terms of publication. Two Dot.r.ann per annum, payable . ' ilerni-ttannaly in mtvance. If iiutpaid within tbe year, do b e ealarged. V' Papers delivered by the Post hider 'MI be charged • . twenty-6ve cents eitra. ADVEI:TISEMENTS_ 1W Tl3Ei REAR. One Column, $20,00 I Two Squarei. $lO,OO Three fount:meg. 15,00 One Square, ' 6,00 H a lf, . do: 12,00 I Businesscar.cs,slihes 3,00 „Advertisements nit fi.excleding a square of twelve lines will-be charged $1 for Three insertions— and i ,lo neetsfor oneinsertion. Fivelines or under, 25 cents for each insertion , AU advertisements will In inserted until ordered out, unlessthetime for which they are to be conttnuedis specified.and will be charged accordingly. The charge to-Merchants will be $lO per annum They will have the privilege of keeping 1 advertisement, not,e;ceeding one square. standing during the year, and the insertion of a smaller one in each paper. Those who-Occupy a largerspace will be charged extra, All notices for tueetings,and proceedings ofmeetings not considered of general interest, and niany other no tices which have been inserted heretofore gratuitously, with the exception of Marriages and Deaths, will be -chirged _or advertisements.. Notices of Deaths, in -which ii.v.tations are extended to the friends and rela tives of the deceased to attend the Ihneral.will bpcha r. ged as advertisements. li letters addressed to the editor n ust be post paid, otherwise no a ttentioh will be paid to them. cr Pamphlets, Checks, Garde, Bills Lading and Handbills of every' descripion, neatly printed at this Clifice, at the lowest cash prices, Valuable Coal and other{ Lands FOLt .sit -LE. - • griN Friday the 24 th day of December, inst. will 11 -F be sold at Public Sale, at the Public House of Strduch, in the township Of Wayne, in 4 .lie county of Schuylkill, the following Real Estate, ,wit : • No. 1. A certain Messuage, tenement and tract of Land, situate in the,lownship of Pinegrove, in the county aforesaid, bounded by Itiads of Mi. ehael Fritz, John Huber, John Zerbe and. John Bayer, containing 251 acres, part wood land, part meadow, and the. rest arable. in a high state of eel. tivatioo, rah Swatara Creek running through the • • same; the improvement:lr .- tire a two std. _ry log dwelling house," saw mill, log " • Bain, and other out buildings, at present in the tenure of Michael Wenrich. This tract is . divided into 2 parts and' will either be sold in the. whole or in parts. No. 2. A tract of wood land, situate in the Towoship Pinegrove and Wayne, and county aforesaid, adjoining lands of Jonathan Zerbe, John •Zerbe, John Boyer, Wendel Swartz and others, con taining 587 acres. This tract is divided into 7 Lots, of from 50 to 100 acres each, and Oil be sold ei. s'ilter in the whole or in lots to suit purchasers. N0..3. The undivided one third nf 320 acres of Coal Land, situated in the township of Barry, coun ty aforesaid, adjoining lands of Strubh4r Fidler, Ben jamin Snyder, Peter Ruler, John S.; Beistei Esq John Filbert and others, held in common by Abra ham. Fertig deceased, and Henry G. Weaver. No. 4.- A tract of Coal Land, situated in Norwe gian township, county aforesaid, adjoining lands of Jacob Mennig, and lands surveyed to Jacob Zimmerman and lands surveyed to V,Villianalluntz inger and others, containing 53 acres. . No. 5. A lot,of Coal Land, situated an the town shio of Norwegian, county aforesaid, adjoining lands belonging to the Swatara Coal:Colima:ly, and lands surveyed to John Zimmerman' and John Sny_ der. containing 19 acres. ' No. 6. The undivided three .eiglith part of 430 acres of;eoal land. situate is Norwegian township, county aforesaid, adjoining lands surveyed to Nich olas Allen, John C. Offerrnan':-and lands surveyed 'te William Graeff. It being the !same formerly 'held by Abraham Ferig deceased, in common with Adam Rauderbush and Samuel 0, Franks, Esq. -deceased. - No. 7. 300 Acres of unimproved land, surveyed •on a Warrmit granted to Michael Wenrich. "No. 8. Two thirds of 200 acres,' of unimproved 4and, surveyed on a Warrant granted to Peter tremer, No. 9. One eighth of 400 acres" of unimproved land, surveyed on a Warrant grdnted to Peter 'Kremer. No. 10. One third of 308 acres of unimproved 'land, surveyed on a Warrant granted to-John Fil 'bert, which Abraham FertiT Esq. deceased, held in -common with John Filbert and Henry G. Weaver. No. 11. One half of 200 acres of unimproved land, surveyed on a Warrant granted to Joseph 'Fertig; and adjoining lands of Philip Clouser and -others, late the Estate of Abraluitn Fertig Esq., !deceased 1 Sale to commence at 10 o'clocld in th'e forenoon. Attendnnce and terms on the day Of safe by • PETER KREMER, Exior. s November 27 48— N.D. at the same time and pllic'e, will be sold 'two shares of Stock in the'Farmers Bank of Read _ tine. Persons desirous to view the premises will please to call on the said Executor, in Pinegrove township, 'Schuylkill county. ! Mince Men QMITIM celebrated Mince Meat, a superior ar '' J title for family use, for sale lm.„, E. Q • a s A.OFIENERI;ON. . . ocotch & Iri sh 'IS hiftkey. Scotch and Irish WhiskeY, Loaf Sugar and Lemons. Heavy pressed and Cut Tumblers, For sale by E. Q & A. HENDERSON. November 27 40— Towanda NOtes. 7 VAKEN at par. in payment of f billa, or for goodp, • by ' JOHN Sf C: MARTIN; November 27 - 48— Coffee & Su#,Ars. lm, Java, Lazaira and Browned Coffees, to. '-' gather with Loaf and Brown Sagan., of a it;u. Iperior quality, received and for Wale cheap by TROUTNI AN S . r. SILLYMAN. .Nkvelnhar 27 - 48— School Quills Si Pen's, . AT 25 cents per 100. *lad Steel Pens at 50 cents per gross ' together: a:general assortment of Quills, and Steel Pens, among which are the Perryan Three Pointed Pens, a ;new importation, Just, received and for sale by December 4 REWARDS of MERlTlilaik Rewards of Merit for schools. Just received and for sale by B..BANNAN. Dcember 11 'THE CIiURCIII A 1.111 AN AC--For 1842, Price t cents, just received aid for sale 8y B. BAN N A N. 50— December ll' Leathe,r!; Leather ! "stioEMAKERS' Upper and; Sole I.eaiher, of a good quality, very cheap; jlst received and for Seale by . • It. ID. SHOENER. December 4 49 Toy Boo ts, FROM 75 cents per &ass 50 cents each, ti new and improved_ assortment, Just received and for sale by • B. HANNAN. December 4 ChapmatiNKazor strap, A. SUPERIOR article, just received. Try it, and if not good return it. For sale by - a BANNAN, December 4 t 4.9-21 . • New 'Crop Raisins, acc. IrIIST received a few boxes new' crop punch Rai.. A. 'sine, which will be sold very cheap—also ftesh 'PrUnes, Currants, Lawns, Citron, &c. JOHN S C MARTIN; - Novernber 6 1 45-- Da wrs Safety Lamps, OF the best construction ; a 0 moat approved kind also makes new gauges Id lamps, and other epairs done at the subaeriberts Clock and Watch _Maker Shop, in Centre street, Pottsville. - June 1 22.4! JOSEPH pOATSWORTI-1- ---- i . . . -.. . ~„ _ , :. .:, siti_ 4 .i ...it ....::,, ,:. 1 .....:1411• .. _ - ----,, aglNEßB l°. ',,,,` „,,,,.----,'::`.' 41-11 „ --7- %.\\\•\';' - ' 1 ::::::".. :---- l• •- ; i .- - - AND . - ' - ' • --,. .---- ---- ••- - - --- '''''t ._ 1 -. . ' , . ' •-• , N POTTSVICtIt'GENERAL ADVI Woman's Love. When alfthe W oman's grows strange, ( 7 - Then shall her arms enfold thee; When smiliag fortunes change ) . - • Then shall her words uphold thee. When all thine hopes - will fail, And leave thee nought but care; And 'when thy cheek grows pale. Or‘Wasted, with despair t • I When desolation meets thee, • Without on arm to save; When Death himself shall greet thee, A victim for the grave ; • When woman shall caress thee With an angel's care; ' Then shall She softly bless thee With more than angel's:prayer. " Bow comes it," said 1, " that you are not at tending.to your cab this evening 1" Neil ,quickly drew the pipe; from his mouth, puffed out the smoke, - and raised his fingers before his mouth, es if to im pose sitcom then looking from our box to see if any one was within hearing, be drew slowly back, and leaning towards me with his arms on the table— " You'll be mom !" said he. " Certainly, if you require it." I had to send it," corilinued he, lowering !nal voice, I had to !send it to get a new lining." " But what's the mysiery'll 0 The old lining." said' he, P peeking scarcely a- , hove his breath, "has been . steeped in human, 'blood." Mercy !" said 1, giving an involuntary start s '•wbat do you organ ?" o Hush I" continued he, o listen ; yoe , have read, no doubt, :in' this morning's papers, of a dreadful suicide committed on Monday last in a cab—the Inquest was held yesterday." "I heard something about it," said I, but have not read the report." was in my ; ' cab," whispered Ned,. G—d for bid that I shOuld ever witness the like again ;" here he pressed his bands over his eyes, as if in agony at the idea of h was a dreadful night altogeth er ; haw it did rein and thunder, for all the world es if the elements knew whet was going forward," You say the inquest was held yesterday." Yes, sir, I Was examined ; I will read you the report." 'By this time the house was nearly clear of persona, and Ned drew a well used newspaper from his pocket,: and read as follows,. from the Mor ning Advertiser Edward Jerrold, commonly called Black Ned, a cab-driver, stated, that on Monday night last, he left a gentleman in Cheapside from the theatre, and was returning to his stand, Charles ' street, Covent Garden, when on passing through Temple bar, he was called to 4 a gentleman who appeared to be sheltering froM the rain, at the entrance of Bell yard ; he pulled up, and decearied entered the cab ; be appeared to be perfectly sober; but when he, cabman, inquired, where he should drive him to, de ceased gave a loud laugh, and told him to drive to 6-11. Witneis took the answer as a joke, and asked deceased to point out to him the road, upon which deceased said, .4 you are a pretty fel low for a London cabman, not to know the way to hell ; there are -five thousarid ways in London—take the first; go through Wych street arid up Drury lane." .Witness drove on.: at this time there was a heavy rain, accompanied by thunder and light ning ; deceased cried out at several times, that it was a glorious night !" and told witness to drive like the On reaching Drury lane, he called to witnessqo pull up at a public house; deceased entered, and called for a stiff glass of brandy, which he drank, he made witness drink also, and treated . several person's , who were standing at the bar; he laid down a sovereign, and told the bar maid to keep the change, saying, that he was going to a place whqe he would not want money ; he again entered the cab, and told witness to drive towards Holborn; tt poured rain;; the windows' of the cab were all up ; when witriesS arrived at Holborn, he called out to deceased to know which way he was to drive; he called twice, but received no answer; he (wit ness) thought deceased had fallen asleep, and drove near to a lamp, in order that he might see better. Witness looked through the front window of the cab, and perceived that deceased had taken off his coat, and waS es if reclining across the 'cab ; the window of the cab vies dimmed With the rain, and the witness Could not see' distinctly. He called again, but received _ no answer; upon which, he got down, opened the door of his. cab and found to his horrf r, .that the deceased had cut bis•throat with a .razor, which Jay clasped in his hand. Deceased had his shirt sleeves turned up, and both arms were cut across in several places. Witness imme diately called , to a policeman who happened to be near the spot, The policeman and witness carried deceased to ;the Boar's-head Tavern, which was the nearest public house. B, BANNAN. ANOTHER ',GERA IAILHUHN.—There is at, present attached to the ordnance survey in Ireland, a boy of eight years of age. named Alexander Gw,in, whose natural powers of calculalion leave the greatest arith meticians in the background. He can, in less then a minute, mike a leturn of any quantity of,land by giving him the serveyor's chained distance, which the most practiced arithmetician would 4akelan hour to complete. 50 -2 Pnoonrss or Lovz.—A duel was fought et .Iphn sonbtirg, Kg:, a few days since, between a Dr. Not. tis and Mr.! Bridwick, a lawyer. A woman was the Cause. They toughie at twelve paces, with rifles, and both abets were fatal. Another instance of the effect of the infamous code of honor. THE Dawns OP WIiMIZIGTON, (Del.) shave re solved not Id , receive the certificates of loan, or small note's, issued by the Banks of Pennsylvania, and under autbUrity of a Law of the last Legislature. Dison.sctver..—Two members of the Tennessee Legislature have had a pistol fight in front or the State House. Neither hurt—a passenger a r ia slight. ly injured, 'though.. _ Parr*: Mon.—The Pittsburg Chronicle says : —Shin-plasters are so called from their sticking qualities--vilien a person gets hold of one there's no getting it off .4.Wisdo J m is the • result of calm and:disinterested medhationsf proceeding from an observing and pent+. .1 trating mud ; it is seldom that experience alone can confer, it." "It may be better to bang a rogue in rotes than a rogue in tags, but it is much more difficult." Dz,►D.—lira. Proctor, theectrees. ; - ' 7l- I — Oitlteacti you to piercuthebowel• of the Ea rtit,autl brlog out from the Caverle offionntainiAenats optitUb giveutreoith toout Undo and uubjeetall Naturettn, VOL. XVII. [From thelL6ndoo Monthly Magazine-] Black Ned'. Cabs or f the Suicide I - Weekly by Benjamin Barma n,.Pottsville Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania ' 3 Mersa, the baneful; GIrL Mr. entered, early into the honorable East . India Company's service, and came out to Madras ti fine, bold-spirited and elegant youth. He served through the whole of the war with the Burnes% which broke out Boon after he arrived in India, with an intrepidity and bravely equal to that: of the other officers who were engaged in that hard ser vice, and many of whom were cot off in the midst of their glorious career. At the conclusion of the war his regiment was, ordered back to Madras, while his heart beat high with gratitude for having been permitted to escape unhOrt. ' At one (lithe native leasis which were held about this time, he became enamored of one of the dan cing girls, whose soft mild eye and beautiful figure, for which this particular class is so finned, so com pletely infatuated his affections % that 'for a time he thought himself completely happy in the posses mon of the loved syren. Two years passed away, during Which time be had become too indolent to discard one who once was the object of his affections : butthese affections had become cooled by habit and intercourse, and it was not till the arrival from England of the lovely , Miss the highly talented and accomplished daughter of Captain —, that he found how vision ary and inconstant had been his Termer attach. ment. Miss If— was, indeed, all that a man could paint of beauty, wit and accomplishments: there war the ray cheek, the fair open brow, the round and polished arm; in short all that distinguishes our fair and lovely cour.try.womon. Lieutenant B— had many rivals, but he oe( v wo and won her. The day, the happy day, was e for their marriage, all his friends partook in the ensure that beamed from his eye, all save one—t at one was Mena, the dancing girl. He had, as soon as he had become acquainted with Miss IT— item the girl from htm with money and jewels, according to the general custom in India, and supposed 'that she had gone to some other pro. tection, or returned to her own country, as he bad not seen 'her for two or three months. A month, however, previous to his marriage, she came to him and told him to beware—that though parted from him she still loved ; that she could bear to be separated, but to see biro married to another, that she could not endure. B— thought this was on. ly to extort money from him, he therefore again loaded her with presents and sent her to her friends. The day befere the marriage was spent in that bustle and feverish anxiety which is-so natural to the occasion; in making his final arrangements in his bungalow, that was soon to receive his lovely mistress. All was love and hope with him. The night came—the last he was to sleep in his present quarter?. Merza, the now hateful Mersa, stood before his bed. 'Beware!' said she, ' beware : Spurn not the heart and love of Merza : lead not to the alter the fair European : my bitterest hate and revenge shall follow.—lf this, my second warning, be unheeded, this day month shall see a mourning widow.—Choose now between my fondest love or burning hate—beware P • B— sprang from his bed to follow her, but she was gone: the servants were sleeping around the house; no footsteps could be traced to any spot where she could have concealed herself; the whole house was opec ; any one might have entered or gone out without observation. Et— returned to his bed ;be felt too happy to think much on this circumstance. The gay morning sun beheld him dressed in his full uniform. One hour more and he would be the exulting possessor of lovely a bride. About a week atter their marriage I called upon them : the bride's eye was lighted up with love, and her mouth was graced with the happiest smiles : but B— himself looked ill, and he complained - slightly of a burning at his stomach, which he had fell, he said, for the last two days. In another week I again called, and I law him lying listlessly upon a sofa, with his lovely wife beside liim, 'ook ing anxiously in his face. He could eat nothing, and was evidently wearing away. The medical attendant,ordered change of air, and he was moved from Palaveram to the Mount, where he disclosed to his wife ,the prediction of Merza, "the dancing girl, related his former connection with her, and expressed his full persuasion that his doom was sealed..- The last week came; deep yea the anxiety of his brother officers; the anguish of his doating wife, I cannot describe; all aid was in vain ; the day month of his marriage he. was laid in his coffin, a senseless corpse; his widow well nigh a maniac, who bad scarcely numbered seventeen years. Poor 13—'s body was opened ; but it was found that grciund glass had been administered to him,which completely wore away the coats of the stomach, and which no medicine that had seen given him had been able to dislodge. Thus died one of the bravest of the Rangoon heroes. 'With how much less regret would his brother officers have beheld him stretched amongst the dead on the battle field. PI CTOOESCIITE BEAUTY OF MINES or Cosr..--7-The coal mines of Bohemia an, stated by Dr. Dockland to be the most beautiful he had ever visited. We will describe:them in his own eloquent words The most elaborate imitations of living foliage on the painted ceilings of Italian palaces, bear no compari son with the beauteous prolusion of extinct vegeta ble forms with which the galleries of these instruc tive coal mines are overhung. The roof is covered as with a canopy of gorgeous tapestry, enriched with festoons of most graceful foliage, flung in wild, irre gular profusion over every portion of its surface. The effect is heightened by the contrast of the coal black colour of these vegetables, with the light ground-work of the rock to which they are attached. The spectator feels transported, as if by enchant ment, into the forests of another world ; he beholds trees of form and character now unknown upon the surface of the earth, presented to his senses almost inthe beauty and vigour of their primeval life ; their scal)._atems and bending branches, with their deli. cats apparatus , of foliage, are all spread forth before him, little impaired by the lapse of indefinite ages, and bearing faithful records of extinct systems of ye. getation, which' began and terminated in times of which thew relics are the infallible historians. Such are the grand natural herbaria wherein these most ancient remains of the vegetable kingdom are preserved in a state of integrity little short of their living perfection, under conditions of our planet which cream, more. " Movuxas arm Datroirrase.—lt was a judicious resolution of a father, as well as a most pleasing compliment to his wife, when on being asked by a friend what be intended to do with his girls, he re. plieri. 'I intend to apprentice them all to their excel. lent mother, that they may learn the art of imps. ving time, and to be fitted to become like her—wives. mothers. beads of families, and Ureful members of society.' Equally just, but bitterly pail:Mil was the remark of the unhappy husband of a vain, thought. less, dressy slattern. "It is hard to say it, but if my girls are to have a chance of growing np good for any thing, they must be sent out of the way of their mother's example. . To %vri AND CouNTRY.—A facetious tri' yeller deseri. bes the difference of society in the metropolis when compared to the provincial towns, in the following language{ "ln the country, if yOu have a boiled kg of mutton. every body wishes to know if you have caper sauce with it, whereas, in London, you may have an elephant for lunch, and no one cares a pin about it." faulsois.—The debt - of this state is neat! $20,- 000,000. SATURDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 18. 1841. . --•- • - Vlipplageb Well. what are you looking at. old ;fellow ?" said Jack to Jonathan, in a pause of Fanny's La Sylphide. He had risen trinn one of the forward seats of the pit, and was looking straight up at the unequalled array of beauty in the boxes. " ,I say, what do you see, old fellow?" "By gosh," said Jonathan, "I never knowed what made em call them 'ere upper seats IA the menting.houses and a. bout, gal !erica Om" - Love in its purity is found in a gentle heart. It dwells not amid the riot of pleasure, it dies in the &reef splendor and cannot-live in a heart devoted lo dregs end weak follies I is more matured in quiet ness than loud applause or the world's praise.— Give me the sharply defined feelings" of a young and timid girl, and I leave you -the professions of the gaudy coquette. Give me the beaming glances of. liquid eye, and I yield the bright and flashing blate of the proud beauty of others: The editor of the ,Bdtre Gatette was fonnorly postmaster in that town: but g few months ago he was removed. and another person Appointed in his place. Whereupon in his paper :of yesterday he has petpetrated the following good "Re miniscence. Whet hour of the day reminds us of what we are? Why X. F. M. to be sore." `i; It is something remarkable, that talented men leave so few children behind theiii, and that talents is so seldom inherited. Men of genius rarely leave Rifted eons. John Quincy Adams is on exception. Thomas Jefferson left none, neither did Shakspeare. Newton, Bacon, Bonaparte, Ctesar or Alexander, Many great men have died 'mehelors, and many of the most distinguished women have died old maids. A little girl herring her mother say she was going in half mourning, inquired if any of her relations were halt dead. A wag dour elbow says, that nothing is more tory-fish than to see a well dressed man drunk in a gutter. We rkrs•ned his words instantly. It is very strange that lightning. which is said to be rather warm, should cause a tree to shiver. Tea Accnuctfittastor.—The London Satirl!it thus notices the late w seem:when:lent :" Wagers are beginning to be lard in the city al ready as to the birth of another royal babby ' be fore Christmas, 1842. If Albert gets on in this way, John Roll will be jackass enough by and bye to Propose doubling his income. - THE NATION% NOM The Qlieen has now a ' pigeons pair,',.. Then lei us bone to God She never will another bear. To make what's even odd ! When the Queen heard that during the fire of the Tower a great number of ihelle were thrown into the moat, she innocently asked lithe Town was famous for oysters. fhoran.—A gentleman attempting to carve a fowl which had been roasted for his dinner, finding con siderable di/Scotty in separating its joints, exclaimed against the cheat who had sold him a hen for a chicken—. My dear," said the enraged man's wife, "don't talk so abont the aged and respectable Mr. B—, he planted the first hill of corn that was planted in C—. " I know it, " said the husband, and I should think this hen scratched it up." And here is another : Upon hearing of the death of a very'eelebrated radical, Lord stuttered— . Tha-th-thank heaven 1 the cm-av-average of man kind i improved." New Version,. '- ' Over the left.' Decidedly in the descendant of the sinister. Does your mother know you're out 1' Is your maternal parent's natural solicitude allayed by the information that ynn have for the present vacated your domestic recd . ? Bee ! there he goes with his eye out; Behold ! he proceeds totally deprived of one moiety ofhia anal organs! [For the Miners' Journal.] A Question. It is required to divide s circular piece of paper into two perfect ovals. The paper may be divided into as many pieces as necessary, bat they must an be used. How is it done Answer requested. E. H. B. EZECUTIOW.—CoIt the Murderer.—Patrick Russell, convicted ottbe murder of his wife. wee executed in New York on' the Bth inst. The gal. lowa wee erectel in full view of the window ofjhe cell in which Colt is confined. He looked through the window, and witnessed the execution from first to last! .lEttrar. SPEED.—The greatest v exploit 'of travel ever made on this side of the Atlantic—or the other side either, was performed by Clayton the al rotte% Re started fromCincinanti with his balloon, and trav elled from thence to the Allegheny mountains, a dis tance of three hundred and fifty miles, in nine and a half hours. PIIOI7BBION AND PIIACTICE.-A Mississippi pa. per states that a Mr. Garin. one of the newly elected anti-bond members of Congress, was indebted to the Union Bank of Mississippi, upwards of 500,000 dol lars; all of which, except a small sum paid in depre ciated paper. remains unpaid. He is an out-and oat anti-bonder. Arroxiirm Msay Bottum Cast."---The body of en abandoned bat most beautiful gid, named Ann WAllister, was found on, Thursday in the Middle sex Canal et Boston. It is supposed that she was murdered, se a man was wen to follow her towanle the canal from the Theatre on the previous night. The Angler. Anted cap a pie, with baskets. bags and rods, Worms. maggots, brass,lead, the angler's gods; More flies then Emerald's land endaree, ( Poor Piscatona's noble luck insures, ) Come home, his looks his woful tale pronounce. The luggage half a ton—The fish an ounce, MORE FOTWEltTEll.—FoTgeries to the amount of $50,000 and upwards were discovered in New York last week. The firm of Kirk and Johnston is im plicated. We trust these respectable rascals will not escape the punishment due their villainy. Aarasna.—The Tuscaloose papers of the 24th ult., announce that the Hon. Arthur P. Bagby was on that day-elected United States Senator. to 611 the vs. cancy occasioned by the resignation of the Hon. C. C. Clay. Dsracrrtome—The new methodiet church, on the corner of Eighth and Race street s , . Philadelphia, was dedicated to divine worship, on Thursday of list week. Aorerrsn.—The Canadians are• talking abput laying a duty upon American produce. These John Bulls are great sticklers for 4$ free trade." IiTIALLT Parr.c.o...:-.Tha Potato crop in Ire. land. . • • Tort.—The democrats of Orange county. N. 0.. h f 5, :,.." ated Henry Clay for the Presidency. - , MI BllMlnarty of the Foreign Bede ?4' The Rev. Hugh MGNene, at the request of the American Consul and several influential citizens, delivered to a crowded auditory at the Liverpool Arophitheatre, on Wednesday, a lecture on the life of Dr. Franklin. It excited. immense 'interest, and the receipts, intended for the bene6t of the Printer's Pension Society, amounted to £270. Mr. Atha a gentleman of African descent, has been appointed chief baron of the exchequer in the island of Antigua. Another man-has attempted.to get into Bucking ham Palace. He is insane. • Several deaths by hydrophobia have lately occur- red in Bnglandind Scotland. An anti•corn•law meeting, at which Mr. Curtis, of Ohfo, attended, held' at Birmingham on Monday, was overruled by the chartists. The deanery of Cork has been conferred upon the son•in•law of - Chid lustier, Pennefather, the Rev. Dr. O'Brien, Fellow of Trinity College. Sir Cliffort Constable and Sir John - Gerard. both ROM= cathulice and staunch conservatives, are shortly to be raised to the peerage. • On Sunday night, the Staith, or shipping place for coals, belonging to Tyne Main Colliery, about two miles below Newcastle, was entirely destroyed by which was occasioned by the accidental overtur ning of one of the fireplaces used by the work men. The Duke of Wellington has given directions for the refurnishing of the principal apartments at Strah fieldsaye, and it is said that her. Majesty and Prince Albert will honour. Ake noble duke with a visit early in the spring. An accident occurred to Lord Rivers, at Brighton, during the last week, by which his lordship haa dreadfully fractured one of his arms in three places, viz : his shoulder bone, the arm just above the el bow, and just below it. A private in the 60th Rifles, named Robert Mor ris, quartered at Burnley, on Sunday evening last, in a frt.' of jealousy, stabbed his lieutenant, Mn O'Grady, pnd Elizabeth Hadden, a girl to whom he was attached, and then'stabbed himself. All the parties died in a few hours. Oh Wednesday week the directors of the E. I. Company gave a grand dinner at the London Ta vern to Lord Ellenborough, the newly appointed go vernor-general. All the ministers, especially the Duke of Wellington and Sir R. Peel, were loudly cheered, both on their arrival and when they left, by the crowd outside the tavern. - A recent discovery of jewels in the Exchequer• office has been the subject of much conversation in the metropolis. The treasure found is said to he of considerable value, and according to all appearances it has been hid 101 150 years—plainly for more than o centary. The most probable surmise is, that the jewels were pledged in the reign either of Charles H. or James 11. The Birmingham manufacturers ere now recei ving some large orders from the United States. There orders had been suspended while the affair was pending, but were issued after the trial had concluded. The calamitous fire at the Tower will also give employment to a considerable number of bands in. the gun trade. Upon the whole s the . prospects of the Birmingham artisans for the winter are more cheering than could have been anticipated a short time since. ' Prince Albert's surname, and, of course, thst,-0 the sovereign and heir apparent is, we believe arch Marquis of Lothian died at the seat of the ThiA.a. ger Lady Suffield, on Sunday. Sir Gordon Bremer and Captain Elliot, of Chi nese notoriety, have arriftd et Falmouth in the Great Liverpool. Lieutenant. Col. George Macdonald, half-pay, 16th Regiment, a veteran officer of 35 years full-pay ser vice, has accepted the appointment of Governor of Sierra Leone. The late Rev. Dr. Nott, of Winchester, has left to the Society for Propagating the Gospel , in Foreign Parts; £6,000, to be expended in building churches in Upper and Lower Canada. Mrs. Fitzsimon, daughter to the Lord Mayor of Dublin, will Aischar g e the duties of Lady Mayoress, at the Mansion House, during the mayoralty of her father. • Lord Kelworth, son of the Earl of Mountcashel, bad the contents of his fowling-piece unfortunately discharged into his shoulder ,by accident, a few. days since, while driving to Cashel, on a car, The Morning Chronicle of Saturday makes the following assertion Having failed to obtain the young Queen of Spain in marriage for one of his own sons, we understand that Louis Philippe is now using all hie influence to promote a marriage with a son of Don Carlos. The co-operation of Christi na has been Bemired to this scheme." Tte Frankfurt Journal publishes a royal ordi. nonce issued by the king of Prussia, placing a sum of £6OO British at the disposal of the Archbishops of Canterbury and York and the Bishop of London —being half the amount ofthe annual income: to be paid to a Bishop of Jerusalem, to be appointed by these prelates. A letter from Lille, in the Conatitutiond, - states that a man in that place had met with his death by swallowing a live mouse. He war in a publie.house, and the mouse having just been caught, be laid a wager that he would swallow it alive. He did so, but immediately afterwards was attacked by violent convulsions, and in three hours was a corpse. 8o perfectly satisfied and highly pleased was Lis imperial majesty, the sultan, at the personal exertion and zeal shown by Sir Robert Stopford, on the cc. mien of the arrangement and happy termination of the Egyptian question, that his imperial majesty was pleased to order an imperial nishan of honor and merit, and a sword with its handle studded with diamonds to be prepared and sent to him as a mark and a remembrance of his imperial majesty's parti• attar esteem and• consideration.' The Rev. Waldo Sibthorp, fellow of Magdalen College, and brother to Colonel Sibthorp, has sold his church at Ryde,.in the Isle of Wight, and cud. denly taken his departure, in order to become a Roman catholic priest. • On Friday week, George Gifford. Esq.. of Belly. eopp, in the county of Wexford, dropped almost In stantaneously dead • while looking at a pack of hounds drawing a cover in the neighborhood of his residence. -- -andpleasure".—D Jonmsok NU War the idntere Joanna] Descent we eawariarm o , . The Saxons are placed by Ptoleiny. eaten AO' became first known to the Roman; at the beck tht Cillainiano• Gratin,' ," his hien* of the tiothe k provesjhem to have been • originally Gate or Gotha, who passed from Sweden into he also shelve that the Scythian Gate fottedarthe Gothie nation. • And it is evident from the trittlish Saxon) the Mcesogothie, and other gratinurs, - printed by Dr. Hicks, that the English Elston language Is dw rived from the Gotbfc, or that of the &Alen %deb which woe Celtic in its grout& ThattheC eltie Ism guage wee brought from Scythia; in Aale, in the migrations of the first colonies, and was the ground - and origin 'of the Tentote. end all the other lan gnages anciently • used' int/std. Scandbaavla, thi‘ Lain, and almost all Europe, is ' very well provetby nentier, Rid. des Celtea, I. 1. c. lb, p. 165. Viett..-th eicepts"the Samaritan s the .Gtecitan (P ani l - `.from the Egyptian) and the Roman remains moat em".-z,.he Grecian ) Thlllangei • never subject subject to the ucn .Z the north of Sweden. The unir "* "'Luca weft the fourth and 'fifth centuries-has 'rib" , and the Welsh tongue, and that of "Lowerlik itL thic Biscaye, end Seems to have some with the The ancient Etruscan is supposed to have beep dialect of the . Celtic.. The modem French and Spainish, though dialects of the Latin, still retain many Celtic words. The Danish, Nortvegian, and Swedish, ate evidently dialects of the Cltie,•efid are allied to the German, especially that used in Lower gemiany. The Asiatic Scythian colony which Odin or Woden settled in the southern Provinces of Scandinavia and the northern of Germany, Introit': ced a softer dialect of the Celtic, with• some new words and new terminations. This:was the Eng. lisp Saxon tongue. See Millet, Intro& aT4isfaire de Dannemare. - The. Franks and English Saxons Went eilttal), German patrons ; the former came one hundred and thirty years earlier beyond the Rhino; the latter from the countries about the mouths of the Rhine and the Elbo, and about Holstein, on the tot:Ail:tent of Denmark, still called Juiland. Hence the French and English both - had the same language, as Bishop Godwin observes from this circumstance. : This•ia confirmed by other clear proofs by the learned .and judicious William Howl, in his Institution of Gen• eral History, t. 4. p. 425. See Butler's lives, vol. 4. pp. 224 & 225. Ae Pottsville contains descendants of almost all the eforenamed nations, it may amuse many otymur readers to be made acquainted with the derivation and descent of the various languages of our ibteft• there; here conglomerated into a prettygood sleek for tracing veins, and finding where they trep arrizone of us yet pretend to, say how far dray run down. MEZEOFANTI., (For the Miners' Journal.] Biographical Enigma. I am composed of 21 letters. My 1, 20, 13, wee the name of a distinguished European Patna. My 2,6, 21, 5, was the name of one of the slob era of the Peclaration of Independence,. My 3, 15, 14, 19, was the name of a %Warrior:of N. Caroline. My 4,3, 7, 12, 20, 6, 11, 5, was the name of a member of Congress during the Revola• lion. My 5, 10, 9,9, T 7, 19, was the ileme.of-one of . the Professors in liarvaid College. My 6, 13, 13, 3, 11, was the name of a Brigadier . General in the Revolution. My 7, 14, 6, 15, was the name of one of the signora of the Declaration of Independence. My 8,9, 7, 17, 12,•12, wes the name of an of& cer who distinguished himself in the i war with the Algerines. - . • My 9,3, 11, 18, ,was the name of one of. the signers of the Declaration of Independence. My 10, 13, 13, 20, 11, was the name of one of • the Governors of New Hampshire. My 11, 10, 7,8, 14, 4, was the name of a Persian Conqueror. _ My 12, 6,5, 14, 8, was the name of a distinguish• ed Ainerican General. My 13, 3, 20, was the name of one of the sign ers of the Declaration of Independence.. My 14, 15, 3, 19, was the name of a_Goveni4kof the Colony of N. Carolina. My 15, 17, 13413. 646, was the name of tart' of the Treasury of the United States. , My 16, 13, 10, 11, 15, was the , name of one of the members of the house of Burgesses of Virginia. My 17, 11, 15; 21, 14, was the name of a diatin• - rushed Spy. My 18, 14, 13, 8,6, 2, 19, was the name of a na• val officer, (son-in-law of one of the eigit, era.) My 19, fly 13, 8,6, 18, was the name of One of the Governors of - Georgia. My 20, 6,7, 13, 3, was the name of one'of the Governors of MaliVe. My 21, 14, 3, 15, was the name of a Revolution• pry Patriot. ' E. B. B. Answer next week. OrsTrate.—Few persons, we imagine, ate aware of the immense quantities of ciysters consumed in some of the large cities. In a suit that was hied in one of the courts of New York, a few days since, it was shown, during its progress, that one. indisidtikl, (a Mr. Ruckman,) in the sear 1836, supplied that city with oysters to the extent in value done tan. dred and filly thousand dollars! DEATIZ IA TUB PFLPIT.-..011 Sunday, fist the Rev. Frederick Tuckerman, of 'Poughkeepsie, while engaged in preaching to a congregation at /Wenches ter, Pe., fell down and expired. Aunivan.—The London correspondent of the Boston Post says that the Hon. Enyilitn - Estsit• stir, our Representative at the Court of St. James, had arrived in London. RAPE.—A German fur dealer, in Boston, was an. rested last week and fully comm itted, charged with having committed a rape on the poison of a yonng girl in his employ. Two Motown or CONGI4II3 bate lately etinee4 a somewhat pugnacious disposition. .Cause.,—the rightful occupancy of tbe_arm chair vacated by Mr. Sergeant. , Tonsure are selling in isicinnatilor reenti a pound, and in New York at 8 cents. In Pottsgrille they have sold as low as 5 cents. A Resent. ELECTIOS for Congress, in tthe Bed• ford District, in this State to take &Won the tist inst. Tan Dowrostans intend giving Dickens a splen did reception on his arrival in their city. Some of the Roston ciclons ere pretty good. A Texts Jonas has been found guilty of stroki ng some horses and nigger!.. • MADAME CELESTE, the damage, contemplates i speedy return to the United States.- Tat taTscmsnip AcADIA brought 0ut35,000 OIL Dasrancrtvz Flita.--I:litty buildings liters cit. stroyed by file in Albany qn the. 1 616 inst. “ Flattery is that which makes every body' 'sick but those who swallow it.'! MI