/ POTTSVILLE. Saturday Morning, Mar. 15, 1845. VOLNEY B. PALMER, -- At his Reid Estate and Cod .ggencies. No 69, Pine Street. Phil, delphia, No 160, Nassau Street,-New Noik,` No. 16 State 'Street. Boston: and - - Bmfth east corner of Baltimore, & Calvert Streets, Bahlmore, is oar agent f,,r receiving sulnicriptions and adverttrements for the iners• Journal• • • '}'The several Courts otSchuylkill County have been' in session at. Orwigsburg, ;luring tho last iwo weeks, and will probably continuo to sit tbroUgh neat week. OPIFINGI 9P•7ilr. SCUUTLICILL .1NATT4 . 7 105 • —Notwthstanding the wintry weathes,o4"Nfon- day s lut, (the' 10th init.) .wc aro authorised. to •stste r that pursuant to our previous notice, the ,Sahnylkill' Navigation was opened throtilhout its whole length on That day, and is now inngood or der everywhere.: 'lt is . With deep regret we Ileac° the decease :400 csteemedlpitizen, Mr. Wn,: Bagger! y.— Mr. Haverty was beloved. and respected by, all who knew' him, for his amiable qualities and up- :fight walk and contiersatian. Ho, bad been ill for some time, with a lingerie decease, (consump tion,) and died on Sunday Morning, in the. vigor of his Age, lamented by the - community of which wt valualjla 'member, but:leaving fur his friends hopes andlsons.olations infinitely 'more pre cious than any. t l ho' World,• can give-Lto him death is not an sternal sleap. A SILIPf . CINAL ICUSLES Tna AMELLITA:q Garet', from Mexico, is nt pre sent in'England, with full authority from hie go- .vernment, to' undertake the constructirm of this great and long dreamed of work. An accurate survey of the idute has been made; and ho is noii , seeking from , English capital and enterprise, the .means to accomPli'sh his views. The distance between the two Oceans across the Isthmus of Panama, is only forty miles; but the approach to the Isthmus is so shallow,. that vessels of heavy burden coUld nbt near the land without breaking bulk; this theleresuperadded to - the ezireme_ unhealthiness:of the region, forms an insurmountable objection tc‘ that route. A more feasible route van's projected, via, the. —l , .ackaragUa, where the — distance from Sea to Sea, isninety-Eve- miles.' But hire again there are oljntions which' Condemn the route. L - Pon 'Hum boles 'authority, "there is not` on the face Of the glehe,pother sPot so thickly 'studded with volca nos, as that part of America which lies between the 11th and 13th degrees of northern and ' Nickaragua lies between , these . two • pirallels. Besides this, the Lake's Leon and Nick a,:agua, the river Tipitapa, which - cennectS them,. =aryl the San Juan, by which they aro emptied into tiie Atlantic, are directly in the route, and the de scent 61157 feet, from Lake . Leon to the 1 3 acific,. would be Ofsuch a difficult character, and require so many LoCks; that attention is naturally direc • red to a tltinfrout2; and the Isthmus of Telluan- irpei, , which is 180 miles across in a straight line from the Atlantic to the Pacific, has been selected, after accurate survey; by Mr. Garey, as decidedly the best and most feasible. The undertaking is cutirely practicable, and the Canal could be corn • pfeted ant cost of seventeen millions of dollars. ' • The lamas of Tehuantepec.is salubrious,' fruitful and healthy, covered with• fine 'timber, . _ forShiphnilding, and would sustain .a large pop ulation, indeed it was densely populated, till•the r.leasiations of the hucineers converted it into a Wilderness, Harbors of excellent character 'could ba Constructed o4oth oceansot a small expense. .On the southern side, the depth of,water on the , Lagoons is about 18 or 211 feet, which can be in ereascrl,to a requisite depth, at a reasonable coq., And on the Atlantic side,the - Coatzacoalces, which hal always at least 20 feet of-water nn the bar, can very readily. : be male navigable up to its con fluence-with thrOlatalengo. The work to be'ex': - crated, would 1;4 chiefly comprised between IC.° • :'.; and 17° embracing a space of not quite thirty one miles iri extent, and the required exca- acations would not exceed the usual limit'. Here i ',the Battelle de Tarifa, a pass between the moon tains of 656 feat, above - the level Of the Pacific, and less than 600 feet above the mouth of the Talatengo . _ afford, perhaps,. the Most fee t ibis in the Whole of thange of mountains 1 wctich traverses the Isthmus tin - rough its whole ex. I :cot, continuous at each end.; with 'tho greet . which forms the spine :of both Continent=.• The Chitnohrpa and its confluent the Monetza,.! ,'td the Ostuta, which is a still mare considerable river, and fimvslihe the other, into the Lagoons :,rar. Tehuantapee, will furnish an amplesupply • cf water, which coy . be applied with facility to the . nercice cif the Canal- ' The mild and salubrious climate, is an impor tant cori'siderattori; and of sinsilar importance, is C.-:o fact thai the fruitfulness of tee soil, and r.' , undancomf cattle, Would enaldd ' 7 o' 4o s Passing .rough the 'lsthmus, to renew their p;" 0 ° 15 -ions t tatklsrate prices. ' Thi;, accomplishment of Allis enterprise ?s of . ..-::ogrientout importance to this country. Veeseft frocit Europe destined for. the Western coast Of Nortli-and Soinh Anteriea, and the islands of the Nbuth ,Sea, would avoid the' doubling of Cape . Horn by this r out; all 'vessels from the 'United , .Z , ,tated.to China,and probably most of those from the ZiffereAports of Europe with .the same destina 'tion would employ' it. Commbeco -, would , therefore necessarily be greatly increased ; and - Aoubtless a n3hderate toll would yield ,a remuner ating rettitnloc the capital invested, "-• POSTPONER ON ACCOUNT OP TRY . ..WE/TRETE. ' —Bt.Pattick' day is, in New Toth. Bishop . iltighej has put it off till the .7th of April. Quite liberty to take with the Almanac, but some men - can do anything.. - o:l7.llonday triltbe celebrated in honor of !zee_ hnd'a Patron Saint. Look out for sqUalls. CiPT. Nzervoi.L.President Tyler's last offici al act, or - almost:the last, was his best ; it was to reliete Capt. Neir;•:,n, from the sentence of the court Martial, and restore to him hi* sword and psi. Capt. Newjon distinguished himself, in sev r eral actions in the last war, and is, beyond ques ton,a brave and gallant officer. Although by the strictness of Military . , discipline .held responsible • foriviry occurrence on board, the Missouri, yet 2 fcr thelsurning of the vestal tuuTthe storage of the tUrpsntine he was not to !Asia =I ---- Car ar Tut: B& tlt t i he age of 68 Mr. Clay lies been obliged'i,to" return to the prac tice of a laborioits plc fessiog, He' LI said to be; in iOOl,l health, and his neilabors remark thatthey have nAer seen him took better. Luckily, an iron-fibred constitution enables him 'Cs undergo the fatigue and labour of tut extTive' practicer and he encounters it with , he vigor" and. assiduity, the buoyancy and cheerfulness of b young man. Relieved from the heavy re4ponsibilities which he sustained as apolitical lejilcr, he till - manifests the deepest concern hi phblic ati j aits; and the emotions of his patriotic 11 - irt now, are es much for the interest, prosperity honor, land happiness of his countryois when, in the Senate ho nobly fought, the battles of thou Constitution and the People, and twined the wreath of his own , honor around the capitarot her flme. . , • I, . . Tee Ws.urneer.—Mareh made r nnmiabi p de but, and for the most pit;t has behaved itself gently and eery like a frilib. Vile . must confess however, that we can't say muchor the general el f character of the weather daring th last week, be cause it had no general,character of 'any sort,- 1: '!'hero was considerablo of a - hubub and sum ps . kicked, ziP among the cicluds on Mon day, and anfsto and rain 'had smart chance of a contest between thelaselv - es,, hichristed du -ring Monday night and I cruesdayi,ol,l boreas, i who, from his frequent interferencS, seemed act ing an 2econd to the parties, mads• a great flour ish of trumpets, and cut some quoci capers during the encounter. Sumetirnes. rain. Was down, and 'soan/times snow ' I; but it Would be hard to say which obtained the mastery - , as berend-.their mark than was little to.show ter eithei of the parties. On Wednesday, old Sol ;an op the. red flag, and Coo belligerents quickly disapPear4, leaving the battle ground to littleFpigs, tind venerable ducks, who have enjoyed quite a loilee ,upoit the strength of it. On Friday sol stuck his colours • .1 - • ' aul the skirnnshing re-coannenced, a 'coed. many hard blows past, rain was!: trollied down once or -twiec,hut finally snow felt in.his ti•ack4, and rain carried him untie ground. ' 1 . . BROKE OCT V( A Prt.E) •Indlans:—The Albany from 'Major General J. Sf March 7tli, by which it on.the 'estate of IL L. Lid 4y, are in full blast. It Ds!aware County, wero e tents,,fOr the purpose of and Gen. Smith is of op will soon have to he put i , . New 17-011.5. 131.111,r. OpCIETS.7 ..This excellent Institution during the pa a t year, .distributed more 'than' nineteen thousandtlumes, in the following languages, viz : ; -English„Freneli, Spanish, Ger man, Pollth,Swedish, hailed', Danish, Portuguese, Dutch, Greek, Buseian. Arabic, Hebrew and Latin, ~ I • • The ship sailed from Now 1715rk fbr London a day.dr two ag4, had o . n.board, 14 Indians, most of thorn Ottawal and Chippewa Chiefs. Scarrger.o.—lt is stateathatthe - erael edict of the Emperot of Russia flr.the re+oval of the Po lish Jews of Siberia, hasibeen suspended, and will probably never be acted ( upon, oviingto the inter ference of Sir Moses 3.1 . 0 teflore attd others. • Mr. Tyler signed th a Ilicao.iy pen. • SPEED OP Tilt U. IS. STaamsurr rnyler. experimental trials Of ilOrEtricson pro ; pellor, et No:folk,' on! Tuesday morning, the Princeton performed arruile, accurate measure ment, in five minutes, three keveraltiines, the title malting no difference ie i her rate Of speed, 1 . The Exports of Am; N. York, (luring the m 1590 packages, tLING ;teen thousand and forty-nine •barrels of sperm; fifty-two thou sand seven hundred and thirty-six - barrels *hale oil, and four hundred and „eighty-four thousand seven btindred and nineteen pounds of whale bone, were received at the port of I.lew'Bedford in the month . of February. 1 A . , . , 1 'CONsra.t.r. „A rrzyriox—William Blair niern i ber:of thelllinOis Legislature, died at the capitol on the Bth uli., and his wife on hearing of his se. - ; vere illness, was so much affected that .he sank land died about the same time. , ,• Fins 1:f BCCKS Cov - Nrr. T The large cotton factory of W. C.Csboine, situated •on the Nesha .mOny creek, at Milfaid,.Bucks county, about 5 northwe.st of Bristol, was, with all the ma chinery. destroyed by: fire on Tuesday night.-- The. building belonged' to the estate' of Anthony Taylor. • • I ...Cary'd.; Hart have published itypamplilet form, Phil Puree( and other stories of Ireland' by Wil liam Carleton; suth‘r 'of Thelim O'Toole's court• Ship; Islr. Carleton's accurate powers of observation, have given his delinedilons of Irish character and portraits of life,among thelrish Peasantry, a rank among the veil best Irish hooVa that have been written: His ileseriptions aro vigorous and pic turesque, and his pathos is•bf the gednine-honest vi.".;prooar. Ifisron: Tlrr Wonr„n" John Frost, D. This'work merits a more comment than our space particular and estcnci:4 p erm ip. I t i s s p o k en ! o f 1 1 (here in terms of cominenclation;'and certainly, as specimen of i the typographical art, that has been gaij of it .is not too much. The.nnmerouS illustrations a: r ! for design and execution; among the most beauti ful we have ever seem. The work to be corrpris ed in three reyal octavo voluMes will be comple ted in 30 numbers;',.(2s cents each.- The first number is recti . sled and may be had at this office..' " Cruickshank's Oranibus," Ipublished by E. FCrritt,.& Ca , Philadelphia, is received and for sale,.price 25 cts. limilahane ib mdisputedly at .the head of modern Attisa. andithe capitol Cari catures and. incsistable 'drolleries the "Omnibus; make it what it claims to be, a valeta for fun and and- frolic." • IVtisa Opies' 'White Lies,' has ] been published in pamphlet form; by Saxton 5c Belt, Boston, and may be had'at this office. Price 25 cents. Cecil, or the adventures of a ic.loxcomb;', is the title of a work, attrilgtd to Sic E. L. Bulwar, and recently published ' l in ,cheap . phamphlet fawn, by Harmer & Daggers, NEW York. It may be • . • ' bad at this office. 1, • 1 • Iturinda was now .up l ori the Imp ia 1.140ne; in. the teniporaryfesercise bf Suprem , powei; but lie svai anan driven into exile. §anta Annii had a- ready begun to play a oMaspicuouo part iil the fairs otltteiico; be was then Go:ernol of the State of Vera Cruz ; deeming .him elf 'personally aggrioied, be unfurled!the standard of rebell)op, which 'iteeded but to be unfurled to be followed by a restless, excitable anti revolutionary Pcople.L— GuadsioUpo Victoria, who was also exasperated with Ifmbidejoined the rehelhon and was chosen to the command: Personally poimlar, his army *as anginented from all sides, and the friends . , of Ituibide deserted thh falling Enapercir for the rising Patriot.' Iturbidh who had virtuOy exer cised an alinost absolute sovereignty for a period ;of nearly two years,'resigned a crown 'Which no leroget'sectired to him the preroiatives of a incia arch; :'and in the month of May 1823 sailed with his fantily for Loghom i , • The people of Mexico wore tired "of 'rnenarahe and ifienarchiein: The republican feeling which bad originated the first untucees4lll rising under Hidalho, - was vastly Strengthened by the events of the setiond revolution; and the republican patty now friend itself strong enough to assume the;di- motion of affairs. Their attention .vas directed to the United States, arftl dazzled,by tho success, of a free'r o -arernment here, they determined to try its forms in' own 'ninny south. Immecijately upon the - deposition oflturbide, a prtErisional j un ta .v. 4 appointed to grivern the - cou.ntry, rcs tiler Oongress could ho elected. The , executive autbotity was temporarily vested in Victoria, who has been called the .Washington of 'Althea' and Bravo: and Negrete, beth pf whom had rendei'ed conePinnous and patrihtic services in the struggle for independence. The junta', or convention, pro ceeded to , form a constitution aftei the model of that Which governs the United States; in the month of February, 1824, they had completed their , la- bours,; and amidst thitumultudus and clarabrhus rejoicings of the popUlace, the new constitution sworn to at the capitol, and adopted, as the written regulator of the republic.. In i'the Succeeding :September the first regular 'election was held; iti state governments me ' ated,.a general Cangre'ss formed, without disturbance or commotion; and Victoria elec;ted the first President of the , Mexican republic. Ho was,a : devotcd patriot,' had rendered oMinent-ier iicesilo his 'country in her Strug,gle for .indep'en dence4 and his character gave ample usurancd of tranqUility and freedona. PLA - c i .—More of die . 1 1rgus, fittlisliell a. letter tsmith, data 'Kingston, appears that. the tenants Imgston, at Ulster Conn snicl that •Indiani from' xPected by the malcon- H•opera q ng with ; Mon that military force in rcquisttion. Tens l asolutions with orican Cotton .Goods from omit of Fobniary bet, were MEiI6O NO. 4:. In - 1824, the partizans, of Ittirhide made an un successful effort to restore the deposed Emperor. In 18,25 the provisional convention wassuperse ded by the constitutional government;, and in Ithe same'y,' ear the Spanish flag' which for more than i three'eenturies had floated from the battlementS of San Juan de Ulloa, was finally furled. From ;the termination of the revolution till than, Spain had hell that fortress, and her Ecopa'ld banner had continued through - allthe fermentation and chabge to wave over its walls; but with the creation of the new !'republic -the dominion of Spanish poWer in Mexico was brokeny forever. Im:theory the gOvernment of the new repuhlic was apagnithent structure; modeled after a splen did and perfect pVern, with one fatal Sdiffereitce. - Embracing every }j of civil and paitical.firee dom;:it secured n;it to the people a religious libel-- ty. yhe - church and,the stal were not, as They should have been, entirely sundered, 'and where there; ought to have ; been liberty of the widest ranee and most extensive compass, tho Roinan faith; was established by law, and maintained tvith . it zeal not surpassed 'by inquisitorial Spain.; If -something of the daring and chivalric character of their; ; Spanish ancestry had been handed down to the pope of „a - Lexie?, the intolerant spirit of lOid Castile, which followed the adventurers from! the richs.alleys of Granada, and. the fistnesSes ofiAn dahlsla to the New world, and with the iron hand of-C7tris - tian civilization brae down the gentle sp'irits of the naked , beings, who for' ages had, chaunted their song-4 beneath its f2reits, and in undilturbed security parted their light canoes lover its rivers, had lingered with them too. The lessons of , all history, .all the experience of the past teaches us that - when hie in fitter:sic of the church is united with the powers of ,the,tvil government, the effect upon the condition of the people is evil and corroding, and theii lib ertypannot be secure. • While Victoria ocenpied the executi , :c-chait:, the atrairs of the government Moved on with regular ity and harmony. TLe fito,Of civil liberty burn ed brightly and steadily in the first republic of the new,world, anilthe patriots of Mexico had lighted • their,torch at the satrio altar; for a while 'it .aie out a' clear and gloating light, Mit soon the blaze began to dazzle and madden the people. Victo ria'sterm of office, like that of the President of. the :United States, 'expired at the territinatien of fourycars; and from ;ILlen till now,there have been contlnualrevolutionii - in the administration o . f Meztcan government. In' view of this fact the inquiry is naturally sug gestO to the reflecting mind, was the Federal forai of government best adapted totheweribi r ha bits,:intelligence and condition of the people of Metico;and is it really certain that a less compli cated and simpler syiitem would not more efibetu ally have Sectired their happiness and liberties) It is true the .eiperiment answered admirably here; but the.circumstances and condition of the: two people were essentially different. •Our p&Tle were: accustomed to the forms of a free gievernMent and the distribution of power, they were from the beginnhig a free people; their territory was 'pee pled;by contract; their institutiens arose froni the convent and agrecinent of those upon Whom they were: to operate, and: their binding . obligation:was continued only by the consent which Created it. ThOgreat principle Which distinguishes: their sep arateexistrince—the ,principle of well definecFand wi l.iten contract, was through ell their progress the ri . et:Pr:P.; of theiti . rights and liberties. Every stauilled its 9 ; I 'n local end peculiar laws, enacted by •iOgislatOrs sel&e , .? out of their own' numbers, ff theit:inteieSta and habits we74l di Brent; but in all the home fundamental principie o f civil liberty was recognized and all were essentially f i ,:ietat their revolution they only .united by mutual cot:. cent to repel!a common danger, and when iao. object 9f theii:_:union was obtained the link which mad. then one by uniting them with their Englith mo ther 'severed At this juncture, the Federal form of gOvernment was the natural. suggestion. The previous condition Of the peiple - of ,Mexico was direOly opposite. They were, it Is true; divided intoluovinces, hut 'this tira4 only for greater fa cility in governing the multitude; the People herd no voice in making the laws. The Nrri4roy was the supreme head of the kingdom, Arid all the l o emanated from the same source, whether in: the . • Vigi.royalty or Captain-generalsnip of the prieviri eta f_nteinas. , l• • ' • Tic divkion of thO territory into sepritat' giAteg THE MINERS' invested with power to legislate for themselves in matters of local concern, and rs,nnitingtll l ,ol un der a Federal head, when thefeople wein, ignorant of the simplestelements of a popular self-govern- ment, seems nicongrous and absurd. i • Tbb truth is, the people of Mexico w e not yet prepared fer the enjoyment of iegulate4 freedom, and the distinct exeretse of political power. It re quires a long and attentive; apprenticeship. The noble groviip of republican, institutional is _notthe hasty formation of popular passion, but ithe slewly ripened and widely] gathered . harvest Opiinciplo and expel ience. The people of Mexico} Omboilen ed by the energy they had witnessed and the suc cess which followed ;:the :erection of the Federal government in the United States, blindly followed their example, withgut reflecting upon the Ildiffer encs in the enaterial.which composed oJr magnift cent national fabric,l:and preserves it in freshness anti splendor, asspeifect and undefacedias - tvhen it came from the hands of,the. master 4rtisis.who framed it. The systent which through half a centu ry lias s9c.ured tranquility and -prosperity in this country,(did not prOduce that result iir Mexice,but Idisturban and insurrections have 'continnally distracted that government Since the administra tion of Guadeloupe 'Victoria. ME HOW THINGS LOOK AT WASHINGTON.. A leading article in tho Madisonian on . Mon day, headed the ".Great Week" is devoted to the achievements of President Tyler." -The Mali sonian thinks the ei-PreSident 'is already" tehping the plaudits of posterity," That his administration has ~e ternized Warne" certainly=as others before Jilin . have been eternized," . • "Damneci to everlasting fame." T i tie new Cabinet officers have bee'n confirmed by be Senate, and have entered ppcni the duties 'of their appointments, • All accounts from Vl'asbing,ton [1: *0 that Mr. Calhoun was ousted from the Cabinet against his wish, and without consultation ;.that : the Offer of Minister to England tins then made; by way of reconciliation,_ and refused. His friends aro indignant and there is likely-to be trouble in the wigwam. It is laid that he will go into the Sen ate. Letters state that the Mexican Minister has 're ceived his passpor't's; and thqt. Mr. Pakenham, the British Miiiiister, hpe e'xpressed,en opinio'n that' the affair with Mexico will not lead to hostilities, IJARPISBURG WiS The Governor has sent the Hon. James Bu chanan's letter of resignation to -the Senate.— Among the candidates to fill 'the vacancy, 'the most prominent parries are C. J. Ingersoll, Judire FAdred, Judge Woridward, Gen. Cameron, and D. R. Porter., Mi. Ingersoll is in HarriSburg ma king desperate effort's, and is likely to succeed. The bill to incdrporate the Farmers' Bank of Schuylkill.cOunty,!tvitha capital of $200,000, has passed, the Senate; yeas 14, nays 10. The bill Was reported with the individual liability clause. An act has passed the House fixing the stand ard weight of Indian corn at 5G lbs. am unable,' yonder beggar cries, 'To stand or move'—itte says true, he lien , Bost. ..Pest.' If with more care you'd exercise your wits, You'd find he neither stands nor lice; bui 'sits • Rich. Star.. Quit poetry--:-'tis not your calling= He neither lies nor sits—he'd spa att-1 0 'ng. • 1 • Port. Tribune.. • • _ Nay, critic friend,!tob harsh thotrseemeth— • . lie sprawls not, butlperchance ho leancth ; Or, cautiously, each triode allotting • • The tired beggar liza be, sqUalt:ng;-, • Rich. Star. . . Still wrong ;. perh4s some liberal Wight to dupe, -The fellOw kneels; perhaps he dde's but stoop ; But the two ills thatin his cry are blended; , Are symptoms of 'a' medicantstrspendt.d. Miners' Jour.. To Ts or - spi•atet. makes difference small. To squat or stop', the same we call. The truth to find yiltir brain would addle ;: . The beggar on a rail !loth straddle. . Rich.; Star. • • - Pshaw! is your scull composed of blOcks,l • The beggar's tight; pin'ti the\sfoiks, Or, time and fate, strithcruel thumps; Perhaps, Itai-e brOiight him 'to his stump's. -. • TEMPERANCE irf 13oFroic.—The Washingto nians of Boston have enlisted, • during the !sit year,. 3,9s9.persone in the cause; 750 persons who have signed, the pledge have . been lodged. For 1,050 meals to such persons, $l3l 25 have been expended; ftir'rent and lighting hall, $575. The nett income of the society has been $1,230 62; its expences, $1,347 05. - A British soldier accidentally fell into the %Va. ter at Quebec, banada, a few days since, when a sentinel walking by, hardly attempted to get him • out by reaching him the butt of his musket. The drowning an grasped the weapon, and in his. struggles, it was discharged; the contents of which entered the head of the sentinel, and killed him instantly. A REPARTEE. - Mr. Packenham, the British Minister, was in the lobby when the House con curred in the amendment made by the Senate to the Sill for annexing fexas, and when the result; and said, "You Americans,are, indeed, a grasping ) peciple." "Yes" replied Mr. Slidel, "we have. al Strong mixturb of the Anglo-Saxon blood in us."l This was touching Mr. P. in a quiet manner. It is stated that a resident of Mobile Ala., while" on a_ frolic in Havana recently, was assaulted lay! six sentinels successively, all of whom he thrashed! handsomely, captured their • muskets and threw' them into the river; and then went on his way shouting in triumph. , Projected Psilroad.—The 1 Toronto Patriot . says, that the American Liao Company have subscribed, one hundred thousand dollars to wards the projected railroad from, Montreal to the . :I • Atlantic. Tars. Polk has determined to attend no publid balls o! placeg of public general'amusement, while residing at Washiigton,—as Wo see by a private - lotto; published in the Boston Transcript. - i The Supreme Court of thetnited Stites has adjourned until the : first of December.' There is Mill one vacancy. The total revenue - of the Province of Canada caritas past gear is stated at ;631,288; the ex penditure at .£448,091, leaving' a balance in the Treasury of .£183,187. Death ofan Editor.—Died,: a day or two ago, at Baltimore, on has way homci from Washington, Mr. William Simons, senior, who for thirty years has . been dinar of the Republican Herald, at Prov ident:4, it 1., aged 05 years, j• 'kit - iortp :cit ..3icms. .. . f.The Irlarrisburg.llnion:allialing• to Col. Pones retinue otitis way to Washington, says he :had "only ' r.wo negro Iservants, his-coachman - 'and his ufl- 7 . ': „ ." ' . ' , . Highly complimentary to the President's wife to ba class d with his coachmen'rs iv negro servant. Such is the forwardness of spring, that the wil low trees on the banks of the Deiawara t on Wind mill Island, and in the public squares Of Philadel phia,,d,le , aro in leaf.. , ' ' '-, Horace Gre'eley 4 , Esq.; has' been nominated' for assistant Alderinan of the Twelfth Ward, N. Y. Good. Firiffor Pillsburg,--Goods wore forwarded from B,altimore on Saturday Jest, to Pittsburg, by way of the BaltimOre and Susquehanna Railroad and the Pennsylvania Canal; The first cdnsignmcnt of Susquehanna prOduce of the sc-asop:reached baltimore . on Friday., It consisted of 1800 barrels of flour. shad ere served up at Balti more daily. I• The Cincinnati Chronicle says that the bricks made in that city last yetir amounted to 350 millions Florida.--COI. Joseph 13. 1 , Lancaster, of Duval county, Fa •, lias been riointnated es the . Whig candidate fel Congress, a the election to be held in Mai r:est.. ' 1 . Shotbill, a young man en gaged in Driving a stage between Meadville and Franklin,. Pa.,: -was arrested ow Wednesday' of last weak, on-ii charge of robbing the mail. Of the ten' Presidents liosery by this Repub lic; Els are numbered with , the dead. Four still survive. 'Tip younger Adams', Jackson, , Van ren, Polk: 1_ Value of ,ithe Esports front New York for the. week ending the f3th instant, was $479,061 17, :of which $.393,447 were ported in Amer ican yesscli and $60,616 6'4 in foreign ves sels. ' ; • Freshet in the Hydson.- 7 qwirig to -the recent rains, says the Albany Argns l of l'hursdaY, the water has risen severdlateet since yesterday, , and is now in the stores on the ilock and some of those on the pier. Sandal Amusements.HCock-fights ;every Tuesday, Friday and Sunday evenings, aro adver tised in New Orleans. Three hiindred signers of the Temperance. Pledge were obtained during Mr. Gough's recent vist to Washington and Alexandria. The Proviilence Gaiettd states that Thomas r • ' Dorr, is , at present so feeble in health,) as to be unalde to'perform any:labor in the prisoniwUrk shop: It is fi3id . that 4,loetling a:partially Llindihorse I • • at the nose, will re!•tore him to sight:" Soli-ouch • for the horse. To open a man's eyes, you must bleed him in , the pockets. I • . 4:r. Calhoun' is engaged on a work which will attract a godd deal of attention when, publisljed.-- It will lie a _review of events with,Which he has been conrcrsant.• 1 • Prussie Medical gentleman Eng -1 land having a head ache t'euchrti the tip of his tongue with a stopper of .phial of HydrOlanie Acid which: relieed 'llitn;hut' getting a dr i pp 'on his to:l , 4u° it killed, him,insiantly. I i -The f,triners in the int6tior of N. Jersey-have commenced' ploughing. ,! • • " Jofin, Smith; now thO proprietor of O.Bool: . Bindery and. Blank 'Book .111anufaotory in!lNew ark. • , A N York paper says, that tall ladies iOcaria 7 bly prcter glint men. An exchange paper ;thinks. this an error, and observes that no women. objects co /Ig-inen. Very, fine large oystefs, can be purehiFed, in N0rf014,•Va.,. , for twelve 7 and-a-hlf cents per ME Henry Clay; 3r., delivereka lecture at Lou vile, on the 3t inst. HO subject was Grea Britain:' ' • -- The Philadelphians and Bostonians, uncles the Ilew act, Wilfhave•to'pay b cents a letter, for the carriage of only - two, miles; the distlance being I • just SO2 miles between thocities. • , Why is a fashionably dressed young lady - like an unskilful printer I , Because she makes a great bust/eh-I dressing her Arni. • The New 01leans Picayune expresses the opin ion that the difficulty existing, between the Tex ian and li. States authorities, at the Sabine river, is not likely to give any great uneasiness. • Riede of Married ,Women, {{The Missouri .Ifrlits9 of Representatives ;has rej4tedtht bill to Secure prOperty to married tvoinen.i , . The bill to provide for the payment of interest on the-State debt of Illinois, has paLsed the; HOllBO a vote of 67 to 41; and will dmibtless Pass the Senate and become,n law. It has beencorsidera bly mcxlified, however, since its - first introduction by the yinance Committc4. Senator Bates, of Mass.. ; is lying dangerously ill at Washington. A complimentary ball was lately given to a large bog in Cincinnati. It was out of I ,a rifle, and laid him as cold as bacort.' The ..Albany Ges Company is busily at work. By the 15th of September, there will be laid down 4 , miles of gas p!pe. The new Iron Revenue -Cutter, "John-Tyler," s nearly completed at Pittsburg, Pa., and will be aunched in -a few days. goyemor Jones was recently invited tott coin pliinentary dinner, by u - number of the Whigs o New Orleans. He respectfully declined the prof fered honor. , . Splendid Present to -N:6 Clay.—A rich and beautiful set of plate, Sayi the Louisville bourns of Tuesday, passed through this city last week US w present to Mr. Clay. Wo understand it came from N. York. The Supreme court of New Jersey has denied the application of Parke orid Carter for a new tri al, on charge of having been concerned in the murder ofthe Costner fainily.' They will prob ably be sentenced to execution at the present term. It costs•:E600,000 a year to , put , down smug glinglu Englarid, and pods, to the yelue of mil.: lions, are : nevertheless, smuggled there 'every year. ' • ; , ; The total amount of expenses on the Welland Canal, Canada, from the pornmencement to the Ist ofJuly, 1844, is $955,983. Fly driving yoUr business before you; and not permitting it to drive you,. you will have oppertu nities to indulge in the lilury of well applied lei- NIVO. . . . . TeX lews Brs-ritieeor Tilt . t. *-The iron dl tricti Vuhieli spreads tfitailgh Nevßtistiy Fenn, sy vania,'MarYland and . Western YirWitia . .. traver ses regions exuberant with coal,*anti - ;gontaling in. -, water-power, and, travelling further WOE. we find., ih Obio;lCentucay, Jrnr pstticularli 01 , MissaMi. . immense stores of mztaliferous wealthiljacent to' the , most fertile, agricultural •distritilko It is to' Pennqylvania,.however, we must ellie r ay;,direct our attention; whele two fifths of all - the r ,llmi in : the United States is made.: !Me Utrited .sates eon.- • tali' 00,000 square miles Of coal, whi:4 is about . sixteen times as great as .the coal4,feasuoss of , 1 Europe.; A single one of these gnta - Tie maSses runs frOin• Penrusylvania to - Alabatutrand must embrace, itself, 50,0004quare.inilesu: of fifty • counties of Pennsylvania, no less thriiiihirty have coal and iron in them; 'and out 001 w 40,000 1 square unites of Pennsylvania, whietaurun super:. 1 fides, there ate 10,000 . miles of cuOiand _iron; Iwhile all Great Britain 'and IreliMil'Arave only 2000-0 that Pennsy4ania alone his*i area of 'eclat and kin five times. ml great'as thait' of Great • Britain:, The quality of the coal.or I* is as rich l as that.of Great Britain, and they haii &the a i l kti ".. tags of lying ne.'i• the tc•atel-level; while More of 1 the latter country are sOmetimes . muse ` than one , thousand feet below the surface, and..'.are cleave . The.,Parii correspondent of the:7B 4 PlOn Att.'' , • ted through subterranean pasSages.-44junri-Jfer - • I notik„ingin 'one of his...recent:letters the arrival in i eiranes ':ilrrazine. '. • -; , !!!..,,, t'- . • Paris ;of a troupe or 3Ctlancing gitls, between t he, , ages qf 6 and 10 years, frorn-,,the,..-banit# -of' the , ' Danube, remarks - , ; ~ . • ): • , Yet it is a Sad thing to reflect, Kan ., CpcOple do sometimes reflect here) tbat...thesit, girls have been collected' frorn.their,rh.ocues,A9: . be trained . 'tor. thb stag.;, like Carter's hens.: few persons lt,tve'atv idea of the" painful, S i i,SSplaus like Mil of a_danse-, .. use, ivhote repose . , flesh and liberty are...4arrunced, like those of a race horse, that.she migh,f . triumpli.. 'I have' seenl,llle , Truglioni:. says gong •of , her friends, 'fall insensible.on the. floor, a'flerreceiVins a long lesson.fralli her father; she would` be un:• . dressed and carried to •bed - -hy tier 'dentekies.— This• was the price of the agility:and.marvellous bennds of the evening:. - . EVery . ol.ening,That Fitz Janies appears in het best' - charaeler,. she lie' for half an hour, 'face downwardi, rnpoiv.two . ;Chairsi placed ayard 4part, whilst her femme ti e(airOre sits - upon her hark; that it inaybeCorno, stipple.— It is' true' that a, stereotyped -sntile , tplays upon their lips, but it is only to conceit the workings of . a heavy`heart, BOAROITY101 : ' AMERIp4...N SAILORS. 'To tAe'Editor thi !Tribune . th ere is a paragraph gaing the runittist.of the pa pers to - effect tlawhen; : hlr. Reado Was chairtivitt of the li'aval t,%snunitte(i. Congress bo.found on investigation, that out of 109.000 seamen, sailing, in American ships, at that time, only 0000, were Americans—only one in !Weise. Whilu vve do not doubt the correctness of the fact stated. we be lieve that it leaVe.saTalse impression as to the pro-- portion of American sailors who man our shiV. - Mr. R.'s computation could not. have included all the _sailors in,,the country, the true proportion bring nearer one to four than one to twelve. : The State of Maine ;Ilene' fOrnishes ,atreut eleven'. thousand sea:fanng men; a good Proportion of who in; as count of their - superior enterprise, courage arid • skill, aro either - captains or 11:atm...We have sup posed, in the absence of- reliable .data, that about one-sixth' of all our American sailors hail. from Maine. This will give as the number 4Ameti can sailors . 66,000, arid alloWing every fourth one to be either a captain or mate, ,we have left as the number of men a fraction short 'of 50,000 which we believe., to 'be much nearer the. truth: than Tribmze: The satne cerrespoadent. spea . l:4g of the carni val the Tuilericisthi .. s;year, and their elegance and naagnificence, says, that the -A.lnCni carte alone, who attended tho Court, . "sport 1.1 ) .3w i,.. - ds of five thousand dollars that would other ivise f lu e f;niaincd in their' purses; ' , The writlr aids— Some of tha Americans, ro,r7ot the great object of the King, I?ivitc: ent"ltatn— ,ments is to aid, Parisian indna'rv, as a tai;ted ieud ly ti nhout'llicie having a I.l , j.kt,as repul , .!cans , , attend them in a plain citizen's. dress. Mr. Walsh; if I mi,t.dto not,- once approdriately ream : kcd, that white the cost of the court dress rofzlit: have been .nn adequate motive for the ohttsnence of some of these getry, to wear it would Would not have been a :1 fu. PepubFcailß shonki not cant nor Id.ister an: where : if they c,mdt.- scendlo visit n'onarchicril eettnt.ia , , and widt behold Spectsc':eF.., y should cinifurin to' establishid etititiette, which all vt:)lation. under such circumstances, is. in s .' fact uncouthness, hal breeding arld Kuumisit folly,..:.The mother of Americsns not. annually • presented is greater than tharOf any othei , courdrS , N....0q!e, for .. .cur Minister cannot refuse any.eme who will conform to the uasges i . bot were it attended Witlf no extra expense, it wnuirl be gitadru ' Many of them seem also to. thitli . that eur Lictation here is cr.:tali il,hed for the special rairposc:Of presmtirig — thei at iourt, and the bZpartinent O . 'S:Alp would meet 'their wiAies,b . s , attaching to it n'elerk, whose ince it shonld be to answer Their nrultitlidim u notes and inessages—order.-their . 6ullic3' t and Oct as valet on th'e , occasion. ' • p • • Tar La.ta, r . lexi-r.s . 33F : ', llellobai.- - -Tho cinnati Chronicle saysL— , • ' Our conriery •is a..; -great in,caveS a 6 it is: in [ mountains and rivers. Amon tliese the most ,remarkabld are thir receintly.discovered lead caves of Nlissouri. There dre aboUt sixty rni:es sauth of St. Louis, in Jeff.. , rsoo county. :Marl Ifercula; neutni A SClie!.-39flirgo cave , has been discover ed in'a rich [Jr•ad ninci• whiidr seems he :Mule, as it were, l oul Of Vis.a hare here nobs- been discovered. The tollocaue; aril their dimensions ; Ist cave, 50 feet by ,30; }V .- 533,35 dm '4O by 70 ; 44h', do. 23 by! 30.; sth doJ lass boon, captured -onl•y;fiartiaily, [ I, • [' ' •[ The .following `paragraph from the St. 1.01.111 I 'Republican, vflll expLiin is: InviNdoi this caves: • Hr [ _ • ..Geit. James:, I - Ilint, formerly of (Trenton, cs, cr. Jersey, has led the way in the dilroveyr 'of the ucces , Aonof;ebv.es in thislead Since 1 the corn- Mernement. i Th° lasi areoun . i. we gave of.,6int, abou.a month ago,,•he 'had just entered, - rave,No. 4; helms now made, his , Way .80- fet.'t ;hi No.'s, and masses of GaMita'arn tiic only'. hinTrana - Ta his - further progras. l .lefore the twojast caves were discovered, this I.ya. conSid - ered tlie,greate:t lead on - record i and'n . Ow the prospecti for the fu ture-seem to biightint as he advances. , _ . This dead runs aliout , Seuth;3s .dei: East, commencing ;about 10 miles from liill;bnrough, the county •se'at of Jelter4m county—the !end be ing about 5S : miles...south' of.t. Louis. :,!. ' .".;:11 is owned by a rniimahY of a few individuals besides the (*near, spine ofl vlidm resides in this City.: " Nlo l nes felloWhir, extract from a letter in the Charleston 'Mercury, dated rWaS • hin.gtori, Feb. 26th, 18 15," shows by what means the ii,a.sage of tite 4 , J0 - Eqt Resolutions" was . , effezted : 1 , . • . . " As -to 1116 new "Cabinet, my prognOstications may now be 'considered as realized, so 'fares Mr. Calhoun ,is concerned." He has not been offered the . State Apartment: Mr. Buchannan is to take his' place. • • • • . • It. was nut thought that a President whose election he:cordially 'aided—ei citizen, of the South too— could, hair! deemed it consistent with - propriety,. duty, or poliey,qo dismiss'him from qifice. . But TEXAS,. IT WAS, SAID, HUNG ON IT: NEW YORK ,COULD ONLY nE GAINF.I BY 61.C7 ITIFICING It u. CALIIISVIC;11711/ accordingly Ile is sacrificed. llis friends are justly indiguant," &c. • ADVANCES 'UPCIN CO#ON.WC have long aura' petted that gentleman .who' makes ademices to the ladies; make,them , 'parily on 6th:ill, Gut here is a new vicj ofthe.reatter : . • • . These hard times have put people to .many economical 'shifts - , and these, Altifts.in turn have, put folks to inconvenience. :No longer than last week, a gentleman who had beef! fur several months courting a lady for her fmtune, (?) with drew. The girl was astonished, but nut so her mother. :The good Woman, thinking he was mer cenary, bought a cotton we've' carpet, and spent one Whole evening in talking, to her-daughter's lover, about the hard times,' in illustration of which she pointed to her cotton carpet. 'Nuff ced.' The gentleman was otil g Mother.' ;Was, the young. girl's question, —',what 'is the reason that Mr: R. has •forsaken me My dear, he is poor ,hiinself, and course. (pointing to tho Catpet)-he makes no: advances upon.cotten.':• , ; ' , PCNISI:IMENT r 9 SC11150T.:13:--i.ACII recent meet ing of the SoCiety of teachcrte and- friends of Edu cation in N. lersey,,the following resoltitions were odoptcd Resolved, That the infliction of Corporal Pun ishment as a - penealty of erica° is justified by the Bible, and recommended by the experience, of past igeff; and therefore ought not tolie prohibit ed in Schools. . . • . Resoked, That the mode of Punishment ought to be used with great discretion, and only in ca ses of.extrerne necessity, and, that the State be ad vised to employ . inorai influence to govern e thoi: schooht, and 'to dispense with physicl-ioric a s 1 far a i„on s i s t e ht sv i t h the maintenance of whore. some discipline. .". • . A gentleman who re:tided some,siit ain what ' i terms thajobacco, region in Florldj, has :fur- • nisliod the editor Of the Mobile .I , :;itibat 'with a glowin4; ',account of the fertility oft' soil: and the. mildness' of the climate. The region is fast ,•. filling up with •an industrious poppljtion ; and improvements which,a few montli , k'alo:•*ould haw:. been bOught for from 5400 to ssoo' ' '51090.: It lies in Leon and Gail 0; counties, and is not of great extent ; the soil . ' is a' loci`4e sandy. loam, from, ten to twefve-41ches deep, 'and rests on 'stiff co mpact Clay: Thert i Viteralyier& of to . h * accei is abort Sop, to - .l' potq y per acre:. Some of it' has been exported to Etrito., but the principal : part'sold in Apalachicola, niti,cfre itnicets ready sale at prices ranging front 204 . 75 cents per lb. inlhe , leaf. Tho wida range:Nf pricekis', too - the fact that- manyJof the cial - fOators hact . . no previous experience in the. buS*s.-;-Ba/t. Amer. t testi n t.r.• Cart 1.1 U r.:lc nty-seven is the number of .cotes that carried tlie:nea•mre of. Annexationthrough the Senatcond thenumber of. Stites that kviirthereby constitute t*feticral • The coincidence 1.3 nob sq remarks= when' it known,-that without Texa.4, thee: Nee already Iteenty-c:ght Stutcs in the Chror,. irk. • The South Carolinti ttic.t.•,..that has. turned his hack oit 'them, • tire I.Ettining to talk agtiin of nullifying, the Tatlo. Give ;he direction of affai44 and , thee' would be easy enough about .the Tribe: ne , • ..... , ;(,-,..„7.4 - ,.l.o:o:4oTivl:s—Twew . y i ..r,4lr of the celebry-ted Locdoiotive4, hay e.:10.n orfletc,(l.: frj.l%,/.sent to T. icetio. '4 larq,e proi.cir,On-of thorn liavo already Inca: the uAlOs ate /av idly par,reF;iin.l. Tohl, speaks p:iia skill I.3l.cr.;:erpriac...--hirtodet. :41:Ivefter. . 1. • " learit fiord Ile Evansville 'CiAer, Ohio, that a littla girl alLitit 11 years old,if;iigughter or DaniPl Milt( r, of Evere'svEle,aceidentititit bhot hrr selt:with a piztui last hc suP:c#ed but a' tbw minutes. • " ~ :y:.4.^-^-,..,.,.,,,, - ;............,• - S.T_c.., - . 7-1- v.....,1...m.nmairL5m.5......... • Rill:I:51A TIS. 'AZ: El Cot T.-NVP.IGIIT'S IN 1;54S vratTA 1114: PILLS a re a meat estmorilutaiy oic l Oceine fur rho Mire of Rheum:lli:du and Copt, becadde tliSsilnot only • can the , stenitich and buWets of those . morbid hil l:Mrs Which if ratan into tit, circulation, and thrown dopen the Membran`s.and 1111.1EC1,, are tilt;ClUS2,bf the , tilioo e painful maladies, but they excite tlidtalisorbent vessels to take up that which 'id atremly dsplls itcd; and I therefore are, absolute ty eertain to mate al,pprleci cure lof Itheuntattint. aml Guilt. A single f'.s,V i ert box el Vriglit's Indian 'Vegetable Pills often; give 'the most asiimisliiics , relief. and perseverance accoecidt r: to direr= ' tions will be , certain to dried Pkiii`efeveriitilisri f iption ! Irma the body,. I 1 , NVrieht '6, Indian Veseiable Pills also ~k id and in, proviCiligestion and poiify the blood; a: 3 ,i therefore I give health and vigor to tae whole fn true, I t s well as I arise dice lel of tree, •Inzi,2cfroal I.' e bn.tv.: .• • i: I',,r sole., l; ‘,‘ loilesale and Retail, at thll Ptlncipal Daico, ';';o1 IC'd Mace street, Philadelphia. , 1 ' ' n-Ccuticw. A 3 (.7minterf:dtcrs are abroalpayoid mil -1 Stores of don inftil charwlter 'and be p , irticuir L., CTali I ; • , uitht4.sing • inedt 11.oet ptbeoes tcha •rlier id , ' . ei: at re dotted proven. ' ~ ~1 . . Fur sale in, Pottsville t by Messrs: T. dc.• di I'ITLATTY, ' Annt, fin' the prop' ictor iiiltlis other - a-mitt. k Scholl - ' II ' 4 , — 1,1, cothity. . , : TauTti In POW F:RFUL ii ND. wltt. Princstb...7 , , kis true. that Dr. fi rccbm:m's PthrsiosstiV I , : rr.l)l. yi Milieu s Inds of instances proved itself:invaluable It cases of Asilinia, Lai:sit:to.. •Spitting,luflikiod •Crotigi , l Measles, Ili-Mel:hi.. Scarlet reVg - r, Sore Tbroai,ll,l4l , lmopinq i d' , :n.eli, and other Put:nod:lQ* diseases. The iginarkalify Mere:is-T.l demand for it, is unili ,, niobje. eviitenre. that, It is aliprei rated by a dilscOrning public.' ISN'sbuttld be born in mind that the". Pub:co:silty 'etyrtue:" l dells for , mily ~ f) cts. per boßle, widle similpr medi jags set for a doildrramdriire. ' . - • .iii ' '.'[ . . - Hr. Fors'y , tli,,Mcld.''..qrceS Honk, Pa.'slal ' that ton mother, an a , selt ladv,..was cured of an i laliiiroinr, Cough, of erdisiderable . . iduration,'by STEbbiiii's PUL MONq.I" SVII V n P; .. '2 I Pe sale ir I`ottsc - JOHN S.. T. MAIITIN, In le, by T. W. tiro -TT. t 31 A. IigIED. inst. by Jatob Ree I Esq..llrti , ,lllintAm:f • 7slll.r.ttß, to Jlrs. Lovisi BENJAMIN, both pilliancla Township. cru . it 4 n ETS: 4 CorriclaVrezVilllj' J r or the J0.1.V.-1 L. --..----,-,---- ----4 , 2 _ W''lleat ;lour, ~ ilel Dbl. sl 37 to 1 504 rtenty Rye. do .-.! '',' 3COto 3 2:yili Plenty Wheat . bus hel ...'0 tt 05,...::::Scerce' •4YO . CO to 05 .at_ do Corn _ ~..... .oats , - . . : ' " .. :0 ''''' d, - - ~- ",;;I ; .Potatoes new. , " 44 lo ...,, : , l'iii • .-. 0- Tinity ;iced, .t. " tl'f.o . • , ''.H, do Clover •.",,•...c, " - .150 1 .c:ificarce ' Ezcs! =....„. Dozedt 10 t0.12*1 ' :Scarce 't , Bigler , - lb.' ~ II lo 13 . !•.',Lylertkr Bacon.. ,• • " .4to 5 ' '.rll . do Hams. i - `‘ 7to 10 ]Jt: l do - Plaster , . Too 600 l'•,1-Islehly Day " r "' - ' $lO. 00 to 12 :ic''': do. DrfedPeathespare.4l3tislt. R.O. ; i•il do Dried. do .unpar'ed ' : 1 'OO .'. l I do - Dried. Apples pared ". . 75. • i 'I, do . 771 E T.R.4D411;1 . _ Scut by Rail Road up to Thursday everu4 last.. Schtly!hilt Ifavcti". - 1,1,162 15. Pottsville • ;505 16 MEI Per Past Report, MINE DILL AND iCI.D.IIj.EILLHAVENAT : IIOAD. :--ThcT , ,ikilvinfr is Lila amount, or Coat t6ijiportell over for. the iireek ending ori WeSincsday I.:awning last. , ' ' SIPA (11. Tons Per last repOrt .13,159i(41. WILLIAM NEWELL, coft,tor• 'Total, r2rPtiLASKI Lovat, N0.116.—A stated eittei,ing of Pulaski Lodge. No. 1,111,' will be held on 31onrIlty eve hex,,,,r March 17, at 71 o'clock. PunctaiOntee dance is Tequagted. Etf . .)rdet of the ;WI, M. March 15, 1315.• • : • - PUBLIC SALE. - IIBRI7.ANT to an order of the boh ; ' Court. of Schuylkill county, the sil4criber, •Administrator of the estate of Luke Lanl4n, lato of , Nianheint Township, in the county of *huyl deceased, will expose . to sale by POW Veil due, on the sth day of,'/Cpiil next, at 2 oi.elt)ck in the afternoon, at the .House of Reuben flight in Mount Carbon; township and county afOft . jaid , • ',A, - c - eitTain House and Lot ore:Ceuta situate; hi the Township of Maiiheiml ;;• ; County of.Scbuylkill, contaiOng in front-41' feet 9 inches, anddc(ticitth 220 feet—subject to the arrears of purebasi.. mo ney White, who claims for tbe . .i.-samo !$309. .Late the estate of said deceased. lAttend once. will be given and the condition of sale rnado 'known at the tithe and place 'of sale by !,? I.11;1GAN, • 'By.ortler tha: tour;,• • H. DOW NING4 . :PIi• 1 . 0" brg 1 6 'lBl5 1- ... , ,: . t DlttrNE. AND rths.—A sankll lot of . (iVi (ril , it: - SPlrrna rigs, and A few jars undbeaetjar fresh. cro_l'. Prunes, for Bale bk J. Z. C. 31Alrfr.4:. . . March 15,1E45,:l . . ~.:, 11.-. 1 -.' , •-: - :_= '+!,i 17,018 II SB, 5 .. 6 46 -1...---. 15,,'74 57