POTTSV Saturday Morning, Feb. 10, 1844. The proceedings' of the Conferee Meeting asiil befound on the first page.. James IL Camp bill, Esq. of Schuylkill, has been 'selected as the Naticinal,pelepte, and John ..Killinger, of Leba non, ow Presidential Elector.. MfCll,6r cc's Ira CITC2. -- We would call, the attention of our citizens to the advertised lectures of this Association, which will he found in another column, and would seriously advise them to' id by thrilr subscriptions and attendance in relieving this excellent Institute from their present financial em barrassment Two lectures hae already been de livered, one by Mr. Chas. W. PitnaMi, on ".111C chartics,". and the,other by John K. Clement, E sq., on "Education." We regretted, exceedinzly, that unavoidable engagements preventedp'a'fen dance Upon both occasions. as from the klown talents of the lecturers and the representations of those who were present, we feel ecinfideni that we have lost avaluabTe treat. The third lecture of the series will be delivered by Horace Smith, Esq., on Mon day evening next. Mr. S. has chosen an admira ble theme for his subject, viz : "The Durability of Republics,"" and we anticipate a masterly ettort on the occasion. , • . JOU ' F. C. CALITOCY.--Thii gtMtleman has written, a long letter to his political friends and supporters in which ho clearly and delinitelyex'; poses ids position in relation to the Locofoco party. Ho objects to the proposed I.oc6foco- Convention in Baltimore as irregular and unfair, and inside upon it, that the delegates ought to be appointed from Districts and vote per eapite. This address is a virtual withdratal from the canvass, and closes With his bitter, and unrelenting animosity to pro. Aection, as well as his' adhering tenacity to the ruinous principles 'of freo trade, and avows his determination to oppose any candidate who is' in favor of protection or whose prominent friends and supporters are. • - Tho Philadelphia Inquirer winces a desire to ' learn the different opinions of the country press in , xexard to the projected sale of thePublic.Works. We have alluded to the matter before ; and we now repeat, that in ow opinion the Public Works should be sold and the debt reduced with the pro ceeds; we are then in favor of a tax for the- pay. merit of the annual interest,. and ,n•ould have the -amount due toPcnnaylvania for her share of the proceeds arising, from the sale of the Public Lands, tleioted to•the creation of a sinking , fund. until • this is done we arc opposed to any further tax. ation. - Sr..YAz,ssl DAY.—Wedne . xlay next, the 11th inst., is St Valintino's day, and as anti quity has sanctioned among mortals as well as hirdsi the choosing of mates upon that day, we ad. vise all our young readers, male and female, not to neglect the custom. Make your choice sincerely .—notify the favored object of it, and, (it is some. when, said that) the blessing of the good old Sain t will attend you throughout the year. BRITISH Issormamc.—The Now Orleans pa pets state that . the brig John M. Clayton, which united there from Dathadoca on tho 19th of Jan unry,was chased and fired into three times by a British war schooner, and Hfierwards boarded and searched. Several like 'occurrences have trans. pireil on the high se-as lately which wethink calls for the prompt action of government, :Girarcl i flank.-The committoe,appointe4 to invostigatitho affairs of this Institution, report an barb:lto:Mesa• of one million' se:gni y-thrce thou s:m:l dollars. Among the names of the debtors ero Richard 41f. Jo.'enson for :5000, and . Oseoral others who would not late to see their mites in print--so days the Plhladolphia correspondent of &oil. Y. Tribune. it Is said a. frill list will be published. Tacsnx Lictsits.—A Sew years ago a law • was sod by the Legislature of Pennsylvania, inquiring all applicants for Tavern Lieensys to publish the petitions in the nn spapere. signed by et least twelve citizens, that the applicants were proper persons, and that the public house was :really wanted to accommodate travelling. This • voqs an excellent law, and was 'the rmani of rid large sections of the State, of tippling houses. :Et:forts are now making in this Legislature to re; , pe'al the law. trrsara or TILE 'fautrr.--Ail the' Factories at,Patterson, NON: Jersey, are in active operation, and arrangements are Makin; for the ecmtion of ae i ceml more—ono by Iwo Scotch gentlemen tin , tlito manufacture of Dundee goals, for which we have heretofore bcOn entirely dependant on Eng land and Scotland. • l(rj'Tho hon. William Rieslcr, of- Lancaster, has withdiawn his nanny as a candidate for Gov. .error, on account of ill 'health. . Gen. Irvin of .Centre, t Tudge Banks, - Henry Toland, and Gen. Merkle,Uppear to be the only.preminent candidates sib* before the pec . ple., Our irnireccion is that Cen../rs'in will be nominated. ;STILL-TEIST COX . paKr.to bc called the 4 $ May Fla 3 Staff," Li about bcin7, started in L ! , torristo7n, Montgomery county. It deyoted to Whi; prbciples, Prota.ttion, DistributiOn, Na Ulna! Ctirrency, and prom's= to.Locbute an cadent 'aid in t1V.t.6111..1C. ~7c.huyaill Company.—We learn that a3litho lands, rail road, and other appertenances t..zionaing to this ponwany, have belon parchazed' Crain the Trusten of the Unitcd States Bank, by toospanY _of gentle/nen — ft ona Philadelphia, New Voik'aad Eotton, for the own of $200,000. CD' The Pidialelphia:te are enjoying; a comO:cte ha.-4aat creme: iminis is the chapa- of numerous. chap concerto which oacur thaln• nightly. The shillins concerto at the Chinas: Mnseum arair itomenta crawls, ELI tiro talent eihiLit:a u a r a ram ader) Vim Covari.,:.A Bill has.bcen reported in use Iscgialiture for the fUirnation of a new County Mit of pasts of SJauylkill,Dauphin and Northtun '-berland, to be called Mahantange." • - Joshu a Pyett, editor, of the ?flew. York Citizen, died suddenly on 3londaylast*the 50th year of *r. Pyett Was the. leader of, the : new Native Ameri n Party in N . ew York. oz We refer our readera to the Circular of the Navigation`qs)npany, winch will he found in our s4lTerefin; coluatrit% • .LEGISLATIVE. February number of unimporta.ut which 'were introduced in the Senate today , aineug which was the bill ?rona the House for'removing CO sett of Justice of ColUmbia cOunty7frem Danville to Bloomsburg, which passed the ' committee of the whole, and tvls referred to the JudiCiary cenarsitte l # for amendment, In the the loctu • 't containing sections referring tolownship elections in nearly every county in the State, consumedinore than en hour of the setnion,2and passed three • • ; readings. • A rather spirited discussion sprung up in' relai: tion to, the sale of the Puldie Works,, which after' being maintained , at some lengtltended as usual in nothing. Feb: 3.,--The movements in both Senate and House for this day possess no interest for our read ers, and in fact were of 'very, little importance in -any portion. of the community. • Feb. sth.—ln the Senate, Mr. Kidder of tlf zerne, offered a preamble and resolution stating that as the permanent debt of the CommanWealtll i 'amounts to S 40,000,000 and as the taxable prop -, erty'Within the State would amount to $500,000,- 000, therefore, ; Resolved, That the Commlitee.. on Finanee Ye instructed to enquire into the expediency of is porting a bill apportioning the Public Debt up4n" the taxable property. within the State, and provide _a method of assessment that shall serve more fully to equalize the value of property in the different counties of the Commonwealth, in such a imin ner as will enable each citizen to pay his due portion of the public debt, and receive a final "- charge therefrom: A debate upon the resolution sprung- up, in which' a number of the members took part,;when the subject was on motion postponed. the House, nothing of importance transpired except. the discussion, to erect the new counts; of Carroll out of grts of Washington, Allegharii,, Armstrong and Westmoreland. This bill 6.t. through .a second reading when the llonee 0- iourno(.l. x•rzt. Wen sTer.—This great statesman blis written a letter in reply to the request of two hun dred citizens of New Hampshire, asking perniii •l sien to use his name as a candidate for the Presr ' deney, The fallowing is. the concluding portion of the letter, which sufficiently indicates where Daniel Webster intends going: , z It is now more than thirty years since }-cu and your fellow citizens of Isiew Hampshire, assigned me- a part in •political affairs. - My public condUct since that period is known. My iatinions on the great questions, now most interesting to the ,coun try, are known. The constitutional principles which r have endeavored to maintain, arc also known. If these prinriplei and these opinioni, now not likely to be materially changed, shoUld recommend me to further marks of public regard and confidence, I should not withhold myself from compliance with the general *ill. But I have no pietensions of my own to bring forward, any trust that no friends of mine would at any time use my name for the purpascafprecenting harmony fencing those, whose general political opinions concur; oar for any cause whatever, but a conscientious regard to the good of the country. r It is obvious. gentlemen, that at the present roc. rfient the tendency of opinioreCmong those' to be represented in, the Convention is generally - dnd strongly set in another direction. r think it nay duty, therefore, under existing circumstances, to request . those, who may feel a preference for isle, not to indulge in that preference, nor oppoie drip obstacle to the leading wishes of political friends, or to united and cordial efforts for the accouiplish ment of those wishes. The election of the nest autumn must involve, in general, the same principles, and the same cids tions, tt,e belonged to that of 1840. The cause, I conceive, to be the true cause of the country, ite perinanent prosperity, and all its great interests; the cause of its peace, and its honor; the cause of good government, true liberty, and the preSeq•a tion and integrity of the Consiitution, and none should despair of its success. • Eunoprix News.—We give our readeri a few foreign items condensed from the ac t connts brought by theiMontamma. A singular trial occurred, lately before the Court at Chester, England, in which- the accused (+ho was a Mormon Priest) was charged with murder_ ing one of his followers by immersing herin ithe water according to their peculiar ritual of baptism. The deceased watsu woman, and her death bitur red immediately after the ceremony. The pris oner was, after a long examination, discharged: , The mammoth steam ship " Great :Britain," will make her first voyage from England to New York on the 25th of May.- Capt. IToskins,lthe • 'late commander of the Great Western will take charge-of her. The O'Connell trials are canting much interes t . I . now in Great Britain. By the last advices th e jury (about which there was much anxiety 'felt) was empannelled and the result- is thus annOuned . I The list is composod of twelve radiealsland repeaters, and thirty six Whigs and Tories: Snp• posing the ,repeaters and radicals to be struck off by the Crown, and twelve 'Conservatives tb be struck off by the traversers, the jury will theii be composed of twenty.four Tories and Whigs." This being the case, there ises-m . 7 against Mr. O'Connell's aequital, although it is rumored - that government is willing to malie a compromise ‘rith hung provided he will abandon the repeal cause. , 1 During the 14st year a great number of fires has hris occurred. in Lon 49, ainounting in all to 301. The Ojibewa IniiiriTliave been perforMirrg at Windsor, Castle' • of tho, Queen, and the rest of . ,LTCON.ING COU:CTF.-21YEI We pleased t.t? SCO, the Whigs of this old county rousing front idteir lethargy,. For many Years the Locus have lorded it unrestrained in that district, 'and their power hai been so positive - that scarcel an effort ';r against them has been exerted. The iapproaching coittest has, however, awakened the W i higs, anl we are gratified to observe by the 31u.Icy Lurninary,ithat a large Whig meeting was 1.111 in Williaaripirt on the 31st ' ult., at which s tong resolittioins in favor of Henry Clay and Gen. Irvin were pastitedl.' HE:CAT CLAT was rc-eently at !.3fourette, ;Jou" iiana, and a dinner - was given him by Judge Guion. AMong the gueets were distinguished gentlemen of both political panics, and the falow ing- toast, given by cmo cf his political opponents in that occasion, speaks solo ea, and is only no. tiler cvidance of the great enthusiasm his preaeace. alwaya Mspira =qr.; an clasiez cf people: Henry Clay--tha idol oil one party, ,anlitho zimization of the other." Xa per's Palorial L'ible.l—A fresh atippiy of I - No. 1, of this magnificent publication •has heen received and for sale at this !office. , Stibseribars •- 1 ' can now be suppl i ed, Arabella Stewart. - Thisis 'l'amcs'' last Novel— It is founded upon a very irterestitag period of English History, ami.thefaine (If the author ought to.indueo Olio read it. Pri a 12} cents, foir-o.le at this office. . , < %, a lettor from Philadelphia, =I Coi. R. M. Jortruscitc.—TheGlobe of ItiondaY contains a letter from . Col. 101. Johnson; which sets at rest the question whether that gentleman will serve as a candidate forthe.Viee PrcsilencP, We:copy the! clo.ing paragraph: "In the mean time, let evet,Y one be fully pur snarled in his own mind , and act accordingly; and no eause of 'complaint can Alxist any, or against tiny. I wish, of course, to give no cause of offence to my friends, whether they , prefer me for the first office or the second. I hope they will readily yield up their prefereticei to a majority in tho convention, no matter how adierse to their views or wishes. I shall pursue this course, and exhort every friend I haws to ido likewise, in order to preserve harmony and sectire the united effort of the - party.. I repeat, bet Ween my friends my position is that of neutrality,Until the convention shall act and dispose of me; in the meantime,l am in the hands of the people. Should it be the plea sure of the Convention to nominate ito for the first o ffi ce, I should accept thehonor with gratitude and reluctadce. I should accept of the, second with thanks and With. pleasnre; and am willing to Mke - My position among - thO rank and , rile, if such be the pleasure of the convention, Without a mur mur. Wherever I may be placed, I shall try to animate my , associates to do What I consider our duty to our country'; , and, having, thus discharged it, according to our consciences, we will hope for victory. 1 M. JOHNSON. .Tanuaryl2l3t,h, 18-11. district; bill , • Ma. Cali.—The following letter from Mr, Cliy to a Committee Qf lii4nigomery, Mob. will . afford his friends some information - with regard to; his, route : , Gentlemen :—I have recelited here your friendly letter, inquiring the time of ;my arrival in Mont gomery, in my route to the Southern Atlantic States; and I take great pleasure in communica ting the desired information, as far as practicable. I purpose leaving this city towards • the 25th of February for Mobile, where I shall remain a few days. I wish to take my departUre from that city the Ist, 2d or 3d of March, according to circum stances. You can judge befter than I the requis ite time to make the yoyagd to Montgomery. shall be most happy treet and exchange !deadly riatutations, in that city, with any of my fellyw cit izens who may be desirous of seeing me. I am, with great respect; * . Your friend and ob't serv't, ' 'HENRY CLAY. SvoGGLI2CO.— . -The New Fork Courier of Feb. I • 7th, has the particulars of a lat; smuggling which ha's just been detected at the pert.,) The goods were a part of the cargoes of the Packet ships Men. teLma and Oxford. The mate of the OxfOrd was • the l active planner of the movement and has since been held to heavy bail for his appearance. The nuMber of packages seized liar.. about fortyAve— thirty-nine bbard the dxford Mud Six on the slontezuma4—the total valtie of all. being about $5000.' Both vessels wore seized by the Collector, but as it was ;roved that the good4' were Smuggled witb. out the connivance of the Captain, they wtanot bo;conftscated. From Our Wash: l =7,4n Corio4pondent. WASIIINOTOX, ;February, 8. 104. .. • _What is Congress doing I—is a question, t is• fair to presume, daily asked by the people' l of [the. country.. The answer is, npthing fur tele coun try, tvEns Tmrs.o you pArrrr. The third month of the session is now - entered upon, and the De mbcracy. of the lower. Holl* who were before the election, and are still so prodial of their professions of regard for the dear peoplei have been more than squandering their time, arid filching their per diem, of eight dollars; frona the public Treasury, .by leaving the national conc.ems and private in wrests to take care of then4ives. Great was the outcry raised against the last Congress for negligence of ,the publih weal ; and , Most- ; unjustly and unrightehusly, to never. was there 'a set of, men brought together under the con- 1 stitution, that labored harder 4 more resolutely, or porfeateAdnore, than did tlint • same Congress.— Meastires of the greatest national importance wore brought forward and consuminated—private claims ;adjusted, and the moans erceteil for the rccussita tion of the public credit, Emil:individual relief. 'An unprecedented war was ' -tr.ade upon it by the t' ' Ex ecutive. branch of the i oversn , nent, and its leading measures opposed; against i -all which Congress battled, and that too'snanfolly and successfully. The fruits of that Congress; Or from its great lead ing measure, are now Coen in the revival of the commerce, -the agriculture: manufactures, and all the laborious pursultS't4 industry,. The present Conge - ess- hisnot perfected no mea sure of the least pubhe impertance, but it medi tates the destruction of that very act of the prece ding Congress, which now infuses vitality into the industrial occupations of the!, American citizen.— National aggrandisement is tci be sacrificed to'naere party ends. Caucus dictatien demands the offer ing, and thh Tariff is to he ''sacrificed on the van ' dal altar of parig. It is nciWesteemed as the dic tate-of good policy :---southein prejudices tare to be appeased—the, southern kinciples of the man with northernlfcelinks. are to be demonstrated,- - their hue and cry against ,the black tariff, must be proved to have been sincke. ' Therefore a hill , may be shortly expected ,from the Committee of Ways and Means, with the view of it peasing the South, and strengthening the Deinfacy by a re union of the Calhoun end -Van "2 ren forces, in and out of Congreis. I' i, That letter of Mr. Calhden's is making" some 'havoc with the ptinciples'pf the Vdn'Buren,De mocracy. No men out of ;the ranks of that party, With intellects to discern, and capacities to eAti, mater their motives, are or eara be disappointedl at , this evidence of their pliability, for it is now ell'' understood and easily foretbld. Rely upon it then, that the House of Representatives will 'pass a hill! ! during its present session, 4.eadjusting the Tariff,l in which the whole protective policy will be aban-1 cloned. It may possibly be arrested in the Senate, i but, nevertheless, the LociffoCoism of the Honsel will demonstrate what it Would do had it control! of the Leg,islatUre of thdcduntry. There are' no, emotions of anzer.patrim among them;—else why blight the:prospects end blast the hopes of their) own countrymerk by legivlating for the Barr tie inanufacteifier, the Barrisa laborer, for the! encouragement'ef Barrisu skill and ingmai,l,ll,l , over that of true, ittherican citizens I Who now, is bought up' ' d influenced by 13r:lish' Gold ,21 --For it, is the' ',vital of the foreign reanufadtu rer, which idiri- irectly acting; through Loco Fecti sympathy, upon the, Locofeco party, and upon ci I Locofocci HoeSe ef Representatives. Deny it wild, may, it stares ono openly in the -face ; and beford , this Congress]closes, it will be clearly proved tai I the satisfaction of the cohntry. " The hand, of 'British sympathy will'be fitstened upon that p•irty . so flimsily, and so achtesivoiy, tlizit the,; will carr:; . i.i with them' into the grave lof their political ens ! tence that they.are now digging,and in which they will be buried on the 4th iof March, 1845, and from which there will be no resurrection for theinll Now is the time for all !interested in tlx6 ears:' tenets of the present Tariff fo wake up, end edition!! ish their rep*antatived. in Congress against ith,s 'laying of violent hands upon it. Be stirring, and allow not Locofocoiana -to plead a want of knowl, l edge of the true public sentiment on the ' Sub: ject of a protective. tariff:! It may not probiltili stay the - vandal! hand of the executioner; b4the judgment of death, to the present life-preservercif the energien ot the thuntry, will not have beep 'pronounced without the witnesses to its just and righteous operatiem having testified before the grab'' inquest of the nation. Serid in then your petitions 'from Pennsylvania. instructing the course of pith doubtful representatives'en The subject of a repeal of the-present Tariff, like the leaves in auturni44 the_snow flakes in winter.,!,- : I I Mr. Calhoun's letter hill bean productive df anatheri test of Lowfoco ,krinep/e.v. With 'biit tWo or three honorable exceptions, the members Of ,that party, in'the House, vv,ho have beretoforend , vo=ted the rescinding 'of, the 21st rtde, will:tieer ' change:front, and go for ifs support. But a Teat weeks since, hid a-direct vote been taken ripen it, the rule would-have been lest. Now, the 144- ,manic influence 'of the Magibian are brought! fo 'leer, - and it must be retained for the sake °Me. i • T=We , roceied Inlaid, this lIMIE MI NEW . 0 nr..El:*s, Jan. Gth. 1844 rr.(ig,H-ArlNFi*-s!. glnia, and tbe,Sonth.- So wig znarked-,a ' dam:, vice the cliiii - cter Al, the Liacofir.ii - vote has there • Wan, aince - th e / publication Calbeein's man -le iftisto, oh the iinlneet of the reception. of Tefitions. that the Sonthehrgeritlenien in Congressare taking cannage, and it is now determined that the pen& rag motion to re-commit the report shall be with dinV32, and the House brought to sdireit - vote; on the adoption Of the repart,:assifon ns possible. Let the democracy•understend, clearly and distinctly, thlat theyraftssions of their Locofino politicians • on any important question, are as as the traitor's bond of fidelity—for the policyof party - act. lion dissipate them , with the * change de ve2 Y.l xdit ' ' i,,e 4l breeze• The illsfrule will itOT be rescinded. mark that ; and mark Mist mho first opposed, and who may be found reeorded among those who finally defend it. The probability •is that Chancellor Wail/MM. trill he nominated to the Senate for the vacants4at on the Supreme Bench, as he , is known to have been recommended to the Accident by the almost,t if not quite, unanimous Voice of the Locofoco rep x4intation in Congress from the State of ii. -York. -It-is a Locofoco move, in : order to promote• Justice invan, of the SupremOcourt of that State, to the Chancellorship, that room may be made for some desperate -partizan to receive his reward. It• has now reached that deg,ading point where the Ju dicial ermine is to be soiled by holding forth a seat on the Bench as an object of political preferment and ambition. Alas! alas! for the future fame of the Judiciary, that bulwark of our national glory; When among the corruptions of a military despo tlsni: Gen. Jackson established the precedent of placing . the scales of JuXtice into the hands of po litical partizans, as a reward for doing the belie.'-ts Of party. God grant that a redeeming spirit may ' pervading the land, and that nobler impuls,es, there honorable aspirations, and purer purposes, tpay supplant and root out the presentrank growth Of corrupt Morals, corrupt polities, and corrupt politicians. The Report on Elections is under discussion to-day in the House, to the, exclusion of all other business; and ,Mr. Woodbury is addressing the fenate in answer to Mr: Evans, who concluded yesterday an able speech in defence of the Whig Teri& Policy. • M; COMUUNICATED. EAR AND TEAR OF RAIL ROAD IRON, r, In consequence of some recent publications by C. Ellet, Jr., Civil Engineer, on tlie coat or t ' ransportation on rail. roads, the subject, of the Wear of rail road iron has excited some.intercst and enquiry, and aspirited controversy has sprung hetween the advocates of canals versus raif= roads has again been warmly discussed. With this 'branch of the controversy I shall not at present meddle—lit. leave the champions to fight it out emong themselves., To no district of the country is, the subject of the Wear of mil road iron of greater importance than to this; for Wbatmjer may be the fate of the Beading rail road—whether it prosper or perish-4 • I. • wo must have and good ones if they arc to be IMd, for the great bulkof the large ton'- page of the Schuylkill Navigation and the Read'• ins railroad, to which Mr. Ellet so frequently al, iudes, must first be rolled over - our railroads. - The result at which hlr. Eliot arrives is that ihe common two, inch by ball inch flat bar laid on {wood will be worn out by the passage over it cif i 50,000 tons of freight drawn by locomotives,and ; , of 400,000 tons drawn by. horse power; and that ;he common T rail will worn out with soma thing less freight passing over it in proportion . to the weight, and therefore the cost of it. The plain ference from which is that the •fiat bar would be the cheapest; 'After observing that the rails of the Reading road are by common consent acknowledged to be Vood and by many considered uoecceptionable, trocecds toatlirm that before 800,000 tons of coal ave paised down and the empty cars have been! I ; • returned on them, the present track will be enti4.l 1y unfit for safe usage ; and that-it will require! from 50 to 75 cents to replace the !iron IN:hlehll ''destroyed bfeach van of coal that descends from Pottsville to Ricln'ond.. to opposition to this, Mi . .. R. B. Osborile,llb9 Principal Engineer of the Reading rail road in 4 ate report ;to the Boani of Managers states that, !"from the date of our commencement in 1838 tip !to the present time, letut than two tons of rail road ;iron have been used in replacing the bars which !have been rejected from the track, owing to the !imperfect quality of thd iron, yet in this period 1 847,805 miles have been run by the engine, 330, - 1000 passengers and about 500,000 tons nett have !been transported over the road,' and further ads,: I.4Taking this as a data, and with the facilities, i; a second track of GO pounds to the yarcl,l am Of. opinion that the transportation of twenty milliabs i of tons will not wear out the rails and render new iron necessary." ' Now although we may consider this latter cat. culation rather a wild one, yet there is evidently a. great discrepancy betw'een the theoretical deduc tions of Mr. 'Viet and the experience of the rOad . The latter seems like many other rebellious sab: jects, determined not to obey the laws which have been so benevolently, laid down for \ it. Now 'whether the road will ultimately have to Conform to the law, or the law to the road, certain it is tbat iron will wear out in the course of , time, and it becomes an important enquiry to us, how scion will that time come, or rather, in what form, and shall we have the iron that it may afford the great est wear for the money expended 1 ' ' I There is one important error common to !all those - who have treated on the subject; so far i ng I hate mad their 'works, and thatja, they have paid to little attention to ascertaining whether theybad and the iron on it is Propintiorked to the duty Tro quired of it ; for if it is not, it is in vain to expectit to be durable, and equally vain to . attemPt tole's ' tablish any laws for the wear of iron predicated on the experience derived from such ill contriVed affairs. ' - , ' I A I This may be illnstrated by the experience of thi..: place; when we, first began to open coal klrifts, rsit.roai iron was not 'easily prozareal, an d re s o d was sometimes had W r ite use of hoop iron, sitch :--. as is used„ for pooping casks, for our drift roads. While we worked with quarter ton waggens,pov ed - in and out by men, this answered very sell, or at least better than pushing thern on .wood; but when Larger waggons' were introduced, this iron wore out anddisappeared rapidly. When after wards.rail road iron could be obtained, a bar one inch by a quarter of an inch was used—this ',did very Well for half ton waggons, but as soon aa'we put ton waggons CID with horse power, it iliSap peared almost as rapidly as the former. Here! we Might have stopped and said,' iron was notthe, thing it bad been Cracked up to be, r and then set to work to 'discover the laws of its rapid destruction; but our 'operators took 'a more common sense view of 'the matter; 'they believed that .they had 'trot . proportiOned the means to the end,andsubstittitcd iron.lf in. by i inch, and '4in. by i inch. It 'ma then found that 5 and G times as much coal ciimid be hauled over' this in ton waggons as the former, with lesi than half the.cost of repairs, and the iron still retaain geed. The same experience and rea soning have been applied to our Wooden i roads connecting With the Navigation, the Reading kail ,„ I . ,_ .„, , __, 41 Road Cr Li ato aocs this prove iLIAt. won, ifippliefl in properaliapannd -quality, will no re ! JOVRNAL Elst thi Piissum rate: nearof aor even 5 ton . 7 goers . : - 7.4 n. "er enilnpert‘aukthitenda.nts and dime. ttria•oi•rail reedi,lshall he Willing • to depend lc on algtbreic formula, founded on uncertain data, and lei guided mare by therclictates ceramon sense and common experience, we shall not, iee then putting rails on a road to beer - the press4rc of 15 ton engines; where the; greatest_pressure ml -come on the weakest and Most unsupported p of the 'Oil, and then crying 'out that iron is 1 weak :A substance to bear such a pressure; Int • shall 4e them better prripOrtioning the means the enk by - gicing the rail such •a form that point of greatest Pressure shall be supported by solid liar of iron set on edge: . 1; • '1 S. LE ' .CIS, , From the Public ,Led , "er. , ", Rait.nnaris A:411 CANAM--Reply io fintlzrz —2lly4Azje.t' in reply to the first publication " Anthrax" was to administer a well merited it buke for the indelicate andlunceremonious intr dUctierit of the statue of a gentleman, with whom was siire he had no personal acquaintance, into 01 columns'of a newspaper; and to reprove , that is position for meddling in the:discussion ofprachea questiOns which he has not studied, and which frequently are not within the range of his obaer vation• and experience: : 'I; ' penlanse also to make an inaccurate and un jus- • tillable comparisOn of the respective merits of the Reading and Stoekton'and,;Darlington Raiiwas ; with the'esign, apparently of adding the weight of his influence as P writer in the extension of at er ror which had Proiously:;been circulated with great industry by the adherents_ of the Rea ing Railrqad Company. Regarding his ;remarks as very innocent in de sign, lie affects ;astonishment that they shuld have balled for such pro:riper:nil decided refutation. Thaeithey were innoxious is most 'certain; certain; blt I cannot recognise anything as: innocent, whatev er may be the intention, of which the effectto encourage and prolong a pUbile delusion. \•, s I have no timato follow 'Anthrax through his special pleading - , 'or discuss ingenious colln eral_ . i..suesrand new, propositiona. The Reading 'ail- i road Company, •may ; no* commence. pre ing. through his aid, that they can carry coal at $ -50 per tqn,•instead of 40 cents; if they think that heir interest will be Promoted by moderating their pre .tensions. I hive nothing ter do with these specu !afire-estimates ; my present business is with facts ; iziul facts only. , I have therefore !list to_tr3i the. issue :which now; exists between Anthrax and (my self, in regard to the lengthand cost of the Stock ton and Darlington Railroad, the charges exifcted: and the speed maintained Upon it. I havet-, Mp u ten touch en such subjects I hare never wri b-. fished a line which I did nut believe, to be strictly,' true in word and sense,, and I' shall {not now, lover; an anonymous title, depart from the rule o' my 1 life; ,; ' ; I • . :.• . ...; - First then, what is the lend:, and what the cost; of the Stockton and Darlington Road! f The fe'iowing. quotations are from Wishaw's' 'Work "on the Railways of Great Britain," pith-, fished in 1840. ;The factswhich he presents weroi obtained by him; during his tour, from S. Derniird,'; Esq.; an officer Of the Stockton and Darlington; Company.. I qiiote, in evidenr.enf the correctness of my assertions the folloWing,passames: "The capital us shares is altogethlr - .4 1.59,000 and the whole amount raised by loan .£100,d 1 00.", On this authority I stated the cost of the work tol be, in round numbers, $1,200,000. Anthrax ,old-' ly charges me with error,:with stating 'not one wont of truth,' and puts the cost at. $4,700,000. The 'author preceeds to describe the line, and the length of its brandies, remarking in etineldsion, ' Thus; the aggregate - length of the main Frzi and tbranch'ea Li 38,129-1000 oaks.' Witaw, p. 414.. 1 . • ; This is in conformity with my previous state.; mono; and this' is my authority for what I stated. Thef4cta aro confirmed by the sth and 6th % J ot. of the Itailway'Makarine, and by other writers. I Tile Stockton and Darlington - Road is pruilent i ly and economically managed ; and the coal cars do not pasit'ove. the mainline, and then cireulate through all the branches, as intimated by Anthrax, for the purpose bf reducing the apparent charge per mile, but pass directl,v from the mines tip the wharves where the coal is shipped. • The length .of the line and its branehes l is 38 miles, but the coal passes ever en average distance of only 25 or 26 miles. ; . The Charter! of the Company originally Ft mite( the Charge for 'railwaY.du'es at half a penny (one cent) per ton per mile onall coals which hall be . ilt s shipped on bOard any vessel in the po of Stock: ton-upon-Tees. forthe purpose.of ex ortatitnt.'—' 7 Thei.land sale coals,' as !they, arc called—ithosi not intended for exiiortatiou—not being subjt tO this, limitation, by the act bf incorporation, nr nose charged the company; according to Wi haw, t 2}d; or four. and alzalf cents per loss per mif Mercharullse; of which; there' passes throw lineinix trains ,a day, or about six - times as as Passes over the Reading road—is charged cart ous!priccs, ranging from !six cents to nine cents per; ton per mite. It is only under the limi.atioh of the Charter that a low price is adopted "on neer tain class of coals. Now, it is particularly to .be noted that the 'above ch rges on coal are fo 'rail way, dues' only, and that the company makb still 1 andther charge! of half aenny (or one cent). per tonper mile fort,thaulage. . .• Inaddition to this, the colliers own rind k ep in 13.1 p repair the cars; the expe se of 'upholding' which is notincloded in these ms. And further 4 there is an additional charge- bffour cents per eon for thense of the wharves at Stockton and Mid leshO. rough no, art Ofwhieh goes towards the sh ppirig_ i of the coal.' I Conchived,l therefore, that a charge of four and a half cents, was a correct representa tion of the average charge on this line—thotigh that average would obviously be muclrhighlr, but for:;the restrictions imposed by the charter. Finally, it is! stated by - .lWishaw, p. 422, tat 'the coal engines are limited in 'velocity tosix miles per hour; and if the engine mon are found driving at 'a - velocity exceeding eight miles, they are inea riably fined.' 1 It is 'owing to this rigid lindtatien of the speed that the company have destro3lcd but si tracks of edge rails, in bringing down less than, 7,000,000 tons of coal. I I `'Having nevi' disposed of the disputed points, Wo will repeat our comparison of the racti, for faets are truths, and see what ',there is in the success of one of these roads to justify its quotation evi dence of the probable success of the other. It was stated by Do Pambour, a distinr ishbd water, who spent much time on this work, that the i company after! nine years' experience, estimate the expenses of hanlage by locomotive engines, 'at 1 ,1 , (two cents)Thr ton of coals ckried t"; one milcin going down the line. ' t , The ecu.l.'t 4,shit is given by Wood, alei l a diso , -I tinguislred writer, and experienced engineer, it . a ' work published four yeais later. And it isi again giVen by Vigtioles, in 1843, as an establisl+l fSct. - It is, indeed, it fact established by eighteen yews'l . experience. ! I 1" Now, I wish to he informed by Anthrax ,Wheth-: cr ibe 15 per ! cent. dividend, which he sayslis paid V, this company, on a crpital of $4,700, 4 00,: is earned, as hefrepresents; by carrying conls'at half apewey, or half the admitted actual costl : -1 wish, hirn to consider, whether the success! of this campany and their large dividends ( let I nev ee Fowl they were, financiers) is not to be ttribu teA, in part a least. to the fact that,tfic company received froM passengers thirteeir4imes ae mach per mileJas the Reading Railroadt Company . 2 Whether he. thinks they make all this money ihy carryingcoal!l eta lass of one cent per ton per mile, (Par their - expenses are two cents, and he says that; their charge id but one,)',or whether the fact that: they charge four.times as much for each tonnf nierchandise4 and convey abotit,fire times as wiich,3, or it, as this Reading company, is not mote likely n account felr the thing . - ...: ' , ! Company In point or fact the,' Stockton and Dielingt: on: (!lompany recievo twice, as much per ton - per Mile! for one clans of coals, (the class on which the price: bilimitedbyltho charteo and more than fpur and ii.ralf tiniesias much per ton, besides the wharf.; age. on the cla.v.s on Which the charter gi es them, the usual latitudes,'ash is now charged by Ithe! . Reading convoy. „ H _ 1 . And it is also a fact, 'and a most impor t fact,: that the Stetckton and; Darlington Company 'can. 'reach the vial mines tied ' keep in repair hue 88, Miles of main track an& branches, while the Rdad-: tug company, for the Slime object, must k. 4 up ti...: bait 97 mik r amclusive of:Umbras:cites. 1 f • . It is elsorkfact,lhat the Stockton and. Darling. toni Coirtyiny ; send their oil over Wit about 25 rnilOs'ef Iron rails, which eel. £25 poi ton, and the ;Reading CairtpanY send theirs over 8Q miles of i--, .ron, which'a $6O per ton. ' Xt is aisa true, that furl the Reading road t tist !costs-four Mes as much for equal duty as it does on the Stet ton and Darlington road. And if .we now . compare the investment of :$9:000,000' Which hqs been ventured 'by the Reading C Mpany, with the $1,200,000 invest ed Jay the tockton and Darlington Company, we will, I tra y ;be able to recognize the difference be. • tween their respective' chances for eminent sue e t.• eeis. ' /Intl Wi I,not be unjust even to Anthrax. e hhasnot pr! tended to- account for the mi.i . D sing fui?ds, and he does not pretend to as.sume—“ -- he neCer prete fled to assume—that thiS particular ,weik (the &tiling Railrciad)'will priY" indi4 `glib never J ew its cos; till the last annual. report reilealedlt:' No, nor, in feet; did I; 'though, niien I sa . the stock edrancing.,l strongly apprc pended son elcurious revelations. I - , I leave nthrax . with :thrs excuse„ which was , doUbtlesstheibest within his reach, for the unjus tifihble innemtion that the Reading road might pay, beettuOthe Stockton 'and Darlington road is known tol}.y. There are now more Serious Sub jeep fin , Ins' *reflection. He . presented himself imignarrimOnsly as the voluntary - champion of. the Reading Railroad Company, and he is 'bound in hohor to carry them through, or drop hem as Un werrhy of hi's, aid. i I put to liipi some plain questions, which he did not attempt to answer, and waived them with half -expressed and half-implied indignation, that refjections should be mth ade on the , onor of the ' 134anl of Directors ",' of that institution. - . •It is far from my intention. now to make reflec tion upon the integrity in purity ofany gentlemen, I know the Value of private character, anilrespect its I assail no nun and no set of men. But I have asked: some important -questions; which 'l' now repeat,iand to which the public, I. know, will &Mond a straight-forward and satisfactory, answer, tthrough o ” Antbrax,". who speaks semi-officially of • the acts of this Board, or through some other 1. .. . au thorized channel. iWhy were the accounts of the month or De-, eember suphressed7 The want of no time is no available eicuse. The Schuylkill Navigation Di reetors met! their stockholders, on the morning of Oat Ist :of Jetmary; and their .report of all expen ses' and receipts, of all the affairs of the Company, uP to the MOW of the 31 December, was full, Salisfactoryand perfect. The 'Reading Railroad fiiical year likewise terminates on the 30th De cchaber: The stockholders—fifteen of thent_only —"came liag , tiler op the 9M of .faquary, when an eleven month's report was presented to them for their adOinton. Now, why did it require forty ildys for the preparation of that document? And isiit not a feet . that this report was' talks. printed before it colild be.fairly adjustel for the inspection of the public eye? ; : , ...Again, Mr. Anthrax. I reminded ,yon, in my previous article, thet the Reading Railroad Com pany larive,!by their own report, made way With I:* en9r474os and incredible sum of $1,6/10,854 it the spat eleven months. I asked you, also, aS the apol gist and advocate of this . corporation, to show nie,-from the printed report, or any other authentic document, what ! disposition has been Made of all!this money. You - have passed the qeesiion by; as one of those tliings which it would be most prudent not to submit to • the ordeal of a newspaper exposition. But it isnot to be passed by. The iniestien shall, not be waived ; you cannot ‘iro,ixe it; tie .Company shall not waive it; but a strict Oceennt ,of this money must be given; or Truth . has : lost its weight, and public opinion its fence. ; 1:' i 3. Then ading Railroad Company are now trans porting C lat half Me admitted actual cost, in terest asid ,! on those roads in the world on which the actual eost is least. They are carrying coals :it a staiy fon. without any reference to the ques tion of interest, and without , makinr , any provision whatever 44• the depreciation of their vast estab lishment. iNow, sir, what is this far? Men do not usnallYertgage in such business for nothing, and w 0 have seen enough of corporate financier- Mg on thiti Square mile of ground, to be able to form a preity certain conjecture of the motive, if the motive be not satisfactorily -explained. I reipiest:you to follow inc a little further. i I find. by the eleven month's report, that during the last yepx the Company purchased twelve loco motive engines and 450 coat cars; and that they had-laid ten additional miles of single track, see. oral sidingS. of which the aggregate . length may be one nrifC, and made some slight, improvements at the . Richmond wharves. I find also that. du ring -this period, they expended the sum of $221,- 000 for repairs and transportation. By clo , :ing the a.ecOunts onthe 30th November, they reduced the, apparent interest to probably less than $200,000.1; - . - . • • With these data, I submit for your inspection the fellowing statement of the account: ggrCgate; nvestmentNov. q 0,1843, $7,119:292 , Invest/limi Dec. 31st, 1842, 5,866,633' • Increase of debt in 11 'months, fe. ;11 the knuch Odd receipts for these 11 ‘ nionths, all. which have been expended, . • . , 'And we obtain the sum of $1,637,854 `for the whole visible amount expanded durinethe wish now to compare" this stun With the ac dear. v valtie of the objects for which it was expen-, mode by which we can arrive.at a ny,eorrectConclusion of the character of the man agement and financiering of this Company. baps the , fellowing objects of expenditure: 12 locdinotive engines,, at $6OOO, $72,000 . 450 coal cats, at $200,. ' 90,000 9 milesi,Single track (old iron)s6ooo 54,000 Iniproveinents at Richrnond, say 8,000 Other improvements, say . • 20,000 .. Admitted expenses, . 221,000 Interest, say .200,000 • Expenditure susceptible of expla nation, „- 5665,000 But,ltlwill doubtless be alledged that this comt. pang's credit is notoriously bad ; that their course has been indirect and deceptive; that their policy is.suSpiciOits; and that people, as is natural, do not like .lo mit. them. That they have been compelled; accordingly, to, pay usurious rates, in order to raise this money. As I mean to be will also be just. I admit thedcfencc ; and to meet the case, I will allms; 25 per cent. on their cstimato4 l -on the sum paid-for cars and engines, track and,wharves—on the expenses and cyan on the intercit. • Let us pee Low account then stands. I: . . . tixl nded during the year as above, $1,640,85 Of whicli„Fc can explain $665,000 To *hid! we add for usury 166;250 And , we tUay thus account for But we have yet, you rpceive, a bat- mice of $809,604 for whichtthe public cannot account., I wish you, to account for this sum:. • I assail, 1 repeat it; - neither the character nor the conduct of any man. I respect the character and the feelings of all plain and straight-forward men. But Ido say, and I am responsible for what I ear, and for nothing more than I say—that there is here a clear balance of $BlO,OOO more or less. 'yet Unexplained, and for_ which this compa ny hare not dared to account to ,a dcceircd coin inunity. . • . I do nett say that any man, in partimilar, has u sed this Money ; but Ido say that whenever this balance . of $BlO,OOO is properly explained, item for item, Charge for charge, and 'entry for entry, we shall have a clue to the reason why this corn pany coutinnes to carry coal, as they are now dc• in.'s. for le,ss than the actual cost. This vast sum has not been consumed in sup pressed running expenses, as many believe. , The agg,regateexpenses this year. apart from depreci. ation and extraordinary accidents, ought net, tin:- der ; ordinary management, ' to have exceeded $300,00( of which the company have accounted for $221,000. , But thj money has been used, and I ask you, as one who has already spoken far the company, to tell me for what it has been used. I want no lofty dimiciy, and no explosive indignatioit; but 'I want to I.7ww what has teen "done tmtl that money. 1;i • •-4 You have brought forward ri a now esti. mate Of the cost of transportation ; and you-scent to think that if M. Archibald had the superintew deuce of thi4 work ; the company could, at a dollar and a half per ton. But appOint Mr.:,Archihald 1:• wky turn tat ent worthy superintendent? ' When be to'the satisfaction oral! Who understan whom T con fess I am not one,) that thi or, under his managemain, but 40 con turn out a Man who• can do :the bus cents to put in one who, it is tinders vance, will make it cost $1 50. • '. Mr. Archibald, you think, Could mat. pay the interest on a - ''r fair cash cal Now, if I may - presume to ask, what, pinion, is a fair cash talrration for a. a must.cany coal ninety-four miles for when you recollect that the lowest liml exPenditurelhat has ever been : reached tries were materials and labor are co cheap, is two cents per tan per mile' What is afair mei valuation of a i mast live, if it live at all,: by carrying's (lime cent, per. lon per . mile? A your representation, the Stockton and Road adopts that systeni, find makes I clear. What then may not this rOat as it is by very, able thranciering l' estimate published by the board in 18: - Moderate." a dividend of 20 per cern:, of five millions, meet your views? another speculation on this head. 1 a grdit deal of humbuFing - etill. V ' to it. ' It ( 1 .. We received theifollowing ye . unknown correspondent, with a reque them in did Journal of Feb. 3d. A ter, along with several deferred articl us from totnplying with the cicsiie A PLACE or REST Weep( not ilmu hearenWhrd H whose, toilsome way, The'ploom of many a are is throWn; ' may stray; Within whose heart sometender pulse pain. When tried by this relentless world, - dream is vain-, • Weep not, though o'er the living glow brightest wreath •• rate's swill and frequent tempests lea stain of death; ! • • 'For endless raptures shall. be thine. in m " Where the wicked cease from troub weary arc at rest." Thou ihn'st bend unto the cliastcner, and _. • loved, . • The pure and beautiful organ!' by early il I Thou must mark on many a blighted ch mildew cling. Thou must bend beneath Times shadd snows are on the Wing; ' 'Till the peace which pasiethknowledge ' - thy - sent, 'Till the silver chord is bioken, and crust bowl 'Till the bright and glorious streetvab feet imprest, "Where the wicked cease front trOub weary arc at rest;'' • 7kL flow many' flowers will rise and' blo sweets to pour .• Across the - mazes of thylway, which ea. store;. - ! • How many foud,eycs, full of love, will i t hid— How will the dark and hsavy' pall press lid Thou must pile the graves, remorseless a faded brow. 1 And lift the serenade of death benea bough 'Tilt with a pale and clelaged cheek, and ing breast. I • • Thou wilt Murmur for a Spirit's wing rev ' . rest. Vet Lifh is but a season, inittliy trials s And then upon the empyreal air, thy cast Tken the bonds of earth Will sunder, an , drink the sone That floats the vernal rtaltures, anti the alone Thou wilt Join the hot and . lovely—who fore to aid, • - Ih a glad "continual city'? by the'earth's trod Where each angel's plume is folded, brow and breast; "Where the wicked cease from troublin: IIY are at rect." • 41 . , 'in cir rlc b . . . , On tnesrlly . evenino lint, by the Rev. Arm% ii.iot Mirssr, to Miss ItleitEt. I Pottsville. ' . .. 11tECHANIdS' INSTIT , The second Lecture . before the 3! sociation took place oil Tuesday E the' Town Hall, agree4ble: to the o. most. . • JOIIN K. CLT.:SIT.ITT Esq. on nE Duty, and Man's Happiness"—was fort; and there can bo no diversity oi gard to the beauty of composition, al] tollect therein displayed Nest Arenday 'Evenin . g. the DACE SHitri. Esq. T.eetures on thr , of Republics,"—and On Friday Ev in t. the Rev. J. B, l'ittrtas, will lec Arts." We hope there gentlemen encouraced than theirAeser‘ing pre shall feel the benefit if it is to.' . Pottsville, Feb. Bth; 1844 1,252,659 ' IT 19 7315 T, VAINLY PRETENDtD, than the. human system, ran ,he cured by DI PULMONARY SYRUP; NIL .The aßtpnis certificates, speakide of. it in the high many of the most respectable el:lg. - ins in beyond the shadoni of 4 doubt, that it ' Panaceas ever discovered, for Conan Sore Throat. Measles, iCroup, Asthm Side, Breast or Back, Scarlet Fever, & per bottle. DR. STEELLIN!O VEG. ANTIRILIOVS surpassed ass safe and :salutary purga Just befire r , tiring to resat—Priee 25 cts I The Ilay. G.A.acey, Pastor of the M. apiek, states from experience, that' . Steelling's Pulmonary Syrup. is sufil". Hoarseness in him, produced by public For sale in Pottsville4, wholesale an C MARTIN'S Drug Store, and in P W. I)%OTT, Sen. ._ Feb.. lit, • 385,193 CI-The last doubt reninvedt— ELIZIB£TIITOWN, N. J About two months ago I was seize . 1 Cold, which soon caused raising of bl. ous remedies, but none did any good ; tTary, mt Cough inereaSed, and it was result i Consumption: By acciden Family Medical Guide' met my eye, whi Balsam of Wild Cherry: I - purchised and in one week ccas . c4 raising blood tirely disappeared, and'my health was tared, enabling me to attend to my bus JAMES W. We the undersigned, are acquainted Woodruff, and can assure all who-do n his statement i 3 entitled to full cp . () known his word need; not our -,: at ,„ eOLLOS 1‘ ' 3. P. for the County ELIAS WIN .1. P.ltfor Borough of Eliza. Bold in rotttvile by j. . • In ILlnt - ling by .° 1 Feb., ID, / CO." A CERTAIN CONVOCATION OF P" are e'en at him," says Hamlet speaki lonius. But "convocations of worms' the living as well as the deal—prepar their septilchral . eonfederates. Look with a complexiob the Color of tallow! circle round his eyes,,the enlargemen the querulous, whining cough, the yolce, thelassitude of his body. A " convocation of tVorms are o'e fellow. If they are not destroyed and die. Administer JAYNE'S TOM I and in forty-eight hourS that child w being. We have seen the expgiment even in the worst ease lave we kno disappoint those who Abilea fair tri should never be without it. $831,`.:30 .. . , For sale hy Ea.:HOLTZ & 13A.SilE Agents for the proprigttir. ' _ . Feb., 10; , . • ST. - 0 .IVI 1 - , I - Oliver x. r, , • ' • L RESPECTFULLY announce to Schuylkill county. that they have ness in the Store recently occupied b one door south of the Pest Office, in Pottsville, 'wpm they; have just op• carefully selected stock of Dry, Goocis,. Grocerit Queens, Eaithenras - low War0,..&0 • & Amour Which ma y be 'cciund Giotto, tinetts, Manacling de Lhins, Gingtta ones, Silks, Satin, Laces, Napkins, II Narseilles, Valencia; Silk, Satin, and great variety of Masi*, Bleached Silk, Caton, and Glrghams, Hindk Cloths, Velveteens, Ladle's add Ge ings, GloVes, and Mits otall duscripti, Sugar home and New Orleans :lola , and Tea,i Cheese. Candks, Snap, Sal eral, herring, Mins, Shoulders, at generally, Tobacco * , Scots* ,Crack Lard, Sweet Oil, Lamp Oil, Raving purchased their goods wit . on reasonable terms, they will be en: them, at picas quite as low as their: Feb. IP, 3 El carry' why t the prfF,- has showk.- 1!d him, (#1! cost 40 3., I? t 'mewl fot:44 >mod in !ca . ; I I P: e the vinic nation • in ydui,'Di -tawny that,: $1 'per ti*, It of actual, i likoad tat at :Lit il ording` .. to Darlington 5 per cent:; do, aided Woulir the 8 as C* . .11 a capital ~e t us hato e eanUar Faces: • 1. • ; frOto?in !.t to pitiiksh icss of iitat t that :.!..I:tir.tct' 'ere, siCtOild r'er„ttiy st •• • S, irhete MM IMBEZI I ' I ,ing,. to*iihe . • ce ath the,:hcff Lk' formewttere s garney"eiriis cd the I'o4n arc urelrPthy . 2461"ie. a qiai-,.0f tG cantitkie . - - the graye be eacli . .;lo'4o MOE htgc Opi:ess With a Jz4 rn- !bear thO:litto I nrt are OA. lirit =MI IMMIZZII Itl g6llhbe- Iredeemiimes ICIZZ , and tilt Sri s- I 8. M,1. 4 4 tj a, iiiiNiiii Itr. nuolrs',..str. It:coo, *ftb of i • • ITE. . . [cc/rani-W. Ai j•ening*:at cr-of incatic4WOur mas„tf.t:y cf-, opitlicyn Tn f4 , - vigtia - 0 t twit: Ho. "DuiYiNtrlij ning• 4'lo Gtii ture - ofi The will I*-I:idter leces.44:;pg We ALL distaws, of I r. STEO.axo'll !ling nuffk: .1.: it st tertst9jeom the U..s: Pfeves 'a nr.e,tiftWe best pticm, , Patnh ity the, PricF. 7 not ire.-taethern a box. , . Ch irs]t;;aTnn- Poe d054.,0 Dr. tient to irmoye screaking, retall„.a.t4., S. in:1(100(41)y T. FE= I , Feb.. 24013. ;Z it : rt a rign e r i n ut, on abh - scon. : feared itAtirould , Dr: Wititaes • :b recnni*.nded hottle;ittOd it, • my CfitAr connil24ly l'en. !less wooDgprF. , with 31'4'; 1",• . know thit . 1-• Whlo , llll* lot ESte.Vh.• 3. N, 6aintonii, e 3. . C. MA . Tifilg. tAll • JOID: 8 El certcAoVOltsts. of tho de4 i tiPo. are at Work -cm Ile a bamifet for t nett TKitut child mark the,Mack 'of his titeOmen• , cubic nets ' , 4if, hts at poor cloelled to wilt ill L e c en b i - ER a 4 d t i Pi7Ei tried, 'itever,• rrrshis ritrii...dy to 1 of it. _,;7stottiers SON , l*Pville, !`qr-$t la V. tlic cit4ene of eoinnicneed bust. Wllliara the - BceiAtigh et' 'led a. Saw, and s, d. Hi* EMI 1 Cassimerts, Sat is, lawnS, Merl. hand*, nativists. other Vttilfags, a ' 114 toblsalied, rebiefs, )!ittreirnsr tlestan'i- Stock. r.s, Alst,Aiyrup, t,r,, gurfer,''..Cofree on, ElhdrtNack ! d d ran kEtrllcat. I's, Butt •i,i..,-I:ggs, great ale, And bled to iltOtte of eighbete. .