninkr, l ia i eie l i ge i a w ill leave at 9 , -1. .N,. O ttte at Gwipeia', arid reach POTTS VILLE In iiitera.cti the next [nor sling 0i , p0,11.10r. Coach to Philadelphia. RAT'ES OF F. 141. E. From Pliilad'a.!`thrito Northolribet land, $6,00 " dn. ,; do to (7att,wtr..a. 6,011 " .Pottvcille to Spohn , t', (Pr.id Mt.) 50 " do to Cooper's, 75 do ' to Shamokin, 1,511 do 1 to Sunbury, via . . Poti.tyille :4:25 & IYinville R II .. do, I to Northumberland, 2,511 " do to Cattawt.sa, 1,73 J NCO 13 KR A M & Co.,Shamokin. JOSEPH I: i .1 11 EL &Co Pottsville. JOSEPH i'AX & Cam: ecutsa. P h'o R I ETORS. For seats in 'only at siindersion's Hotel, 4111 St., Ifitint Vernnn Muse, 2d Si., ('on gress :Id St.ii United States Hotel and Vlarshall Ilnose, Chesnut S4rtiet.. LT A daily lute will shortly be established on the above route. Pottsville. Juno 29 26—tt EXCILiANGE HOTEL, P 11)TTS1/LL E., • It ilium G. Johnson , f 7 ::.. Li As tdkcn th., eommodio to u. enl - dish -; - -11. F i mein reeLonly necumed by Jo.eph W ea ver, tol a. me .• Nai tonal HMO, — corner of Centry and CJilowtsill etreeta k and ham materially Improved It. arrangement for the accommodation of em.tomers. The'sitnallon la filea'ant and central, being cocillg umei In the Post t,, Tice and Town Hall, and in the bikoness part of the hmough ; and three Dirt) IA 1 [ICS IA Stagea arrive arid el , pari from tik•Exchange to and from Reading, Sortbuniticrl t ind, Da nv i Ile and Cattaalo.;a : IV A rE FAMILIES .who dtoo re ftixold in , / tire slimmer months to 04 Cosii Region will be furnished with parlours and F chameters calculated to please the fancy and render couirii•f able the most 1.1.,11,11 0 ,. giiestii; and TIZ.AiVEI.I.EIZS Will always find incise accommodations ;which are m desired, and the strict attention oelsorvantri.. It were supertxuous to any that hot TABLE and Bea will alwaysibe furnished with the rtioiceat xianda and linitora ; and with a wish and exertion« In gratify tits gueats he antie.patea the patronage of the public. Pottpville, april 13, 1!"439 DawylS Safety Lamps, OF the two cotter's, ton, and moil approved hind aim:, make, view gao•er , to old lamp., and other epaiga done at t6e subscriner's Clock and Watch Maker Shop, in Oentre e? June 1 2:l—tf JOSEI'II G 1 VI'SWORTII FOR 541,14]. A IMO STORY BRICK 110 USE in . . . • Norwegian Street, Bonnie, 0 1' j , ,,im i i,jk, • • ... with ilie adjoining half lot ~1. ground. lately sass . IS s -. incanted by Strange N. Palmer, En. The -- - --- '. muse !is well built. good with-iccumm ida • Jolla for a !amity residence - For terms, whielj will be reasonable. apply so . MLty 18th t 20—if G. W. V A INVII AR. ! or to A• UNISEtt HILL, I 14 hoc Street, New York. t • I 20-3 t ,i Trustees. Penrisylvania ILIII . RtFEC TOR Y. JOJIX SIL Pt 11, Ppump ETOR. Respectfully requests his friends and• Onstoineis will accept his aineere thanks .' for the grelit ,dneiouragermutt he -has received from "them since he opened the above estal:dishrrient. . 1 In making thiS request, J. S takes the t oppurtuni 1.1 to ingirm thefn .he has made extensive arrange ment; for the SuOiner Rumness, and will constant ly he supplied With all the deliedcies and articles which the Phi!a4lphia Market can afford during the Summer Season.; WI S' ES. .4. • Ofd 114der4W,tne, per bottle. '2 00 do. Pale "try, do. 200 ~ do. Brown a. —do. 2 00 do Port, pia. do. • ,2 00 -• do Ltsbon„Wo. do. 100 . Chumpaigne Henry Cloy Wi e, 20i do. . Piapoleon; . 2IN • do. Woodcock, o. ' 2. I do. Vii.loria,, d . 2 I I ' do. #olosetto, _,,„ d. - 20! ' ' Pepper's, Smiiih's, and Se el X X PaleXe on Drought. Apaftments always in readiness kir supper parties, ',..c., and those wbu z. all . miy expect to receive every totention. I ',July g E 27 —tf . . . , • • , • j uiri r.VT. 1 - :1 i k:". . , I . .; 1 ..' 7. ... , \ .." ' ' ~.•• it , S ~. , _ ...: -. 6 0 .A . , , - N.....- - - 1.1. A i.- 411 . 1111 ! n 1 1 - 1 - 7 : ~ _ k . ; 1 --- , • . 1 " . 7.-, ' .7-71 t 1. . ... . AND, POTTSVILLE GENERAL ADVERTISER. . will teach you to pierce the bowels of the Eitrth grid bring oat from t 4 Cavarns a r t ha mountains, Fetid* which will give strength to Oar Hands and subject all Nature to ouruse and pkasure.—ais aonssou VOL XV. Nrriwal of the Liverpool EIGHTEEN HAYs. LATER—PROTEST fIF 10.000 1 , 00 OF BILLS OF THE RANK OF THE U. S. AT PARIS—CONTINUED DE. CLINE OF CO rToN—STATE OF TRADE —THE IikRVEST-,AVAR IN SPAIN EN DEO A Nb ° it El IKEA ENT OF ARAN CAR. 1 4 0 3TO EP ANC& • ; The tenor of the intelligence brought by this ar rivsl, does not vary, in ecmplexion from that which has of fate precedtd it. The most, import - ant item, perhaps, to tae ,peooln of this country, is the dist:rt or ot 110,000,000 of the bills of the Bank of the Uni ted States at Paris; and though. as it appears by the accounts, the house of Rothschild. of Paris, has tern p.,rarilv aided these drafts, the shock to the credit of the Bank in Europe is irreparable. The banking firm of Hettinger and Company are well known throughout Europe fir their opulerce and independ emu... They. are held in the highest estimation for their honor and integrity; and it is riot likbly that they, for the sake of two hundred thousand pounds or more, would refuse their acceptance even by wsy ot accommodation, to an institution .for which they have acted as agents for the lung period of twenty five years, a shout being trope led by reasons of ■n irresistable nature, and being conscious that their re lusil would be virtually a bleak up of the Bank of the United States. • ;Jpon these remises the "Liverpool Mail" con cLitles :=-“We may, therefore, snontins that it ma 1.0 -Ithat the, bank as suspended, and that the end will he a cessation Ili us e110r11101.115 and rIIIIIOWI specula. Irons, and a wind lip, Si lite expiration of three years, nh as futon a dividend as circumstances shah al. Cord." The Rank of England i•alued a entice on the Sth. September, alai 11 Wart ready toitnake Immo on MI6 , oothaving more than FIX mointra to run, payable nr October as 6 per cent intereq, aince which time the .I ) ,,ney market ha' , experienced much relief. PARTS MONET .MARKET AND COMMERCIAL ICirw.. Monday, S pt. It/ —The pruiestini e ui ten millions or' the bylls , of the .Bank el the United Stat-s, Hintingor & Co. KIM continues to exciteaurprise in "this market It is a tact of the greatekt-(mportance, and tor which the Bourse was totally mil:revered.— It is asserti d that the London agents lit the Bank were acquainted with the t,.tention of Mess-s. lint linger, and that the house here did it to prevent mote serious loss, by thus compe ling the Bank to Marie immediate remittances in specie—cotton, 'iom its depreciation in prier, of white) large con signments have kitten seot to several of our ports, no longer bcing-s sufficient guarantee. It nifist also be remarked that the Bank of the United Sines have drawn further to a large amount, which foils will come forward. according to custom, on the tat of October, and Which w:II probably not be accepted by the Pairs correspondents. This ad drional refu-a!, it it takes place, will cause a deep ittipreS-I , IFI ho'h abroad arid at home, and efforts are imilitog in ward off such a drsaster. 'flip coolie quencx. ofittc.e !'ac's has renewed, to a mown ex. ler.t, a crintitierrial rri-is, and the private Banks of Part. louse limited, during the last week, their trans. ar none ; but to day the news of the entry of Dl/11 Carlos into France has given niore confidenve to ,!apttalists. and speculators. It is, in fact, beyond a doubt that the pacification of Sam will bring for• ward immense capitals which have Hitherto been unemployed, and which will give a new impetus to the money market and to trade. ROORSE.—Tbe timely inteivention of' the house of Rothschild .has iod..ced N liovingleer, at last to ac rept the bills of the Uni ed States Bank. At the opening nl the Bourse, business was rather flat, and money difficult to be obtained hot in the course of the der some evensive purchases gave an impetus to the market. The account+ tram various parts 44:rent Britain in relation :c the hareestare tar more lavinable. and in several district. in which prevtoul favourable• weather had encouraged hopes of good crops, sub-e -quent bad weather has ppread gloom and G-ar. The hop crop hai muttered greatly how the weather, and the yields are light. The state of manufacthres and trade doesnor ap pear to have declined since the last accounts: From most of the manufacturing districts, indeed, the ac courts are encouraging, thourfh as will be wen he our extracts, k:nerican cotton had declined a lii. tie. The demand, however, was steady, and under the Circumstances considerable. ‘IANCH6.-TER.—The general feeling in that Cotton will einne dome' to the low point it was some two yearn ago, and winch hen the effect of keeping !etre otirchasers of goods & twt..t out of the market; Ifni.' both linty Lien offered on lower terms than a few days previous; especially heaty domeaties, but which off. ra have prpved ineffectual, aa'no mite pre• tend+ to be so wise as to know hoW soon the full es• lent of the depression lain Ia ke,place. The view of things, combined with the dishonour of the &ails on the Bank of the I4nitid Siate-i, added to the very un cettain state of the harvest, makes the market at (his moment unusually gloomy and ceepresscik PARlA.—Advibes from Paris of the 16th .ult. fur: mish the iinpartrint intelligence of the arrival of Don Carlos in France. with his family. and the termina lion of the civ.l war in Spain. Din Carlos arrived at Atnhoa, in France, on theTtib nit and was, with his family, received by the sob.Prelect and the French troops and conducted toSi. Pe The French papers err Lescours ing the sugjact of what is beat to do whit bun. =I On the I lib six Alai4se And two Nava:rase bat. billions, and all the Carl's* staff', with Genersli Et Ito and Negri, took refire in the French let ritory where they were &omitted. The arms of the Car. lists have been given up to Esparterit by the French 11.0 - trines. ,Espartero appears to have been very much disappointed at not being able to shoot er cap turn Don Carlos. Cabrera still keeps ihe field, and is likely to prove an ugly customer. Queen Chris tine has given a dinner of -90 covers," to commem oration of her good fortune, which cost, the Madrid papers soy, upward'. of 600 reels. The ministry are resolved to dissolve the Chamber should it refuse to consent to the tresej bet vice.n Marrow) and Es. partera.... The Sentinel el ri.yonne has received fore a.cor. respondept at Rillsa intelligence that The ministry. at Madrid ha: fully acceeded to the condi:ions of the trrety between Espartero and Marotta. " The same journal adds, that the Bishop of Lyon, who was re siding at Mont de Martian on parole, has made his esaipe front that place, and has reentered the Span WI territory, when hens 'going to join Cabrera, in Antigen. General flutist' bas put himself at the head of some guard's", •od ha's Laken to the woods. The thread and cotton trades are soffaing from the present stagnation of busioesS. ' Die beet-rent roger manufacturers are in a very cmb d state The printing and book asides are in a. deplorablb condition, and uulesa something V, done to give tbern fresh vigor, sermui losses moat be the result. Jt was at 'first thought advisable to a !riy, as In 1830, for aid to governinc , kt, but theoniiiiMers having ea• boosted their budgets, are by no means disposeit to lend an ear to such demandsa well.kcowing that all the oilier branches of commerce ovould lay claim ur their assistance. TUR.KF.Y AND EGYPT. The aecnunts from the East do not 'promise any speedy setttemest of the difficulties between Turkpy and F..lrypt. Mehemet Ali, persists in his demands 'Mich the Turkish authoritia have not seeded to. 's said if the Egyptian advances into Asia Minor, will attackConstaritinople, which would be by the &lAA and French fleets. The shed these fleets withdrawn, but Admiral (Mused. The five great powers appear to \y warring against each other—Russia and :log' n one aide, and England. France and the other. It wee reported that the Ras. preparing to enter the Bosphorus. The I. It' Rags . oPPn• • ' • Porte .w ! Rouslin c be secret Prussia . i Austria 0 starts wer, Weekly by Renjansin Hannan, Pottsville, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania. SATURDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 19. 1839. Vice : fey of Egypt was auralaiag aigoraus preiraratiatra for war. Afire. which entirely destroyed one of the suburbs of C°o""ollonPle . .. occurred on the loth of August. Three thousand and sever; houses. Giriii*g the whole quarter of St. Demetrius, was consumed. The n.mt bet of lives loot IS stated at thirty. It co. 'gloated in the carelessness ofa woman cooking B•h ; and would have been vastly more destructive but fig the aid of the Prince de Joinville and the French s.ilors. MISCkLLANEOUS. M ARE AGM or Qintex VICTORIA.—The Ausburg Gazette contains the following passage respecting the marriage of the. Queen of England :—" The speech of Queen Victoria on proroguing the parlia ment. makes no mention of her marriage. As wine journals have hence inf.tred 'that the. mairemoni. ol alliance with the Coburg family was slit' doubt. hal, we can affirm on. good authority, that the meet. ing of several members of the house of Base Coburg at London is for the, purpose of settling the neeessa ry prelitninaries which must precedethe marriage— that is to say, every thing relative to the preroga tives and the revenue of the intended husband. As for the question of the marriage itself, and the mu. turd afr•ction of the parties—all this has been some -time decided. The Duchess of Kent and the King of the Belgians have been the most zealous promoters of the alliance." . _France has acknlieledged the independence of Texas—Englund refu-ed to do PO. Gen. Hamilton, of South CtrolMa. who was a passenger.in the steamer Liverpool did nut succeed in negotiating a loan in Europe for Texas. The ship Erie. Captain Funk, that sailed from Havre fur New York en the 28th Aegust, put into Falmouth, England, on the 9th September to Ms tree.. Thrship Siddons, that sailed hence for Liverpool two--ya eater the steamer Liverpool, arrived pat two data after her. Account■ from the Cape of Good Elope speak of great do.conterit in the tolonii. and official returns show a great fa:ling off in both 'the ewports and impel ts. Nearly five hundred of the emigraave were treacherously Maa6llC/ ed by the natives in June last. The London ■nd Liverpool papers continue to teem with correspondence and communications re 'alive to the Lady Flora Hastinea affair. There will be some netting annul it yet. A terrible fire occurred at Koninzitteiriz, Prussia, 'cm the 20th Atigio=t, which destroyed merchandise to the value of $OllO.OOO, and a great nts..ihtr of buildings. The insurances smountei to about $200.- 000. Tue lady of General Sir John Fraser expired at her/residence in Kensington, on the 11th ult. John monk, American sernan/i:s been commit tedN to ewgnie. charged with the alio! murder of Peter Sampson, the second male of the brig ~ .Milos, of Dur;7., on the hirti seat, within theiticiadiction ..f the dmiralty or England. On the 10th ult, a man named Romain was con. victed by the Court of Ass*.es fur the Indreet Loire, of the murder el' a family named Rodent. at Rai'. near Tours, consisting of the husband and wife and their daughter, in January fast. A young girl hay :jam been condemned to d•,fli by the court of Assizes ofthe Haunt Rhin, ford murder of her father and two. brat - hers. The fame of the mzrderers appears tin have been of the class of respectable cultivators', and the father was deputy mayor of the village in which they resided. The government investigation into the conduct of the Birminghagioniagistrates, on the occasion of the late nuts ID that town. commenced on the 19th ult. • The London police establishments is about to be reduced to the extent, it is said, of ohe-thitd of the existing roll of officers. The powder India 'of Piton & Wilke, at Dai ford, on the 9th ult., blew up, killing five workmen. • Miss 'Margaret Moyers, daughter of Moyers. to. baker m Hemming's Row., aged '23 years commit. led sui.ide In Landon on the 11th ult., by thrn•ving herself from the vinery at•the Summit of the Monu ment. Cause, dtaappointer.l Miss Ellen Tree made her find appearances pirce her return from America, at the Haymarket Thea. tre.'on the evening M the 3rd ult., and had a mn.t enibuidaaile reception. She played Vida in the "Twelfth Night," an Pauline in the "llan.n m."— At the concloaimi of ilie ...Twelfth Night," las Tree was called for, and literally pelted with bm (pieta, enme of which were more remarkable for their arse than beauty. They were atterwatda eel weird by a gentleman in livery, and carried ' , AT in two huge htiadlex. The piece was then announced per repetition the hallowing Sat,:rday. • Pagenini was at the bats of Vernet, in the &Air. bonnet.; and having lost all his meth, the celeinat cd maestro vats with the greatest difficulty.. At ia. ble, his meat is minced for him, either by one of hie neighbor. or his servant. Ili, crava are painteo entirely, either in playing at billtards or walking with a friend. He has *holly lost his voice, ant espreasee himself wholly by Ilia eyes add gesticula tion. Recipe fur Making Latour Riming Soap, which is an excellent article for Washing. The recipe has been sold for $5, and the soap at 7 eta. per lb.; it can be nianurictured for. 2 cis. per lb. Take : - lbs. washing suds ;'2 lbs. yellow bar soap. 10 qmirts wa ll ter ; cut the soap i thin.slices, and boil all together two hours, then at a tt ain euthrough a cloth, let it.cool, and it is fit for u . Directions fw using hie Soap. —Pun the cluthek in soak this night before you wash, and to every pail of water in which you boil them, add one lb of soap. They will 'weed no rubbing ; merely rinse them out, and they will be perfect/7 clean and white. . ALL YOUNG MEN SHOULD IkE WHIGS! 'Reason, common sense!, and their own good judg ment tell them so. There is nothing in the cold, sordid sentiment of T .,och-focculm, that ought to en gage the sympathy of young hearts.. There is noth ing noble or liberal about it. It is tyranny to a mob cap—it is monarchy boiled down, until every thing is evaporated but the satin. Noble-hearted, whole soulel Young Men cannot embrace Loco-Focoisin. Let them rally, then. Let all Yong ten show them selves worthy to be the future guardians—as they soosemest ihe prosperity and happiness of the country. Let then take sides early, and tattle manfully in the good old cause of Hunker Hill and Saratoga. The Wats NAXI is a tower of strength. The battering ram of Loco-Focoism can make- no Atipreairies span it. Peleliu:mess and neglect alone . will ever yield it up to the spoilers. In the me, Constancy and courage. of the Young Men of this nit.. lion, is now.her only hope. If the young men fail in their duty—if they faker—if they are dazzled by the allnrementa of pouter, or swayed hy the tempt. ings of Corruption-4 is over with us—and for the matter of true liberty, In any thing but a mere name, the subjects of, the grand sultan might just as well lay claim to its possession. Let all Young Men be true—be :Whip—wand tiey will save the Re- public, and entitle themselves to the gratitude of, posterity. Pennsylvania College. The Catalogue of this Institution for 1839 is .be fore us, from which we learn that the whole num ls, her of gradu since se , the year 1834 amounts 21, of whtc e are now auccessful mmisteri of the gos peL The number of Students connected with the Col lege during the current year is 141, who are classed as Pilionsi Senior,, • 14 Juniors, 8 I:3.iphomores, • 16 Freshmen, 21 Irreg.ll.os, 6 . Preparatory Department, For the information of oar readers we subjoin the follow frig notices, %traLtri,ATIONII FOR ♦DMIISION INTO TER COL. 1 tOI ATI DLP•ILTMEST. Students wishing to enter the Collegiate Depart ment, must sustain an examination in Caisar, the Greek Reader Parts I and 11, Adam's Latin Gram mar, Fiske's Greek Grammar, English Grammar, Ancient and Modern Geography, and (CoLanes Emerson's, or some equivalent) Arithmetic. A candidate for an advanced standing, whether from another College or not, is examined in the ve nous braiiches, to which the class he proposes enter ing, has attended. Stu lents coming from other Institutions' must bring certificates of regular and honorable dis missal. No SUtdent is in itriculated, until be is fifteen years of age, and hag been sit weeks iu Lie lustitiaucni .; un til this be is merely a probationer, and will nut bad mitted unless his moral conduct pod habits of study are satisfactory. COUIISE 07 STUDS The whole Course of Instruction occupies four years—each year being divided into two sessions. - Esch of the four Classes attends two recitations or lectures a day, except .13u Saturday, when they usu ally have but one. The following is a general view of the subjects to which they particularly attend: =1 I. Sallust, Cicero's Orations, Xenophon's Anaha" sis, Leverett's Latin Exercise, /take% Greek Exer ciAes, 14 atta on the Mind, COIMIXI . 6 Algebra com menced, Composition- and Declamation, German 'tnd French. 11. Livy, Graeca NNjora Val. I, Trytler's History, Latin anJ Greek Exercises. Colburil'ir Algebra com pleted, Composition and Declamation continued, Ger man and French. I =3 I. Gould's Horace, Graeca Majors Continued, Lat in and Greek Exercises and Prosody, Tvtler's His tory continued, Bluir's Rhetoric, Plsyfair's Geome try, Gurnmere's Surveying, Young's Algebra com menced, German and French. H. Cicero de Officis, Rhetoric and History con tinued, Young's "Algebra completed, Lacioix's Plane and Spherical Trigonometry, Exegetical Study 9f the Greek Tegument, German and French. I=! I. Cicero de Oratore, Graeca Majora Vol. I, com pleted. Differenual and Integral Calculus, Lectures on Chemistry with Expenments, Mineralogy, Natu ral Theology, Ma.han's Engineering, German avid French. IL Cicero'cle Orutore completed, Greece Majors Vol 11, Mensuration, Mechanics, Geology, Botany, Hebrew, Evidences of Christianity, Field Exercises With the Instruments, and Lectures on Architecture, German and French. 1=1:11E3 I. Intellectual P; ilosophy, Logic, Morel and-Pp litic-il Philosophy, Political Economy, 'Plows, Greece Majors Vol. 11, completed, Optics, (Her schel's and Gurnmere's) Astronomy, Keith on the globes, Anatomy, Physiology. ~ If Revision on the whole Co+, Gentian, French, HebreW, Navigation, Botany, Mineralogy, Geology, Anatomy and Physiology, being optional Studies, are attended to by the members of any Class baying the necessary knowledge afid leisure. The Lectures on Anatomy (delivered to the Seni or Class.) are illustrated by an appropriate collectioft of Anatomical preparations. Specimens - of English composikion are - freq . :end' , exliihited by the various Classes. 'Exercises in dec lamation re Wended to in the same manner, and are also performed in the College Chapel before the Faculty and Students. The Senior Class are required to declaim their own composition in the College Chapel. The two Literary Socieues also exert a favor 'gala influence in the improvement of young men in these important studies. The Preparatory Depart meal, under the super visions of the Faculty, is designed not only to quali fy for entrance into the regular College Classes, but also to glee a thorough instruction in the higher branches of an English education. It is not merely a Latin Grammar School. but it is intended to fur nish a solid business education. The youth who enter it for the purpose of pursuing clasecal studies, are not permitted whilst doing so to neglect the eve ry day wants of business, or to forget their mother tongue. The entire course in this department eon- templates' a period of three 'ears, but the student is taken through it m'a longer or shorter period accor ding to his abilities, application and attainments. The following is the list of studies. English G-ammer, Reading, Orthography, Wri ting, History of the United States and Great Britain, Geography (Ancient and Modern,) Arithmetic, Book-keeping, Latin Grammer, Latin Reader, Cesar, Cor. Nepos, Virgil's Bucolic. and Yaeneid, Leverett's I .atin Tutor, Greek Grammar, Jacob's Greek Reader, Xenophon's Cyropaedia, and Flake's Greek, Excl.- crises. Throughout the whole course all the Classes are required to devote Saturday to the studl of Eng lish Grammar ; particular intention is also paid to Orthoepy and the use of Grammatical language iii common conversation, also Declamation and Campo. sigma. Pupils under 15 years of age are placed under the immediate supervision of one of the teachers during the hours both of Wady and recreation. 'The College Library. to which the Students hate access, is well selected, and regularly increased by annual appropriations of funds for that )purpose. Libraries have also been formed by the Literary Societies. There is a respectable and increasing CObind of ilfinertda, also s Lyeenns containing collections id Natalia! History. A Reading- Rou m, ,containthg some, of the most ialuable Journals and Magazines of the day; is open to suhsmibers during home of recreation. Is; addition to the familiar lectures now delivered weekly, during the season, on Botany, Mineralogy, Geology and Pliyaiolo6, lectures will be delivered by the Professors, on subjects of general interest to Science and Literature. =10133203:13X13 Prayers are attended in the Chapel every morning and evening, one of the Faculty officiating and all tEe Students being required to be present. The Stu dents. are also required to attend public worphip on the Sabbath in a church of which the institution has the use for the occasion, unless .They bring written requests from their parents or guardians. specifying the particular congregation with which they wish them to worship. • They are also required to attend a Biblical recita tion conducted by the Preiddent and Principal of the Preparatory Department. SITVITION, COLVODIt ZDIFICL, &C.. Gettysburg is wi thin t eight of the South Mountain, a branch Oldie Blue Ridge, in one of the healthiest districts of Pennsylvania. It is one of the best and most traveled routes between Philade/phis and Pitt+. urg, being Il4.mdes distant from the firmer, and 180 from! the latter k is About 52 tulles from Baltimoie, 32 from Frederick, 32 from Hagerstown, and 35 ifrom Harrisburg, with all which places the cominunication by Stages is frequent end easy, so that it offers peculiar facilities to persons desirous of Coming either from the East or the West, the South, or the interim of the State. The Collage Edifice is a short,Mistance (corn the village. 31 is i a chaste specimen of the' Grecian Do ric order of architecture, c oesistingof a central buld ing and two wings, with end projections, front and rear. Whole length ISO feet. lt,is well- aired by a spacious hall and pamagea ou every floor, the vrhole length of the budding. evizutisiox The discipline of the Institution is, as nearly as possible, parental. The members of both depart ments, except in special cases, are required to room in the College edifice. The President, under whose iesusediate supervision the building is placed, lives in It 'with his family, together with the Tutors end Pro lessors, exerbises a constant guardianship over the whole establishment : so that parents groin a distance have all the security they may desire for the proper government of their children. EXPISS,III Board in the College commons amounts to $ 1 75 per weak. 'Those preparing for the Theological Seminary can obtain board, in the Seminary edifice at $1 50 per week. In town It varies from the pri ces just mentioned to $2 50 per week. WaShing may be had at $1 00 per month. Rent-room $8 00 a year. Tuition is $lB 00' for the Winter, and $l2 00 fur the 'Summer session. In accordance with this, the expenses of the year will vary. from 100 to 130 dol lars per annum. Of course a great deal wilLdepend upon habits of economy. Some Students are bo .rd ing themselves in dubs at less than SI 00 per week. According to a resolution of the State Legislature the Institution is bound to • furnish tuition to fifteen young men, preparing themselves as teachers of com mon stohrwls, if so many apply. They therefore in vite young men of this character to wail themselves of the kberality of the State. =IC There are two vacations in the year, commencing on the third Thursday of April and September, and each of six weeks continuance for the Collcge,.and fuur fur the ,Preparatory Department. It is highly Important that Students be punctual ill entering up on their studies at the appointed time. ‹ The annual commencement takes place at the close of the summer 'session. • FATAL INSTANt-E OF THE DAN ' EH or CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDEN T E. Chance . , and that spirit of inquiry - win aul Pry excuses in himself, by caling it the characteristic of the age, once led us to visit the lunatic may kun at Charenban. Amid the many sad and afflicting in stances of delhied and degraded humanity we met with, one man struck us moat particularly. He was about five and thirty years of age, tall and well built, with a lofty forehead, and a deep-set penetrating eye. The whole character 01 his head was highly intel lectual. but the expression of his features was melan choly and depressing beyond any thing Words can givg any idea of. ' The face was deadly pale, and marked by small blue seins; and the dragged mouth and downcast look bespoke utter despair. He nev er noticed the persons about him, but gated fixedly at vacancy, and muttered constantly in a broken and supplicating voice, as if entreating - furgivuess of some gr. at and heinous crime. Will he reenact - I" said we, as we turned to leave the spot- • Never," said the keeper ; u his is a madness nev er curable" On our rri to Paris. AL E. , the ce)e- - brated physician, who h.id accompanied us'to Char anion, gave us the_ following grief account of this man's case. Monsieur Eugene had so brilliantly dis tinguished himself in his career at the French her, that at the early age of twenty eight he, was named ProcureOr de Roi. an office in many rOpeeta simi lar to that of out Attrituey General. To a great knowledge of his profession, rarely attainable at so early a period of life, he united the gift of a most con vincing eloquent's ; and stranger still, a thorough ac quaintance with human nature in all its shapes, and phases wbich seemed absolntely incompatible with his habits of close study and seclusion. There was nowt nor • memoir with the details of which he was unacquainted.; no rank or walk in life whose feel ings and prejudices he could not dip intp, and id ea . tify hilliest( with. The vary dialect of the lowest classes he made his study. and frees the patriots of Normandy bribe outlandish jargon of the Gascogne, be was familiar with all. Talents like these were not long in east:dishing the fame of their possessor, and before tie had been fuur years at the bar it was difficult to say whether he was more feared as a. rival by his colleagues, or dreaded as an accuser by-the criminal. This to a French advocate was the pinna cle of pnifeacional fame. As hit practice ester filed,. his labor at home be came Much greater ; 'fiegoently be did not biavivhis study until daybreak, and always appeared 'each morning at the opening urt. The effect op -0o hie health was Wald, look, and his formerly erect sad ter, becoming 07med and bent; the life of ex neither time oneot-i-' and his existence . , An who understand tha and death is France, are enure nor tete than a dr de km ploys the.priocipal eon is estimated by but the acetteaL _ Them is no Preparation' deep, no plot too subtle, canons like this, be, sets the character of the.:, his prejudiem, his feat; 00, n tharotredi familiar and feat** af the man. In timbals Lae this our sed ; ind:se complete a passion gained over him, quittal ofar. prevenn, he • his righttbl tribute of adMi effect on his spirits became ed, and for several days: h The beam candidate for fered from defeat as he di , height had this iatiituatio, life seemed actually t 9 ha. trial fur a capital !Arenas; death to the advocate or deux,' said an led barrister and the salad* became a pi NO. 42. eletlf Tins Mania was-at its h went dire( 6 ted him to p the direction of a trial, vitt chine the greatest integers was dila :—A gentleman corupanied by a single Beni real& nee on the banks of mild urbanity of hismanne dresa.had soon won for him will of the initial:it:nits, who him, and in an equal de. •' servant, whose Bretagne stu ill calculated to make frien village where they sojourn • tosttract their share of a • must rigidly canvassed, -4 lsa judgement. Such was the state of m• the illage sass thrown iut port that the stranger 'ha night, and that the servant • whither. On opening the ;1 a strange sight presented i erect with pacluingtases an , teved as if for a journey—t. t,ooks of the deceased ware ery thing betokened the p In the bedroom the afiertac • the beilelothei lay in a hes.' with blood, and a. broken ra • portion of a dressing gown were several foot tracks in and these were traced thre 4 I which led out upon a gard eil in tie grass—the servant • 1 1 neither could the trace of Stich were, in a feW words which indicated the eomthis. and in the state of public parties, were deemed 811E61 the servant, who, it was .d . , leagues up on the road V I morning. • The commissaire of poli pureuit, and before that nig , At first, his usual stupid assumed—but on hearing t ter wts now proved, he bu . 'iloke more. The most diligent search cover the body, but witho nowhere to be found. A ceased was taken up near t. I belief was, that the corpe river and carrird down by here-very. rapid. The inaiy were never kindly the greatw.t height, that he edge what had.beendone • now do doubt remained u CM His trial at Ittigth Came arrived 'special' in Lyons t pnnripal of the English cri non cannot 1 e held for rn found, exists not in Fran reqiure a chain of circums strongest and most continci To iliscover fiats where' where it did not, were easy and the poor prisoner's r weakest order, and Whoie it - ited, offered an easy victim of the lawyer ; he fell deep snare laid for him ; he was upon the \ roml to Bordeaux was there; that the watch sion "wettYPhis master's he . they wire in his keeping hesitation of his manner, e 6011 of trouble and confusi him ; and even when a fit would shOOT. across his clog gated by his torturer and The result may be easily gn ed to death ;.end.the follow' cute received at his levee ? . authorities apOti his success was led to the guillotine thousadil people. Two years after hit trial kook plate oar advocate was passing through Ami on hle way to Peronne. There was considerable b and confusion in the hotel, from an incident whi h had just occurred, an 2 which shocked all the itim te a. A gentleman wh o . arrived the evening before, eying attempted Weep mit suicide by cutting h is throat, was - found two miles from the town upon e high road, where it appeared fie bad fallen f loss of blood, 4 , 44 walked thus far after his intended crime. • His name is Leinoine,r said some one in the. crowd as they carried him bleeding, and nearly Una less in, the house. ' - : ' • Lemoine ! ' said 9-........-:, mainly C •we name 40a- mau murdered at Lyons by Jean Labarte.' •f" 1 - 0,17,04 • And what is most at in; said another, not hearing the amend' 'oni •of Mansbarr 15.--•!----. 4he is now puf y sensible and mo st penitent for his attempt, w 'cil'he ascribes to a pas. ing inanity that he has ban liable to from a, boy; the impulse is fire to-destroy and tan to epticiiaT himselL . . • .. .• That is indeed *jugular,' said Monsietne--:—.. • but there is no combating arnonomania.* So the poor man feels, for be has ilready essayed the seine several times its the laiehe'.nearly goo . cecded when living on the Garonne.' • The Garonnei Lemidne ; screamed, rather spoke the advocate ; • when; whiere ; the sterna oT the til lage • kit /14 Mama. on the, pm mouth and carried him too Much. with stupid alerted tip and he passed d"P'ilbn 411 MINN' !Ito. pociety . . and same: 4acarest sari kat drug; saws of s Ins' 1 for lid ware that it is nothisqt iq which the Prosstesr E!iREE too!emere,ne artifice too 1 the educate; swarm '. , -Self patiently to learn I / tate 1 , , habits, 14. frelinp; hen the bias coma wi every leading 'trait ad - 's Life was par - • I had the demoniacal I . t whenever, by the um ': . to be defieudedin . *, , and applause, die - . ~ e nt ; his head droop . w . d scarcely speak. : - ate honors never sufo , ; and it last to inch • reached, that his. own in the le upon Mai nd thaissue threatened e accused. • Lavuel de I rthermening ofis case. [ overb concerning- Mon-. ight when the. gement- - to Bordeaux "to take " , at that period, was ax ial rprance. The case yelling for pleasu ;rit-ef nt, had taken up haw, . 13 Garonne. Here the and !impasses/ling, ad the attention and good were much taken with' piejudieed against the' idity and rudeness were s fur him , to the tittle. two new arrivali were • M ention, and they were always with the same. tem when one morning.; commotion by the ne... been murdered in the as gone, no one knew oor of the' little cottage; c •lf— the Boor was cov= cheats, corded and e little plate and a few relukly packed, and eV peratlion for departure. vidiAtill more strange; upon the Poor, covered r a twisted and torn lay bestde them—there to blood upon the poor; a 'Small dressing room (where they disappear as noWhere to be found, e body be discovered. he . chief' circumstance* ion of the dretulltd crtlies velMg towards the 'two itly strong to implies's covered, had been ammo Bordeatts early *at set out immediately in t the man wee arrested. d sullen manner was t the death of his mu- . at uito tears. and never. was now made to disc:. success. It was-long t, belonging to the de.- e river, and the general been thrown into the Sc current which was anon of all puttee, who I to the torrent, rose to Iwould tiever aiknowil l ith the body, although their minds as to his Monsieur ointhict it. The great insl law, that a corivic rder until the body be but in lieu of it, they ntial evidence of the. g nature. . existed, to fash lo6 iE the practised advocate; er n was ev idently of the teltigence'wes most lint-. every subtle questiciri r and deeper into tlit de tiA, say - that though he knew not why he ud keys in his posses cknowledged, but why w could not tell ;'every ety momentary EL were turned against t trl gleam of intelligence ed brain, it was =tick vetted to his• injurtil • ; be was condemn g .morning as the advO. e congratulationi'of ths . and ability, the pkiscrnet 4 the execrations of Ittn • u be fen eiti streaming . from hi. . up .4 0 once Wad • skhocklbad been itnuo Labe*, as pierible gaze be left him after--• in Charsatoa, 1!:==l