POTTSVILLE. Saturday learning, Miy 81, 1845 • VOLNEY B. PALMER, Ste his Rai Ewan and Coal Agencies. N 0.60, Prne Street. Philadelphia, N 0.160, 'Nassau Street, New York, No. _lO, State Street, Boston, and Booth east corner of Baltimore. & Calvert Streets, Baltimore, is our Agent tor receiving subscriptions and advertise .ettts for the Miners' Journal. .1!1:r Re.. A. A . .. ANDERSON, will preach in the arge reo the r 'Town Hall, t.l-inerro%k (Sunday) afternent , at half p..st three o'cloek. rStihject, r• Christian Libp-fy," Joht' VIII. 3• co"..T.,nre Son the Episcopaß;liurch of Pottsville" ' —by!. M. .U., ivus:receivtil tau late fur this week, I but shall appear ] i:n our . next. Mrs in W!vra:t.-71toscrst Jarden runl Mat 'icon, of Plitlaelphia, \ aderttise . honied !dermal water. From tlet TeCittlena under our table we aro ittclitted to 'prenontice it superior, that .ia it -looks superior4he weather is yeller too cold to drink mineral water now, but :et the 'dog days' are at hand, we anticipate a warm 'spell before many .weeks, and if' it!shoUld occur we will try it and report the resulf,of our c.xperitnent. Tut Vit EA iltiu.—Ourclpthito has become as capriciona and . Variable as a 'spoiled beauty, and a man ihmild he extremely , cautious of committing rimself uponibi phases for an"hour in prOspective. hilesve write over coats and coal tires are quite cOmrortable; we havdn't beard whether tum bling run is frozen over," ur a hearer • ,, snow fell upon Broad Mountain last night,',' and shouldn't like to answer for the condition of those more hy berborean latitudes., It' was very ceinterish last Week, but greW iiistly more seasonable on Tues day and Wednesday: hut yederday -blew up again. Red noses and blue lqop were quite plenty tvgather ought behave itself better. Tom COUNTII r.—The 'ear verge:4 upon the !COY trtimth of June, the couritilv wears Its mast delightful appeacdnee :Ditisiuq pied, flll , l violets blue. And lady eauscits all silver white, Aud eucketo buds of yellow hue, Du paint ttte meadows with delight." Nature invites us to , pass out. from the cities' . feirorish hunt, to find .rcfreshinent in the silent Ts , /:1 de. It is exhilesating to the senses, and hen efi iadtst the physicadman, a .4rele 'in the country. It tiigeod'soutetignes to Jeave the stir and hustle,. the turmoil and din of the clamorous multitude of busy men in the crowded marts; and walk awhile among the spirit-soothing, heart-moving and lovely scenes of4n r attire; to ,inhale the pure siir, where freshness breathes, .andito feat our debt .of 'gratitude, to the great spirit of the Universe. It was a beautiful and brigh(day, and the beau tiful sun milled up6n Earth's shapes end colours' of beauty ; all nature seemed In ninlion and in joy We, pushed aside our hooks and pen, and wandered out among the hills, through a landscape where the majestically grand, the half tamed, the wild and the gentle are mingled. Rugged jagged rocks, green slopes, fair cultisatcd f'-Ws, groves with their eVerdant inequalities and delicate over shadowings of foliage,' mountains. •rockribed and, ancient as the sdn,' ravine's that attest the vener. ; ableness of our World, mark arid vary the fine scenery . of this region 7 and among -these scenes we lingred, 'till 'dazzlCd and druirk with beauty, the heart reeled with its fulness,' The majesty of Strength was around, tho 'grand , air of sky above; from its subteranian source, a crystal stream gur gled gently, with voice music-t 1 as is. Apollo's ltite,t•malting melody'' on the air. and the birds with the most eloquent 01,.created_voices sat . and sang in 2Goil's first Temple,' ch7iiiting, hymns of 4 juy with ini.fatigaltle hill. Who could resist such influences 1 .-Lthe' selectest influenves of creation; that heart must have been torpid and . world-har dened intkad, that' did not feel varied and in tenser vitaliti i •--that was not drawn out of its con tracted range of.every day,eniotions, and upwards towards its tinal destiny. . - I It is good sometimes to..,leave the town and its smol4,ointo;rltere, to east behind its the toils and aniictics of!our practical lives ; to look front the _physical to 'Ale moral, to breathe the fresh and bcalth-promoting air, to refresh • nod amplify our hy - tonver:.e with the giorieA Of creation, and to ~.'e in them,-tho evideoces of a creative power add the hind of a crcaior. With the samo sun shove us that looked down upon Edi•ft,,with :he cbluts around us, that in tho RainhOtiv, and play iu - the clouds'— that 'flush and circle in the lower,' with the woods deep mas4eS of green nvershadowing us; birds singing. to Its, stre.ifn. whisp •ritig music/ ftr us, and the wings . of insects that-wake from . the en- ameled gn.iund, hoating—rnelodicA on the air to soothe ut,' the subdued, 1?:oul is . i-;i 4 iried upward from glurie:s visible and created to glories invia ble-6' the 'roilyle not made. hands., It is surroutide&hr. such seenea'aiii iffibrences,--when the Worldi without, is 'garnished with a glory,. that the World Within ue. experc o*n vastness, and man who isqacquied by a thousand livered angelS.' Messengers ;if mercy on crraunds of love from Heaven—. above hine.elf erects him .tliat.:Ote immortal know:: it. immortality. and Tres alobg the line of Inhale... - . desire.' that the spirit forgets:. the. bondage of the beat, against the bars 'of its earthly tabernacle a . nd yearns ror.its native skies Amidst. rthe stir of losiiness and the crowd of men. we are disposed to worldly mindedness -- every thing-ikvelled to the even_ surfirc of a practical utility, men :trn ec,gmur..d in .tadmings and iontriances, to ridvence tit the career of gain,' and plunging into the tide, we ea hurried along ,by the szittiog . current. Our wind.: become cramped, dir ,view r •ciranmscrihed, the innevolent affections gro‘;‘ wiaker and lege eirmdii(ing: she thuniau syMpathies less electrical and contegeous, Then leste the workshop, the store; Abe fifine; And go faith flometima into the country, arson: the bilhr.and fteltle,i.er.d where the meadwa skirts the ainninainz open your heart, and "fully :unbrr som yoUr seul.;" stoop clown auileacia lessor/In the:flowers; Gars Spirit smiles ill flowers, their voiceless lips are living preachers— . "Each floral bell that bwingeth. • Makes music to the air. .And ever. ringeth • A all to stayer." Go forth into the &Ids; each leaf and blade of grass can awaken a joy past j4y,', 4 and suggest hoPes that find thrh testing place near the throne of tflai.....eternai pre- estatrnt dall•exitlent,. pciwor , in the siient - spheres, works in the 91 the dln"—thatutaile and guoornooll ; LAIL • RILIZ? rn Pirreenan.—We find in the Pitts. Daily American the folloiving conunnnice tion: - Fortartzza, May 16,1845. • Wx. J. HOWARD, En, Mayor of the City of - • Pittsburgh. ; . Dear Sir—lt affords me great pleasure to for , wird you the enclosed draft oa the Bank of the Northern Liberties, Philadelphia, for Five Hun dred and Fifty dollars, contributed by citizens of Pottsville and its vicinity, towards the relief of the sufferers by the late disastrous fire in your Please, direct the remittance into the proper Course fur tho purpose desired. ; •". Very respectfully, &c. JNO. SHIPPEN. In reply to the above, Mayor Howard, of Pitts. burg, has addressed the. following letter to Mr. Shippen, acknowledging the receipt of the contri bution from Pottiville. - C MASI:ea OFTICZ, PITTIBITHOH, •Z May rTeith. 1845. Dear Sir—'-'3l7ouraAf of the 16th ictat. weal duly received. You will please tender to the' citiaens of Potts ville and vicinity our 'warm thanks and ardent gratitude for their very generous contribtitions for the relief of the sufferers by the great fire in thii city. • 'Very respectfully ;Yours, ..... WM. J. HOWARD, Mayor To John Shippen, Esq., Pottsville Nati. Dux Vivrstus Vivaiscs.—Our friend Yar dley of the York 'Eltnre, advertises Hama of a sii peri"r quality: They are first rate , and Ms mis take, depend upon our taste, and try them. We are not,an epicuret but there is Wisdom in the motto "Live while you live," and a well cured ILyn is a luxury worth enjoying. ; 5111T11 9 3 WEEALT Voctima.—The first quar terly part of this excellent and valuable pbblica tiom.containing all the numbers from January let to April - Ist, 1845, is before us. We have before remarked that this was one of the very best and cheapest publications in this country. The.works teprintid in this quarterly part Of the , volutrie cost in.Londou $22 . 00,: and can be purchased in this form for $1 00, or IA clubs'of ten for 624 cents which-maketi it beyond doubt the cheapest mode' of collecting a choice library ever employed. The Editor has exhibited uncommon poWurs . :of judgement in his selections, and the first quarterly part does not contain a work that is not of the Oat interest and character. All of them would be fekti with pleasure, and most of them with profit. THE BISOOP WRITE PIIATEII BOthr. SOCIETY'. —This' society held its Anniversary:ln Philadel phia, on Wednesday evening of lait week ; the Rev. Mr. Ogilby, presiding. A. numerous au dience were in attendance. The annual report, an eloquent production, was reld bone, Esq., the Corresponding SecMtary. It ex hibits a scarcely of funds, the - ugh the wdrk!Cuf tributing the_ Book of Common Prayer, by :means Of its limited resources,- was encouregihg: The number distributed the past year was 5475:; that of last _year . 5400, showing-a gradual, though small increase. The receipts have been 59 . 55,78. Addresses were delivered by Ifon. Josephfß. In: gersoll, 'Rev, Wm. Suddards, and the Chairman, after which a collection was taken up. TELEGIIAPiIIe , COMMUNIC/TION TIETOZKII B•LTIIIORE & NEW Yolli:—We see it stated by a 'Washington Correspondent of the 'Nevi York Journal of Commerce, that the New Yorkl Mai netic Telegraph Company; have filled theik stock .7. • and. are ready to procede to the coinpletionlof the line of communication between Baltimore and New York.] In case the design of the Company is frustrated by the Rail Road Company, the use of whose travel is wanted, the funds will be em phiyedio establish a Telegraphic Line between New York and Boston. •If this experinient is successful,, a line will soon be established from Bangor to New Orleans, and another westward to St. Louis. Mr. Kendall, it' is said;calculates that the stock of the Company, will yield a dividend of twenty-five per cent. per annum. . Backspin DELTIL—The tOston Atlas, men. bons a 'distressing accident, whith occurred on yriday, Morning, at the Boston lnin ComPany's Minks, in• Roxbury, on- the Mill Dam. pp. of the workmen, a young and industrious Irishman , named James Gorman, carelessly attempted to pour some_water from a pail, into a bucket sus; pended on one side of two large iron wheels, which were In the same range.of line, with scarce. ly a ,Perceivable apace, between them, and revol ving with great velocity, in the attempt', some part of his dress caught in the machinery', and his body was•drawn in between the wheels, and cut in two, across the breast, and awfully He was crushed to death instantly ' 1 A Cuntosyrr.- - --The Albany 'Citizen states, that there are in that city, tbe remains of a' won• derful animal, called by the naturalists, the Zny. glycon. The vertebra of the, creature, which must have bCen half whale end half alligatOr, ei.. tending from a portion of the head to the tip' the tail, is eighty feet in length; inanimal must hOie been nearly or quite one hundred feet long. The remains were discovered eMbedded in a chalk foimation on the banks of the Alabama River, and were boxed up, and forwarded to Pio. fessor Einmous, at Albany. , , • THE Monmoesare again in treuble with their neighbors. They have called upon Governor Ous ley, of Kentucky,. for help.,,,The.. , lluorina of the Twelve." and the Trustees Of the "Church of Christ of Latter•Oay Saints."- implore him to convene the Legislature specially for their benefit, to 'lend his immediate aid to quell the violence of mobotraci, and exert hit influence to establish them, as a people, in their civil and religious:rights, where they now are, or in some part of the Uni ted Stetes,.or al some place remote 'therefrom." There are indicatiOns of another outbreak-and die -tutbat&kin that country, urileitsl the authorities step promptly to suppress any ;violence. .. t MILITARY A c‘A D YV YAT EIT rorarest ine war departrrient has appointed i Major General Scott, Brigadiet Geberil Brooke, Brigadier Gen eral Gibson, Brigadier •Gesieril •Towson, Colonel b. Bumford,, Surgeon General strence,,' Major Levi Whiting inspectors of the West Point Acad env, for the, ensuing year. They are to meet it the institution .on the lot of June, to attend to the annual examination of the carp'. of, 'cadets and make report' of the discipline,4ndruction, and general condition of the academy'. A POWTAiILII LITZ Boar.—A life boat con structed of water proof cloth on a frame work of wood, assighing - 216 pounds, l and capablci of suitaining S 4 ,persons, has been exhibited in Eng.. hind. Having been thrown into the Water, not shipping above a apart of the element, eight men descended and Thearded her in - a minute; they pulled her ac4ss the basin and performed a va. . nety of evoluttuns:to the satisfaction of the specs tatora. When nut in .use, she - may be Stowed away on deck-not Accup,yipg /12mA/A Airco iu• chesin.deph. correspondence of the Miners' Journal. . Dis 4 YeitiF, May 21st. 184 5 . Deis have ijsited all the princi ple manufacturing towns in New-England; 1121 , far east as Portland, and I was' struck with the evi dencei of prasperity abibited , every where, in:the go.tthCad and; happy countenances of the people ge nerOly; and all this has been the effect of the Whig Tariffi'of 1842. It Would delight you, to witneas the happy faces, rosy cheeks and smiling looks of the girls employed in the Factories, most of whom tnaki enough ta support themselves comfortably; I and leave a balance every week, to put in 'the i,Savings Bank,' where they. lay up something for a rainy day ; whilst at Providence, (R. I. 1,) I obtained permisibm to visit Tom Lion., -in his prfson:' and, if 1 thought proper to do into his cell, tfat. might have an opportunity" of sat isfying myself, of the abomniable lies and Blen ders:. put forth, and circulated by such ordans as the loCofoco presses, who exhibited Tom as a mar tyr to! liberty, incarcerated in a dungeon, with a chain; to his neck and leg, 14 pitcher : of water, and • loaf of btea r d near him, end his wife and children weeping et the grating, being refused admittance, by his cold headed persecutors. Now the fact is, Tom : ne v er 'has been chanted, has excellent fare, „ t, looksius fat air an Alderman,' and never had a 'wife or children in 4 his life; so much for political hum ,buggery. His cell looks like a comfortable, snug chamber in hotel; neatly Annished, with a dou ble filed bedstead, wash stand, hair brush, &c., • 1 and q uite a supply of books, Law and !disco"- neouit; he winks when he pleases, (painting fans,s and from the specimens I saw, is quite an adept at the busineia. Now' seriously, when we think that this man, was guilty of the,horrible cnnie of treason, and lwould have been 'executed any other!Count6 underthe sun, to say the least of it, hehas beck' most leniently dealt with, when it is well knoWli, that he can walk out of his prison whenever hal l chooses to take the oath, that s ull the members of the Legislature' take, viz c to support the Constitution of the United States, and the Constity,tionlof Rhode Island, but this was only one of the nainiy frauds practised upon the Cred ulity of the honest yeomen of Pennsylvania.' . In ;Boston I had an Opportunity through the kind ;attention of an old friend, and brother salt,. wiiieseverat of the Public lnstitutions, of that Winaderfully improvingtity, end in the Exchange, met With th e following description of; the famous Artesian Well at Greenelie, at-Paris. •In 'order to appreciate t at the first coup d'aeit,' the - grandeur of the work of M. Merlot, there are placed at the base of the colhmn, upOn a level with the arterian surfaee, the Most elevated monuments of EUrope and Paris ; St. Peters at Rome, the , Cathedral at Straidiurg,N n tre Dame and the Invalids of Paris ; the bbilding*of Grenelle, are naturally found up on a level oft the soil, and the exterior table of the well, ie elevated 28 j metres (or 112 feet.)- The monuments, the buildings and their acceparies are equally reduced to the scale of offs thoOandth ; the tkameterfof the ascending to has not been reduced to this scale, its thousandth not being rep, roductile. The boring of the well of Grenelle, was commenced On the 24tht of. December' 1833, the water sprouted out on the 26th of February, 1841, at 2.1 , o'clock! . P 411., the Work lasted seven years, one Month and twenty-six:days ; the depth Of the well is 547 metres (or french ytirds,) being 1686 ~french feet; I•The volume; of water sent forth is a more; than 3,400,000 litres or French pints, to . each inhabitent of Penis. The temperature of the water , is at 27 degrees, 7 tenth centigrades or 79 ' • I degrees, Fart nheit, the Chemical analysis has dem onstrated git. this water is purer than the water of the Be4ore closing this 'long yarn,' I must introduce to yoUr notice and the Coal Operators of our re gion, i la most valuable and mportant discovery lately Made here, by a manht.the Mune or Ball. .and for which I am inforMedhe has obtained psitedt, ihrod l gh...the aid of Some friends ; it la cal . led the .Parent Indestructible • Water Pipes, I wentla see them, and was surprised at the great simplicity oflthe invention; and the great value it musthe to our operators, who are obliged to use • !! the wOter , from the 'mines, that is more or less itn pregriatedwith Iron and sulphur t it will convey the water through those Pipes, as pure as, the foUntain front which it springs, witbout any of the deleterious effects of lead or other metals,the in vet-nibs:l is simply this, you take for example a stove pipe,'and fill it l ,with,kydrolic cement or wa ter lime, an instrument shapid like a: cane,Jri then introduced, and run through the pipe, which' leaves coating of ;the cement, which becomes as hard as a !rock in the course of an , hour,the pipe is then put in a 1 rough box, and the cement Is Pour ed around itithe same as grouting stove viiirk, and in a I 'short time you have a 'sieve pipe, that will last forever, tow what is to prevent the boilers of our Engines, from being protected in that way,; . that once accomplished, we should not have an instance of a boiler breaking fur t years, and Years •to come ; the discovery is 'most invaluable for ci ties and towns, that have the water introduced in to them ; the first expenselWould be the last, :, as I consider them indestructible. The fdllOwing Pri ces you will Perceive, are not very onerous, it inch bore,; 8 cents ; 1 inch 11 ets. ; inch 14 cts. and 4 forth, Up to 7 inch, which is 62i per 'hen, otherlsizes in': pr‘ortion. ' • .1 . Your friend, N. Miss Launra Bingham, eldest daughter of W. Bingham, gag., of Philadelphia, niece of Lady Ashburton, is the young Ainerican lady who' ; was announced a short time ago as hiving been 'Mar. ried Paris t , to a descendant of the famous Tem plar in " Iva nhoe,." Count Olivia de Bois Glai r:on. I The above' paragraph has been copied pretty generally by the press, and it may be that some editors, and some readers tao, perhaps; have really believed that a young lady of Philadelphia has; mar ried the descendant of sir Brian do Bois Giiikbert. Novr;.to say nothing' of tho fact, that by the vows of his'°rata, the sturdy Templar _was bound' td ibricYand the consequent question of Legitimacy which might 'be raised in the case of any deacen diait of hie we incline td !xlieve, from our recol lection of 'lvanhoe,' that the gallant Bois Gutlbert was entirely a fictitious individual, who. sprung from the fertile brain of Stir Walter 'Scott, like Pallas from the head of Jupiter, mature at birth a being of the mind and nntof Clay—Miss Bing. ham's" husband therein*, he is* bona fide descendant of the famous loose moraled Templar, must be rather an unSubstantial personage. [" Frixiownio ova ;Exaster.x.--It appeari that that ilia black Antenna= have been annexing two of thise counties, larger ,than Texas and Oregon, to their coking. The! Liberia Herald, of the:lsth Mareh, , shitss: that the • Governor hid retprned to Morcisis, limn a visitliu the Leeward Settlements, and tied purchased the snti h Inuit country.Anuc larger tbanthe whotsier razes. be whole of the llama eentiti,i, also, had keen p urchased, and is -ncorporatfid in the c0199'.. :Ada WP 4414 rerWO I Atis l 4' • • THE MINERS' JOURNAL. AN EVIL TO BE CORRECTED. Intemperance being in itself an injury to soci ety ; its well as destructive in its tendencies to the inteMperatef it becomes the philanthropist to en quire:whether this evil be on . the increase or iie creaae: A-few years since, the friends of temperance united in a grand effort:to change the old order of thing:S.—misery and want in the domestic circle, gays wray to the regenerating influence of peace and plenty! The tortuous ;wanderings of the in ebriate, were supplanted try the steady gait 'and natural majesty of God's freemen! The employer , and the employed were alike pursuing the paths that merge all reasonable distinctions in society, in orie grand principle of merit and usefubaess.— The : imprecations of the besotted tipple, were hushed in the moral dignity that sobriety flung around him; and happy hearts sent up tbe aspi rations of reason to the great ruler of the ChM 'verse. Truly this was a great work of utility. Now, we are l verging into the old order of moral degraz Wo see men of intellect, yielding.to the serprint that sparkle' in the ruby cup. We see ruin: stamped in bloated faces, that were formerly riclPwith the vivacity of greatness : We see the eye-lids falling like half tanned leather; and the feauires gradually assuming a dark, deadly hue, as if alCohol contained a mineral poison more subtle • thaMits false associate: —5. •lome of the reformed, have fallen into their old habits, like the hog returned to its wallowing in .the mire; but to a great extent, new actors appear on the stage of our botOugfi's reputation; and drunkenness stalks abroad with - impunity : Proi faniti is made to darken'the counsels of religion i' The •S'abbalh, that is calculated to lead the mind of Man, 4rpert Nature, bp to Nature'S God" is made the occasion for the coarse jest and ribald laugh of the sons of intemperance ; and young men, as well as middle aged,,are flocking to the standard of misery and prostituted' repute tion; • - The writer of. this, is by some adjudged to be seeking office—by others, it is said, he is "welling away his populariey ! " As both cannot be true ; and We feel inclined to doubt that either is correct, we diay be excused for summing up' the whole ar. gitment, andTresentieg the •'syllibus of the case" as follows: 14. Some of our licensed places of resort, _are rather indderent to the objects contemplated by Law and , instead of accommodating "strangeri and travellers" with necessary entertainment; en courage young men to spend their earnings:for liquid instruments of suicide. • 2Od. Our borough is overrun with unlicensed peer and ale houses, to encourage drunkenness by diluted poison. We have laws to correct these evils; but alas for the administrators of the law— 'what is everybody's busideis, is nobody's busi ness:" and these stepping-stones' of iniciritY, are suffdredio traffic in'this manner without fearof consequences, ' How long will this state of things be permitted to cph uel Pottsville May 28th, 1845 Tnz, Rics.—The second great contest for the supr'emacy of the turf, between the celebrated mares Fashion and Peytona,- came off over thi; Caniden Course on Wednesday: Fashion 'the Jer4y Mare,beat her (southern rival both 'Licata fourMliles by several lengths—Time first heat '748; second heat 7 57. • A!, Stxown Law CASE has beerfremiing •before one of the, courtsin New Orleans; in which a child is claimed by two sets of parents—the one asseiting: that the child was betteor Orleaits' in 1835, and the other that he was born in New l York in 1837. Tho testimoliy adduced on;thy` trial; says a New Orleans, paper, is very conflic ting; The case was brought up by a habeas car pus ; 1 the parties were John and Marthy Paul on the one side, and Mrs. Hughes on the other. The The Court decided that Mrs. Paid was the Mother of the child;in virtue of which decision she took . I.iirrunder her maternal proteition. F r flOM MATAmiiuAe.- 7 •Tleis New Oilcans Kea . , 1‘ pine, of Ei late date says,— The Mexican. Schooner Juniata, Estella. mas ter, arrive' at this'Port yesterday from Matamoras, whence she sailed'on the 3d inst. IShe brings us neither letters nor papers, but a , great abuudance of rumors, in which we place very little;• confidenc. The , are of the moat hostile 'character, and could ono ;rely upon them, he would suppose Mexico bentr,on the most desperate purposes, and_ prepa ring; for 4war to the knife.' We place no greet dependence on this news. though it. is possible Mexico may be gathering' a force at Matamoras, for the) purpose of threatening Texas of repelling the Camanche Indiahs. A', letter from Santa Fe says:—"ln the last ten years, six American citizens have been murdered in this department of New Mexico, the criminals never brought to justice—never punished—the . Am4rican'Minister at Mexico duly . informed of the facts, but nenotiee taken Of the M—and the gricals and effects of the murdered men have, ,in many instances, gone• into the public treasury. A United States ConsikiWas . eaveral years ago ap poinied—ito steps were taken by - crt. Minister at Mexico to have hiMacknOwledtrel" Fitox MA:rmtzvz—A Blip from the blarles ton Courier says,— , we - learn by the arrival of the 'terve A Capt. Hunt, from Afatanzas; r. that the mike& werOixtremelydull at that place for all kinds of Amerie.'irn produce, whilst the produce of 'the blind was scarce and high. The crop of sugar , and Molasses was represented-as being short. i • BiSHOP or Pgarrartyarria..--Rev. Alonzo'.Pot ter, (onierly rector of St. Paio church, Boston, and `now professor of Bellhi Lettres intrlforal Poilisophy i Union College, Schenectady, has heel; chosen Episcopal_ Bishop of Pennsylvania, in this 01=3 of Di, Caderdonk. Be had 91 votes in the Clerical convention, and his election Was unin imoasly confirmed by the lay members. Dr. Bow manthail been previously chosen by the clerical convention, but - rejected by the laity. Ws see it stated that the Norwich and Weaves ter Rail Road Company, have it in contemplation to effect an alteration in the location of the road at. Norwich, to avoid the acute radius, now objec ted to.. The cost of the change, will be about $25,000. The great competition on the various routes, makes it necessary 'to consult the irafety and good will of the travellirig community, to Min a fair share of thktravel, The non. George Banerf ft. Secretary of the Navy, has received a diploma of Honorary Mem ber of_the Academy 003 r-fence at Berlin, in ho. nor of his literary reputation, end. especially of his History of the United States, • • • Rsnasssino Waosos.—The Picayune states that the young mart who ran off from Troy with another man's wife, the day he became of age; had been attested in. that city, \ upon a writ issued by the agent of the deserted busband who claimed $20,000 to heal the wounds in his domestic peace. The agent however, adopted the first of Nature's laws, and took care of himself—he got the verdant youth to Pay him £5,000 to settle the matter, and he acknowledged the receipt of $2,000, as com pensation for the husband And pocketed the rest for his trouble. • A IT4 SANT IN) OESTIitiCIITE TOILNA,IIO AND Hut &roux occurred in DeSoto county, Miss., on the 13th instant, destroying every thing in its course. On several plantations, the young cotton, corn, garden, and other plants, are entirely des troyed: in some plates 100 to 200 trees were blown down on'a single acre ; and not a leaf is left on tree or shrub. The Hail, was nearly three inches deep on the ground, in the morning in some places it lay in drifts nearly three feet high. The stones are represented as having been, on an everage, lar ger then, ounce bullets. etas large as patridge eggs, and birds killed by them were scattered over .the the ground. - X Femar.r. FIEND.—A Mrs. Reed ; under sen tence of death at'LawrenCeville, la., for the mur der of her husband, after several ineffectual at tempts to hang herself, has confessed' not only the poisoning of her husband, for which she was con demned: but two . other - Persous before, as well as the murder of a nephew for money; and. es though ' *these enormities were not enough, she has also confessed having caused the death of two children by starvation ! She is, indeed, a fiend in human form, unless she is as foul a liar as she is murder esi,and has confeised to more crime than she has been guilty of. She is now placed in a situation to render it out of her porier to destroy herself. BOSTON, CONCORD ADD MONTREAL RAILROAD. Belknap, N. •H. Gaiette, of the 22d inst. say that the amdunt of stock, subscribed for at Meredith Bridge, for the Boston, Concord, and Montreal Itailroad;'Was over $0,090, the first of the, week. 'rho Gazette anticipates about $10,0,- 'OO9 there. , COAL IN GEORGlL—Thet'agrange [Ga.] Star sa - ys that a friend exhibited to . them 4 soine Coal, dug up from the land of a fanner in Troup coun t. • It is said to . liea rich specimen; and 'equal to the best Leigh or ,Alleghania coal. It is also thought in exist in great iibundance. • , , About one hundred. thousand tons gf Anthra- cite coal will.be 'required to supply- the different Iron establishments in, l and about Danville, the .present year. 'fp will, absorb really the whole supply friint the 'VViikesbgre regFbn. , GES.. J.tessos. r -The, Plaquemine Gazette states that Maj. B, G. W. Butler had just le turned from a visit to the, Hermitage. The con dition of the General may be inferred • from his remarks, in relation to a Medical..pieseription.. 1e said is useless to prolong my suffetiligs: I can no ,longer be of service to my ,countip or my family, or my friends, and I am prepared to ap pear in, he presence of . my Maker." J.'M. • The Pendleton S. - Messe e merlays that Mr. CALIIOt:7N is at his Fesh.knew near that pldce busily, engaged in agriculturarpursuits.- •• Nearly all the -eminent statesman of-this coon. try, are practiCallarmers: Messrs. CLAY AVEn 7 srsi, C•ittuutt'aud Vittr Brest:, though some 'of thed•unite thereto the duties v ohmotior proles; sion, are now:engaged intim labors of agriculture. 02. The New Xark collections, in aid of Pitts burg, amount in all to $22,218. The highest gle 'subscription, $6OO, - was. given, by 'Woolsey & Woolsey; There were seven of spoo eaclr, three of '§2so; two of $2OO, 50 of sloo‘.and73.of,sso; PR ECOVIOCS ,VII4ATNT . .---Thlietttle girls pas sing along a street in Baltimore, a few days since were met by a buy not twelve year of age. who asked one of the girls to give him a flower from a boquet, which she held in her hand., While she was ieclecting one to , givehiria, hO stooped down, and with 'a lucifer match set fire to her 'clothes.— The child ran but was caught by a gentleman, Who extinguished the flame, but not until a considera ble portion of her dress was destroyed, and eileand the ge'ntleman who caught, her, much-burnt. Coen-ram:m. 7 Mr. Fox; the arittsh. Minister being about to give uti - his residence at Washing ton, has very graciously' Offered his beautiful col lection of choice] and rare plhnts for the ,public gardens. , The Union announces that the President has determined, in all appointments to Consulships, to nominate American Citizen', where it is pas stble. • The Broadmedow Steel ManUfacturing Com pany have advertised for contracts to construct the foundation walls of their manufacturing establish= meats. This looks like piing ahead. - • ROMA,/ CATtromc Bserisms were condemned by the Presbyterian General Assembly t at CM. cinnati, 20th inst.. Ye'as r 69-; nays 6; not vo ting 4. j Majority against recognizing -the Tlaptisnis, 159. Tho question was whether - the . Catholic Church was a church . of Christ. The Asseinbly . has decided that it is; not. The' Duke 'of WeJington is the oldest soldier •in Europe-actively ernisloyed, having entered the army on the 7th of March, 1887., fifty-eight years ago, as ensign in the 73' Foot: WONDER. witax 7 , I—Tbe Washington carmspohdent of the Journal of Commerce says a scheme for forwarding the whole mail V. the rate sixty miles an hour is :lir .in agitation. Exper iments are soon to be made, - which will demon. strata its entire feasibility.. It will be a cheap mode of transporting the 'mail, and is far pieferable even to the atmospheric railroad talked of in England.• rt correspondent of the London Mining Journal says that steam boiler explosions may be preven ted by the very simple plan of having a smell hole drilled in the plate immediately over the fire place, and filled with a leaden rit which will Melt only when the water gets ber Me proper level. The Washington UniouelPeolting of the rumo r afloat that General Jackson is dead, says: "No, late accounts have been received ahout General Jackson, by his friends in this city, as far as we can ascertain upon the most anxious In- FROM SANTA. Fs.—News of the passage of the Teies Resolutions by the Congress of the United States reach s.l Saute Fe on the 13th of April but it pte7le4 rt ezcitement of popular feeling. Governor issued s proclamation, desiring such of the foreigners as were diiposed to meet eta Pace designated, and receive' their protection papers. Very: littie attention however, was paid to the priiclatuation, as tio apprehensions wen antertaiped of soy ilium:taw difficulties • 2tll earls .ot Jttme. iNTSII.taTIICO PllO3l MIXIC O . — PrOp 0 ble &de tnration of Santa Anna.—*-Dates from Vera Crpz have been received at New York to ;the-2d inst. The American squadron of four vessels,' was stilt ' at Vete Cruz. The U. S. Squadron consisting • of the steamship Princeton and other .`veitsets,* under the command of Commodore, Stockton, had arrived -at - Vera Cruz, The usual friend- ly salutes were exchanged between the eqtuulion and the Mexican fortifications. • -.: ; The British Minister for Texas had arrived at Vera Cruz in:a vessel of war from Galveston, and proceeded by express to the city of Mexico*. The friends of Santa Anna are.rapidly 'exten.• ing their influence throughout the Republic and . his restoration to power is looked upon us.highly probable, if not certain.: The late earthquake which .was very destructive to property Ind life 7 in the Villa de Rio Blanco. swallowing the inhab: ' bitants as though huge monsters were feasting' upon human beings, was one or the causes which have tended to produce thisextraordinary change, in public opinion, the Clergy having preached, upon it -as an evidence of the wrath of Heaven towards the people of Mexico for their ingratitude to a grCat chief.' The New York Sun'itais: - .. , The influence of Signor Almonte, thei. former private See'retary of s `Santa Anna, and latellfini.s., 'ter in the United States, has also been exerted in ' favor of. *the, fallen President: The • neXt -. arrival may bring 11 s accounts of Santa Anna's peaceable The Gas Light• Company of Baltimore has de- I restoration tea power. In themean tirne*theae king Go'vernment has sent to Texas era tiltitrrattmi. 1 ; clared a half yearly divident of three per ,cent. offering independence guarantied by nitric,. and 1 England, provided. Texas rejects annexation ; Our corinmerce in the Eastlndia Islands ?tithed which offer being de , acto . a reeognitiorl of inde the bene fi t. of visit from the U. S. fri;"ate,Co sti ' ; pendanee, will be rejected ; and the ;prese nt tution, Cap( Percival. ' •_ .1 1 Government of Mexico becoming unpoitular , at 7.- af • I. home, abdicates in Tavor of Santa :Anna ; -Texas 17 . S. Alma!, says that three crops .l then comes into the Union, and We* , ,pay a feW wheat each year can be raised in California. *V .. diu.ndred thousand to Santa Anna; tolliCal 'the Several fires .occurred a few days since I -at • wound inflicted upon Mexican .hon'or .by the, Uniontown,,Pa. i course of the provisional administration: , r.fifpch ap- * . . ". . ' - pearS'to be. the probable course . of events,'.and res . i . The Varier the Astor House, in New; York, turation of Santa Anna. though acceptable in Ent, has been 'converted into a beautiful-flower garden,. 1 • , gland and 1: rapco rrrty prove advantageous to'all .., 1 „ • • *ldle fo?ntain in the centre. parties... ~ , The Mexican Congress remained ip. 'Session. The Courier des r , Etats Unis states, that Messrs. The President had proposed a loartof three mil- Buchannan and Bancroft, are jointly preparing! ,ii""i of dollars, to meet the expenses Of to war with the United :States, idiould 'revile:agree is an elaborate defence of the American , chains to annexation. i The people are exceedingly .anxious Oregon. , . 1 fur a war-with the United States. 1 , `-The flint trees in Ne w England, have not sage! , ed, ills said, by the frosts.' israziounsa wren Eunopz„ , --ko less than four Steaniers wiA . leaes England, in July, for l i the United States. Much has been said of late 'Vespecting the man ufacture of wrought iron cannon. It is believed that the first ever made in the United States, if not in the world, were manufactured-at Mount Holly, N. Jersey. • By the annual report of the President an& Fel loWs of Yale• College, presented to the ConUecti cUt Legislature, it appears ,that the total amount of receipts the past year, was $28,196 78; total expenditures $27,149 69. , • The actual public debt of Texas, the Journal of Commerce say!, - is:between $12,060,000 and $13,500,000; the country ii extremely prosperous; business good; the products of the earth aburidanti and the currency unquestionable, consisting of gold and silver. ' • We findin the London papers a report th: t the plague has broken out at Jerusalem, and th.t . the number of deaths is about forty each day. r. The I%tayor oi - poston ivati quite ill last wt;irki The Hon. James BuclMnn'an, Secretary of Si has been requested to deliver the annual, addrc i , before the American Institute' New York- 771 e Magnetic Lighl.—Me,ws. Sanders anti Sty r, of Cincioavi; who went over -to llog to.oh tain'a patent for their Nkagilvtic light, .have.hver'i well received. • ' The Newark Adverfi , er . tiotizzi • the death Col. W. Ogden„ of Raliray. Lieut. Wilkes, it is said, will clew $.10,00 by the two first editons of his narrative of the explo ring Expedition—government having secured to gim the copy right. , The opposition on the North River tietween the steamboats still continues: 'Siotiori - go from New York to;Alliany for twenty five cents. 'Do yoillunderstand me,' now r thundervi out a hasty pedag,ogudfo an urchin, at wfiuse - -bea.l he threw and ink-stand. '1 ha vegot ait ink-ling of what you mean,' replied the boy. We learn that professor Gouraud, tvirOttichnis •has just receiaed infOrmation of a legacy.left,him by a relation in Franee„to the 'amount id_lls,ooo francs, • .. The 'New .England Rehgions anniversarn-s were held at Boston :during tliti preAthrt week. Two young men of Richland, Vii.; went to North Carolina a few tidys since', to take a shot at each ether. They returned home• bpfore there mothers knew they were out, unhurt.' i • •J. Fen,ninnue Cooper is' about to commence another libel snit aianist • A inagnificent hotel, Luger ,than the; Astor, is to be erceteti in Boston en Bloointiold street. - liarnionious—.The violin and plane' have' be come attached ; aiCineiri'riaii, and are said to , rm duce a wonderful-effect- in combination. The Argun - gals tl \ Neiv Jersey slave cases before the Supreme Court have. been concluded. The decision will be given it the next The Oregon Fever is spreading over the-whole land and the water too. r A steamboat was' l'aun dyed at:New York on Saturday, and . she was the'.oregoil. She is a magniticaMi boat in Te l titrd to size, as she shoulilhe with such a name. .• • tich distress is• said to 'prevail among the Cherokee Indians forlack of provisilon.. The citizens of Nashville have contrif!utea $1,152 for the Pittsburg Sufferers! • The citizens of Mobile have contribtitcd $1.652 in aid Of the Pittsburg Sufferers. It is in the political; as in the human'•constitb tion: if the limbs grow to large for the body, their size diminishes the vigor of the whole. i Thus. a country, may be swallowed up by the extent of its C4lll, dimensions. . , . A mental calculator, in the shapolof 64 six yeaMand a half old, has been presented to the French InStitute, by thc 'distinguished Sava'', M. Arago. The New York Tree Sun learns by the tray of Troy- that a SEk JiouSein New York has failed for. 600,000;'-r A splendid battling establishment hsa just been fitted up at .Br-Louis. The Louisiana State Convention has !"finally ad journed.. The final vote, on the adoption of the Constitution they have been, * so long engaged in friming stood ayes 55, nays 15. Tea Mosnos [Gso.]• RAILROAD, with all the property, is to be sold on the fret Tnesclay in August next. Tni QUESTION, may a man marry his deceased wife's.,. sister, is up again before the Op.) School Presbyterian • Assembly at Cincinnati. SENATOR MCDCETIE.-A. letter dated Abbe villa, May 22, published in the Augusta Chronicle, itates• that on the previous day ?Mr. MalL) arra, was attacked with paralysis, and htui lost the use of one side and his speech., Scaaa'AT ♦ Caor Hocsa.--Gentiemart—il.et'a Have a boiled mackerel." Wailer—"Biled, sir ! Better hev'eta air If they're oiled they'te EXPEDITIOUS Tnavemano.--Travellers now pass froth New York to Detroit, by tiro , of Alba ny aid Buffalo, in fifty hour's. TTAvu,u3e;--Tho fare 'from New York to Albany, 160 miles, is tjown to 25 cents— tom New York to Boston, 300 miles, $2 SO. The total nuqibei of explosions in the Nor thumberland'and Durhami Colleries, from Janua ry, 1743 to June, 1845. inclusive, was 94, atten ded with •* loss of 1247 lives, averqing .12 for each explosion. A Washington ►ewer Says that the President and his family, will visit Old Point arid the Rip Rep this Bummer, whits the Executiye Min is is itatisnipsirs., , •An editor ,sbniewbere oat west, thinks it was impolitic in,the New New York Assemi4, to•in• vile the widow of Alexander Hamilton, lake a seat on. Me fluor,' when she made herain : i• grants in tl}e iNislatiye halls a few weeks liasays it would hate been more to, their credit,'lo. have • `utTere l d 'her a chair, CiTIZENg IN z on e ) tind one in the ±uatly .e6Yebrawalt of t..L.mort Bramtrettl; which have per2.lhrtne.:, lholigatlti Of behtle..* and ho'l.w4as per. emir:aft or the '119.1;11 sctenttfic skill , of ph,veeons haal rtinsoital them with tile assurance that they 0.1.113. db no more. The propfroes of these; filet,.-a 9 an ;mu-boom:4 and aperient Illelik.111r; are, itli9y4l:ed all who-tni, them 7m:out:nen them Ciheit_... Twines intrpan.t all eology, a III) DITISI be used . 19 , belkiprecia- Ted. The week and delicate will be - eti . .engthenctl by their use. not by bracing: but by:!,rotoong the ramte ot weakoce.A:the gross and corrupt - hnnors . of the Ltittly. , remiire no change .11:the or care of any kind. Plain direr:none each b ! .s. en dia. every one is his own Letiermetent. t:- Friuli at MI turret It:: Priiwinal . otrwc, fiiit'a.tr N. Y. and liy; the folioaTtog'antitorizedr,.hlenta tirhnylkiti county, • ir,-,•• ' l'atisi.ille, W. Ilerranote . ;. Nee, f, - asit&,Georgr.. ftetr.-'al'd , r : Pert I linten: J.. liehirritnitt&o,!;l,l - 4.1u,, rom:. I:. k l'‘. 111roorer ; cletrnyikrit If ay.‘l,,,l•lllrit•s, lirodzinger : --(it'd by one agent in ever i Glees u(. - tur,7.4'.4.71." t hro.u. hum tit, world. - ' • : ~,- ' 1- 5C03 t ri. coArrED rit,t,s..Dp..G. 1iEN4....1ii - T4:6. 5t.e.:.;4 Co"itf , lll.ilum Ve , m111 , 11,• lire.," ,are 4ivv tt..., favelirc orediciire of thei - t:nooti V., N'taer. heitr•rietne diem me been discovered a n.l;*pirtF.ol ttio.tiri(Tr ru,-„. no.* •irit we Ilcp , e,llo kn0w1., { 4., wl I? ftl,4oiFe C• , ... I; liIIII g II(II,IIIII(711: 111.11 if in eilicacittoß um! philwint .I+ . tiles J'ills. - Tice idea ad taking V il la nereitollre h.ea beCn - narkeatin;k in the highest do.trcc. .lio;tir.rrettr. is due ta::. smith for tirhezinu(*Nils vSidildii 0te1.,.. (noel 11;e knoiv - or 4nore rhanovere,v . croiri,of .1 , .-.... rase ;• ennsidt:dil iiv - other..tinzr , irsustidiruilrins : r, rrit•el or eiir.ti,ined ilyskiista In virli , ..o , oi IA w; 4. CIiIIIII , under eui 11,vb illton• rl i'llir, ko. AO re 4 7 ,L ‘V'r have mid rie in nurseivc.: arid in,nur ismil i,*(irlieiiii:ri he. odds-and - F.4ls 'iii ilr. - ,,,rie : anct been R and we dart say. vre never ssur•dior er i sii, i. 6uth f , . pleasantness aiiii.einesev. . ' ' o.' ii; , One word in reference to those isli•tle:4lo344 era, who not ha.viug honesty no•mari lor initcpeedant livelihood. ZoimiCrfi-it or it4itaie valuable reint•dies as: Dr. Sinith'a Gaffed" Pills ioriginated with Dr G. Ite.4 smith who applied TM- a Patent ch" ever 'l , f'd of iliimi.therelitre it sniin,tlitt all other Pills daftniMt to . lie -Sazar spuri - . Mrs nod d togoi!tte., and we adv IAP : thom • %Ori lit ex - Inoue carefully the box for theinselv'es,Jand ace that lir. Smith's nathe rs MI h. Sold at 179 greenwhich'st.N.. y. and . 1)v John S 7. C.Slitrum. Druggist. Nrittsiille - ; J. & Or k Earl, Reading; S.'& G.i:-Shollella tierger, • !iambi:re; /lint 4. Sterner, '24:4. A. &. J. Ili Fads, Illinerstille. " • i&r:AiL"I'ION.—The public should reniernber that No (Sugar can• be gentiine,':ini r less DR. G. SMITH'S siimature is on . (he: side or EVERY box. This is important, as miserable medi cine ma y he ent•elorril with sugar. llieq.• Pills are:. rartde of.the PCREirI. MAfERIAI.S, anil t buy oillheit the rt;.ruriity of either physician nr But a, wortttlets notation has been mad.., iccothendatimi.buttho snizar which covers; iiii , a vilo rnixttire of aloes and coleynth. such. imposition. ELTMATISM AND Gony-Wnintir'S INT/Y . 61%17(1E1'A •••• eLr PILLS are a most extraordinary medirtnet l'or the cure - of Rlrvainatisin and Grotrbecaifse 1114" Aot only cleanse the storliacliand bowels of those ruUrbid lui alnr9 which if taken into the circulation, txtul? ; llirowit upon the inernlitan , and muscle, are the cattso of the above painful rrialadies, but they ext : ite.the adsorbent vessels to' take up that which is already dep9itted, and therefore are nbaolutely certain to Make a putfeCt cure of Rheumatism and Gout. A single 25 cetit• 'box 01 Wright's Indian Vegglable Pills often givd hlte bust aston relief, and perseverance according:to direr stalls will be certaiii dr,ive Pain of every : disicriptiont from the body. . Indian N'egetahle Pills also nidistnd im prove digestion and purify the blood,. andirtOereforu give health and vigor. to the.whole frame,: well as drier dt. , tase of erecy nante fri,nt the body. For sale, Wholesale and Retail, at the'. , nrincipal Office, No. 16PRace street. Pliiladelphia.- r; , ..7-Vetution.—Att Counterfeiters are abrnarl; a3'oid all stores of doubtful character, and be 'pa rtietijahlta n raid purrhasinif front those persons who offer 'to •Se'll at re duced prices. , • . For sale in Pottsville, by Messr , l. T. & .I. , BEATTY Arent for the proptietor,,and the other hgentel . n!Schuyl • kill county. "" ' I.T.NITF.D !ORDER OF ODD • FELLOWs..I4 meet Mc of the Stockholders in thelf4ll, belong-. ins to the United Order of Odil BI :Miners„ vine, will hi , hell at the Rouse of Mr. Joutt,, , pttovoir, on Mondayevenine,.the 9th of Juno next, into'cloek P. M. Punctual attenilancd is requested, uti business of importance will be laid before them. - By lirder of the Board. FRANCIS SPENCER, tkee'ry, Pro ton. Minersville, May 17,. • ,i,llO--Mo- AItI ED. On the 25th, inst. by the:Rev Joseph' 1116(..*I, Mr. JOHN WILSON, to Miss SAR•II WILSON, bother'Miners- • - - i By •the same, on the - 29th hist. Mr. Fn ANA eire ROAD, to bliss SOPHIi HARTZOG, both of Minersville.,,. By the Same hn.rhursday evening last, Mr: REUBEN STIMEO, to 1lli:1!3 BELINDA. JusE3,.bilth Or /2(),(tiVille. -OINI - MARKE,TS: i3 . i.Trected eorifully for the .JOU4NAL Wheat Flour , . per 1161. 84 50 to 4 62. ' Plenty Rye ' " 3 00 to ; 3 04 :Plenty Wheat • bushel ' 99 to 100, ...Scares . Rye 1 " oo to 65 ' do Corn • F ." 45. do Oats, • 20 do _ ... ii Potatoes new ' 50 to 75 ~,- ;:.- do Timothy Heed, - • .. 450 - -.. i 1 -- 'do Clover " . . " ' 450 ' ' `• 'Meares i Eggs • Dozen • •- 6to 8 i'; : ,Bearce Butter lb.- 10 to 12 :! "'Plenty . Bacon sto 7 1 ' do o Hams „ . Bto 10 i 'i do . Plaster Ton ' 600 • 'Plenty Hay 1 ' ' ". 810 Cato 14 '- '': do Dried Peachespared Binh, 250 ' •'] =•• do Dried do unpared " 1 00 1 . '' do Dried Apples -pared . 1 75 ' • .'' 1: do • Taken* la mistake ,;. THE gentelman who took cm:ELAN' MAO' Carbon. Hotel, in mistake, a Iady's"DARR•43ROWN FRENCH MERINO COAT, the Cape an/ ftimt line with green changeable silk and trimmed Ovit,h black gimp, wall cnnfrr a favour, and receive a euttaMe re ward, by Jeanne It at this office Pottavillc, May 31, Ice Cream.. fl' • EfE Subscriber having refitted his Tee:Cteana bon. now prepared to furnisb bia.lbtO Creams. *very day and evening during the week-016i Parties.. and private fernlike aupptied at the etiortest*tice. Ma 1y 31; • ; 30/311 C: 1441tT1N 234 . ° INS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers