.• _ . t .„ p_ - - . - 1110* WV,' '4I4IUPIN".-"°7414.1..: 22"..1(446. irot.Nr.v It. PALMER". • • "At lin Real Entn . te and Cnal Arracian. t•en ror. o {Third & ebrenut str,•qtp. SCAssau Strrnt. 3nu - 5 , 044 1(1. State Strrct. finirtnu.•a • rfs: Prmtb emit" corner erfitatrimern. .141rprir. L - 3altitnfita, tr nur ArrntYd - rrrrivirr •uhPrripriorto and "sllderrtivementr Cnre.!;!.ltVii-re" Jrmrnal. tirt iNeunoirE Tilts'kind of Insur3twe a beeinning to attrirt enn- iderable attenttnn In fh• cnuntry. l'ampbbqa eon i'asninelbe ner.s.Pary infmnation. can b nbtaired et . bia haler. wbere applicatinn ran be made. •innei`2t; 1-. - AGENTS FOR - TUE MINERS.' .J9E-UN Af.. liTinerroille—Charlea ft. O Forrest. ?or. Carbon—Henry4rr. s •Wlin tire authorised to native anbseniTnirena and ad ' - Nartisentents for the Miner.' Jonrnal. OURSELVES Being engaged ju.: now in mokire'nut our bills for the purpose. Of merlina heavy' itentattda-on • am. we wilf "ohbeed to -those:4&lo;h4st to us In 'call and smile. 1 his - is-rsperigy rt questml of those who owe urn trifling sums; es it will ' , RV. as from much trouble and inortiOvation. in ' eendirie a collector to their houses otter' they are not always to he found. We request Atention *Yo this especially as to many• rf our 'pritroria and subscribers we have been very induluent. • an; • P '.A • PRO'rEoll E -- TA • The hie and 60 . 7 policy of the eiroot4, wMch gires Mot its- rretyrrd rind stir''- '. /Hies 'Our own workshops in iP•eferrnee to those of Europe. -NOW AND FOREVER'! I.EIA'UItE6 BY itOFE:s:-011:111.1.1y1AN We err informed that if o rine.,of ItNt ru boi•Ti.. hors can he obtained, Prafe.sor of, l•W hiavenill & , w liver a rouri=e of Lre'liarm ob`4lt.nl ney *Re:Miner/Ito/3y. ne cotihr,t4+o with !lin , ' criaL ff'giottiAuring the loiter part The price will be one d rlLrr Inc the' enAr)Uf five !reform.. A prirsrainine . pulligh;kl a whim the nrxtw •e 6. •11er.004 wishinir to pm elue tickets will pirte(' send in their !times lio . thio e The u soon ai ptig roux the following frordithe North American.: A NEW CoUNTIKnir LIT oily wnearrnnt. on 11;3 Miners*. Bnnk of Pottsortlle, has been 4i,ienvered by Mr. B. M. Drexel, of this city. It in evidently; a new etnivaion, and altogether unlike the genuine. The good notes have for a vignette a female. with the denomination 45.0' in large characters worked. in, and two female ftzuren r.n each site. It in the only plate the bank has in ciroditien. The counterfeit has a tnedirliiont head on the left end of the note. MANION Rirces.—A:i election of officers has been held by this company. in cnnisequence of the resignation.of Capt. S. J. Potts, the result a which was that D. J. Ridgway Esch.-waachosen canton% John F. Whitney first lieutenant, A McD mold second lieutenant, and Edward A. I.3iilyman third lieutenant. The New Methodist Church in Market street. in thishorough, was dedicated on the9th inst., by Bishop Jane., assi.ted by the Minister for whom it was built. Mr. Elsegood, and Rev. ,tfr. Heston, of Minersville. tiuhiicriptions and Collections .a mounting to $lllOO in all, were taken during the day, W!).7applied towards defraying the expenses of the.Bdifice and preparing it for divine worship. The edifice itself is large and commtxinus, HMI fitted up in very correct taste. The Church iu Second street, which has been in process orbeiiiir repaired, is now nearly done, and wilt also be com modious and comfortable. THE TA RIFF The Locofoco press of this state with a few ex ceptions, occupies a strange ground with regard to , the tari6 yet one which under the eircum+tancer;, when we look hack to its course on :either gars, thine, should exeit' P r-s astonishment. Prevkus to 1844 they were open adrocatee of the tariff system and adoiaiti the.people to vote for Mr. Polk en the " gmbnrtth;tlhe great. national measure, the tariff of 1842. woollbe p'e;ifectly safe in his hand!, yet new under the PDX foill of 163 R. they appear by' " species of intuition, to have disrorercd. that the bill of 11312, is unjust and unequal, in its opera . Con, -and heartily approve of the new 1111 as .• great matter of trinmph re, the p .rty and Presi. dent. True it is, they ',lvreas some apprehension lest the great reduction orr . iron rind coal may op. erste injuriously to Pc. hUt.it iota he unjust to ' condemn it before it has' had a . trial. The = leaders in the Jiff-Tent. sections of the state hale 'already bad the Cue ' givsn them .1n ripens in Philadelphia. and now .do not think it will be as tottlists the Whiga say. and re - el . ron they will give it a trier • The leaders of. the Arlistinistration party. are here well awariTref the ruinous tend/mes of the re. peal of the big of 1842. having -Again and regain admitted it, as in the public meeting held herf:nid long singe. Besides it is absurd to ray.illal the great and evident depression of business is the le ech of epanic created by the Whigs. for no roan . - . in his senses would be stupid enough to. reduces, Mate of things Erhich would injure, if not iiiin him i self: °rotarys now the deprAsion it has not yet inched its seine, and unless we en greatly, will become Onisell,sal. We may, in connection, men • tiou a circumitance, which proves th4t thote who deny the asistrnce of any coin of. apprehension. Yet are terribly frightened, one-of the leaders of the LoOfocciparty. haying. during. 31,e pa.t week. hurried off his hands at the prime cast. a tract of land purchased on speculation for which. previouS to the nitwit)Of the tariff repeat. he lial - refut.ei iti, in a Prat of $9 00; equal to one half of i g ii.i i i c00t.:.: If thecadent esn keep the people quiet al! 1 I be accomplished, but the people , enslaved any where, at; to submit to 1 ing:Wilhont grumbling as even the liter would bring them ireo compe • y do. This kind of party subirds- 1 i i t be injurious to the people and to ; It declares blind Objection to - Tarty . getfulne.e of all individual idea of ng: All the party who do so, thus former protestations and compel us l i that with the , leadeM at least, their ! no' were a ,mere sham and fraud on ample. The tariff question in . this !tlitnportince, no party should array I ,d, or if the leaders so decide, Wei • 1 lave heretofore followed fit their foot ; no:v act and ,think for theini s ;elves. I their plans svi ere not yet so ;Ws sort of t. itiares Mr. W talon alto, r sion cannot b the country. rule, and a fo right and vvr• • I abandon their to the belied prior professi. ; a credulous • state is of vi_ itself sgsinstl people who ill stepi should , How ...ro Ecn.aomitse: , — . The Afeiaadris Ga. wins thinks that 'the enormous - expense of long sessions of Congress may be saved het'esfter by, a prOpez, unileretantinig in tulyance.with the Piesi &tit tiptoe the subjects to which he low - nits to ftp VY'lls Otto. srurr or, THE LOCOFUCO TEEMS A' boast was; made that. great as was the disiktis- I faction in Pennsylvania, at the repeal or the Ta , - riff of 1842. the state would be-whipped into - the traces,•and again vote for the Loco toco can didates when' prevented'. to them. This calcula tion we'sre'pleased.te think is tneeireet, and that . - periPte are notso sunken as to kiss the hand that, liar strict:en them, and listen again to the tongues' h moiled them. The whole State seems -• - alive with a feelitufthat will not easily ge allayed 'pile or the; confidence Mfr. Sevier's taunt- - int prediction. There; re here, it it true, papers who yet eontiettie.‘" tn. deceive the tktvple, but 1 -Whenever the-press is what it should bit. a . ' iefiec , lion sf the feehogs-of the people. it sp rake in, , tones •of -indsgrtation and of rebtake 'Among sther;;;Who have taken the lead in this rebuking of treachery is the Easton (Pa.) Sentinel. an out ! and.tini.JacksdM, Van Buren, Baltimore Convert ' .tion , Loeo , Poco sheet; which 'thus ittlack.sitsold Lfriends and companions qslero, a Roman • Emperor. -and the blaif , kest monster of blond and ctuelty that stains the pass of hi.torv. frdohril while Rome the anident 'capi T tel of the Empire was burning and tumbling into ° ruins. There lis tin cold blooded depravity Dr, Modern times, that approximates so nearly that of Nero, as that dt - certain -Lorofoco editors, Roth iri and out of Peinnrylvania, who are found clturid Jirie end snickering at 'the impending -ruin. tha Or -Patens the great interests of the country. par ,ti c ularly those of our beloved old Commonwealth - The V'ennevivanian that can laugh and enicke over the Cilia ti4tiei. -of our citizens—over the Ante prnstration Of the prOsperity of the country,' b . a reckless act - of legislation, may gain artinfatriou 'motor* tv, but it will be at the sacrifice of ever bonorahie feeling and patriotic emotion. "The develepement of Pennsylvania's vast 're-, soutces,was progressing with a •rapidity thai strimitatthe mitst sanguine expectations. Capital was filming in 'by ' , miltitms into ter valleys item all parni 'the country; turning- her codl into sil -1 ver, and hei,-Ijron into gold, relieving more and more,evervyearthe burden of her taxes upon the ' tarmers atid' :mei hanks, by dividing it with, the capital invested - 141yr iron and coal works : -after she had ex vernier) iifilninsupon millions on works of internalmngenvernents i‘nropen tip coruinunira lions,betwe'en the sea-hoard and her inexhausti., stoles .of mineral wealth ; after being bowed I down for year= in gloom in embarrasrment after citizen's had invested hundreds of millions in' Ithe coal . s and iron business, greatly augmenting f r o m year - ti 'year the • bintiness and proeeerls of.-Iter public - works: when she had just be 1-gunil to pay ,promptly het' lOtilities, anti the I fond hope of 2 speedy redemPoinn from her most lturilensome and depressing public debt. dawned n0011,11(7 eye, just lifted from the dust, she is I struck (low!) in the fidl flouring tide. of her pies:len ityLby a miserable horde of Southern vandals. aided—tell it not in Gait !—by some of her ce.sn sous!' - And to cap this climax,•to out-liercrd the Palmetto •Heinds: self-styled peinotratie editors laugh et the.g , roarts forced , from her by the idow ! s They even nicker at her lamentations, make merry at her grief, and wax witty over her calami ties 'Oh' inr a Marne to virne thP slavesl" But no: we Will leave them to their soberre flections. whose scorpion thongs shall lash thestr through the world." Few papers; in this state speak otherwise, so. Much so that the Pennsylvanian.has found it ne cessary to har4ngue thepartyin this fashion. .'But there is no middle ground to take in such a crisis as thisJ, He - that is not with the Democ racy of the ptinn, whatever else may be said to the contrary. if acairst it. Let us be.untrstond. Our meaning is clear, that while the State of Pa• had its own notions in tecard to•protection, she id not the less a member of the great political church nor does it folbltv that she should divide front her friends even in thouct.t. Those who adviie, a da.rent course—those who ask her to sepaWte from the Democratic party of the Union, on this ,subject—are either her worst enemies,. or their. own." 1 1 • - This is plain enough. The Administration have determined to resort to the policy of 'whip ping-in.' All Who have ' the independence and moral nerve to advocate Protectior. to Home In dirory. 29 opposed to the dOctrines of the Nation al Administration, are to be denounced as traitors. to the party. Senator Cameron and his friends, will please take notice, and govern themselves As we have said before, this language we trust end believe will be futile, that the people will re member the editor of the Pennsylvanian, like . J.lckey Horner in the nursery tale, sings for hiS; .upper. and with one band is earning a eb aorta'. hie salary in the Philadelphia Cc tom House. and with the other attempting to prolong the sway of the party that appointed But not Pennsylvania only is discontented, the •Great West" of which we . have beard so many wonders is speaking out. They were the President's great Free Trade Worshippers, and now have the reduction of the Tariff, and sundry other I.oco Foco measures, on the acquisition of which we wish their! joy. The Cleaveland Pisindealer. a Loco Foco sheet makes the following confession about the Veto of the Harbor Bill and the course of the Administration. s•But a greater advantage thin combination have our southern hien& just now. They have entire enntrol,sof the Executive power, an ioilnence secmtd to none io the Government. This they *Otoaii.ed by a dexterous manceuvre at the Balti• More Convention. They have got a Southern President With Southern principles, and through him the North and the West have been made sub. Fervent to the. Southern policy." TIM OHIO . €TATZS3I.IIf. the Organ of the, ; Loco roc° party in that ala.e epeaka thus et , thel 1 measures of the Administration and of the Veto especially of the Harbor. Bilk. , . I ...The Mes Sage in which the President SUpportsi his' views. is a shallow performance, vulgar in its 4 language, ridiculous for its false logic, and paltry; as the treatment of a thesis by some hair-splitting! and wire.dravving schoolman of the Middle Ages,l alt,, thought himself a great man, because,:likel all small characters, he had mistaken cunning for! .wisdom. It is, however, quite worthy the man! whose inthecilityhas been so unhappily displayed! in his action of the Oregon question—first ut-i String hoists of the - loudest kind, and then sneak-1 ing „Jr to cover when the enetny'ettay was faint ly heilia in the. distance .. There're- a remarkable , iimiliinty in the President's condut on three two! sukjects. A's :be mouthed and 'raved aboht our! '"bear and unquestionable' right ',to the whole of! i Oregon. like unto one of Nat Lee's Bedlamite heroes -for we can --nig call it mouthing'and ra-t, ving„-When the /winos 9f the treaty is known to' us, how‘ - earer much it pleased us at the time of its utterattre, - Trainuse we7believed it to , be the warm, language of earnestneis and sincerity—so has he now vetted a bill substantiilly recommended by himself, throi:gh the report of the Secretary of War, a high of of his Cabin: It is true t that the defence has been set up tor 'm . ihat the Secretary though reporting through the President really reportit to Congress., Granted—but -this does not in the slightest degree alter the case.— i It has always been ' considered—at least it was iii -those day. when 8 was thought that some degree of profound statemansbip, was necessary 1 in governing a great nation—that a cabinet should . ; support' one uniform policy7-as speaking the gen ! timents of the party whose principles it was ap -1 pointrd to aid in carrying out. Who , ever heard 1 of a high cabinet officer recommending to Ocingreas, ; through the President" course of action directly contrary to tat of tho President himitelf, 'and ac 7 I welly accom tanied • with the proper, estimates as to the crad of carrying it out—who ever beard anything of the kind. weak before these days of jleveption and palpable fraud! What President 1 • •I a Lecentiportion of self respect,..ever practiced such small ' 'trigues ! It is new in the history of our country nd ow doubt • found its origin and IMI Mil votive in the Aland. toitifecive itime MelOerslo ',Congress into the support - it which'the Executive feared.might clot otherwise prove sun. essful. As the grist- words shout Oregon were' rollowed by the arnitleit possible oedema, and were litentled only to gull honest men.:so was the course of the • President-on the settee' nfimprt king harbors and 'fivers favorable. only ;isitti'the design of gaining Tafel fat the new Tariff Bill. 'the Administration, not having faith enough to believe , that one righteous-meektre could stand without practicing s little falsehood on another.— like 'mist earnestly hope that the day is' not com ing when'every ' true democrat will 'have; in hit 'iternesa 'of heart. to ask pardon of7Ood and cuan 'for having aided in elevating to power, men whci Imistaki , . -treachery for toed conduct 'and paltry s- - hifts 'for great statemanrilip." IWe are sure that the-time fir regret bas-emme • -,and that•thrOhiottatesman must prove his sin kerity. by undoing-what he has done: 'The enteace -Dgarocnae, another administra-' Lion sheet thus terminates an article on the effects of the legislation of •the Lot Congress, on the in terests of the ration.: . • - • ' .As'itppreciating 'testimony of the high esteem in whiehldr. Polk is held by the vast commercial interests, of the Lakes, since the veteof the Hap bor Bill, the gags of the shipping at the various polls wiere exhibited at ball mast and Union down tupon tie reception of-the news, • "Yesterday, during, the entire day, the colors of 'all the shipping in :hie port, with one solitary ex ception, as well as the out on the flag staff of the 'Bethel Church, floated: sigricifs, of distress in 'how of the enlightened statesmanship (t) of the 'Chief Magistrate - of the Unioii: for exercising the l'prerogatiVe of Kings ; in interpoSing the will of one man io defeat, in opposition to the clearly ex pressed sentiments of the people, the best inter ests of the country. Well, well, reckoning days come,after 'a while." ' no above extracts..ase 'presume are the vhice rarthe people of the West speaking in tones of thunder, as Senator Allen used to say. in support of the Administration. The thing cannot be de tied that the point of forbearance •has been push' l ed -Mp far, and that . Pennsylvania is'not alone in jher indignation at the treachery of the (Amnia itration. . THE NEW FRAUD._ -The kader.s.of .ihebienfocam have concocted a nevi fraud to be circulated. before the election. • fr. l was enneacied at • Washington, and is to. be sent throughout Pcnn4lsania. It has already made iits appearance in'the Ledger, precious to which, hptvever, we had heard. - of it. •It is intended to occupy•lhe , ground of the .exploded Hein :elation to the home valuation. ' • The Locobscoleaders are now busy circulating reperts,ehat at the next session of Congress iron and coal will be protected. It i‘ well known that I nn change can take place,'except by a trio thirds vote, orWith the full sanction of the President, and this there is an ahvolute certainty cannot be had. r. Payne of Alabama and the Wa.hington Union having s stated thane change could be hoped for, as long as Mr. Polk is at the head of government, inasmuch as he would veto everything, except a ifurther reduction of duties. . Will not the people say to all who propagate l each falsehoods, that they are common liars 1 THE HOME MARKET. What can the country expect from a party whose prominent men, like Senator Breese, of [l llinois, the colleague of the man who was taken from the ears, utter such sentences, as I care not for Ithe home market, that eight or ten counties in Ilk. nois can supply, it is the foreign market that we i • • need.' Now let us, for the curiosity of the thing, !see what the borne market is and what portion of ;the staples the sole produce of Illinois, bread stuffs !and food, is consumed by this market, - the right ihonorable Senator, in his ignorance sa much de preciates. A correspondent of National In- Itelligencer, thus forcibly presents the matter: The wheat mop of the United Slates Makes an nually twenty-five millions of barrels of flour, of which about one million iv exported and twenty four millions used in the home market; of the corn crop: of fruit' lour hundred and . fifty to six_ hundred millions of bushels, not one hundredth' part is exported: and the other ninety-nine parts, consumed at borne; of the three brindred millions of bushel; of oats, rye, barley, and buckwheat.. leas than one hundredth part is exportwl; of 61- teen millions of tons of hay. womb - ene hundred and fifty million of dollars, all is consumed at horst; of animal food. -even hut a small portion of that whichis salted, ill exported, and, if both salt and. flesh is taken into view. not a fiftieth part is sent abroad- Of a verity Illinnii:mtist be a wonderful coon-' try, a land flowing with milk and honey, if it can consume this immense:produce. It is not so; however. ar t a people : of such mighty :capacities. would send some one mare eapahle of represent ing `their true interests to thr:denate of the :onion. Jesting apart , the great market of. every. natiortis at lnrse, , as l any l l man, with common sense; or an approximation to it, will see at once. 'No nation in t l e universeever has exported or will export ,mothan one eighth of its agrciultnral produce. 1, Eve , people requires a great portion of her ag ricol ural produce for her own consumption. As the e rrespondeni of ° the Intelligencer says truly : T e'daily food of any nation is enormous, and Gre4 Britain, in her 'years of greatest scarcity, never imported thirty days' yoovisions for her en tire population. If my memory 'aeries me. the . roord shows that, in the vary scarce year of 180,:, it was, estimated she imported about fifteen days' soppi l y, and then her population was about one half ir.f what, it now is. . The daily consumption Of floor ' in the U. States, estimated en the quanti ty of wheat grown, is .seventy thousand- barrel.. and of Indian gorn nearly .one million five hun dred hushels per day.- • . - I'lr entire value of the agriculteralprodbetioni ofthe United States ( exclusive of cotton) is an nually' at least one thousand million of dollars, and the annual amount exported (exclusive of cotton) doeslt exceed' twenty-five millionson about one /Win _part--leaving nine hundred and seventy. five millions for home consumption; and yet Mr. Bree 4 lays he dues not care for the home mark et, and that ten counties in Illinois can supply it!' This view of the matter, is sufficient to termi. nate I ar l once the prejudice attempted to be excited of the agiieulturalist against the manufacturer.— As we stave said again and again, their interests are never disunited, for instance, if the coal region were mined to its foil capacity, it would afford s' market, l ineit only to the farmers of Schuylkill, but to those, Of two or three other counties around, so ample. lhat not cue pound of produce would ever I be sent from them any where else. But the corn ; mon seise we referred:l . o, above; as necessary to . . appreciate this, is so pbs i, curri:l by party that we ex pect nothing from the leaders, until the people, always in advance of them in intelligence, take the matter themselves in hand and show that they apprecia l r their own interests. As long as men. blind to the interests of their constituents, as the i Senator_ have referred to, are sent to the Na tional 4 rre. nate,tve cannot be astonished at the le gislation of the last session, which_ we might al t most think & jiidgment,on the nation for its sins. t. -- ,Psos, has entered on his dories as Col the Port of Philadelphia. and appointed !puties, Dr. C. Treichel and Richard' L. Eeqrs.. who have acted for many years in acity. lector of an his del Howell, het 'cap TITE MINERS' COAL. TRADE AND THE 'WARD-OUSE Sib Ithl IN THE T. : From the Mana papers we , in !that the - Bar , .. i c en AD tsi iiiitell Attica, Hebron and Albers ' lbeen char= t wired in' London, where they a ttaal ; :aimehatlliag. to „prociied 'to Piclonoind Atka *- 4 fo, load , +if coal for Bosnia. -.." f -_ These 'bre ail large' vessels!, of 390. - ,,t0• -4 0 0 tons, antltbey' will bring' tufa • -,cargois..-Tam coas deep waters °roar eastern 2 ta wilt allow the lgesti. t3c lasiof vesaels to take Cerl,intl - henee they % 1 ca Ing st a tower rate frcm 'ova otis than the smaller vessels eau from Ric mond =I Phila. sdelpbru. - 7 This is 'but thrionitinurnoe of. a business which has been extent, for-many years. The bas been , regularly brought to time, tar the supply of the Dungy for manufacturing purposes. F • this importMion has been 'in ' - lean's duty. Afttr th e , first 4 •,- --rho import of Nova Scotia err, crease, to the detriment of the c, ,Ay lvania, Mary land and Virgin mere to be: regretted, as the etc coals of the latter 'States wer • but just . coming irito free use. . . . By pulling Their prices low, ven at losing rate fin: a time, the rich ,proprieturs iiikthe Pictou mines most:). belonging to the estairr of the Duke of Volk: will be.enabled to drive t o American 'com petitors out ti t the held. Whe that is dune the prices may be raised. The - ensuwer will get coal none die leas in the him; run nd so it will be in respect to iron and other articles. The British producers having the market jilt their hand, will tit prices td suit lhediselves.' . ." 1 -. , We are not of those, also hinkiveare to-be deprived of participation in the coal wade of the East, to thee:tea:it that many .8 eat to anticipate, but that the business will laid continue though necessarily at a redo lion ifj,s , ,t least $l 00 per ton on ths present rates after I.F`cembey next. Of thin reduction one half nearly ri : *l fall upon-listsgr, as there will he but little reduction of rents by the Landlord, and next' year when the Canal shall be completed the „price of..trarispnrtation•will Only tea about.so cents‘per ten less than at pretreat. The Railroad. Company will make no reduction) durrna the, present season. A heavy importation of for - eigrs coat *lien re q riled, &ova not result in injyry to the ,trade.— For instance if you import twir hundred thousand tons, and it is required to supply the market, the irre of &mettle' coal is not eft - iled—butAl is produced - by the destruction of the jades - Jtry of the country, an importation of 50,000 tons will effect pricis to such an event wrl: drove ruinous to aft engaged in the trade ; and it is oo toriouir thak.u'rider the low duties previous to '42 while the coal trade of this eounty was complete ly prostrated, and the.markets' glutted, the impor tation of foreigit coal was more than doubled.' Not the llegiene alone will suffer, hut P,hiladel phid•their nutlet, will soffir in a most material point of view. The coasting trade will decrease, and the balance of exchange will perceptably show how important was this trade, in enabling them to pay for eastern goods 'not in cash but in The old order system here will he re;stored with an its otgectionablerfv mutes, (for under aotion•of the b- rreaMry and Warehouse Bill money is not to he had to transact business with.) It itsaid the operators are anxious for this. But this idea is a perfect piece of nonsense; es all the operators and (nine-tenths of them are whigs) voted against the Fhange, which they surely would not haseslone had that teen true. What will the people think of a party that will thus lie to' , and fro to accom 21i,b [tear en 4.- DUTIES ON IRON The Troy Budget is publl wholesome truths on this subjet thinas, it'gives us tho followingl it says wasprepared , by James I Coal of Tanerfaduring Iron il l ' nod Creel Britain co t Wales. in 1844. Pig MIMI. Temp. 'Clot. L 4 Iron stone, • 3‘,--• 0 0 Coke, .' 1 Jty • Limesione, , 1 U „ Wages, General Charges!, Cost of • ton of pig iron in Witt Dn. in Pennaytei onl. 2i Iron Mane, Coal (anthracite) lAmeatooe, Wages. General Chargeft, , . Cost Of *lon of pig iron in Difference in favor of Great B It will be seen by the above (adds the Budget.) that the general charges and wages fur manufactu. ring a ton of pig iron in Great Britain are put down to $3 00. In Pennsylvania the same is sta ted to $3 75. •Forge" says that if .we will ask - any (envie* man in Penneylvania what he gets a ten for smelting., we will be eared (r u m 63'60 to $4 00. Of course what is tated-to be general charges is included in this erimste. Now the' difference in the cost of prod a too of pig iron in this country and Europ is only $250, and the cost of transportation, innee anr corcarair - , Sion;is about this amount. herefore, if there weee no duty at all imposed u n the article, the manufactures of the two count ies would meet in our markets upon equalterms or competition." , ~-We find the above stateme and the remarks It upon it 4 the Emporium of I+t,Baturday, which by copying endorses and apes it. About it, howeier, we have a Word to say : . his all hum bug, and so incorrect that we glow not whether it be an askiait of folly. ar manfest* disposition ) i. a' to deceive . We would think t e letter weieit not that charity camels our aid an reminded ushOW few of the Locofoor Editors the country are men of business, helm usual! persons who have failed in ether puvrmits andn placed in charge , of presses, as if the best_evid ce of -fitness to in-• be; struct the people wereinespaelty to manage their private affairs. Who Mr. Ja • s Hall may be we do not know, pr whether he is mpetent toirpeek - Of the British manufactures, b t we are very more he knows nothing of the costs a Pennaylvanitr. ' He es timates, it scents, the oat of a too of pig iron in Pennsylvania' at $l4 2 . We think an thracite iron is made at a lesst along the Mon lour ridge at Danville, than al ny other place we oa know of. on account of the vic c mmy of the ore and fuel. but even there, iocludingshpenses, it can not. be supplied at a price,lets thanol4 emit $l6 to slB— so much for the result of calculation. But what we wish most to get at, re the details and comments on a statement, whiih any Editor of-a paper should he ashacczd to poi forth. The coal, ore and limestone requirr ice a ton of pig metal is worth in the gt $1 25 ; the mining of the Coal, the dnestonel-ttio . Transportation, and all $1 25; its 'mica in the pi' capital invested, must be labor, yet we are nubble which totem into . the pi is only $3 75!! oil put forth ouch &dome ol to believe them. A young man named Daniel ed' at Bridgeton, N. J., a few bathing. ,fOURNAL. 'The people of Pennsylvania are, so will be Sven by the following extracts, met with ridicule and contempt for their adherenie to: the Vocoroco ;party at the Wit election, and neglect orttio iuue .of.protection to labor and free Vado,,inculcated the Whir, and denied to be a tail by thetLoctifo; co leaders: Mr. •Payce of Alabama, when asked misers the country would get revenue, relied, .eas - (laugh—we -shall consume seisms goods in stead olgornis made at home.' We shall erive a. revenue of $100,000,000, if need. be, / by POUTING intri"NrititS Al MANS AS WS ShiSl - 00:' Mr. McDue , ffi in replying to Mr. Webster, made use of this extraordinary language: qt was represented that the LABOR .of the country would be affected by ibis bill—Taar . (said Mr. McDuffie, .contemptuously,) is ave •-earatx, wines': ! Remember these things. I by larger sesselir rried on.'to some dui deotla toe' , omit n for a long lid &tamers anti (or four years past e face of a pro- I rt . December nen I will greatly l • el mines of Penn - is—a' mull the Iletit bituminous The Charlebtoon (Smith Carolina) Mereuryot thorough going free trade Polk and Dallacpaper, Who was .NOT cheated in 1844, thus ridicules the honest sons of Peuneylvania, for being made the dupes of the designing, in that memorable campaign. -The Mercury ,says: 'IC is, indeed, a uotatle pretension to set up, that be cause Pennsylvanians were too /GI'4OItAIST AND STUPID to t uow what were the ISSUES INVOLVED in the Prasidential election, it is, therefore, dishonest and treacherens for Co - ogress to adopt any measures but Audi is their triNtlittaliCE or S'.I . UtIDITY may dictate lir approve.' The Philadelphia Times, which was one of 'the dupes, but which-now ,prOtests against the fraud, comments on the above as tallow*: .AJas ! . ..poor,despised, betrayed, down trol]den. and insulted Pentury lvania ! 1Y hat!, evr-n South Carolina making game or u. ? And hue it been, fur this she has labored su long and successfully 111, the ranks of Lterubcracy '? tit hat ! taunted by South .Carolina, the land of Buzzards and Bowie kni‘es—.uf nuttiticatiou and ignorance—the abode of cotton lords and slavery—where white men are sold fur debt and slaves hung tor defending them selves against the unprovoked JlO.l deadly übsatfits of their masters? Must we submit. any longer to the dictation of 'such monsters? As freemen inerlcansaa.producurs and not druhesupun society, we say nu! no :,181e are Wet i gOl/0/11. ourselves, and we shall fur the' future do it. I,le will net allow the southern lord with file knile in band and dagger drawn, to first injure arta! then insult us. Forbearance any longer- wit' uease to be a 'virtue, and fur lire futurd we . shall so act, as to be able to protect ourseives from aitgressiors.and injury, no mutter roar what source lcuiay come The introduction of this bill iuto cougreas,' one of the strangest things which bas occurred the legislative history - ,•ot the natiou, and, o& hat account deserves special coniment in tis toe• - • - sage,;alking for the appropriation, the President states nothing, informs theliouses of Congrels of. no disposition or overtures - on the. part of Mexico, _or of anything with which the whale country was not already acquainted. WitiXtit any circunilo cotton. howeves the Preaident: suggeins the pro party of their making •tua appropriation to proitile for any expenditure which may be necessary. fo the purpose of settling our difficulties with tirtfl 'Mexican _ It is not pretended that the sum thus asked for is to be spent in connection with the military bp. erutions, for though -engagements to the amount of seventy or eighty millions at the lea s t may have been entetiii into, the twenty millions appro priated cannot have been disbursed. But the Inca sage says : At might be inconvenient for thiMesican Gov ernment to wait for the whole awn, the,. payment Of which may he stkpulated by this treaty, until it can be ratified by our Senate, .13r an application to cairy it into elect made by.Congreae. Indeed the necessity for this delay might defeat the olfect al together.' fishing some very FL Among other statement, which Hall, Esq. , the United &Wee' rfnpare4. From this significant clause we'Must conclude, , li ars ). that instead as Gen. Scott expre ss it, mper ing a peace,' we are to go to workj buy one by cerrupting . the MO;ican-rulers. It may he, the President underrates them, that Paredes and his officials are more incurroptible than a certain high officer of our own government is supposed to he. a. Slerrg. 6e. $4 50 8c 3'50 3a• 0 75 6■. 150 6s, . 1:56 . . Mexico is now busy in her preparations tourer. and such a step would have so seriously conipro rniied the national dignity,. that .. we'cennot but •e• knee that honest John Davit, Itislie called)' of Mass.. defeated the, appropriation. We cannot: but lank our own President bee • iieen studying' the Mesican.system of..policy, and at least has learned some of. the bluster and(a treat deal of the inefficiency, which eharacterizeslthe rulers ,of that . unitappy .people. $ll 75 ELM $1 50 11 75 2 00 6 00 75 -16 1 75 1'76 .2 00 0! 200 n'a. $14'25 11 75 $2 po =I stye, except the intereeten !crib° head of that the labor, a ton of Iran ling shame to ask the people iley, %yes drown ghts since while THE ,FRAiID - - THE. TWO M ILL 19 pILL, We learn from the Ledger's correspondence that within a few daysithe Secretary of \ the Treasury will issue a circulai in regard to the interpretation Of the ad vatareas classes of the Tariff of '46. The foreign valuation is to be the regulating prin ciple. We may here state, that even if the word home were introduced. it would not include freight unless especially provided for. Will the Loco Foco papers who copied the Union's lie now con tradict it 1 MIXICO AIM -mg/ilia:v.—The nevila rrom'the army, is uninteresting. nothing having occurred worthy of notice. The army : was being sent on to Camargo, end steps taken by the commanding genera/ to prepare a camp yet further on the road to Monterey. Thisduty was assigned to Bvt. Brig. Gen. Worth. There is a report tin. Jamaica, that Califomii, having declared its independence, the:prustipal ports bad been taken possession of; by U. S. Naval forces. This is likely enough to have occurred under any. circumstances. The Regular aitiy, appears to be well treated and kindly recerved, by the peopleef the conquer ed department, but every day or two a volunteer is found dead in one of the public places: The state troops are said-in many , instances to have committed great ontrages. On one occasion a mar= der having been committed on : : a Mexican, Gen. Taylor bad given up the offender to the lois! government, to be tried by the Mexican flaw,_and• ritiniiredaiik, -- 41ffenting.in no any Pnniihinent they_tnianleal-carnedinto execution. Before this date the army has moved to Ca margo, if nOt:beiond it, leaving Brig. Gen. Ha men, of volunteers, incommand at Matamoros. At a special meeting of the POTTtiVILLE FIRE ENGINE CGM PAN Y . , held August 19th, 1846, the follwoing Preamble was submitted by the'Committee Ind unanimously adopted : Inasmuch as it has pleased an All-wise Prost deuce to remote from us our lamented President, and late fellow member Capt. Wm. SHENFEIe TER, we, as the Committeb appointed in behalf of the Gocupany, expressing out deep regret at the loss Of our oldest member, who for many years has filled and ,discharged the_duties of a fireman, and who had the love and - respect of his fellow members.' Ff,arolcacf. That We feel the deep lora and that our symp.thiee bt, extended to. his relatives. Resoked, That a copy of the Preamble be pre. canted to his reitives. 'Rewirted,that we shroud . our Apparatus in mourning, for the usual time: ' Resolved, Thai the proceedings be published in the Borough papers. ' Committee, HERRN STnivca, • bee Race, .Taos. FOETID,- ' • OLIVER DOBSON, FRANK Parr. On the 11th and 12th inst., 4181 Emigrants were landed in the port of New York. ARRIVAL OF THE CALEDONIA. TEN DATE LATER FROM eivicaroox. %This steamer left Liverpool on ' ..thifi4th inst. and teethed BOston on the - 18tb, Tuescia)i List. Her mire isnot altogether without political imfoltance. - The reduction of duties on Sugar was under die. clissimi when the fast steamer left, has passed by vote l of two to one nearly; and is an extension 4 the; Free Trailo policy to Sugar as well as corn, a change valuable to . t . he English people. kit .un linportaittyi the ; nited • The cotton market was Without change, and in messed activity b'eJ bekti'ocesiianid'in the`tnano (souring districts in consequence of the pasaige of the Tariff, by the House of Representatives, news of 'which had been received. Fortho same reason the price of iron had advanced. A further fall in the ,value, of grain had ',taken :place, and, harvest operaiiim4 are proceeding ;rapid ly. Theognatity of the wheat is finer, and the yield greater than last Year. • „ The money market had fluctuated butlittle since he sailing of the last packet. L , 'The Britanin airived in Liverpool 'from Boston, on the 3lst ult. Louis 'Bonaparte, ex-King of Holland, died at Leghorn. on the 2 tth alt., of apeplety, aged 67. Tholl'ope bas granted a general amnesty fur all,/political offenders. • ' The' Corn trade was inactive. The large ar• ltivals.of dour and wheat from the United States and Canada tended to depress prices. Fristici.—Anothef attempt is saitito have been inadion the life of Luttis*Philippe, While walking Upon the. balcony of the principal window. of the Palace of rthe. Tuileries to 'Wen 'to*the concert, which was given by the band of ;the National Guards, as part of the customary • rejoicings in commemoration of the revolution of duty. ThU King was accompanied by the Queen and whole Ruyal'Family. No sooner had he seated hints' elff and given the signal fur the concert to commence, than a person in the crowd drew firth a pistol and fired two shots at the King, which neither injured .the King nor any one else. ,-- Tbe King pointed out the aSsassiii, who was 'immediately :ailesteil and lodged in safe custody._ The police bad gleiit' - difficulty in saving him fiom, the.vegeance of the populace. The * miscreant admitted hie crime, slated his name to be Joseph Henri, that he_ is fifty years of age, and a manu facturer ar Odds de funtasee, residing at Faria.' , .l Misfortunes, he said airde him weary of life, and •he fired on the King'to get talked about, and as a means of meeting death: He added that Lo *pro posed to commit the crime some weeks back, when on duty at the palace as a National Guard, but refrained lest be should bring disgrace on his • 7 comrades: An institntion in France of similar organization Fo the'British Corn Law leagues has been gotten up and is supported by the government, its prin cipleii are opposed to Frr;e Trade. A report has been current that the Government intends to ienuce or abolish by royal ordinance .the duty on the importation of sheet Iron coining from the.linited States of America. 211 sorts of 3tems. - There is a report that the finding of.the Court of Inquiry I.4trtsti is attogeihercred itahle to, aryl In lour IA Geri. Gdif/CS. ' TM. Detroit Advertiser, is severe upon the cone ditiort of"soine of our frontier Forts. Mackinaw has but part of a company left to look after at.— Saulte St. Marie had a garrison' of twelve men, Copper Harper none, Fort Winnetrago none, and the barracks near Detroit has a force of—twenty camp women. A very potent garrison this latter, which we do not. think the D—l himself, would attack.. They have at Pittsburg, Pa., a Locofoco trans. parency used iu tidiest Canvass, saying Tetras. Oregon, Polk, Halfas and the Tariff of 1842. , The Hon. Hobert C Grier was sworn into office in Pittsburgh, on Monday, as At4ociatejudge of the U. S.,Supreme Court, and commenced his du ties at once. The life of Sam Houston; is. being written by C. Edwards, Lester and the - Sas Jaen) hero, will thereby loose what little chiriseter is left hint. Col. Belie Peyton. who refuied to return Verne with big discharged soldiers, ■nd joined Gen.'fay lor as Volunteer Aid, has been elected Lieut. Col. of a tine regiment of Tennesseana. Mr. J. B. Gough,'- the Temperance lecturer, whose severe illness was lately' announced. is re. Covering. This will be grateful news to his many friends. - MEDALS TO BE PRISENTED,—...IIII'. G. •W. Reeder, left New Orleans, in the cutter McLane," on thit 9th inst., for the Army, tarrying with him the gold, medals prepared by the - citizens of that city fornon•commisvionetiofficersO'Sullivan, Far-, tell and- others, who distinguished themselves in the battles of the Bth anA 9th of May. They wilt be presented in thetpresence of their com rades. - Gen. Wool has not selected the route from Natchez, by way of Alexandria to Ban Antonio, as the most practicable and the, shortest fur the cavalry now at Memphis, but \i'Me . Srding to the Memp,his Eagle, the Kentucky, Tennessee. end . Arkansas cavalry are now all on their line of march from Memphis due west via Little Rock, &c., to San Antonio. Tex Diststrtmn VoLurrsarts.—Great exeite nent exists in New Orleans, because of the dis banding of the Louisiana Volunteers, and because the Secretary of War; has decided that the Loui siana Regiments, Col. Raiford's Battalion- from Alabama; are not legally in service. They will aII be mar:tared out of service at New Orleans. The option was given them at Matamorasto re-enlist for twelve -months or the war. ay A meeting of the Merchants and dealers, will be held at Pox & and Morin:met' Hotel, on Monday eseninunext, August 24th, 1846 0:8' = o'clock, to take the necessary steps to enforce the Hawkers &Pedlars law passed at the last session of the Legislature, throughout the whole County. atembera of PULASKI LODGE mill meet sin Monday Evening, Lest Met, ai B'o•dock. Auggas.22„ GIRL At. ELIGIOUS NOTICES *REV. JAMES B. PALMER, of Susquehanna co. mill preach is the Vulietsallst Church, Pottsville. on Sunday (tomiurroiv) morning and evening, at the usual hours.- The public is respectfully lUVited to attend. Anglin 22,1916. MARRIED. On Thursday the Mst inst. ' by N. M. Wilson, Esc' Mr. Mr. Wit.t.tsu O. Mauna. to Miss Emzarrern M M- rus t both of Columbia county, Ta• , _ OUR MaRKET. CORRECTED CAREFULLY coR THE JOURNAL Wheat Flour, per Bbl. 44 50- i Plenty Rye do 4:3 25 to 3 50 . Plenty. Wheat bushel 95 Scarce Cash 621 e • " • 65 to 20 - do dd`- ~ ii Oats 35 do Potatoes new . - “. , - 50 • do .' Timothy Seed, • " 2 50- do Clover " 4 50 Scarce Eggs Dozed 12 . . Scarce .. Butter -lb. 10 to 24 Plentj Bacon 4. - 7t09. ' 'do ' Hama AI 10 . _' •- . do . Plaster Ton 6 oct - - Plenty Hay, 44 *l3 00 .. - -do Dried Peachespared Bush. .. 250 - 2 : to Cried du unpared `fi 150 do 4 Kilos oared 4' , , Nottee. _ _ ALL persons indebted tothe sutsertbei,Sem bdedene - - 4nlints tll atherseise, are earnestly Val uested to . call 'on him without delay and settle fort ue ith. ' • GEORGE H. fITICUTER. /Logan 22,1846. , 34 —3t BUMMER Stcantsa—lt should be remembered that during the intense heat of stammer, the process of di gestiorils perforated with such extreme languor that our food. instead of being speedily.dissoleed and con verted into nutriment for the body, °Dela - become. ac ., Wally syieriled or putrifl.Nl in the stomach. Hence bad breath, dasagreeabletaste in the; month, colic Ni na, dysentery, cholera .morbus, and other disorders of ths intestines. Wright's Indiin Vegetable Pills are a certain e Ire for all the above dangerous complaints ; because they 'cleanse the alimentary canal of all these bilious and putrid tutmoUrs which ate the cause not only of all dia l . orders of the borrels, but of every malady incideilth mar. They also aid and improve digestion and purify the blood, and therefore give health and vigor to Jrk. whole frame, as well as drive every description of pain from the holy. For sale in Pottsville, by T. D. DEVITT, agent for the proprietor, and the other agents in Schuylkilleoun ty.WlLLlAM WRIGHT. - • Ce.,4ALTII! CO -BLESSED HEALTH; Thou en abo , 4e all gold and treasure; 'tis thou who enlargest the soul--and openeth all its powerti to receive instrur. tion. and harelish 'clique. He that has thee, has li tt l e • More to wish for; and he chat is so wretched as to hav e ihee not : Wants ereb; thing beside. Let us be thank turßrandret iif give ushealth-•get then a he.e blessed which a century's use has fully estab. fished to be 'behest niedicine ever bestowed upon than. For the prevailing colds and coughs, they wilt he found every thing that medicine to capable of imparting. al• Sold at 13randretles Piincipal office, 211 Broadway N.V., and bthe following autboriied agents in Schuyl kill county. . . Wittsville, 'W. Mortimorr— New Castle, George 11.tifeny der ; Porgelintnn,l. Rfidnhc A C.n• Orwige. burg, E. E. Hummer; Schuylkill Ilafen.7Charle2 Hunt zinger ;-= And be one agent in every place of itu • l'iortance, Ihroughoui the world. BOICIIF.NiOWN, N. .I . Oct. `25,, 184 - Mrt• Seat W. FowLE :,Dear Sir.—Dr. Wistar's 'Balsam' of %Vild Cherry has been in the market some six or seven years. The universal te/ehrity which this medicine has gained over all whets throughout the whole tountrv,-/s enough to convince themost Meted utons, -of the great value of it. and encourage Mote' who are sick to try it. 11117 long felt ..it my duty, and wished for an opportunity to . express to you my geasi tude. , for the benefit 1 hatt derived from it. I hate been rescued from the-grave, and saved from that most terrible disease, consumption, by using it. Last is in-• ter after I took a bad cold, I was troubled with rekevetc cough for eeveral, weeks, no that toy appeine,,And strength fined nte. I was obliged to give uj bit'snieSs, leave my bench and shop. I hads'ill the :dunning symp toms of 'COMMtion, such as pains. iiMtgoldr, sweat in nights, 6.c. I . tried many kinds of niedicine, but It dll in vain until procitred a bottle of Dr. Wistar's Bal 'eam of Wild Chttrryt.'w.litrh. by faith and Perseverance, finally sated trol Wk4-atill Cured me entirely, I have 'not enjoyed as goß4httaltli foe! welve past as I do now. • 1 .." 4 '' THOMAS DEN,NETT. We are persorarit,Y aequAintet with Mr Ile'nnett.— The public may relyon the.,lintli of his Atat,moot. _ - f - WHITALL STOKER, . . ~, GI:ORGE.. PARKER- .- For sale by John S \ gillfaiiii. lirtiego.l, Pollsvllle -... 'Win, Taggart: Ttmautui ; ft itkel m Medlar, oewi g ,; burg:, J: B, dr. .1.-A. Fists, MiTith-viiie ; Caleb Wheel er . l'inegrove : 21. , SSOO To Loan. TIIE Pott Carbon Beneficial Society, will loan the SUM or Eight Hundred Dollars, to any person who wilLs , er ure the payment of the nine, on, unineumb er ed real estate. Application may be made to THOMAS QUINN. Port Carbon, '•EDwAIID Cot.t.surot„Treasnrer Port Carbon Bebe. Idol Society. Port Carbon, August 22, Mid Atiministra - itiiN Notice. E 1 1 . 13 ‘ i s le , f rmlnf i ni t a . t Ci e n o Vi t e he es b T r t n e . g o L f , of PottAvilltc'echttylk ill county, deceased, bare been grimed td the. subscriber, by .the r , Register 1$! Sehuyl.. kill emnity', therefore all persons indebted to caid Es tate, are requested to make Immediate payment, and all those haring claims will present them to the sub -ICr4ber for settlpment. SAMUEL. SILLYMAN, Administrator. reottsville, August 22d, 1816. 31-llt Adolf nistra cor , s r • l ETTERS of Administration on the estate of JohnA Falls,_late of Mineraville, deceased, having been granted by the Register of. Schuylkill county, to the subscribers, all persons hating claims against the EP- , tate of the said decedent, are requested to make known the same to them without delay. • .;.-- .RACIIA EL A. FALLS,i Adasinistratrix. JAMES IL FALLS, Administrator. • Minc ravine, Auginit fied, (NM. 34-4 t To Coal Operators-=Prop Timber sulncriber la prepared to contract for • 1 livery of Prop Timber. for Mining Operations,- of nll descript tons. - and to deliver It on the line of the-Ca nal. near the "Five Locke," or on the. Mine Hill Ran Road, near 1)e Forest's Store_ JOHNM. CROSLAND• • Augnet 22d, 1846. Navy Island Boat Yard. TILE undersigned, would respectfully inborn his old customers, as well as new ones, that no sale of his eontins taken plare,and all orders for Sloops, Sr hooners or Barges under hr let in, length, 18. feet 'beam, and 10' feet in depth, will be attended to with the Unita) care and determination to give satisfaction. ',Miff Planking, Wrought Spikes, heavy Timber and go ,c 1 Workmen, enables us to turn dot River Craft of the very best description, warranted In please, under* forfeiture of $2Oll, on each vessel built by the subscri bei• JOillit 41: CROSLAND. Avgnst•W., 1818. . 4 ' • 34-3ino Stray - : to*. STRAYED away from the subscriber resi gl y •i ding at Mr. Ciiiierman's Co!Wry on Bit ' I PM..itver Creek. abmit two weeks ago. a RED , -BRINDLE COW, while white face, and two red rings around the'eyes, with the tops of the horns cutoff. Whoever will' return. said Cow to the subscriber, or give information where to get her again shall he reasonably rewarded. THOMAS CAMPION. August 29.41,3.1-3 t.• • CARPETS AND OIL CLOTHS, At, the (`heap Store, No. I, Strtivberry OUR EXPEMSES ARE VERY LIGHT, PRICES Low,, and Terms Cash. P L_ • ... ERSOIVW wishing to bny new CARPETS and OIL CLOTHS, very cheap, this fall, wbolesaleor retail, will do well to examine the excellent assortment we elTer uf ' Splendid Imperial, Fine and Super Ingrain. ..z4 CARPETINGS. Twilled and Plain Venetian... 2 And well seasoned Oil Cloths:lkm 2 to 24 feet wide, rut to fit. Also, . .Table Covers, Bags, Floor Cloths. Rag and Cottone4rpets,&c ' very low, with a good stock of Ingrain Carpets frost:l2s to 50 cents, and entry and stair carpets from 12/ to 56 mita. ' ELRIDGE & BROTHER, 41 Strawberry a-, I door above Cheroot, near 2d st. Philada., August2M, 1846. 34--3 mo MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEAILISCEI • • . . pr Ere ar fe lrrna the CMCE in virtirr e etlr i r i d tT: Wile. he thinks he,haslaid . his stock for - th e e Elea— son,-he generally has to renew it halts doCen times' before the season is over! This profves that the-people know where to purchase, and it proves moreover that he knows how to sell, for the good people of Pottsville- - who are wide awake and know as well as any people, on earth, how many cents there are in a Dollar, wool not purchase his goodsnlniost as fast as he can get the up from the city, if ite did not sell a little cheaper than any body else. The fact is, they are , drawn to his store by an. IRREEISTABLE ATTRACTION," Philosophers talk about the attraction of gmvitatiott , - magnetic attraction—chemical attraction--electrical attraiition, and we.. s linoW not how many °the , aurae- ViosiOut they leave.out theettongest of all=-..vix:' The Attraction of Self Interest! • We make ft le the' interest of every one to deal with_ us. We do business on thestif evident principle. that it is better tow!' a thousand dollars worth of goods in a week, at a profit of 5 per centtiban be six weeks sel ling the same.nmount at more& of 20 percent. Every one will acknoWledge the Justness of this principle t the prudent and economical will also see that .by deal ing with a man who carries out this principle in his bu siness, they will save 15 per cent on evety worth of _ We . ROODS - If nEV.PVIDLRIASE. " We will throw the mhole'matter tato the form- of syllogism, which is a sort of logical atioin mama, which ssicicas every thing•Mto a CertEd Hat. People will buy where thiy. can buvicheapest—this is our major proposition--ettyy, body buys at Gee. W. Slater's—this is our minor—Elmo. Slater sells cheap- , er than any body else. - , - There,. if you ward Stroilier arguments come to our store, and We will give you arguments itresistable, and not to be gainsaid.. Pottsville, August 22d, 1801, New Books. Phatubet's information for the People, part I. 25 Romantic Ilistdry of Dhotandiah, an Oriential Bandit, _ • 25 - Fanny, the Little Milliner. 1 t 311 • Pierce Fleming, or the Lugger's chase, 25 Mrs. Bib's Baby, by Douglass Jerrold. . • al Wandering Jew, by Eugene Sue, 2 volumes. 50 Ladies! Book, for etepteruber, 25 Graham's Magazioe,for do - 25 Just received and fur sale at LIANNAN'S 'Cbraii, Book Store. - August - 22..18.10. r 34 . Money Found. A PU RSE containing a sum of money, was founa on the first of August, in Centre street, in this bo rough. Information with regard to it can he obtained of MUGU ALLEN, Market street. August 15,1846. , 33-33 _ VALUABLE TAVERN STAND • FOR SALE, THE subscriber will sell at Public Sale. A, on the premises, on Friday, the. Ifkb of Mil: September next. at In o'clock, A. 51., that valuable Tavern Stand, at present prem.' pied by him, situated in 'tile flourishing town of Port Clinton, Schuylkill Count}, Pa. The tel is built of stone, 30 feet front, by 50 feet deep, two stories high, eon IS cittible,of accorniriOdating a large Number of rersons. There is - excedent ogler at, the 'door in abundance, and the stabling is .eopd and stall, dent for all purposes. Terms and condititins Mak k 11MV:11 on the day °Nair.. For farther particulars, ap ply-14111e subscriber, on the pimp WILLI/UR MOYER. Pon Clntton, August 15, 18.16. 3 Sts 13111 ENID