II .. 1 6 IL • •il iS or Pie bpication. , r ~, 1i ) i t.Z.15 per annum. ilayable senn-annhaly in rt.., ic, Ii ait i i a id within die year, S 2 50 win b e , ri er2rdj • 07•••1.41)erzaetiveri it byt he 1 3 ost Rider w ill becha r ta 2.., celttreXtra. ~ ' • , IDV Elr E rISEMNTS D'V THE YEAR. -,'" ote c.:114 an, $24,00 I• Two Squares, $lO,OO I' tree -fourths , 10. 1300 I One 'zqua re. . 6,00 Half, i do. 12,00 1 Ousitiesscarde,slines 300, , 1... - itse•nentr not exceedin a- square 'of twelve tapes wta be en irged $1 for thr e insertions—and so - at .ts i ., , , r.f,te i•tertion. Fire li es or under, 25 cents NI each iasertiOn• tit 1 Ivertise=cents ,will briccerletiuntroegetedoot. .1 Mess rhe tithe for which they are to be continuedis ..M.coied, , and will be charged accordingly. r • The cb_rge to Merchants will E r be $lO per annum r iey Will it live the ,irivategeof keing I advertisemeor, ti exceeding one square. siandin during the year, and le insertion of a I:mailer one till each paper. Those who occupy a larger s,iace will be t charged ettra. .4I I ..-olces for meetings.and proceedings of meetings - it considered of general oat rest,- and many other no tices whiCh have been inserted heretofore gratuitously, with the exception of Marriage and Deaths. will be - enarged its advertisements, NOtices of Deaths, in whiC„h mc tattoos are extendmi to he friends and rela tives R I rri,• deceased to att . end - t :funeral, will bechar. sod as advertisements. - all letters addressed to the edi or n ustjbe'post paid. k herwisi no attention will be paid re them. El Litii,pt Ladlng and ;Iftadhillii 4f eVrry leArription, wally printed ai this 71 . ..'isrdt the itcrt.§traM r!rites. Isac Thompson Co.'s "01)1',081TION DA Ll' LINE of lqtr Four Horse Tioy s Ltillt Coachrs from Pulli.4 Ll' HIA .To P0 . 17 . 61 . 1LLE. 'eta Readsog Railroad, lenves 'Liladelphin, Built 'at o'cloc It A. M.. arrives at p ti.cille t o 4 o ' c l oc k, P. M. :.Itca yrs Pottsville, doily, l GA o'clock, A. M.. 'arrives at Philadelphia at GA ii'e :ck P. M. Passengers by this,litie will :nice at Pottsville In time to-take Stage fur Si . fainokin, Sunbury. ),11111!huniber land, D n v Ile arid (baitawissa, and can Helirad.in met ling with sober and careful drivers, %AN: Trtiv Cirielles. and gentle iorses, and accom- Ini.)ileitilig'Atents Raeing not pet - mated. The Proprietors arc thankful fur past favor's, and merit a diniiinuanee of the same by their assiduous. at lention;tor the ttecummodatio ) and safety of the tritvelling 'This Line o f Sailor% has prn.it)vely no eoLneelion with oilier line oh said road 'For tont, aii e le to •I ESI' DIXON, :at the City Barri, TI! RI!) Street, t Phitude/phia, and Ji'IIiNI•DUNGAN'S, at the Petosyfeanta .Faerner. TlFOrtil St reet, near rallovi,',ll. Reading at liEFf RP.; lintel. PoUst, lie at 1 NIORTINI Errs Pottsrtllq little!. and 131 i tfAlli'S Masud Caritas, House, which are thi onlyoffietL. Fare, front Philadelphia to Pet/.+l:le, in No. I .Car, No. :2 ICar, IS tat' PSON till iiAF:I. Clol2l'lll Proprielor9. F F. RF.NSA N Y CO; K. 8.-:-Person , dc.iring in Ji tt rac , l in ttlig lone F 1.4 , 11 re for Thompson Mr Co's Oppositron I and. rr that the Jr receipts [were sn pr integt. • Port Clinton Illottitdry Poi{ S A 14E. — , he so!ti ti the Fol. ndry plasanti PorrCltolon.S. eounty, on rer.v Is It tilts. This Foundr% us at khe'commeneeno iit o! the Little SCII'IN !kit! and Susilueha nun Rail Rii.id4 now ma I: itu and will in a 'short time he one °I the best , ituatiiiiis in the,eonntry to (1.0, lar2r hi4siK'ess For term &c. apply to . P.-Ni: E & I rqn Foun4rs, Philadelphia. Iif.A.AC I Port Clinton P-6:3 Plain & Figured NEW fiuilolv of hone beautiful And fasnion iale goods., just received and terisalt. by T J REATTY Davy's Safety -.amps, OthC hem cnr.struetion,andosi approved kind ` 1 . 1 " also makes new pus« s to illd !amps, and other epaivo done at the subsertbet cl,;e:k and Watch Maker Shop, in Centre street, • June 1 22—if JOSEPH t ATSWORTH• Chee%e IQ A PS:GO. 1",11t. Apple ac. l tits e, fur sale b)• MIZE A nust A Luca nac's lin4 I S-12. G Enirh-h and 'Clenic Almanac,. f..r ` 1 " 11 1z 4 12. ..I..st received and f ~.ale I the (:rem. ~~n_l•• LL bc Nc,vi-mbet 6 [ Sarsaparilla 47qmpound n ROW N'S Celebrated Stirsitpar ilia Compound. 4 11 ' a fresh supply just rre.tived by C. Q. & AI HEN PERSOR September 10 ---117-- Pascal iron Works Ware- _ house. No 77 South Third Street. S PHI LADELP ' .71orris, Tastier ROY Pounders,'and Man, 11 Grates. Furnace', litlcllen Plr FVf pt't la Ovema,&. - . 1% . Tubes. for St-am, (;as. llot 11)as - , - "s -of the hest Co Ist Patterns for the Foundry - re' delivered at the Wa.rebout.e, Philadelphia. September :26.1 S3S. French and Gei It=l *VHF. .nh , enhcr teept-etfulii aittinunets in the -111 puhiie that he is prepared t t n g i ve lessensin the French and GtomittJanguagrti.s. trt classes or to private For tcrtn. ap•l at Mr. Sioibert',. Store, l'entte Strt.ct. t. F. HICIIARDS July ID • Putt SA1.11: vim F,7. subscrther is 4iitt,t;iard to sell at rice.. a sale jar roet, all the ,aersortahp:roperty belon:- ing to the North American float Company, eon si,ting -of 43 large Rail Road Call. Forted to the Hoek of 'the Mount Carbon Ral a ßialid, 16 Rail Road Cars,auited for the Mill Creek R iltload with a large somber of Draft Cars all in gold . order. two Truck aaggon., • together with a variety of firtisrs ne -oessary for mining operations. teyllinder and other Sereenv, Carts, WAgzan*, frae4smith Tools, Picks. Shovels, Chains... V.. car. mgekher with one fi ft een Inane power Engine complete . one Theodolite and lesal , in good order. App!),- to JAMSMLIMAN.Jr,' El 35—te. Auzlist f''' • Alibitney it Haiti ßhnkeis J 9.-5 U-4 and 10-1 Wt/itneNiand Rath Blanketp For sale he & HENDERSON. 4 Noticei %WHEREAS Jahn T. buzzard and John T Strauch. Merchants. hulls tradingunder the firm of Hazzard and Straueli, did on the ninth !day of February. A. D S-11 . Il,execureto the undersigned a general. Avigruuent of thei' effects, held in' co. partnership and individual. wl , :ch after providing for the payment of one' mall 'ireferenee, provides fur the payment of all their debts rquallr bud Tatra bly without atiortation. leiiatief is therefore hereby given to all persons having "mends against the raid ft-m, or either the, said J Sa tin T. Hazzard or i t John rauch, to present-them to the undersigned and all y.er.ori; indebted to th raid hrtn, or either , hi g dastard John f sztard and hn Strauch,arere ,l,iired In mike payment srithlt delay. F. W. fl ' GMF.: - . 4 %. ' - C.[WYNKOOP. Assigtifts. tbe As.irornest sod o idarentest of affairs may be seem at aoir tiwas,at disloffiee of W. lIMFIES. lona% ilie.ll.c.c - am it.;4l. , 33-- Orpheus in Kentucky, or, The Forced Chateauluiand has a ple•asuttt - story, which we woehd tint fur worlds lain ve to be pure invention, howeser in our cooler tn , nwiiis we may su-per I it, about the ve•y gehttemailly ell'a• tor of a raffle shake, w rih u hum he brushed up a its at. quaintance b. neath the t ~ 1 In ,•11.re que nee of his great rm. rs of ;otegue, his sting ing sarcasm and backbiting propeitsit:eA Chateau hrtand and his frtents yeti n.uch dreaded too close iutaniacy vsith this very sbowv of the woods; and as hp, was manifest sten. of displeasure at tie s••ropt in.rusion of au Follfola an 11.Wly 111 , 011, his privacy, it was the must I,rtuna.v cut umstai.ce in the world. quoth Cl.at• ÜbTlatl, that one of the gehtlernen it. his compa ny hi thought him of pa.llteg • cute mit of his pock et, anti try the effects n tune. Lo and b e hold ou ! this most cultivated of rattle snakes forth with mandested a very adnurable dilettante taste for music—became chntaied into quietude by the sweet strains poured forth - from the Frei chman's Auto tuagtco, aid repaid the gentleman's double tot along by abstaining front ail tonging of his own. and suffering the party to proceed without mo lestation. We propose to bang up, as a pendant for this fanciful sketch of Chateaubriand's, a real fact, which occurred some time since in the back woods of America. $ 4 75 4 ?5 Liao to Elbow; a Kentuckian of the genuine breed, possised a talent which made him very rpular in a thinly inhabited country. He was on accomplished player on the fiddle; and at the dancer with-which the settlers cheered The Io g winter nights, each giving a rude but truly jocund enter_ taintitent in sue, ession. Ephraim was sure to be an int lied _u.•-t. lie wr> a good know, and a capital timid at spinning a tough yarn," a quality for which most Kentuckians are conspicuous: and when to tins ty as added the rare talent of playing driicing tunes viry respectably on the will be readily inferred th it he was lodged no inlet. iie I k:Mfr ('aunty lIENDERSON. 35- B. BANS N. 45- , acquisition to.,l(leSC rustic parties rpowone i-tecasion it happened that Ephraim ktal 1 for rather\ a longer period than usual at one of these dorms, partly &tuned by the potency and otht r excellent qualities of the Ly m e, which wee Served by the proprietor of the log house, partly Ly e little thitatton, •ergtng upon matrimony, in which he happened to be then engaged. As he was wen ding his, way homee aid, the first grey light of mor ning was beginning to peep over the eastern hills. Ephraim had Just - arrived at an not Clearing near the edge of the woods. upon which stood the with eripg frame of a l.l.pitated log hut- Here be sat down for eu instant to rest his weaned Imes, for he had daiiceti and played all night. and tritati on. the heautitulitaee, form and mind which centred in the fume Mrs. Elbow. E. COI Pfl Ilall.ll lIA Vor s, .ufactogyr , .. of Coa Rances, Bath Roil •Ided Wrought Iron eLam ps uction. . Iceiven.and ca2 , tine• 1111 i & Waltiut St. Suddenly - a b (laic how hng came from all sides on his ears, and imagine his horror when be found himself Isesst, in every direction by au immense pa( k wotces ! The, had scented him from afar, and on they came at ,full speed, excessively pleasect • with the prospect of so savory a breakfas.. A flying assault of Phatofrs Cossacks never prulueett greater con sternation in the Brea-is of N - apoleons militaries, during their retreat from Floss ow. EMU man Lan- F:phratfn remained for an iAst , aut horror chained I to the spot ; the next he tiouttdcd up from the(bleck 1 on which he was seated, like a Tian struck through the heart by a musket ball. and rushed into the in-) terior of the hut; the door food wide open, and he 1 to.de a stolen% effort ti. 4 17 it, but Its rusty and ! treacherous hinges gave sy, and it fed to the ground. Here was a new consternation. Ephraim remained not ail instant for reflection. The foe was fast closing upon him. They bawled, as it were, in his Ter) ear, and with terrific loudness. Ephraim thought be had never heard sounds so loud bstmr. He sprang upon a beam with a de gree of agility which would make the fortune of Herein :arres, the Man Fly. The wolves were now in the log house. Ephraim sprang to a second and still higker beam : but the foremost of the pack had , already reached the, first. They were evidently bent upon breakfatting in the log house. Great as had beer, Epturaim's 'consternation, and burned i as his retreat had been into the interior of the hut, he hail never deserted his fiddle. It was partly through instinct that he had held both fiddle and bow firmly grasped in his left hand; partly through the esteem m which be held it,-for it was a very capital violin and a new purchase. TO that violin, strange as it may appear. its owner'was in debted for his fife. Ephraim was not Lunch of a scholar ; bat as Torn Moore says in his cutting reply in Str litulson Love.- perhaps be 'd tend or bean) rcreved." the wt II koon-n •• Marie huh chums to soot!, the sanze breast: At all events; the thought struck him—and a Itu i cky owe it was— it might be of use, and could do no harm, to try the effect of • the concord of sweet I sounds' on the fotiout beasts by which be was sur. : roaadel. Bey, rum '1 he strack Rs , with• MI- ' - 3 _ c• , 4 f,. rr, 0 01/4z , J . . " I wit leach ycru to pierce the bowels of the Earth.and bring out from the Caverns of hiounfains.rdetals which will givestrength tcrourilandsand subjec tall Nature:o ouruse and pleasure".—Da .Joansoa VOL. XVII. Lines, Sent by a Lady to her Son, with a present rift Bible Remember. lore, who gave thee this , - When other days shall come : When she whO had thy earliest kiss Sleeps in her narrow home; Remember. 'tyres a mother gave The gift to one she'd the to save. That mother sought Pledge of love 'The holiest for her son ; And from the gifts of God above. She chose a goodly one; She chose fiir her beloved boy The source of light. and life, and joy. , And bade him keep the gift, that when The parting hour should come. The.% might have hope to meet agthn In all eternal home ! She stud, his faith in that - would be Sweet •Incense to her memory. And should the scoffer in his pride Laugh that fond Beth to scorn ; And bid him cast the 'pledge aside That he from youth h. d borne; She bade him pause, and-ash..4is breast, If he, or she, has lov'd him best ! A parent's blessing on her son Goes With this holy thing; The lose that would retam the :me Must to the other cling : Remember ! 't is no idle toy, A MOTHER'S GIFT-11,PMCIRber. boy! Fiddler FIT DENNIS DISOE Oftrn our seers and poets have confect That rmnac's force can tame the ht ions beast = Can make the self or foaming bear restrain 1118 rage—the hon drop his crested mane:- AND POT Weekly by Benjamin Bannan,'Pottsville, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania vcius twitch of the elbow, the briskest tune in ciis- tepee—to wit, .. Yankee Doodle !" The effect which it producetl was miraculous. AO the stores of the art magical could produce no- thing like it. The %elves gave over their howling in au instant. A while ago.they were bristling with rage—apparently untamable as hyenas, and the frightful monotone of their howls was cooly varied here and there by an angry bark, as one of the most forward of the pack bared his gleaming tusks. In faet. the party became pleased and Attentive listeners It was a curious audience fur which Ephr iim was developing the precious mysteries of his art. Swiss, at the -1049.1 sounds of the Ranz des Vaches ; a Scotchman, at hearing Robiii Adair; an Irishman, at the inspiring strain of Garry owen, played in a foreign land, would not sympathise with the melody more deeply. But the wolves were only too attentive and too anxious to witness the manifestation of Ephraim's powers. The thing became frightfully 'tiresome ; an';. awful pain took possession of his elb .w and fore-arm, and the limb Itself was reedy to drop utt He found that his caimhilities of endurance had ne- rer been so pinchingly taxed by a party of —fifty country-dancers, as by a single pack of wolves. He could hold out no longer. He tom ed playing for an Instant. Grow! ! growl! Jump ! jUnli , ! One ut the longest-tusked of ihe animals uric within two Inches 01 his leg at the last hound. Here was cer tainly a pressing call for the renewal of his .rchustral labors. To the diabolical fatiguz of his elbow a new giicf ,was added. l'he morning was exceedingly cold. and tphraim's fingers at length became benumbed —almost frozen. Stopping was out of the question, in two 'ruses. He wisely continued scraping the strings; mid the music which he elicited ; though Ole 801 l would scarcely hate at kii, , v4 lidged it for legitiniate, was considered very passable by his audi ence. Pr. ha bly net ie them had a correctly etu cate•l ear, there being no Italian' tyer3 in ail Kin- the cacti rnstaliCt . S to tie attended io iti its apphca• ;:fl. 3 , e t• In %,11,1 11, tempt [Attire Is Tali4l.l-1,. tr , gresst VC MI , of I' r911,10t1 is ne illy uniform for t qua! meter:ibis of hem, and the law which govettis this anti use is, that gases etpand of the bulk they had at the freezing 1 , 01111. toe err ry degree of Fahrenheit it has also'b.en ituroed that the COrlelitflelltr, as n gnosis volurre , an, that one cubic inch olexygen, raised with four Lucky. cubic he's of nitrogen, will rei resent the propor• Ephrain.'s visiters wcte resolute! bent upon bay- tum: of an, part of the surrouiollog attnesptisn ; by ing either the fiddling or the fiddler; and v.iitt the atonic weiett, tne relative proportions are near! ) Kentut kinn it was evidently a question of being three arid a half riiu •gen to one' .if oxygen. Now, es e n up, or continumg the music. Snap went a s combustion goes on accordiogly as a greater ..r string tablet strit.g. is not indestructible as- It sser quantity of oxygen is ado.itted into the fur -phaltt.s, and horse-hair sill not last Leaver. trace. it will foliose that, where cold air is used, the Hier Coed lank ! there is the third string i meximurri quantity of this elementary hotly is duly gone, and the bass alone rem a nts ! That i:log be I ass- 6 nit in, because the eliornic,d proportions being string w a s more valuahle to Ephraim Onto esen the known, the cer,anturri of oxy gen ens med can al by calculating 11. e dimensions illustrious has-,trio e Pagsniiii. But the few ways gs,„t,l„,„; gruff notes wloch Ephraim ass, able t o e li c it from I of the cylinder aid the number or strokes made per minute ; but where the hot•trlast is employed, the this suing,. were evidently dissatisfactory to their worships the wolves. Thetr ears were spoiled by temperature of the prepared air is liable to variations, the superior music which they h a d h ear d in t he ear- and, as a matter of course, the important constitu ly part of the concert, when all the strings were pi r- e u t of the atunAphere, above described, will vary feet, and Ephraim's elbow almost "as fresh as a with it. Thus, if the heat which the air receive. daisy." An occasional growl fr o m hi s long.tailed from the stoves is only 480 deg. Fahrenheit, it is c critics made Ephraim start and scrape his single clear that, at this temperature, it would exactly string with vastly increasing emi basis. ; double its volume if unconfined; under such cu euinstances, a cubic foot would. yield an amount of Just at this important juncture, when they were beginning to show their teeth and snarl pretty free- oxygen equal only to one-ball the quantity contrrn• lv, like the concert critics, and when the conclusion -4 , ed in a foot of r old nir. 'Fete remedy for this is to to which they had arrived seemed to he 'si'e've i call tie or cuinirlise the hot air, and so admit it into the furnace, at what is termed a strong pillar °Oblast, bad enough of it," a party of Ephraim's neighb arme d with axes, on their. way to the woods. (wide a n d, in order' to effect this, the motive p..wcr end OM their appearance, and the evolves, to this luckiest fiddler's great relief, affrighted by the si g ht of a num ber of men in company, made a precipitate retreat to the woods. I guess." was Ephraim's remark, %hen be had descended, I played a tarnation deal more this niornin, than if I hail been phyin . for a wage'!" Coasrme-riox or Ft/REIGN LUXURIES ;3 Till UNITED ST AT ES.—The lulkm mg I. a Statement of the Luxuries imported from (mew' countries, with the amount of the same articles exported lium the United. States for the year ending Sept. 30, 1640. The balar.ce marbikcansidered as the value of these luxuries consumed to the Ur.ited States in one year. We %enture to say that but few of out cittzens are aware of the large am runt we pay annually fur luxuries alone, all of which we could do without, and moat of them with decided silvaittage. Teas. Coffee. Cocoa, Fruits, Spicefi, z Ale mid Putter, I:bees, Butter. Clgata, :ike, Lace, Jewelry & Precious Storm., 201,590 16,336 Total Imported, .. Imported, Home Consumption, $ 28,816.210 To pay f these luxuries requires. the fdTlossing amount of articles exported during the same year : Exports of sundry articles in 1840. Specie, Bullion, Foreign Gold & Silver, $6,181,941 Gold slid 'Silver Coin of U. States, 2,::35,073 Fish, Oil, Whalebone and Candles, 3,198.370 Beef, 'Tallow and Hides, 623,373 Pork, Bacon, Lard and Live Hogs, tj391,894 Butter and Cheese, Horses, Mutes and Sheep, NVheat and Flour, ltolixti Corn and Meal, Rye Meal, Rye, Oats and other Grain, Wienit or Ship-bread, Potatoes and Apples, Flax Seed, Hops, Pot and Pearl Asher., Total, It will he seen that it takes to pay for our impor ted fur:aim ( and a paw only) all of the products of our Fisheries which we are enabled to export, all of the exports of our Northern Farmers, Including Pot sod Pearl Ashes, and over Eigit Millions of Dollars in specie anal bullion.—Tribune. A Patrants St ascitesst.--Mrs. Elizabeth °A men, of Phceniiville, Pennsylvania, uhose death occurtad a fezVdays since, at the advanced age of 32, has been a euh.scriber to Poulsen's Daily Ad vertiser tor more than SO years. When that- paper was Inured to the North Aniezieratahe soil cantina. ed her subscription and, what is better than all the rest' through this whole period of tooth than GO fears her subscription was punctually She of War, but her good ezample remains EGLE GENERAL ADVERTISER. SATURDAY MORNI Impnled E.rported. $5,41,7,859 $ 1,356 044 6,546.221: 930.39 S 161,359 146,901 1,404,669 72,121 &58.939 369,915 2,209,176 171,604 1,592.564 , 144,393 135,488 2,070 23.229 5,840 3 753 869,434 56,3.6 `10.991,191 96R,090 468,425 18.144 $33.076.155 $4,259.210 4,259,210 $ 28,921,427 G. NOVEMBER 27. Mil. Better Bub than Bust. Idler, why lie down to die ? Better rub than rust: Hark, the lark sings in the sky, Die, when die you must : Day is walking, leaves are shaking P Better rub than rust. In the grave there's sleep enough— Betzer tub than rust : • Death perhaps is hunger proof; Die. when die you must : Men are mowing, breezes bl.swirtg- Better ruo than rust. He who will not work shall want ; Nought for nought •is just ; Won't do, must do, w hen he can't. Better rub than rust ; Bees are dying—sloth is dying ! Better rub than rust From the Book of Beauty for 1842 Love me it I live! Love me if I-die! What to me to life or death, So-that thou be nigh? Once I loved thee rich. Nov% I love thee poor; Alt' V. hat is there . ' could riot For thy take er.dure! Kit.s me for my love! l'av me rum my rain! Come! and murmur in my ear Dow Mou again. Am Incalion of Hot-Mutt In Smalling A correspondent of the •.M ing Journal" enters into the lollowmg interesting colndder4tion of the advantage.; and properteus the hot blind, aded til-st apparatus must all be of auffiiient capacry. If no other advantage arises from a proper applica tion of the natural taw herein :lest - Tibet), than that of carefully suiting the mach'nery to the duly to he performed, it t. 11l be no inconsclerable la to it to those oho embalk in the manufacture of non. •It is true that. ~ vtiether v.ith hot or with cord air, the oxygen forced in can alisays be calculated. be cause the deh•ere of I.list fr.-in the ey tinder must pass through the regulator into the heating stoves, and 'thence' into the furnace. so that the absoluti -quantity Can be easily a-certained; but as at i• an ob_ Jett. in working with hot-blabt. to arrive at a tem perature much above 460 deg., say, 501 deg.. the melting point of lead. A hirh is, in fact, the test made use of. It becomes tieceisary, in a high degree. to as certain, by calculation, the eluieatent pillar it- extra pressure which wail be required lu. etety given in crement of temper: uie—so that the d se of uzyg,en, which proper combustion demands, shall, by such increased pressure, t•e fairly supplied to the furnace. That this is of importance cannot be matter of doubt, when we knots that, if the temperature of the hut air be 600 deg. (and at is often higher), it would, if not subjected to restraint, increase its bulk in the proportion as two and a qtiatter is to one. Foru nately, for easy calculation, the law holds good that the dilatation previously referred to is uniform, both at very high and very low temperatures, so that great exactitude may be arrived at. It may be objected to all these observations, that their application to smelting purposes can be of no use to the lion mas ter, but I am satisfied that, tf science goes hand in hand with manufacture, the latter must be benefit t‘ el. o It has been found in •the reduction of the Welsh ores with anthracite ( to which this letter may be considered principally to refer,) that but little good . can be done under a pillar of bleat equal to 2i 113. ; in fact, the greater the pressure and higher the temperature of the hot air, the more wall this other wise intractable ft.•e! be made available to the reduce Clod of the ores associated with it : indeed, by the aid of.. hot blast," stone-coal will smelt any de scription of iron mine whatever, it matters not bow lean or how rich—whether a mild "or a'• hot" mine, as the local phrase goes—this remarkable fu el will reduce them all. And, by the singular but certain manner in which it imparts its carbon du ring cementation, it enables those ores to be smelt ed with advantage which heretofore could not be used in the manufacture of good pig-iron it will soon be seen that these very qualities, to, wi t h its capability of bearing transit, will occasion an thracite to be exported from %Vales to foreign coun tries possessing iron ore bat no fuel. 210,749 .277,018 11;799,098 1,042,516 284,325 428,989 99,655 120,000 11,235 533,193. “ The general tendency- of these- obscr'i - ations is to the effect , that in hot blast, the higher the tem perature the greater the nrctasitc for a strong pillar to restore, in same measure, the, attenuated state of the air, in order that the furnace mac receive the proper quantity of the great eopporter of combus tion that may be due to its smelting pow-rya t and I think I may safely say, that if the formation of fur nace to suit the materials. ( whatever be the de scription of the fuel, Yliud the adaptation of Nast to the acme pommy.. always received-deliberate consideration previous to” the erection of writhe, the melancholy assappointments and failures, which rt is sometimes oar misfortune to witness* would occur."' • The Lafayette Minion& nays theme rows old to. per In that Otte who ectonfly sold his wife's “bas , - de to boy rats—Shoeking Song; RV BARRI" CORNWALL. Foreign Summary. [The steamship Caladonia arrived at Boston on Satur- day last from Liverpool, whence she sailed on the filth inst. By her we have twelve days later intelligence. The news is not importar.t Trade is is still very dull and there has been en enormous fraud in Bills of exch.! quer. , The following is a summary from the "principalEn gliah papers-] O'Connell vies elected Lord Mayor of Dublin on Monday. Of the sixty town-councillors and alder men returned, forty-one are Roman catholics, and nineteen are protestants. Of these, three proles. tents are repeaters, and three are liberals. The conservatives, including ono Roman catholic, num ber but thirteen. The conservatives and liberals number twenty-one, while the repeaters count thir ty-nine. The widow of the composer Belline, since mar tied to a Mr. Bingham, connected with the customs in London, and 35 years of age, died ' almost sud denly on Sunday. M William Peel, third son of the Right Hon. Sir R. Peel, Ban., who served in the Princess Char lotte under Admiral Sir Robert Stopford during the settlement of the affairs on the Syrian coast as mid shipman. is about to go to Chloe on the Cambrian, Captain Chads, C. B. According, to the terms of contract, the British and North American Royel Mai! Steam-packet Ct , mpany is bound to wait the pleasure or orders of governmeni at home, or British authorities abroad, 1,, 'lie extent of a detention beyond the appoint ed d .y of sailing, of forty-eight, or, at the most, six. li3urs. The Lads of' the treasury hare authorised the ad Int-siuu rough rice from the [;sited Matta at Id per quarter The death of the Earl of dome took place on Fri week, at Hirsel Hall, the Lundy seat, near Cold 'lre•lln, Bertsick,Lir . The Dowager Lay Br..oke Ptchcll erfired at Hampton Court' Palace on iiaiuiday week after a long ilitiebs, in her. 821.1 year. W dnesday the loth October, as the Rec. %Ir. Swstn, chaplain to the Earl of Harrlngton, was returning h.nne horn Derby on foot, toll down and suddeLly expired. Lord Etlenbarough had an audience of the Queen, on Friday. at Buckingham Palace, and kiB-ed hands on la app , iinted governor-general of India. The olipointn.ent has been officially announced of Mr. i'enn,daiher to be chief justice of the Quc, n's Bench in Dublin, on the res.gnation of Cb.icf Jus tice Bushe. It is stated that the greater part of six trillions of dollars pind by the Chinese for the redemptiou of etaittin turns out to be bad saver. The Queen has been pleased to direct letters pat ent to be passed under the great seal of the united kingdom, appointing the Right lion. Wm. Lord Fitzgerald and Vesci, her majesty's commissica.er for the affairs of India. Letters from Trebisonde of the 16th oI September say that an insurrection has broken out to Georgia against the Russian authorities. The insurgenta, it is said, by way of a sequel, burnt the quarantine es taldislament, Akheslika (probably Achalzick.) The /'bole•a, it is said, has made its appearance in Bnstol. G.vernn:ent I..tb,Nut to etten4ihen tht 6ruticallailfi (iibra:ter. fhc Royal Weal India Company has memo- Timltzed governmeht to run once a Month Instear! of fortnigbey. An extensive fraud had been attempted on the exchequer, by an issue of spurious notes. The taktu into custody was said to hold a high station in one of the government offices. The amount of ihe fraudulent issues is said to be as high as 150,0001: or 200,0001., according to the conies .ion of the party. The bills do not appear to have been strictly speaking a forgery, for according to a general report, the signature of Lord Monteagle was obtnned in a surreptitious manner. The paper; are fall of rumors and speculations on the subject. The evening Chronicle of November 3d says-- A gredt fire happened in the tower of London on the night of Saturday, October 30, the details of what fill sevcral columns of the papers. It caused the entire destruction, nith ail its contents, of the magnificent building called The Grand Storehouse and Small Amory." containing, in addition to an almost innumerable quantity of trophies, and other evidences of British glory, no less a number than 200,000 stand of arms, &c. Several acts of incendiarism have lately been per petrated in Yorkshire and Warwickshire. The British troops in China have suffered so much that it is stated the force in India is to be augmen ted by two regiments. At a late meeting of :he Dublin Refeal Associa tion, Mr. O'Connell annotinted his intention of presenting a petition to the House of Como:ions, in his robes as lord mayor, in= losur of a repeal of the union The sultan has been making magni6cent presents to the English, Austrian, Rcesian. and Prussian' am bassadois, and their ladies. Lady Ponsonby recei ved a parurt of diamonds from the Sultana Valide worth .£4,000 reeding. The Son of Pagantni is now et Rome, endeavour. ingta procure a rivision by the pope of the judgment in virtue of which the Sardinian government has hitherto refescd to authorize the inhumation of his father, according to the rites of the church. The decrease in the consumption of malt from the 10th of October, 1840, to the 10th of October, 1841, -in London and its vi'itinity, amounts to no less than 41,924 quavers, the quartity used in 1840 having been 776,219 quarters, and in IE4I being 734,29.5 quarters. The following is the average aggregate amount of prong/m:oy notes in eirculatiOti in the United King dom, afid the average amount of bullion in the Bank of England, during- the four weeks preceding the 16th of. October, 1841: Exoz.s:so—Bank of Eng land, R. 17,340.000 ; private banks, 6,t53,964 joint-stock bahks, S. 3,519,384. SCOTLVSII-Pri !we and , ;:pint-stark banks. terzlin Baatrof Ireland, .f . , 3.060,750; private and jnint stork banks, 2.185,398- Total, £35.563,199. Bullion h the Batik ofEagiand, .C 4.590,000, Mati!tine Fortr4- 00 Wes. bee kali broke her lep. OW Baser sore shell lay all egz Theft enne cow Ms tone Id-Jab dry, AS ester Sall Ma en tbe oink is fall ofaim ead warm; We're hors To-do, end tfiete-seenvilk 1 . The following lines in reply to the Hon. John Q. Adams' Poem do the-Wants of Man," are by Miss C•NOLLL HYAUINTHI: BE NET. 1 This Miss CchNilla Hyacinthe, we opine, is not a This born to blush unseen." or to Waste her - sweetness upo i tlee desert air." • ...kart QUIN v Ansus. 7 ;-This 'old man eloquent' is the most wo detful man of the age. His last speech, on the McLeod case, contains more sense. and indicates more moral courage, than all Congress put together. On the verge of 80, he is a poet, a plailoanphej, a statesman, a ith all his youthful spirit . and fire. He is i cot only eloquent and poetic him self, but he is the cause of line poetry in others—yea, , even in young lOdies. Ecce Signurn.r --- , • To tliie lion J. Q. Adonis; On reading his beautiful Poem on The Wants of Man," by Gunow...s 11.1NIC/NTRE BENNET. of Arlin ten House. L. I. ' Your taints. dear sir, will seem but small, When they're compared with wine; • My single.wan outweighs them all— / scant a soul like thine! For all the wants that you may find, And yet ten thousand more, ,_..._ Can never satisfy a mind . So filled with wisdom's store. O. 48 i want a soul that in a span Can grasp the orbs on high The only essenc e of the man That is not doomed to die I want a placciin yonderaky, Where you and I may meet To sing the pra Ise of God on high - And worshiji at his feet. You do not "ward the voice of praise , ' It follows you behind— You wall be thoughtAkfuture days, The friend of humallgind. And after ages, as they rise. Exulting will proclaim. , In'ehoral union to the skies, Their blessmas on you/ name. September 18th, 1841. It is a duty devolving on every member of a fain; tly to endeavour to make all belonging to it happy. This may with very little pleasant exertion. be done. Let every one contribute something towards improv ing the grounds belonging to their house.. If the house is old and uncomfortable, let each exert him self to lender it 'better and more pleasant. If it is . good and pie - Sault. let each] strive still further to adorn it. Let flowering shrubs and trees be planted, and vines and woodbmes be trailed around the wind; owe and doors ; little articles of lurniture to replace those which are fast wearing out ; wait upon and an ticipate each others wants, and ever hove a pleasant smile for all and etith. Make home happy ! Parents ought to teach this les=on in the nursery and by the fireside, give it the weight of their precept and exam' le. If they would, oars would be a happy and more virtuous country ; drunkenness, profanity and other disgusting vices would die allay ; the) could not Ina in the influ ence of a lovely and refined home- Does any one think, lam prior and have to work bard to get enough to sustain life, and cannot find time to spend in making our old house more attrac• live I " Think again ; is there nut some time every day which you spend in idleness or smoking or list- lessness, which might be spent about your homeal Flowers are God's smiles, a ' said Wilberforce. and they are beautiful beside the collage as the pal ace. and may be enjoyed 5y one as well as the other. There are but few homes in this country which might net he made more beautiful and attrac:ive. hot In strangers only, but to their inmates. Let every one study, then, and work, to make whatever place they may be in so attractive that the hearts of the absent ones shall go back to it as the dove did to the ark of Noah.— Windham Democrat. locoiwage your own 31LechanIcs. The caloined article contain.; some wholesome truths on this important subject, which we commend in an especial manner to the citizens generally, and particularly the owners of real estate in Augusta. It is the part of wisdom. in ail communities, to en courage domestic manufacturers, and is certainly a sound principle in political economy, that every com munity should manufacture, at home every article their interest dictates.—A ukTtisto Chronicles ESCOCELAGE lOVEL OW'S ZiLECLIASICA—IT Is roil THE ISTARLAT OP rurn PLACE TO DO so.—The dis position cat.not be too much rebuked, let it exist in any town it may, to send to distant places for pro ducts, which could be, equally well furnished by the mechanics in their own town. No one thing can t - e mere positively injurious to the real interests of any town than to go over the heads of its mechanics, and buy elsewhere. It takes out of the place, mo ney which justly belongs at home. It- discourages and drives away mechanics. It prevents them from advancing in prosperity, so as to add to the success of their own town. There are people who think no mid?. tan 6 , kon,l for any thing unless a he an imported one. giith persona are the enemies to the town in which they live. They do what they can to retard its progress. and discourage its citizens. 11 is wholly wrong, unjust and foolish. Every real friend toy e place in which be lives, should do all be can to ecourage its mechanics, and he who has correct conception of the duties of a good neighbor and a true Anaemia citizen, will ever take pride in doing so, and not tun away after every thing-that is foreign, from the fool ish idea that by so doi;ivg it-senders him a man of the tan, by such act of deep injustice to his own fellow. citizene. ENGLAND ASD ANIZEIC•-- At 8 late public meet ing :n Liverpool, one of the speakers, just returned from this country, drew the following picture He says that having landed in America, ho went first into the west, and fcund that a man rhci could do nothing bet dig cook: earn a dpltar ati half a day, and that he could obt3in board e-rd hadg.: ing for a dollar and a half a week. The pike of flJur was then 13s. a harrel.—He went down the river to New Orleans,,andlound the merchants there anxious to send this flour to England ; but they were fearful to do scriest on its arrival there should he du ty against it, and it should rot in the trarehotrxes, The price was then 16s. in New Orleans, and in Liverpool 363. He returned up the river, and just then news arrived of the proposed change in the cam laws. He should neter forget the barn of enthusi asm with which this change nes bailed. Hundreds of persons came to him and said, Now we will have your manufactures—your fine muslins,cuttery, ik - c." And very anxious they were to have thcin. He left the west and wem to the east. At Boston, he wem out by a railway to a thy containing 25,000 inhabitants; which was not in exi st ence fifteen years ago. Now, it had a capital invested in milhons of more than L 2,000,000 sterling. He says the oper arises turn out, and he could not distinguish the fe males from what were here called young ladies. They carried parasols. He invired the wages there. He was told. that Ih7 were 2i dollars, after paying all expenses of board. A spinner got 4x dollars af ter paying all eapen ae s of board. He returned from that day to Boston, and in twelve days was in Lit - . erpool. The first sight he saw here wee s woman picking up dung in the streets." TIICLT Sr3LE . E.L. -- Plea . ium is but- a shadow; wraith is. vanity ; and. power a pageant : but anon :nos is exude in enjoyakera.2- 1 perenrl in fame-- unlimited in space and infinite in duration. In the performance of its atered ofike. it fears no danger.-- spares no espence--ornita no exertion. h =lea the contratain.-todts into the volsano.-Jives into the ocean—perforates the eirb--enri.hew •globe-- explores the sea end hod-contemplates the assume ....leeenat to the sthAme--:no place iv t'e. , n'eveti4l.7l its 'Oaf itrinfe-4, I,nalte Haute Happy."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers