POTTSVILLE. NATVM)At DI43RNING,'NOV. I I, [843. . . . ' • Itisurait c . The. subscriber. Agent ;131 , one of the besi.lnsur,- : nee offices in Philadelphia, is prepared to plate in. ouranees on all Ileseriptions of property such as Houses, Mills, Stables Golidei, Furniture. , tthe very losvestrate: , B. BAN AN. - . - • V. B. Palrnei . ; Pl., No. 59 Pine Street, Philadelphia in authnritted :to act as Agent to,receise subseiiptions and advertisernevu for this paper. NOTICE. The .subscriber will be, thankful, irall those who alb indebted to him, and ate able to pan, will please callamd settle their accounts, immediately. Those but ing claims against the subscriber, will,please also present them immediately. 0t.t123,1813. BCNJ; BANNAN, !Passage 'llgelcy t &c . The eubscriber is preLiared to engage Passage,. for paissengeri from every pari of England, Ireland. Scot-' land anti %Vales at the very lowest rates. He also at tenes to unfitting mowy to (sell , Tart of Europe, in sums of iMo' Pc and and upwa,ds. 43 3 , prompt atten tion-to husincss he expccts to else general satisfaction. B. BA NN N. A qent f or JOSEPH - 1 RA Y. C/-e Publioullons' All the ebetip publications are for sale at this office as coon is ludic& et:publishen4rices. Single copies of and work• obtained to order. - The subscriber return= hia eittero thinks to the citizens of POW ille.and. 'lie county generally, for the kind feelings exhibited towards hint in bis pits sista. difficulties, and linprs ih.rt it trill be in his Filmic.° reciprocate those feelti;gl, ! liy, extra •eler. lions Ut endeavoring to prom'iite the best interest= of. thocommnnity - through ttio position . wbicli he war icontioneito'occupy„. Although compelled to do bus l iness at p:esent -for the bench} of •hie rredlore, • he confidently hopes that by strict attention to the sane, and a disposition' to accommodate all those who fechlisposed to patronize , hitn; he may soon . be enabled to extricate.hims.lf from -his present position e nd do something for hims:lf and f.nnity. again.. • With the loss pf his property go 'all unkind feelings towards any member of the corning •nity, that may hare been engendered in the . course . ofstbe list fourteen years; during `which ho,published the Mir.crs' Juurn,l, arid thus publicly tenders to one and all the rilit hand of f_rowahtp. Cornmeocing the w. i ild anew, as-he in cempclled to do in a pecuni ry point of sicw, .6o wishes to do Co al ith a clear eonscience. dud an upright intention of : dofng justice to all, along ails a. Cull_ determination teen counter all diflicifties, itsever formidable .-ttiey may appear, and'Eurinount them if ho can.. - _ The Establishment has, paced into the hands of John Baitninf..as Proprietor, but the editorial department and general superintendence will be under the coittrokfille . subscriber as BA:!ZNAN:. , . Pottsville, - November 11, 1913. • US* OF ANTIILIACITE7—In glancing over Mir exchanges a few days since. we remarked, the fol. lowinearticlo in relation to•advertised proposals for wood, which is extracted ((Om the Lancaster Intelligencer.. It reads thus .• We anvil° !heat tention of our leaders to the advertisement -of Mr.' Moormn. the finpPriptetdent of the Co lon:Ms:and Philadelphia inviting pro. posals for 6000 cords of wood-:-for the taeef the road till De:amber, 1844. ' It i 3 desir thra that a fair competj.dan should ho encouraged. the, amount advertised for 16 .IMlrreriFC, •and will sup ply 'the road under the near' Canal Commissi'or). ereSor ajang prod: As tNeSuperi:itenderit has thought it right to tcHke this contract at this late peva& just before the near hoard take their seat tve trust competition will be er.c'ourageti." The above mentioned proposals ore triade.by the geVernment, and it is a wafter of surprise and wonder to us that our State, in. the face of econo my, inovert!ence and soused policy, bhauld epcour no thertiae of wood on her lecenntives ins'ead of the'ttifibmcito products of !lei own mountains. It hap been asserted thattlio - use of coal in such ca- Fee inleipracticabV; and were, this ohjnetion true, we Would have n) realm I) coinFlein, but expo. rieni , e proves the•reverSe. Coal is used on other ,Tail roads in the `country; and it h; a matter of well known fact that the Ltaltimore I2ailroid com pany have perchlscd coal from Schuylkill coun ty at a cost of E:ght &Mir: per to:r in preference to using . 'wood. Besides this tie have the case of the Sugar Loaf Coal Company is Lezarne coun ty, which company use nothing 60:anthracite ,upon their Icamintitivea, although they pass for Cif- 4 Ven miles over . 11:z'etm nod Beaver. Mead , Tav Milhaud, through a thickly wooded country, where it could9.%plocur&f n! co:nparetioly noth ' Aug: Tiv4o thrqalo evi heca to pr3vo that the uo, of antbraci:e is • poss.ble and practicable, nay Inure, thit it is preferable to any other fuel for staam'generating purposis, and yet notwithstand ing all this, we find- the Po:tsuille and Philada. n.ailread cimpany continuirt; to use wood. This is the more resprehemible because that c.impiny expends 'entirely upon this yegton for its support . ennursprnent.. If anything sh•+uld recur to decrease 'the sates of that.er ch..,ek its iirescnt eon 51:Imp:ion this ..cmnpany arnul.l be one of the hoe. vi s est corkers, and it is thFr ! .f. , ren ineomist,:nt and unteciprocal policy nn.th••ir pa , t: We,clo,e trtia auljlet ob - rutly at iv i.:11 a Foiniso that , Cce will tecur'to it ji3ar,.; fully is a sticceetl iog number... •.L", Turzvss ecrzy.--:.We itne:scd, qtlite einusin; scene in the streets of our Borough, on Sunday last, which Was as follows t p vty of 4IJUr citizens hal startid .in o -the-Woods -for the purpose of i,a•chi.og two not )rious prirelers, burtowed-uaddr a tree somewheie between this placs,and port eirbon.• Circura,tin&s had tm lo fix /long suspicion up.m them., and the lo4me -of the sortie were del ermined to - del ide the We saw the party on thartreturn, the pripners, stiong y guarded, were in'll..hec . centre. enda more comical looking twain we n4 - kr laid our eyes en. Thu 'pods, discovered in , their StfOnghold, were hung around them ital6B nags! --fantsstical style of arrstigemcnt, kettr.s. pans. thickon4. coats, hate,' hoots,: nearly ever) thin,: that cold be' cons-F./kat:3r cribbed and carried off was tle : e gentry 'in. posses-i .;They ivere furnished with a ride to Orw-gsburg, c. here they Aval tv.Tai; meir trial at the trzt t-rua." OuuiaL - AND have the par l i - ticulars of a quirrel and wurdcr. wide) occurred last wcels,.. in the neighborhood of. tzuntkury, l'fOrtlititnherknd comity. A parry of 7o.ung num wontout faccoonhantini, and while .sts.ctn; the residence of three Irishmen on Sham:Atiftsfeel, three miles Etat - of Sunbury (v.z ; Wm. Holiter, itotert liunter, end a tritn named Delany,) wee attack: d by them-- a quarrel ensued which resulted shortly after in the afiath of young Vend by frettnties - (scull with .'a gun wrested from We tearObat the Iriihmen were the eggressora—they lance heerCitiveliceil and are now confuted in cbainti irf,tho Sunbury jail to await , f.eir tidy whielt will most probably lake Voce nett : week. coroner's inquest *pal held over' the body. Verdict - in actordiniee with 'tie facts. The Zap. Daniel Nr.brer was to li4v, **paid) ca Tbarll.lay ;rat, a; Aaiaver 4 Maass ctatctta.' • Texas. The newel fr4m Texas of a lite dato:;posipses, most starving interest.; Bye letter from Galves ton to the New, Orleans Tropic, says that. Gen, Morphy, U. S..charge to Texas haareturdellta Coe United States, and that 'strange dcvelone ments reating to, the Cause of his return are a. bout to be made public. We make the following extracts from the letter t 44 General Murphy suspected some_ secret ma- ! chinafions between the British and Texan, GO- crnments, bighly"detriinentalto.the United , Ststes interests, and forthwith set abed discovering the nature of the mystery.' This he' was- enabled to do during President Houston's absence,at the In dian' Treaty Grour.de-he being furnished with well:authenticated and undoubted copies; of the entire treasonable . correspondence held by the British and Mexican Goveriaments--binding him self to send commiieions to recognize the:-nomi nal scvereignty of lalexico, provided that Govern ment will thereupon cede Texas to Great Britain, for'eonsidcrationl ' Texas will then be a 1.36 - Lab province, Ly Cession from Mextco,, and con sent of the Executive of the -RepubliCl!--:-thii con firmation of therSenate;and sanction of the people can-be relied on—it ii - 6ppesed—after sustaining the ordeal which the fresident has . led them through. One a province of Great Britain, and the imme iate abolition of slavery folleivs as a mover of course—but a 4 . 4 consideration '•' is se . • ' ' le , cured for the slave-bolder." ' ' I • . . • . '• .7 . '•4 . I 44 But what, you - ask, is to be the - Traitor's re: i ward? Govsnson GEPEriAL ron Lire, w'rrar A LARGE sA,t,Any Atm A 111G11-60UND1 5 4 TITLE, will bribe l HOEIAton to sell his country! 'The ,correspondence which I allude to fully ',explains the mTste'ry .of the President's war against the Navy. The vessels were to be so'd in New Or leans hat spring—atter whiCh . the Mexican Navy to take Galveston and Control the coast-- 4 he secured by p f iorinidatfe inland invasion. The seitsion to linglimd was then to follow, tip agree mew; and the iieople of Texas would ldok upon their new masters . as eery saviours,-and 'adept a ny form of G.)verntnent that tbeirAleliverers might preselitte. The it contumacy ", of Conamodery Mime defeated this well contrived plamt:--and he de4erves - 'the execration of every lover of the 4 , British policy !" .' I believe that a plan is now ma'uring for the delivery of Texas into ti-e hands of Melico this fit% Prey Gad that 14. PAlvk a- 1 1n "Caucus" may 'prove as successful •in 1 thwarting the President as Corn. Rio •re , vas last spring! If sr that-the ii , ol ingel detfft tion of •Alri'Aftel, bearer if alespatchrs. will operate, most injuriously on the *fairs of Texas--for things are bastmaing to a grand deneuncement, whic . h • . will prove fatal to the young Republic; 'unlesa the Eaele.can re-cue the victim front the Lion's claw; I" . Nsw Ei.s.cTiosr.--The result of the e. -lecii tit in New Yolk, t'n Tuestfty Is.t, is se la se hard froni, a complete victory. Hers d ffer s trneW•hat ii their report of the result, 'arid what is more singular, the strongest; Whig pa. pars are the.lost sanguine of their Sllcl3lg. We take the st4emeut of the New York Tribune, nliich, is among the most In lirrate; and the re. Purr is ns fOIbWEI - : The twigs have elected their Sheriff, and there is a_ probability that the Caro. nor, :Senator and Clerk, are also elected.' READING .' RAlLitoAn.—The business •on the Philadelphia-and Reading Rathcad. for the month Of Ovober, 1843, amounted to . $58,160 34, aI 7 Imiing an increase over . the-previous` month of $9.334 69. The busimiss for , the week ending Nov. 4th was $13,395 93. In addition to :dais we learn lint the Presi&nt of the ceMpanv, 11 r. Crider, n'as gone to England _for the po(po,e of making arrangements fir the iron of the sei.ond track. This fact, when taken in connection with the receipts 65 above stated, argues a , 'prosperous and encouraging state of existence for the com pany. • OUTILAGE AND PROBABLE MURDEB.-A col ored man named Edward Jordah, on Tuesday last, attacked and beat his sisterli Mis. Richards, in such a manner that the injuries redultrd in, her death, she being enceinte at the time of the'out rage:iticbtads, the busbanit of the murdered .woman (ben seized a gun,..7ith which he wound ed Jordan as he was escaping : l, The scoundrel zwas pursued, and .after a-hearing was remanded to jail to aeaut his trial at the nextfterm of the cauft; A.o trrespondent to the Botiton Couticr, 4vititing Itorri — Krunce, says that the account of the; late encounter of Cassius M. Clay is now being copied in all the European papers, as an evidence! of the•imprsctil.abtitty of Rcpuhlieniisrn. asserted 'that Cassius teas ta son of one, of the csodidistes • for the Presitleiny, end tho ty;hole occurrence is desctibnd , extravagant,: high coloured language; and is calgulaled to re.' fleet disercaLt upon out. country. . thtenscsuss4n. 7 .-The Canal . Vont President; Capt; Werner, was ' , shippedlast Week to Phila. delph;ci, by. illrfGideCin 13ast, of Sthuylkill Hn yen, haying on board 71, Tons, id emit. of coal; This is the largest load . which has ever passed, • do.4,the Schuylkill. Canal; and th makingthe rec.lid, we would remark that it is ascertained be. yond questi m, ih.it eleven incbes!rnaro of water in the Can's' would 'that boil's or one blindred tons i)Urt;len. ' . t The Hon. John gtuncy Adams arrived at Erie on TuCs ! lay Inst. He was *dyed with a ;salute of A,riillery,.antl all ktha horiours which a grateful community could k'be!..tow; were ahowet ed upo4 the 'vciterable pttrlot by the nultitutre. NUPTIALS IN ,Emperor of Brazil has 'firni,hed his c.mtract of marriage to the Princess Theri.si of Naples,iand the roy'al couple were enjoying all the delights of a honey- Moon at the lasi siivices„ • • • 1 • I ATTEMPT. TO A,BIetEINETE Tin POZE.-•-4A story CV.lE'circulaiiig in R:tme at the lot account, ‘itat an attempt had beeri4nade upon the life iof the Pope, by a 'tnt of scvolutiohaty Physici n. whit was arrested' hilrt in aciArcli of hie and a WNW pitta! was giscovered . upon his Flip CO , VhcriloAN„--Lytt have cheering ailvices 'from this young and vigdrous state. ;there is an even ,chance of •the . e1«:elion Of a WhlOiovernor, Lieu: tenant mid V.V3 Of. the .arse Cringreesm'enl Anil the kVhig. hid 6-aly a rem!.er:ia the istature. Our !clerk's who h.ve. word from tive ri p,trt of the State assure us tun the majority ,:ither way tb.s Fall will be . trink..mnil such as to leave no tioubt'tti the 'minds nt any Whig that the Stlte will cast her v-o es for , Homy !Clay' iti tBl4. 'Thus floats the Whig h'maiiti: in the sun• shine in every quarter of the Union !--N. Y. tri• bane'. , Geonots.—Tne ' tote et the late Electind is the heaviest ever s case in 'the Slate.--In all but one County ( Wine 'y the Whie . majority 3 SDO on Congrees as well as Poveinor. Sepate —47 Whig, 44' Loco. Hous-125 Whig, 77 Loco; Whig majority in , Joint Ballot, 51. • last yeautho Locotec? majuilts on : joint 031- Ist was Tribtine. • BOOK KESPIISUTUROXI, TO! 00011 . ACC01%••••• WO are creditably' ist9rmetl, thSt -.l4lcsers. Bisrper have furciaeted Mr. Bennet's popular Treatise on •Book Seepihglor lare:e sum of slo,ooCiltr. :rob 'American: • 4 • .1 :-. , FOREIGN - ITEMS. - :1 .• •-: • • I it . • . t 1 .: -ABItITAX T THY ZUITTAUIA. i - . , . The; news from Europe; by this ?arrivals- of m u ch importance, end possesses great interest., - The principal topic spoken:Of , is the arrest of Daniel: O'Connell, the partic:dare of Which tire:give our readers below.l ',,, I,' • : , Animal., or O'CossimAt—One.ef the boldest steps ever undertaken by h - government, is this er rest of' O'Crinnell.land the dispersion' of the Olen tart meeting. From the passive, the government has Wished to the irggressivo poliey-4rom one ex treme to the other!, . T h 9 Planted •meeting was to have been held on Sunday, the Bth, nip the preclaination for dispersin4 it was pot issued'un til lam in the afternoon of Saturday; so late; that it was impossible to 'apprise per Sons who bed come . frorria distance. , l As this Meeting "was to have been: the last of the monater meetings, all the strength of the Repeaters '; Was intended tehave been brought to 'bear epee it: No, time we's lost by • the awl:mince in giving effect , tci their deter. initiation to prohibit therneeting. All the availi. • ble military force of the Co:entry Was in or near, Dublin, the men were proVided with sixty rouhde of cartridge, and :twenty-four boors' priwisions„ a park:of artilery teas on the field of Clontarf, and if Mr.' O'Cionnel had not, by a timely counter pro .claritation, prevented the people filial assembling, -the Chnsequences l would have been lamentable.-- Sunday,/ the road betwedi • Dublin and miles--was three or four densely D tla t" rd ig nged by pers i ons passing to and from the in fended scene of operations, but no di-turbanco took plaie. Thus steed mends uet Sunday night.— 1 Thefollowing dig a great meet ng of the amid. atidn took placeat the Abbey s reet Theatre, the Coin Exchange being toe small for the purpose. • Mr: O'Connell 'addressed the meeting on the E. %Tina, of the previous daii.stating:that if the Gev. e tint did, not/ intemilto shed blood, they had puisued a course the most likely to effect that oh ject. He counselled obedience to_ thelaw,-an. noenced his intention of holding simultaneous meetings in every parishlof Ireland,io petition for Repeal, and to address her-Majesty, and declared that nothing •coold ll accelerate his,vvialies so 'Much 'settle interference of theevernihatit. ' A' length thelDublin•papers of rtiday night an nounced that Mr. O'Conneltniould he arrested the next day, and the Irish Metropolis, es might nate.' rally be expects., became hiablY eiCited: Every one %eta on the:qui vire., Cleat • numbers of p .,-r- 'Oils assembled at the 'Head Pence office. Mr. O'Connell !mired at his house, Merricin-square, did having received this Sacrament, was witted nice by the Crown Soliettor, to know at what hour he would attend with bidtat Judge Burton's diem berg. The hour fixed wpi three O'clock. . Mr. O'- Connell nttende l d. and eilierei.cioto recognisinCee.. himself in £1 . 0100 1 and we swedes of £5OO each to answer n charge of conspiracy and miiilemeau er on the first-day of teiin. This - same course teas I adopted in the ease of Mr. John O 'Connell, - The rhartie against imr. O'Ceent II is that 4 corisPira ry frr the porpose,of compelling her lit eje,ty; by demonsirations of phy'fieal foice, to Change rhei measures and the laws pf h: r realm; also with the utterance of seo,ous did inflonnnatory language,, ealcii:ateifta b6rig into':contrnipt the tgoverinhoof and constitution of thecouritry, and produce! dig. r'atlstact , on in too army; and foriher, with rai,ing • 'Money to procure achinge in the laws and colnsti . retina of the realm. TheAttornry General fa to Proceed by indictment, rind not ex-officio, (hit is, if the Grand Jhry find tills. -Against irir. Bay, Mr. Steele, M: Barret t of the Pilot, Mr. Du y, of the Nation, Dr thay,!;of the Freeman's Journal, and others, similar pieeeedings Will be tal(p.— The Goverrimeot and Mr. O'Connell are now fair ly at issue, and a short time will show who s the ictor. At p'reileet, tilb •elifel anxiety is to keep the country Oat. Helms issued two add4ssee, 'in which obedience to the law is the only theme dilated upon. t 1 ; I ~ At the Repeal AsseCiatkm, on Mond ay; Mr, o'. ; Connell evinced . 'a desire to „re.C.ede a little frjm the 1 ' high ground en the.ROpeal question which iii has all along taken. Heexpressedhimself favorable 1 • tea federal parliament, if the Government ring ' concede it. • Some as , ert that this looks ve l y like a desire to ibaCk out;' hue he expresseu; it seems; I • a favorable opinion in favor el tali project on more 1 than ono occasion. 1.: .1 I' i I I No .10F.9 thin twehle counsel were immediately retained for Messrs. Daniel and John frtilinnell, • . 1 -.... i ~.. , among wnom aro mews. rip' and Mooie, late attorney general sod Solicitor' general for Ixqand; Wand five oth e r c o unsel. l 1 _,_ Next to affairs in ilrelantLpublic attention is fixed.tTon thh' City of London election; thelpol, ling forw \ hieh takesploce on Saturday next The candlifatestare Mr. Thomas Baring, who is rela ted to Lord 'Ashburton; and„Mr. Pattison l . - 'the former is a monopelitit, the litter a free tr ader.- i , The Anti-Cora Lew:League have throwft them• selves heart and soul ;Into Ibis contest:, arid they are sanguine 'oi / carryingtheir'men.- Thh result of this election will have an iir.portint influence on the future commercial peliey \ of the ministry. Mr. Pattisores success will compel Government to accelerate their movements ire the threctien of free trade. ' No solitary election for a long period has excited so much interest. ', I , The troubles in Greece are not at an end, and it i is generally believed that King Otho I will be compelled to abdicate; , . - The Greenock AdVertieer' states that 'a secret 'expedition has bedißttecl out at, that port, and that several vessels have sailed under sealed or derb, which are not re be opened until they have ' I . crossed the equator. :%• I'' ,' . i f l y the commercial treaty with China, the whole system cif fees and prlesenta is abolished. %rho hong meretianttdebts hairs been - paid up. The trade is open to all nations as well as to the Eliglish, but it is nit yet known Whether any but the English are to have consuls at the (Our ports. • A. Stockholm letter states' that, the town of E gereund (Norway) ryas entirely destroyed by foe oti the 4th ult. • ,i. - ”. • . • . ~.: A PoPesal ha! beeemado to erect a moon ent to Dr. Southey in RedchaPle Church, Bostic his native city. . i Thu Rev. Dr. Posey has returned to Oxford; ' with his health (finite restored MeDUartit.-4The WashingtonqGa.) Nove of the Rib Ult. filebutEe as. tasted at a ialideal ; :discu.Sion last week, in Elbert couniy..when he was met; by one of 'our , Georgia wb•gs, in, which, ;:Foinehet to thi astenishment of the Coco•Focos,:hs eolife:sed that:his opini.ins relative tG th e e,tneiilutio t italily of a Uriited.States ward unCbanged, he still aliening ilk be umstitesiionac Tylughlhis health ;aims very much improved he contemplates retiring Awn the Unit ed Statta' ; Senate toil yeitr: „ A 'CLIAII3tED ltisa'.--tln the great fire.of 1835, the store of bhp :Bentsen, the met.4l dealer, stood 'Nab in the mtd.st.of the'ruin, end almost enharm• ed. No ons could tell the reason why it was not detilroyedt On . Fridai 'lts factory , in Brooklyn stood in a simil;t: meatier, while fifteen - houses and other buildinii were trurned atl itonnti)l. - • • The loss occasioned by the fire stprooklyn, on Friday afternoen. is estimated at 'sl6',ooo, mostly covered by insurance:— N Y. ..I:our.Com. • nowtoiiment of demagogues has beon nr. getaizediri this fhato, which Hensilato's Oion.'`, They *ear iho Locofaho uniform, with thieraddition of aATylirfluiapsack l ,, Their bahner slippage' raven,"*ith the talon° .i,conte to nte and //ktlifiive fhte, , iVE. I " _._, _:(-,, , '''.THE, - - MINTERS',:` -JO, :,.ußif-A_li.:..;-L • (All sorts at Jrciii.s. conginiacia.settetect.l ',There is a ttititere ticket in nomination in Del aware Cat; in Opp944tion to the - Delhi regeney.-E- The Whig shave a tieketin the - tieht. JUL SsaTii, the Prophet has co mmenced tavern keepinp • • , , Wisdom islhetter without an inheritance, than nn inheritance without wisdom.. - , • Tiler. S., schooner Pbeenix, arrived et folk, on Sunday last, in thiny•threa days from Chadres. - , i A ;PEcuLta Nl4no.—Heroine i 4 perhaps tie peculiar i word as - any in int I triguage. The first two letters Gilt aro' male, the firit three in mal4 the a ; r ace first f man, and the whole word ahrate.woutan. It runs thus—he, her, he• ro, heroine. "1 4 ,,50 more persoas have,esseaped - frotn the pens tenlary at Jefferson, Missouri, ' .Col. %Infield, of the .Texan army, bas 'arrived in New Orleon's;in feeble health. - 114 further 'maturing of the cotton crop ra, geOrgia is stcrppeir by severe frosts. Cancelled six year bonds of the State of. Ken. tucity„ to the amount of $122,000, WeTO burnt at Frankfurt on the'2Bl ult. by the secretary of State. 4 According to a Dublin paper,. a successful ex poiiment has been mule upon the 'Atmospheric Railway. - It appears that the tieing can be ploy de'at upwards of ftfty miles per hOur. - :Two hundred and soventy-six new Gime. and seven hundred l and thirty-six! now brick.bou sea have-been built in Cincinnati, Ohio, dtiring the present year. A. Brother of N. P. Willie bas, become connec ted with tue Neve York New Mirror.: ;• • ; Exercise, a cleanshirti and ajconscienc"e clear add unspotted, aie :he great pronaotivee of health and happiness.. I " . • I is A .sensitive man said to . feel worse after a pers t e* querreli, than after pinching his fingers in the crack of a door. ' The printed b?oks in the Bli Museuni Li biary occupy led mites of Vitlf f ' The New Yoik packet ships are carrying out large quantities of wooden ware to London., The Legislature of 'Vermont adjourned t its sea. sion at the apse of last week. , f • - The American Corisul at the Sandwich Wanda, .recenfly gate a sp'cutlid entertainment t. the members of the Royal Family. Tbo merting;of the Itt;o . 4lers in the Pink on Tuesday, was liobtpoiThl in censequenciii of 'the storm. - • tt is ward in ihe Mining burns!, that 1400 were annually' sacrificed by what are termed wina;sceiderits." A Stock , holip letter toateothat the town of E' gersund Norway,) was 'entirely destroyed by `fire on the 14th ult. A greet 'mass meeting was to be ho!d . in the Park yesterday 4tarneen, to express sympathy with d't'imnell. \ . - 'fhe Rev. Dr: Piney ‘ has returned to Oxford' with his hcal,h suite res'.ored. , ", I , , , -An unsuccessful attempt bias been madooli t thi/ I ; life,tif the Emperdr of Iluisii. Mr. J. Harsely Palmer sailed fro)* New Yorli yesterday for London. the airrest of o . C.mitell and his' friends pro}_ duced gnat exel!emeUt throughout England 1 Goveir or Sewall] hes written a warm' lettei-i4, mot of Mr. Clay (or the Presidency. The WashiLgton Madidortian, following to thy train of-the Charleston Mercury, adaticatekth'e annexation of Texns to the United States.' • We are happy to learn that Judge Thompson s Let recovering. , ANOTIIEU Goss. —John Magers; a Soldier iof the Revolution, agfilB4 years, died in paltimote on Fuerilay. Tito pnekvt boats on Ihe Pennsylvania Canal nili cease running on tWOlsth instant. ; -f The small Pox has made its appearanUnitn =natl. , • . • Th. forfeited lands, now advertised for aoleiin Hamilton County', Ohici; amount to $57,00,64 , ; . The hoc number of students in Yale College, at the present time; is 559. Tho New Qrleans Picayune says I We consider the epidemic at en endtelieheddth of the city is now resitted,and absentees hay )re .; turn without danger." A necessitous man, who'girea co.tly xlmnata papa la'ige sums to bo laughed at..i To acquire a few, tongues is the task of a i'ew ;Cars; but to be eloquent in one, is the labor of He. A heavy shock of an orthquato was felt in Mayeville,Vontucky, on the night of th'e 29ihfutti . about 10 o'clock. ' . • - • 1 The Yellow Fevey has entirely disappeared from Motile, Alabama. . • Sir RObertPeel lately gave £4OOO to the church • • building tuna. • 3 vn 1 A ra a - BARTERS soCTII7'4O.IDII4O ! ccousza,--A thousand such accounts, at ten !dollars each, a. mount to ten'thousand dollars—n hemlionati l lsum' thest;'iinies, ware,- it all collected. ' The eame number nifire i dollora each, ameunt to five hou.i sand dollars. lOughtnct then; every sobs riper'to a paper-tto do as he vvoltli be done b i , and thus fulfil kilo golden , rule-t=ca'ncel at one WS printers' account, more or le os-khat he may not be one of . the thousand, or the gneltiTdred t l or et ven the fifty, .who may think that because the debt is small, it is of little 6antiequento the printer. This is no don—but the staterneot`of a question is equity, for the sofittion of wipe eti‘ r but those whom it may conern.—The "r.cifir hey. . .. ~ 1 OuThaoz.--tLa,t everong, whiles Mr.lienrY, Erben. the organ builder, was!sittirig alone in his rrtfice,two men ant:ere:Land abruptly commenced a conversation respect i ng a spiirious VITA titat'vMs inserted in the Courier, a few i aye aince,lpurpor ting to be from Mr. Erben, ri ter some ether re : . marks, M0)1, suppose I did.rigt it in Abe gender; to whin r. Erben answered that circumstances which had coma to his knowledge, adilerfolie re mark jest 'mode by Triplet, induced him tl) belieVe that he (Triple') was the authir. Instantly Trii. ler `struck Mr. Erben in the! face, 'anti {ho other man, Walton, seizing him /hi the throat' the !W° pummelled him, severely, tier desiatittfintil Mr. , Erben's workmen, ' alarmed 'by the nellise„came running in. Triptct i and Watton iheni4lert 'but were pursued and overtakVn, conducted to the police anCheldro bail for trjal—Ar. Y. Com. Aida . . A Darr.—A gentleman i who dame' passenger. ' on the steamer Eclipse, inthrms us that the report at Vickabera, that Mr. Zjian,. th e baiter of the' w Sing, and. Mr. Harnreritt, the / editor' of ritap Whig, were to Sght in Louisiana on the next e t ior. ning (Tuesday). :Phis isi'alt wrong; ft is foolish; . , and w ic ked : flair jeadhs are not a particle .he fitt d hi any fuddle 4 abase' that rerideri ns e ,can 'such a meeting necessary; and let will tall; .. . ell the iiorrear, and " syrepathv of the public Frill . . scarcely purchase hur t ial Olothes'for either paity.;4, 'l 4 l:o—lteitild; ' ".-' ' f ' ' - - • ! , Valde of " NewsPaiiiers: • • " cO. It is said that the father - ,-of . ant interesting faintly near Elctreit;llich;, got :long Since et ppetl the Only , newspaper which :ha tillowed himself or fanlY,-and' solely on the irotind 'that he , could not afford the eXpensel t This , man chews 414 60 worth 'oftblitcce a par.—Exchange friaper. 1 - ironder, then, he 'is !stupid enough laths continue his newspaper., t His torpid, tobaceo rid. Alen brhin, must loathe intellectualalicuent ei much as ,a seasick man does pcirki Such a man cannot underitand that the real value, of a newspaperls greatertha`n the pitiful two or three dollars:a year. ori4ci'iniki be hal:ince. tea acotemPerarY r e marks, a newspaper is a school in a family, worth ten dollars year: , Even the most timer! paper bijitglisonaething new. Children read or hear the contents,' : gain intelligence of the. affairs: of the world, and acquire usefulknowledge, of, more im portance to them in life than a present of fifteen acies °fiend:l Parents ,are not - aware of the vast importance of a newspaper in a family of children. ytiii !lave : made the remark before, and we repeat: tt,lthst take two faMilies of children equally smart,] io loth gcdng to the same echool, 7 -let one of them! hive the :free:use of a newspaper, and it would ex..; Vde astonishinent to mark the difterence between thena. Full tine' half, rind daimportaut half, as it: respects the business of 'the world, and the ability' • to rise and make one's self respectable in it, is de.' rived froirtne,wspapere. -What _parent would not, rWihh his ; e-children respectable Who would be filling to hive his neighbor's children : morn iniel.i Ilxent then his own 1 Yet how trifling is thil r sum a paper hosts 1 It is even in these liarsktimes abseiluiely contemptible in amount, and no man Ore; felt it, except in its beneficial consequences, Who . paid his i isubscriptian regularly.--Harrisbur4 , „ Tele.grapA. Tits INve.rroN.---An undertaker in New York has invented a coffin which' he givee the title* life-preserving coffin, singular and con tradictory idterms es it , is. Th(New York cot.- respondent of the National Intelligetteer ay elireservini Coffin.' seems.to be the - focus of curiosity at the Fair of the Institute. It a So constructed as to ;fly open with the least stir of the occupants and,made as corrifort3ble (1 ins it intended. Tor a temporary lodging. The pro. prictor recorritnenda-lnhat, indec , !, it would he, et ; withipt ) --a -correst:indlng facifity of et ;it ifroui the vault, and arratigereents for ,privaCy. light,anti fresh air—.;n short, all that would be agreeslile to the remnant on first waking." • roe; writer states that -asphyxia, or a suspen.. slim. of life, with all' the'appearance of death', is • certified in, in many, instances, and carefully Pro ' afded in serne countries." In Frankfort. Cn ixianyq (says the writer.) the dead man is laid in a l well` iii,E;a room and hie hand;fastened for three days to a bell pull. The Romans cut of f . one of _thefirigere before burning the corpse or otherwise bestowing it out of sight. The El.aptians made 1 sure by embalming , and other 'nations:by frequent 1 washing and anointing. Medicil books say we should wait at least three days in winter and two in summer, 'before interring the body. It has been suggested that there sti.n.dd be a public of fmer.Who should carefully examine the body and give a eertificate, without which the buriet should re illtial."—Philarfelphia Ledger. Bsnx.ei Cousx: INTOLERANCE.-A dark and disgthcelial spot on the .map of Pennsylvania, is 'this benighted strohghold of Locofecoism. The following from the Heading Gazette; o neutral pa per p'esents the latest instance of ignorance, and tntolcrance occurring within its borders : '..Soma six months ego, several young gentle_ `men; members of the Episcopal Church in , this place, undertook the formation of a Sunday School in Maidencreek township, about six miles from town. -They encounthicd much opposition, from some-of the good people living in 'that neighbor hoodi.tant,perievering in their- laudable underta• king,' succeeded at length': in establishing , quite a large School:' With ,some trifling interruptions 'froth - these persons, in the way of brepking the windosvri of the room occupied for, the , ,plarpose, and; some other equally decent expreStions of dis akfobaiion, they were suffered to;"" ptirs'uo the even tenor of their way," `en t ‘ il within the last week; Witch the ill-will of thoit,enCcnies, hereto ford principally confined to words manifested it- Bei, in , deeds. The school room walala . rricadoed, add our young fridnds were refus i ed admittance any longer, with the threat, that if they did not dis"ontinue their visits, they ( the valiant enemy. )• woisid Moot them ! To crown the Whole, the granter . part ofth valuable Library, Which had just been Piarchafie l d for the use of the 'children, was stolen!Sed adveitiseMent id ariothr column, heoded tt $lO Iflewsrd." ) ' ' ' • Such is therstatfi of enlightenment and freedom inn glorious old Berks, the Star of Democracy," Heaven-defend us from such DemoCracy ! • Jens' Qcr Fier ADl3l9..—The Cleveland Daily Herald of NO. lit, iinnounces the of John Quincy Adams at-that place. He took 'them quite by surprise, sio that lipy had no time to ring the bulk and fire! their cannon. He addressed the citi zens of the place in the Church. He 4okO of the , • , growing prosperity of the West arid or the recep tion he had 'every wherp met with in the most en llinsiestic terms . . -Ho said that BM.goYne bad de clared he could march with three regiments from one end of the British Colonies to the other ; but hP was compelled to surrender before' he reached the plains of Saratoga. He was greeted with three cheers when he sat down . His progress is like triumphal march, and the Kild"marieloquent' seems to enjoy his Western tour greatly. ,He left the same, afternoon for Hebron and eiyezted to be in columbus.M3Saiurday. ; Ivrcin,rics Kitourt.ar•nc.-4he , Danville Ky.) Tribune states that several of !Tao leading tmCoflos 4 of Adair county, oppose the Common sch , ml System, avowedly on thoj ground that it Would cativo all; the youth to grOw up Whigs I The editor pviinently adds: We cannot but admit that there itivery good ground for their op-, jrehensions. If any Lacoroco wishes his child lo,giutv up in Ilia! own *p'oliticti, he] had better keep t~ datk.cs , o well's mouth >— , The to of— The following i - Mil s ca . of the pOlitical market is 'taken from a Gorman`Raper published in Phila delphia and is correct in*quAitions I - Political ExChaie, L 'cofticos. Velue. Wlits, Van Buren, 30 per et. i. H. Clay, 90 per et. Calhoun,: 25 4c McL , ean, 10 44 Lewis Cass, ;1;5 44 1, 1 /ebzter, . R.l:Jokuson,2o «• fluehan3n, good, but no sale. Tyler, no, salelat any pried. , ,Tun Quarricre .Jury.— Cel Johosm; was compliMented with a public diener•at Concord, N. H., on the 2 tit ult. ,Af• ter' dinner, thb 'question was bluntly put to him, Col. Johnion,did-yoU or did you not; in-Your opiniop, kill Tecumseh?" Thereupon he dada. rail. .11) /II tiown opinion,/ did hilt Tecumseh." Hp then detailed 'the circumstances' upon* which lip Mid' was founded, end a po rtio n of the guests cUrtatituted" themselves a jur y to try the case.; The result was air: unanimou s verdict that Col. , Johnson did kill Tecumseh. : - I. ,---- --.7;-: ~, ---,, Cardr' . . .- IiRS. GRAN i .Inetruetroantthe Plan o p m , 1% . Guitar, trod in vonaV. Ira ate, offers. „tali,' protoseional services to the Le i - of Pottsville.':' Residence ai Mr. 11 F 1 13011 1E1.011"S;-•.' s"." -- Corner of 1 1 /tabu:gang° , ,aid~. v t t k Oetoter 14, L - 30 , • 1 , , i Bli. Iscol, 'Oyster is announced as: a ceindidatal for, the Legislature, in Franklin courrty, Pa. Many ; wilt be - engaged in running , l;F 14 and we fainity' .. down yery 1 Shortly. - .1 - • . t i ME Berkg county mot tle Schools !" .1 Sous . AD4S - ON Tux §xtust..L.The Hon. Johan Quincy Adams, on Tuesday, the 24th ott., addressed bis constitueuts at Dedham, Masa., on the .State of the Nation: The papers state'that he Spoke but' briefly end incidentally of general Politics, bdt devoted his whole energies to the as. peels of Slavery : and the prop'osed Annexation of Texas. The following Ode'was sung on the oc.. , mien : • . 1. -... . • . 1 , . . . welcome to John %ninety Adams. , We tome, nti warrior to meet. '• 4 do chief With sword and shield . • i Returning, home with bloodstained feet From some meat battle field ; I ' We come the Fnistat OF MAN 0 greet The trete .tvho bath stood Tindatintad;—scorning to retreat— I When Slivery threatened blood/ .. i • ' We come to render homage due From, fredmen to the ONE, - i Who foremost of the brnvo and true, I , Is Freedom's champion • )t" We come its hear that fearless voice Long raised in Freedom's cause. • 1 And from the Statesman of our Choi p Learn how to - iNard her laws. ' Thou more than Hero—Patriot, Sage! Shield of the rights of man— i. ' ! Thy name shall shine on History's page , A light t.s guide and warn ' • And when our ions in future days .j • ' Shill meet round Freedom's shrine. Thy name Shall mingle with their lays °neve for “AuLD LANG SYNE." I _ COLIiNEL JONN§LN IN VranioNi.--When Tecuuiseh visited Varinont, he : was received at the Gpital.Montpcliir,, with much enthusiasm, and a public meeting was; culled in the. Represen• tatisies' Hall, at which Gov.-Mattock fresided-- , The Governor, who is cel:brated for copciss.rnea 2 sages and4ddresses, thus received his guest.:, Col JonssON : behalf 'Of the Legisla ture of Vermont, and in the name of .:the.entire population of. this honest little State, !I to yr-4 welcome to this their capitol. I - Sir, you are a Statesman end a Sold,cii At the• Thames You led a cl.P.rge:With a dashing:gal lantry, that hes ne."cr, never been sUrpessed.-- You have fo!..!gb.; and bled—ay, bled.—iii Free dom's 6au.-,e. You ara'brave and ;generous to a 7.ro:erl;. 'Gen there be any higher praise? There can: you vindicated the honour of your fellow citizen f end your General when some who knew him not eisayed,to tarnish the military fano of that hero: now; alai! no more. Magna_ninious man ! again say.; welcome, -thrice welcome, here amid the descendanti of the Green MOuntain Please to paraen;sir, the concisenes4 of this ad dles=, for I am an ohl man of few wor j , cls, Lint sin- lil2 _ . • . . F: ENE ON TUE . Mi2sisslrri— , What rnd of wOod it that l' ' i , - • •It's cord wood.' replied the chopper, with the greatest non-cbahmee. ' ! 4116:v . long has it beet V eequired the anxious captain.' . Tour - fe.at,' said the chopper.. _. . , MELANcIIOLT AI:CIIANT AT WILLIAMS COL - Lr.cr- 7 011 Saturday afternoon; os one of the stu dents,. a son of Rev. Dr. Snodgrass,l of Troy, N. Y., was going out on a shooting excursion, his gun was necideritidiy diseharf:ed as he vita's deScending the . stairs °rill's way trout his room sending the whole charge of shot into the - breast of a student by the name of Lord, from New YO:Ir. !Ls life • , 'was considered to too in great danger. : BRI FS DI ALOG LTE.-- . Hollo! bq—.2 : whose is that red house on the top of the hill?' ,Nfy father's:. ' .It isn't every boy that knows hid own father-- vvho. is yOu'rs?' - ° ~.Mother's huFband, 'That's very probable, but I would like to know mho your father and your mother are. ' will,inform you, sir. They _aro the parents of an onlY' son, who know how 4 to practice the wtsri precepts of king Solomon.' " what way?' II - 'By answering a fool accrdin . N. O. Cresent City. , IN THE IrVI!.11) I—Mro understand that ono of aanteurs newly appointed officer:, went on Coatd a ship which recently arrived here, and sealed up .the water &set, to prevent smug-, gliiig! He probably mistook it; ' : cer the maid hatch! We learn that ario•ht. r ',al his officers, in making up debenture r'etern , ;:poa Railroad thus —itar..r.ixon. Even the Eaglisti'Laniu'age is to be iefornad 1 . • -We suffer in, proportion as 1 : we feel, and :we' meet with less sympathy if we feel deeply. Ma ny" ; people say to their friends, with a sort.ef .su percilous'smile, "Surely you have no cause for sorrow—you have indeed lost parents and friends; but that must happen to every info." So it may; btrt then it does not follow That all !Mails are in terwoven in the same degree with those of their lost relations andfrierids: , • Tyler is turning out of offic4 olithose who vo ted for him as Vice President, and - putting in those who veiled against hie?. The Crocodile feeds on -its own egg=. • '1 A f at Cnoimia!-=I Cno:stso! said a sick friend whom we visited the other day. i He lay on what he supposed to be his death bed. A neglected cold had. terminated in violent sore threat, the glands of his neck were swelled almost to suppuration, his pulse was? quick' and irregular, his fade flushed with fever, and his flesh like burning coal. IA mass of coagulat ed mucus 'had gathered in his thipat, and the noise of his breathing resembled what is called the death rattle, for which4iis medical advisers had undoubtedly,mis took it. We bade him not despair,and having before Witnessed thee:track/dinars , effects of Dr. Jaynes Ex pectorantj in pulmonary affections. sve procured a bot tle of it, Which we administered as fast as the almost strangled:sufferer was able to swallow it. In anfieur after taking the : firstdose our friend could breath free ly. • The' phlegm and mucus vas dislodged from .the mucus membranes .to which it had adhered and was expectorated in large masses, leaving the trachia Perfeetly Tree; Within two weeks the patient was well. Jayne's l -Excectorant is l eo less efficacious in acute rheumatism than to diseases of the pulmonary organs, For sale by Etch°ltz & lianderson, Pottsville, A gents for the Proprietor. , • N0v..11.' YOU S 4 11:11.1. BELIEVE..—BeIief is not en act of the will? &faint evidencecempels our assent; so lis-' ten, dear reader, and I will convince you that Dr.! Wistar's Balsam of Wild Cherry is far the best reme dy for discaseS of our climate to he found In this coon-: I try. It is formed by chemical erracts from vegeta.: tables (the Wild Cherry, Pine, 'Ste.) that nature sectors to have placed tem as powerful antidedes to all offeei liens of the Lungs and Liver that our ever changing climate includes. After the skill of our greatest phy sicians was exhausted, it 800 cured Asthma in various cases: It curd a lady of an incipient Consumption ; whose family- had alt died of the same disease. Re 4 _yr to !time Platt. Exq., Editor of ~P oughkeepsie gle." Thomas'Cozens, Haddonfield, N.V.. testifies) under Oath, that it cured him of an internal Abscessi violent f...lough. raising , of blood, 4c.,alter he,r,vyas deemed beyond hope. We could r ef er tolplenty such instances of its uncommon power. The doubt= lug are invited to inquire of individuals and cases tha t we allude to as we publish no statements that will not bear the 'most rigid scrutiny. Sold in Po!taville by . JOIIN 'S. C: MARTIN. In Reading, by SARAH MORRIS: November 11. , Law rairtnership. • 1 , 1 ripup undersigned havb associated themselves Ja• al co.artnera in the pMetice of the law.; All business entrusted to theirsore, will receive early and faithful attention. ' '''''N I 1 Office at; Alto residence .of i fF. W. Ilughes, n i Centro Strec P t, Pottsville. F. }V• HUGHES, • 1 r J. duets. NEVILLE. ! . Nov. 4, , . ~ - 4.5 , --If ' • 1111.1.5 T received a tow Tierces of llama, that v, , 14 tl." be sold very low if . application is Made soon. lathe York Sten e. LDWARD YARDLF.Y.I = Sept. au, • :.. , .0.....i . . . . . . etiss:.. • . , t 'i ; __. -.,-1 .41 C ."A V '" zz ,- , W5 ; . i; - THE COAL TRADE• • The ship:na • gain declined alittl da have a,Ohis week: and the season is rapidly drawing to 11ia...ie.-I. In Philadelphia the demand for retail contintitiOtet dy. withdut any material change of prices, esesttfo small coal. Vessels continue scarce in the Stifsql• • ail!, and, Freight to Eastern ports remain .oat, change except to New Wrie r which is now qtuatad at • ta.2sa $t sti. - • •BY CANAL. The following is the quantity of Coal slii*hd by !anal the present week. ending Thursday evenrret last Pottsville and-Port Carbon, . 1 10E0 Schuylkill Haven, , Little:Schoylkill ' '• • • ;111.712 • ifYO5O 4111.,262. • Verlast report DY RAIL ROAD. 3015 : 5,268 Per last ReportlB6 9 77l 3' 0 - ;1t9:783 1.-P•l5 From-PottsOle • Schuylkill Ham Total. I 'Freight f l y Canal. Frorb Pottsville & NI Carbon, Sciniylkill Haven, To. New York, . Lehigh -Conl.Trade. i';;r4 - z • • Des:pmched from Much Chunk for* week ending. 9th M0th,20,1843. . • . Bo 44": Tone Lehigh Coal 4. Navigation Co 1254 6809 Reavvr Meadow R 114., Coat Co 4 1t : 2224 1 FROM PENN HAVEN.2ti • ' 1 - T27le:ton Coal Co Arc/ . 2433 SugaifloarCoal Co " 24,-1; 1360 FROM ftpckeorrt. - Bock: Mountain COO Co .4 - 236 2494-,.: 13,062 . TOTAL 81103OENT8. FROM MA Vcil 0 Lebikh Coal St Navigation Co , 34: , 1 4 1 8 1 601 Beavar Meadow R R Coal Co FROM PENN 9 .. HAVEN; 3 .i Hazleton . Coal Co '• . .. 686 Sugarloaf Coal Co 234119 ROM TIOCRrUtt • is V Buck Mountain Coal .Co , • .36 • 3063 , Little Schuylkill Coal,Titigv. • The - following is thil 4mount of coal terijiported on this road , for the week{ ending on Thuriliq evening: • 804i..' Tons 58 --- Nov: 3 Gray Eagle " ; G Enrarprize 8 Llfayette " Cleopatra " I " Catharine 56 Sundry Shippers 1, ,;!.; ; ,19 1050 ,419 27957 :438 29017 G k011(.1k: VVICIGtigI. Agent. rer Last Ilefiprt Pinegrovg ,Coal . . The transportationseov,er. Union Can . nt; . Rail Road from 15th to thellat Get. inclusive, arqts folio'wn; , . , . ' Tone:Zolvt. qr. Stees.& Shirk • r .. 637 jl3 3 • I! , olmes,Mver & Co.' 5157 3 'lr'heeler ;Sr. Miller, I 21744 0 ' Harvey. hail 4 go. L ' 181,';51 Colt, Ga.skin .11 Lowisson , . 264,-.'; 8 0 , -. ' William Graefr ' ' ! .37 - 1 0 Uainoehl & Gebert 43812 0 Greenawalt & Georr 1 01,4 1. I. 1153.16 0 1 : I'er laqt report. -16.357.15 3 • , Total 18,74111 3 . ' . : . I Y. 1. CONRAI);. , olleetor. 4 ' I MonntlChiton Bail R4tid. • 1 The following is the amount of coat7Ordiportcd on is road foethe week,. ending Thursday evening Wit Tonal 1 . !. , f• -. 1 .. $,093 ~ ._ Per last roport, • :, "126,279 e , l' • I I i 1 1 I Vrotal ' 0-131,312 1 1.. " NATHAN CLEAVl,llr4Collectoi.l Niue Hill& $. Haven It littigoad: i . IThe following I is atnount of (41 transported oe this Road fur the week ending Thte,eclay evenleg Tons,, 9,275 ' 1 246,534 I ' Per last report, .; 'rotal; WILLIAM IV EAV • Susquehattna Coal • !The following is the jgnantity of Coalit,eot to market .goin the Wilkes barre region up thejlOnst.' • ' Tuns . a 46,000 111;arrieb.. t On tho9th inst., by the Rev. josiiiii:McCoril, JOSEPH to pIissPATIIAII(.I% both of Port Carbon. . . . .. , .On the 2lst October., 1843, • by the ; Rev. Mr. firing, Mr. Jon BUEHLER, co Miss SsLoAtkillottopt, both From Pinegrove township, Settaylkitilunty: :=---------„,.=—_-_-,----'--,----_, - 17e a 14• s i In this Borough., on the sih lost .In the 22d year of, her age. HeNnierra yiaciimi, tvikilf Lieut. W. A, Nichols. U. S. Army, , and daughter a. Colonel John' Garland, U. S. Ariny. iy. • .., I' In this Borough, ori Thursday evcnitig Iast,GgORGE. ' IVASIIIIIGTON, son of Mr, John •SOtr,age a months' and 18 days. . 1 ' 0 ',- ..',!, 1" I • i i The friends of the amily, are ibpectrully invited Ito attend the funeral his morning, dt_lo o'clock,with -out further notice. ',',-Ct, Our -lUark,l 111 COMTECTED WEEKLY. , POTTVIT4 Nov. 11, 1843. Wheat Flour, pr . 1151 $5,75 tßacon;; • per lb : Rye - do cwt. 78 ;Pork,: '7 • " Wheat, • bah) 1,18 ilatrisiz 62aTotatno, buahl '3 Corn, 1 - . 53 ilPlast,W ton 4,5 o.ts, "i 33 \llayr-: 15,00, Eggs, • 10 Tina4iy ed. bill 2,5 Butter , •11!" 12LCIosint " " ,05 .11:7" I. O.OF 0.1 —A Stated Melting of Franklin Encarn pynent. No beheld, Wednesday Eve. ning,. Nov. 15th, at 6,1-2 o'cloek. • 41). RICE, Sett; • IN ATLI ERS4 ItATTREESES, BEDS, BEDSTEADS, BEDDOG, etc. • _ ; citizens of Schuylkill Coprity, in.want of aboec - articies, are resprtfully insitedta subseribc'rs before putpitaaing, as thSy erniincd sel! at thn Ripest prices Mr I,I49ITLEY , StiftplGHT, • - , Did. 148 South Second street,. 1 5 doors sbuirepprtice street. ,delphia' I+l'ucember 46:.-2ta qv' ; - 1,1 tit call on are dot' cash. 1 PhiJ trittßßEZo4;S a • subscribers hai+e just iceiverl an elegem; rimeni-of Silk and Caiten they will well unusually 'low for each. re a - superior article frorrt s oire of:the bast ;moms J. FOSTEg... • 46-33, hich They establi cra inbei I L • /,'4ln.tinitstratorNi. - : . Notice.,, , ciTicE is Hereby given; lbut letters or .ads ,mmistrotienkif the geode Si) . dcbattles *hi* were elf Joseph fitibinson,,esq Kto of. the ttiwn' of Port Carbon,i,_: JOMmty, detieued, have been al : anted by the Iteit*r of schoyllttll T.I comity, to the lt.scribers: AI persona therefore, indebted to said;; cstato,..ere telitested to rruklio payment, and these having..itelpanda,.oull sent them for aeitlement, to either ofthoeubsert, bars. . WILLIAM . WILLIAM 13.17;. 1 11ULL, . = 4,dfniaiettotote,, Ncivembri ME 74) ;:: 65' • 44. 224589 5 286 ~ - 514 74G _ 255,1310 I Lj.4 Collector 1-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers