POTTSVILLE. SATORDAY Aroixixo, SEPT. 9, 1913. PLATFORM VICO:FED BY TUE PEOPLE For President, ORNERAL ZACHARY TAYLOR. For Vice President. MILLARD FILLMORE. Oen. Taylor, In !thinner to Cant. Allison. of Virginia, nadir datlpf "Baton Rogue, ApVil 22nd; 1818," in an 'war tolevatal queries—replies reiterate what I have often said—l am a I whip. If elected I would not be a mere President of " al ly, I would endeavor to act Independent of party domination. I should feel bound to administer the Government' untrammelled b y party echemes. Sued—The veto power. The power given by the constitution to the Executive to 'aerie:4e his v eto, is a high conservative power; bet In my opinion should never be exercised except In cases of clear violation of the constitution, or Manifest haste and want of consid eietion by Congress.. indeed, I have thought that, for piny years past, the known opinions and wishes of the Executive have exercised undue and injurious Influ ence upon the legislative department of the Govern went; and for this cause I have thought our system was in danger of undergoing a great change front Its trot theory. The personal opinions of the individual *ho may happen to occupy the Executive choir, ought not to control the action of Congress upon questions of domestic policy; nor ought his objections to be Inter posed where questions of constitutional power have been settled by the various departments of Government and acquiesced In by the people. TAird—Upon the subject of the tariff, the currency, de improvement of our great highway., rivers, takes sod harbors, the will o fthe people, as expressed through their representatives! In Congress, ought to be respected and ta[6l[D OIIT IT TUE EIECPTIVZ. /Milani Fillmore was in Congress In 1842, and was one of the able advocates of the Tariff passed in 1849, 2 •,- also voted fotpe distribution of the Lund Ftllgt. LOCOPOCO PLATFORM ERECTED BY THE ".BPOILB PARTY." 'For President, - GENERAL LEWIS CASS. For Vice President, BENERAL Wm. 0. BUTLER The Creed of the Party. 'Resolution paned by the Baltimore Conventl, Vrbieh nominated the above candidates Resolved, That he fruits of the great political triumph of 1844, which elected James K. Polk and Geo. M. Dal las President and Vice President of the United /States, have fulfilled the hopes of the Democracy of the Union ; In defeating the declared purposes of their opponents to create a National Bank, in preventing the corrupt and unConstitutional distribution of the land proceeds, from the common treasury nfithe Union, for local pur- VACS, in protecting the currency and the labor of the country from ruinous fluctuations, and guarding the money Of the people for the use of the people, by the establishment of the constitutional Treasury; in the noble isrptasa trims to the coast of FRILL Tsang,' by the repeal of the Tariff of 1842, and the creation of the. more equal, honest and productive Tariff of 1946 ; and that, in our opinion, it would he a fatal error to weaken the bands of political organization by which these great reforms have been achieved, &e. • Gen. Can In accepting the nomination of the Con mention, declares shape has read the resolutions of the Convention: . —approweir of Olem—and will wake them the .4raide of his 4dosiniatralion, if elected. That is, be will veto any bill that panes Congress, tint may not be in accordance with their principles. The Locofisco County meeting, held at Orwigsburg no Monday, June 5111, 1848. (in which Judges Palmer and Franey, and E. 0. Jackson, the editors of the Lo -cofoeo papers of this county, took ppm and endorsed the proceedings,) passed tha following resolutions : Resolved, That In the resolutions or the Natiotial Convention, we recognize but a continuation of those principles which were the foundation of, that imperisha ble structure, that has rendered immortal the name of Thomas Jefferson, and his Administration, and which, since hie time has been upheld by all our 'Democratic Tresidente. Resolved, That we cheerfully endorse the resolutions of that Convention. and bereLy declare our determina tins to make them the standard of our Democracy. Fellow-citizene. which Platform I. the moot demo erdtie—the exercise of the despotic one-man power—or the will of the people exptessed through their represen tatives 1 The kings and queen. of England enjoy the veto power. lint they have not exercised it for the last two hundred years,—believing that Its exercise in Eng land would unuquestionably create a revolution and bring thkhead of the sovereign to the black. LOCOFOPO PALSEHOIODS! A friend has just celled our attention to that British Tory paper, the Philadelphia Ledger, which contains an article copied from an obscure journal in this Borough, (en ally to the former) celleJ the True Democrat, purporting to be in' reply to our coal article of last week. The exist ence of such a paper as the True Democrat is scarcely known to those engaged in the CO9l Trade here, and the knowledge of the -editors of this branch of business is about as extensive as that of a child five years old. Had the article been confined to this meridian, it could do no harm 'whatever but since it has been copied, etroad, and the Ledger with its usual lying pro pensity, suttee that the paper in question is "large; ly devoieicto the mining interests of this section," (although we believe this is the first, as it should be the last article on the subject that ever appeared in its colUrrine!).=we feel ourselves called upon to reply to it, and shall do so next week. The late period at which the article was handed to us, prevents us from doing it in the present number. THE FOREIGN. COAL TRADE t Beauties of Free Trade A gentleman from the East, States that upwards of two hundred vessels, laden with Foreign Coal, have arrived at Boston and vicinity within a short time! The extensive lion establishment near Beaton, the machinery of which Wee manufactu red at the establishment of MO/1128. Haywood 'de Snyder, i n this Borough, now uses English Coal. If any person should doubt this statement; we re fer him to Mr. Geo. W. Snyder, of this Borough, 'who reeertill'orisited the above works, and which, we may add, were erected to use the Pennsylva nia Anthracite, but the proprietors state that they can procure the Foreign article cheaper, (under the present Tariff law,) even at the present low rates of our staple, which is purchased this year on cheaper terms in Boston than it ever was be fore! The other mills in operation, Also use For eign Coals. Our impression is clear that, notwithstanding thi miparailelled depression of our domestic trade, the importations of Foreign Coal for the current year; will exceed the quantity imported in any precious year, since Me foundation of our Gov ernment !- People of Pennsylvania! what think ye o .this I Shall this ruinous systeen'continue ! CR"Chartes P. Adams, the candidate of the rte Soil Democracy for the• Vice Presidency, Wain to make any pledges or to adopt any plat form. The system of making foolish pledges is fast Wearing out. Every honest candidate will go as eiretsnutanees may require, and 'this, after all, is all that a min can do. A man that cannot be trusted without pledges, is not fit to be trusted at tar Agricultural Pair.—The annual Agri cultural Fair in the slim of New York -Corn meneed on the sth instint. The Hon. William Wilkins, Hon. Isaac E. Holmes,oL South Caro , . Aritai' Hon. Mr. Graham of North Carolina; gen; Ferallei F. Smith, G4s. Jobneon, Gen. Shields, Mil!cid Fillmore. Martin Van Buren. arid a host of the moat dietinguished men in the find were on the ground. court—Ttie Court of Common Pleas is now in session stOrwigsburg. The Quarter Ses miens Court will commence next Monday. Judge Kidder, we regret to say, is laboring under en at tack of chills and fever, whicti'muib disables him from Fitting on the bench. . r D. G.. McGowan, Esq. upon the motion of R. M. Palmer, Esq. on Monday last, was ad- Mined to plaice Law in the several Courts of this County. His card appears in another col ' umn. (.717re wife of Andrew Stiewalt, of Schuyl- kill Haven, while laboring under temporary insanity, committed suicide on Thuralay last, by banging herself. ririf General Taylor be ehosen, the nest Congress will undoubtedly be Whig. Absolute Whig rule mull then be upon -us.— Wash. hth inst. .Do Whip want any hetter issurange than this. that all their exertions shoull be devoted to he election of Gen. Tayhir 7 ' The Old Hwikers in New York have nom inated Chancellor Wolworth for Governor, and Chiles G. Conned for Lieut. Governor of that ,State( AN EXCELLENT LETTER. . Wo take great pkainre in laying before our readers the following letter from John Cooper, Esq.,-who was an active ant: influential supporter of Polk and Dallas in 1844. The letter, it will be perceived, is in reply to en invitation to address the meeting which was held on Saturday evening. a nt the 4:bine/is Museum, Philadelphia. Derieins, August 2 , 1848.• Gentlemen :—I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your letter of tha 26th inst. inciting me to address you on the 2d of September neat, at the Chinese Museum. To say that a compli ment emanating from a source at once so intelli- gent end respectable, is merited by any claims I posaesi to corisiderstioes3 distinguished, would be an excess of vanity of Which it is not in my nature to be guilty. 'But of this be assured, thst if, motives for exertion in • cause, on the success of which so much of the happiness and prosperity of the population and the Union, sod of our State in particular, depends, your letter is calculated to stimulate services, - which however deficient they may be in talent and power, are not, neither shall they be lacking in zeal and devotion.. I have ever been a Democratic republican, and, so far as my knowledge extended, devoted to our republican institutions, when carried oat in theory and prac tice according to their true intent And meaning, as prescribed and construed .by the )Iretit men who framed them with almost superhuman wisdom end patriotism. But when I clearly discern that the ' weakness and wickedness of the present incumbent .of the presidential chair has seized upon perhaps the only aristocratic feature in our admirable con atitution, to wit : the 'squalified negative of tbeez ecutive," so as to'prement the pawage of any bill, which does not square with that abortion of ignorance and 'latish' submission to the one-man power, called the Baltimore platform—when I see lt more than intimated that no taw-ought to take effect unless it can obtain a vote of two-thirds of both house' of Congress=when I sea that axe cony., patronage and influence has been incalcu lably multiplied by James K. Polk'e seizing upon, by a gross perversion of the powers ,delegated to thoEsenutise by the ConititutiOn, the only means in his power to nurse end foster his own merelri• Mous aggrandizment, to wit :—the propulsion of measures which had a direct tendency to plunge us into a war, first with Great Britain, and instri tably with Mexico; to give to him,although other wise insignificant and imbecile, a command of the purse and the : eword,l, and not only a participation in the law-making power, but, moreover, such a controlling influence in ordinary legislation as to reduce to a shadow both betties of Congress, by his sic viola, sic j who, hie del pro ratione V Ohilliad, feel myself hound by the calls of Common honesty, in so far es lies in my power, to remedy an evil brought on the country in 1844, by giving our support to one who has proired himself to be so, totally unworthy and unfit to hold any office of honor or trust smug the citizens of a free republic. Independent of the honor and dignity which the office of President of the United States conferred. on them, our earlier presidents were, and would have ranked among the great and good the world ovei, in any age, in any country, under all and every. circumstances; . but mature decreed James K. Polk to be narrow.mindeJ;of contracted views, malignant, jealous, and envious, and of capacity more suited to the meridian of a bar room, or • ward meeting, than to rule the destinies of twenty millions of freeman.—l write in perhaps what may be considered language indicative of excite ment, but [ deeply feel what I say. Mr. Polk attained his present situation by bass and unpar donable treachery, by a trick, a prevarication, a flattering in double eense,,with those who moat honorably believed that if elected 'he would have taken the lame stand which General Taylor has assumed in his "Alison latter," to let the people be fairly represented in Congress , and to permit them to carry out the principle of self-government, by' non-interference with legislation on Matters of domestic policy. unless in cases of encaech ment by. the Nigislature on the constitutional powers sad rights of the executive ; for in all other cases of unconstitutional laws of palptthly corrupt enactments, the courts and the ballot-box furnished ample and abundant remedies. I cannot, in the compass of a letter like this, go into detail or an examination of the twenty instances of flegrant usurpation of the prevent ex ecutive , by placing himself in a situation as the - invader, spoliator and subjugator of a foreign country, and tnat country a sister republic, who had copied their institutions from a pattern which we are in a fair way to spoil. A state of things never corn emplated by those who framed our republican form of government, and, therefore,they never provided a single clause in our constitution suited to circumstances, the emir rune of which never darkened their imaginations. The Oregon controversy was equally ludicrous and disgraceful. The Mexican war was uncalled fur, improvident, unconstitutional, unwise and . unnecessary. But here let me say that the victories achieved by Scott and Taylor, have conferred im perishable renown on our national flag; and this is the only redeeming point in e series of adminis trative acts on the part, of Mr. Polk and his cabinet, 'resulting in an immense debt, an arrest of industrial pursuits, a retrogression in agriculture, commerce and manufactures, which half a -century of peace and prosperity will not suffice to atone for, besides a desolation of domestic happiness, by an effusion of American blood, which ought to weigh heavy on the consciences of those who caused it. I live, as you know, in an iron menu. factoring district, and have deify and hourly to witness the destruction of business—the wide spread desolation occasioned by the ruinous' and devastating policy of this administration. Danville Is comparatively depopulated ; the families of hundreds of our laborers and operatives in a state of utter destitution! Instead of the exhilerating sounds and brilliant fires ofour fainaces, foundries, end fowls; silence per-varier our streets'and neigh borhood. Our stores are deserted. Our agricul turalists can no longer find in Danville or its vicinity a market for their horticultural or agricul tural products. Our houses, built by industrious men, who hoped to pay for them by their future economy and exertions, .are deserted, and those who hoped to own them will lose them by inability to discharge their remaining liabilities from want ' of employment, occasioned by the ruinous tariff of 1946.—0ur opponents are endeavoring to ex clude the tariff question a. one of the issues to be tried in this campaign. Our endeavors ought,' therefore,to be most strenuously directed to this all absorbing question in this state ; in their speeches they treat it as a subject on which honest differen ces of opinion may he entertained, without incur ring denunciation fur a departure from progressive, retrogressive, aggressive Locofoco party ties end obligations. It is for us then to show conclusively that Cass is chained by his own Oedipus and the platform of Baltimore to the Juggernaut car of free trade. The muse. want information to separate them from the herders of cringing, creeping, crawling, plodding knaves and party tools—office-holders, office-seekers, minions of the remunerating power, and sycophant. and parasites 4f place, those who "crook the pregnant hinges of t \ the knee that thrift may follqw fawning." Let this be done, and the people are upright and honest, ' Let us show them io their true colors. Lewis Cass, an old hacknied politician, whose whole life has illustrated the character of "The Vicar of Bray," and whose appetite for war is so great, that if elected he would consider it our manifest destiny to quarrel with all creation—who said at "Cleve land," that the conduct of this administration should. if he was elected, direct and guide himself and his administration... Let the people understand that by official speculations, peculation., and an adroitness in fabricating charges for official services, he has amassed immense wealth. That, if elected, he will so construe hie own powers as to give them illimitable extent; end that four years more of continued usurpations will convert us from a representative republic to en elective despotism, and himself into an elective king, like that of land; who however, unlike oars, had no unquali fied veto on acts of legislation, but every separate member of the Polish Diet bed the power of Fe; toing any and all hills therein preferred. - Let us contrast this selfish, arrogant indiarobber like candidate, with the plain, modest conduct and good sound sense end judgment of Zechariah Tay lor, Buena Vistas' hero, who a plain republican himself, with a thorough understanding of the nature of the government he may be called on to administer, and of the people who select him as their ruler, will enable us by restoring our pristine purity and patriotistia,. to sing, "Hail Columbia, happy Land," wider whose. rule Truth will prevail, delusion be past, • And wisdom and virtue *ill triumph at last. I have intruded oo you a long and unimportant letter, and ins=. - ouch as you had honored me by your invitation. I was desirous that. you should, in,Some measure, know him whom you were this disposed to encourage, and now lot me say, that in this quarter the. friends of freedom, of equal rights, equal laws, the friends of the country's prosperity and happiness will leave no stone un turned to break "Those fancy formed chains that enslave the free . mind." and to emancipate our fellow citizens from the demon and delusion of sophistry and falsehood. I am compelled, in• conclusion to decline your invitation, my engagement, combined wits the sickness which afflicts some of my fetidly at present, compel me to forego the gratification which an op portunity such asjou hevepresented would have afforded to me. , With unbounded respect, Tot" . JOHN COOPER. THE MINERS' JOURNAL,. AND POTTSVILLE' GENERA.L ADVERTISER., 12` Candid Adasirsion.—Caleb Castling, in addressing the Cass men at Boston, the other day, admitted; u all loess must, that_Gen. Taylor it an honest man. Well, let us have an honest man for President, and he will =dad the affairs of the nation in an honorable and upright man ner. "An honest man's the man we want." The 'Fire Spreading.—There was a large Free Soil meeting at Hollidaysburg, in this State, a few days ago. Dougherty, and several other prominent Locofocoe, addreseed then:testing. In several counties in this State, the Free Soil dem ocracy have already formed tickets. _ 10" The President bss removed Benjamin P. Butler, one of the leaders of the Van Buren dis ,organization in N. York, from the important of fice of United States District Attorney. far Governor Johnson has determined to ad dress the people in various parts of this Coro moowealtb. This is the true, the republican policy. Mlion. George Hreiner.—Tbat violent and _savage old Locofoco, George Kremer, has repented of his sins.• He is going it strong for Don Zach- rir Our friends, Knoop and Schmidt, are ing Concerts in Lsacaster, Harrisbuig, Carlisle, &c. Could'at they step over beret CB" Chas. Maulte, Esq. of Philadelphia, has taken out a patent for the manufacture of sailing canvass, which will do away with seawttwing. 17' Fire.—A large limns dwelling househnear the scale house in Port Carbon, was burnt down . ors Wednesday last. M'Catel• Cushing has been nominated for . Governor of Musachnsetts, by the Locotocos. Where's Pillow. er; Suppose a Pella?'" what has 'lathing Mar ries a gal what has nothing ; is her things his'n or his her 'la! arDevialion of Falling bodies South of Me Perpendicular.—As long since as 1793: it was discovered that heavy bodies, in falling from great heights, in addition to the tendency to fall to the east from the earth's rotation, fell also greatly south of the perpendicular of the point from which they were let fall. All the ?sxperimenta, how ever, hitherto made on this subject have only been from very moderate heights,Lfrom 200 to 500 R. Mr. W. Rundell, - the secretary of the Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society, having made ■ series of experiments in the deepest shaft of the United Mines, which is upwards of one quarter of a mile in depth, read a paper on the subject at the meeting of the society. As the value of such ex periments must greatly depend on the method em ployed, it took some time and trouble to arrange tie beat Means for allowing the body to fell free and without any horizontal impulse, and at length the following; arrangement was adopted :—A strong rectangular frame was constructed, having a shelf stage inside it, capable of turning freely on an axis near one end, supported by pointed centres fixed in the sides of the frame; this frame was placed in a hotizontal position over the shift, and held 'in its place by buttons; the bullets were ,placed at the extreme end of this shelf, with no other protection to preverit their falling off, than a hole bored in the wood. A plumb line was now suspended at each end of the frame sue east and west of each other—s line drawn between them passing over the centre of the bullet rest; to these were attached heavy ptimmets, 'the lower ends pointed. After they had hung some bouts, to give time for all vibration to cease, a line was drawn on the platform at the bottom of the shaft joining their points,-which was taken as the datum line from which to measure the defection. The number of bullets used was 48, formed of each of the following metals:---iron, copper, lead, tin zinc, antimony. and bismuth; besides these, iron and steel plummets Were employed, the latter mag netised, they were in the form of truncated cones. the ends being rounded ; they were each suspen ded inside a cylinder to prevent draughts of sir from affecting them ; in ballot* the experiments the end of the shelf pointed to the east, and the other ball to the west, yet, in every case, the body all from 10 to 20 in, south of datum line. These, it highly probable, are the most cor— rect and conclusive experiments which have ever been made on the subject, and carry with them a conviction that there is a real defection to the swith of the plumb line, and that in a fall of one quarter of a mile it is of no small amount.— Mr. RundeWm opinion as to the cause of this singular phenomenon, which has hardly hitherto been attempted to be explained, is—that, if falling bodies be acted upon only by tho gravitating and tangential face., the plane in which any falling body moves will be indicated by two lines—one • line, joining the point from which the body falls with the centre of gravity, and the other, a line at right angles with this, forming a tangent to that part of the circle of latitude, which is situated in the falling body at the instant he begins to moee. Taking the earth as a perfect sphere. and the centre of gravity as coinciding with the geom. etricel ,centre, this plane will cut ,the earth in a great circle, and is, of course; stationary, and does not rotate with the earth. Now, while a falling body is moving forward, end downward in this plane, the point from which it fell is moving round in the circle of latitude, and the line joining that point and the centre of gravity flea no longer in, this place, but has described part or the surface of a cone round tha axis of the earth—conse— quently, the falling body must be some distance outside this cone, and the south of the vertical line passing through the point from which it fell. Mr. Rundell concludes, that-bodies falling one quarter of mile in 9" latitude 50°, would have a deviation south of the pumb line of 2-2 feet. The Coal Trade for 1818, The quantity sent by Rail Road this week to 23,355 01 —by Canal 11,357 07—for the week 35,212 OS—total . by Hall Road 578,5419 08—do by Canal 285,812 00 The shipments this week are about 3000 tons less than last; and aboutAftecn thostsavd tons leas than the week ly shipments four.weeka ago. There is also a falling off of about three thousand tone in the weekly ship ments from the Lehigh. 1f the Operators will only hold off with the overstock In the market Is removed, which is upwards of a hundred thousand tone, the trade will improve for the rest of the season. The price of coal on board, at Richmond. for white Ash Lamp, Broken, Egg, and dtove, is 113,775. Red Ash from *3,55 to *3,75, according to quality. Our correspondent quote, the rate of freight from Richmond as follows To New York, . 80 aB5 Portemonth, Newark, 60 aB5 Portland, Providence, 10 New Haven, Fall River, 10 Hartford, New Bedford, 10 Troy. Boston, 25 Albany, Salem, 25 Baltimore, Washington, 90 I Amount of Coal sen over thy Philadelphia and Read. lag Ratl Road and Schuylkill Navigation, for the week ending on Thursday evening last : RAIL ROAD. 'CANAL Week. • TOTAL. WEEK. TOTAL. Pt. Carbon, 6.299 01 266,344 10 5,892 OS 178,119 15 Pottsville, 4.770 01 141,475 19 1,462 10 21,103 03 8 Haven, 9,691 16 363,774 05 3.345 II 77,926 16 Pt. Clinton,. 2,591 00 101,954 04 1,156 18 8,602 12 23,255 01 876,548 18 11,857 07 285,812 00 295,812 06 Total by RR & Cal. 1,162,061 01 To same period last year by Railroad, Canal, TRANSPORTATION ON THE RAILROADS IN SCHUYLKILL COUNTY. The following_ is the quantity of Coal transported over the different Railroads in Schuylkill County, for the week: • WEISS. • TOTAL. Mine 11111 and R. R. R. 13.639 10 450,152 17 Mount Carbon , do 5,477 It 170,747 14 Schuylkill Valley do 5,884 12 221,528 04 Mill Creek do 7,592 00 159,079 17 Mt. Carbonand Pt. Carbon do 0,970 03' 270,582 01 Little Schuylkill R. It. 9,706 02 111,516 12 Union Canal It. It. 9,331 16 2 ) 43,313 08 1 Swatara It. ft.' 3,503 13 0 21,731 00 2 LEHIGH COAL TRADE. Sint for the week ending, Sept. 2, 1848. W GEL. TOTAL. 7,050 18 156,372 18 3,901 17 78 530 04 ' 2,538 00 54,545 IS 2,511 19 44,012 17 2.454 II 71.323 12 2,704 02 48,509 03 005 01 6,303 00 Summit. Rhume Run. Beaver Meauoar, Sprint !lonntain, Hazleton, Buck Mountain, Wyoming, 21,290 16 4G0,038 15 DELAWARE AND HUDSON COAL TRADE. To Aug. 26, 1818. WEEK. 17,'^5 00 To August2B,last yes:, 02.4.7 01 00. RATLS OF,TOLL AND TRANSPORTATION Cl RAIL ROAD . From Aug. 1, 1848. From Mt. Calton. Sch. Haven. Pt. Clinton To Philadelphia ; II 45 *1 40 411 20 • To Richmond. 1 60 1 53 1 40 1114T65 Or Dom. IT CANAL. from August 1. 1848. • Mt. Carbon. 8. Haven. Clinton To Philadelphia, SO as. 47 cm. .83 eta. SATE" OF TRZIOLIT AT CANAL. To Philadelphia 80 cts.p or ton. • To New York c!.. For additional Near , Jideeriisernente se• Nat Page. They will tiere 'be found arranged tinder Beatable 'lleada.• ' • ASTROLOGY,. rp HE subscriber , having just arrived from Sweeden. 1 offers his services to the citizens of Philadelphia and its vicinity. That there are more things between heaven and earth than ever was dreamed ciL is dell,' made manifest by the ,Astrologer, C. W. ECBACH, whose miracies approach more neat those spoken of in the Scriptures. than any of latter days, by his daily performance of wonders unheard of in this country: yet quite familiar are thousands In Europe who have enjoyed his confidence. among which may be Mention ed Oscar, the pretexts Eine of Sweden, Louts POllll2. pe, and many of the English nobility and gentlemen of high rank, who have consulted him respecting lessee, by design or accident, arid who have been gratified Invoking the powers of the wonderful science which be has inherited from his ancestors. 'For; information of his powers to (once the result of law-Baits, and all undertaking. of hazard, and advice for the restoration of stolen property, and for the speedy cute of diseases of various kinds, heretofore considered Incurable by our best physicians. He is also prepared with a quantity of his celebrated Astrologer's Swedish convolution syrup, which is pro duchig such wonderful cures lin healing ukeratiOn ,of the Lungs from Consumption. More then 10,000 patents have been satisfactorily eared in Sweden by this won der ful remedy. Each bottle is accompanied with minute directions, and for sale stills I office. He would respectfully refer the sceptical, and all dim, to. • Mn_ ?do, id town street,between Mrs. Mary Miller, No. 3 Asbaned's court, between eth and 9th. and locust and Walnut stn. Mr. Jobb Blair, 1 3 Adams street, below Fitzwater. Mr. B. Allan, 317 North Id it. Mrs. E. M. Davis. 12 North 2d st. Mr. B. Johns, 16 Little Pine et. Mr, M. Johns, 16 Dean street, between Spruce and Locust and 6th and 9th ets Mr. J. Davies, 23 South 7th it. , Mr. B. Sanaron;73 Wood it., Kensinaton. Mr. Minten, No. 6 hunt st.,betwcen Lombard, South, sth and Bth. He has been consulted with by all the crowned heeds of Europe,and enjoys higher reputation as an Astrologer than any one living. The period of our birth Is generally marked with some peculiar circumstances. thsrffhas a visible effect on the conduct ol our lives, which Professor 'Whack will read and explain t o the astonishment and satisfaction of via- !tors. Re will answer all questions concerning Law suits, Marriages, Journeys, Voyages, and all'the con earns oClifei Terms. Ladles 50 cents. Gentlemen $l. Nativitten calculated and read In full; according to the oracles of masculine signs; Terms, Ladles*l ; Gentleman,gl 50.. Nativitles -calculated according to Geomaney ; for La dies. $2; In full, $3; Gentlemen, *3 ;In full, *5. Per sons at a distance can have their Natrlties by sending their day of birth: All letters containing the above f e will meet with Immediate attention, and sent to any part of the United States on durable paper, Office, No. 71 Locust . Street, between Eighth and Nihth, opnosite the Musical Fund Hall. Moors from 9 'A.M. to 10 P.M. C. Wt.; ROBACE, Astrologist. Philadelphia, Sept. 9, ISIS _ --- GREAT IMPROVEMENT N COOKING STOVES!-MOST'! HOT-AM AIR-TIGHT'COOKINO STOVE, 77.;:, FOR burning wood or coal —ln ofreting !•:- this stove to the public, the subscriber would briefly vete snme ofits advents- A. 4 gee over ail other stoves now in use in the United States Ist. It has a huger oven than any , other cast! Iron stove—two sizes larger at least. 2d. it has four places for boiling, and will boll all fcur at once. 3d. It wilt consume less fuel than any other anvil in use. and at the same time do double the cooking. The subscriber has snared no expense In getting up a stove that will please the public,ss the complaints ge nerally has been that the oven in , all other stoves was too small, and there was no convenient places for boil ing or roasting. Tins stove has other advantages, that every housekeeper will appreciate. This stove will be warranted for 30 days to dci all that is wanted of a clove, and that it will hot get out of order like most of the bombs, stoves which become useless in two or three months' use. Please call end examine and we are sure you will buy If you want i stove. • This Is the ankle for the country'. Stoves can either burn Anthracite or Bituminous coal or wood; it Is con fined to no one sort of fuel.- We have three sizes of . . them, the largest is large enough for the largest farmer's thmily. They will be sold wholesale or retail. Fine chance for stove dealers to make handsome profits on them. Those that buy the first lot sof stoves have the exclusive right of the town in whlcbthey carry on their business. Numerous recommendations can be seen at the store:. For tale by F. W. MOST. Stove Manufklturer, IS N. Sixth street, Philada. Philadelphia, Septil,'4B 37-3 m FALL. MILLINERY GOODS. JOHN STONE & SONS, Importers pad Dealers in Silks, Ribbons and Millinery Goods, No 4B South &road St.—TIIILSDA.. HAVE Just received, and are now opening a very rich assortment of FALL MILLINERY GOODS, such as Figured and Corded Bonnet Goods of new designs. Bonnet Satins of all Colors. Plain and Corded Velvets of all Colors. Fancy Bonnet and Cap Ribbons a large and beauti ful variety. French and American Flowers, all prices. Black Dress Silks, Bombazines, Fancy Laces, Quitlings. Fall Trimmings, Bonnet Crowns, Tips, Buckram', &c.. ace. - Also, a beautiful assortment of French Fancy Feath. ers from - the first manufactory In Paris., A large pro portion of the above goods being of , our qwn Importa tion. we are enabled to offer them at very low prices. Philadelphia, Seing 37.1 m-. BAYLIS & DHOOKER, - AUCTIONEERS. No. S Word Third Street, tbret door, abort Xarket Street —PHILADELPHIA..":. SALE EVERY\ EVENING, • • • , , OF lii - dwdre, Cutlery, Gunn. Pistols. and Fancy Goods. Commencing at 71 %. 3 V.,` - o'clock,and comprising a large assort • meat of Hardware, Cutlery, Boots, Shoes, &c. The attention of the country trade is Invited to these sales. All goods warranted to be as represented at the time of sale. Purchasers can have their goods peeked on the premises. Philadelphia, Septil:37-3rtio WINDOW - SHADES :1 WINDOW SHADES!! 011, , CLOTIL AND COACH CURTAINS, Jt Ills Foolery, N0..31 19 Front Street, Second Story, TA7INDOW Shades trom the lowest price to the high , 1' est, and cheaper than can be found in the City or elsewhere for the quality, and of various designs, vary ing in price from 37 els. a pair, up to y2O. Alan, Oil Cloth and Coach Curtains, at any price to suit the times and purchasers, of a superior quality,va eying in price from 30 cts. per yard to lll—from I of a yard wide to 11 yards wide. Any of the above'articies made to order at the short- est notice and op the most reasonable terms, any size that may be wanted. Those who are In want of any of the above articles will find it to their advantage to call and examine before purchasing elsewhere, as the sub scriber is determined to sell at the very lowest prices. ; Phlla..Sept9-37-Iyl ALONZO JOHNSON. SALAMANDER, FIRE, AND TRIER. PROOF CRESTS, Fire-proof Doors fur Banks and Stara, Seal and Let. ter Copying Presrea, Patent Slate-Lined Refrigera tors, Water Filters, Patent Portable Water Clo sets, intended for the sick and infirm. EVANS & WATSON, 76 South Third St., (opposite Muni/ads. Fscharrge,) MANUFACTURE and keep constantly on hand. a largo assortinent of the above articles, together with their patent Improved Salamander Fireproof Safes, which are so canstructed as to net at rest all man-. ner ofdoubt as to their being strictly fire-proof, and that they will realm the fire of any building. The outside cases of these safes are made of boiler iron, the inside case of soapstone, and between the outer ease and in ner case is a apace of some three,lnches thick, and is filled in with indestructible material, ao as to make it an Impossibility to burn any of the contents jnside of the chesP. These Soapstone Salamanders we are pre pared and do challenge the world to produce any article In the shape of Book Safes that will stand as much heat, and we hold °unwisee ready at alt times to have them fairly tented by public bonfire. . We aim continue to manufacture a large and general assortment of our Pre mium Air-tight Fire Proof Safes, of which there are over 800 now in rise, and in every 1n:42m0 they have ' given entire satisfaction to the purchasers—of which we will refer the public to a few gentlemen who have them In use. • Haywood & Snyder; Pottsville; Joseph O. Lawton, Pottsville; Mr. William Carr, Doylestown, Pa. N. &O. Taylor, 120 North 3d st.• A.Wright & Nepb. ew, Vine at. Wharf; Alexander bamr, Conveyancer. corner of Filbert and 9th sts.; John M. Ford, 32 North 3d et.; Myers Buse. 20 North 3d st.; James M. Paul, 101 South 4th et.; Dr David Jayne, 8 South 3 . 3 Matthew T. Miller, 20 South 3d at. ; and we coold name some hundred. of others if it were necessary. Now we Invite the attention of the public, and particularly those in warn of Fire Proof safes. to call'at our store before purchasing elsewhere, and we can satisfy them that they will get a better and cheaper article at our store than at any other establishment in the city. We also manufacture the ordinary Fire Pro'of Chests at ray low prices, cheaper than they can be bought at . any other store in Philadelphia. DAVID EVANS. JOAANNES WATSON. E l 45 1 25 1 00 140 125 1 25 Phils.,Sept9,'4P-37-1 CHINA HALL SEMINARY For low Ladies Situated on the River Delaware, three miles from Bur lingion and Bristol. TN THIS INSTITUTION, young ladles are thorough ' ly educated in all the brunches of English Literature and the Sciences—and those that 'desire It are offered superior advantages in the Ornamental branches of in struction. • No branch of Instruction In the elementary or higher departments of Science, is suffered to escape the attention of the pupil without its being practical?, understood ; the plan of instruction is such that ao lesson can be passed without the pupil being able to communicate it verbally, and otherwise grammatically. The school is well supplied with superior •Chemical and Phlinsophtcal apparatus. The charge for Boarding and Tuition. including wash ing and the use of English books, is Elf per session of 22 weeks, for young ladies over 14, yens of age; and 460 per session for ladles under 14 years—payable In advance. For Tuition In Languages, - •I 0 per session. dog Piano, 20 do do Vocal Music. 3 do 916,82.9 13 144,492 14 1,051,231 07 The duties of the school will bo Tesunsed the Purr or serf siesta. Address all eommanications to•BrIdgo. wafer P. 0., Bucks Co., Pa.,. post paid. The Steamtibat Bus touches at the wart attached to the premises, several times each day. SAMUEL Y. BUCEMAN. Principal. George Yerkes, No. 337, North Second SL,Philadelphla Jo',n Sturdevant, Congress Hall, do E. M. Paxson, Editor Daily News, do (Web Parker, Esq., Pottsville, Pa. Hon. A. IL Mcllvaln, West Chester. Dr. T. F. Belton, Germantown. C. S. Wilson, do P. FL Frees, do BenJ. T. Hallowell, Montgomely co John S. Brown, Esq,, Doylestown, Robert Longsbore, Bucks Co. Jonathan Magill, do William Watson,do, Joshua Beekman Bristol: Pottsville, Aug. 26, '49. Coal Screens Coal Screens !I ' 11E inscriber is extensively engaged in the mann factoryy of WOVEN WIRE SCREENS upon an improved and entirelynew prmeiple, for which he has secured LETTERS PATENT, and which be confident ly believes will be found upon trial, superior to every other screen in ace for durability and all the qualities . of a good screen. They are woven entirely of wire, and can be made with meshes and threads of any re quired visaged strength. WIRE WEAVING OP EVERY DESCRIPTION will be executed at the shortest notice, and screens made to every pattern, adapted to all the uses for which screens are required. t t subscriber has recently removed his estab• lisbroentt t Coal ffieet, near the corner orNor wegun street..;MlN& pettsre, April 4 MO 14- TOTAL. 277,57 S 00 PROCLARFA.TdON. AVEAS, in and by an Act of th e General Artie-m -bly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.•en ntkd. "An Act regulating ths General Elections within this Commonwealth, passed the 2d day of July, A. D., 1839," It is made the duty albs Sheritrof every coon and to give riublic notice of thellelection to be holden, lie elected:to n; ake h e o n w i n o n.s JOANsued notice noti ce T rui w t E o l g i c E e rs a. a n re igh to She/Worth° County of Schuylkill, do reeks thsawa.by this adeenisement to the elector, of said County of Schuylkill, that a GENERAL ELECTION will be held in the gall County. on Tuesday, the 12th day of Octo. ber next, at the several districts thereof, as follows, to wit: I. The electors of the Borough of.Orwlesburg, will bold their election at the Cotirt House, In shear:rough of Orwigsburg. ' I:The electors of all that' part of West Brunswick Township, lying and being's:cat of the Ibilowanz line: Commencing at thesand hole oaths Bobs County line; thence by a straight Ilse to the thrum of Samuel 11. Med tar, Including the same; thence to the farm of Williani Matz, excluding the same S.thence to the farm of George Mengel, now occupied by Peter Miller, including the same; thence to the house, of Jacob Petre,inclinlingthe same; thence by a straight line, passing near Abraham Fount's, on the Mechem Township line, shall hereafter form a separate election district , and the qualified ut terer, residing therein, shall hold their general elections at the public house•nf Samuel Boyer, In the town of Port Clinton, In said Township. 3. The elector* of West Brunswkk Township, not In cluded in the shove boundaries, will hold their general electrons as heretofore, at the Court House In the Bo rough of Orwigsburg. 4. The electors of East Brunswick Toweship, will hold their election at the house of Joshua Boyer, to the town of McKeansbure. 5. The electors of Pine Vivre Township, will bold their election al the house of Philip Koons, In the Btr rough of Pine Grove. The Borough of Pine Groves hereafter form a separate election district, and the quallfiedelectors thereof, shall hereafter vote at their' general elections In separate boxes I'M] the Township, at the house of Philip Koons. The quolidcd electors thereof. shall elect their officers annually at the time and place for electing judges and inspectors, for con ducting said elections agreeably to the provisions of the Act entitled, "An Act relating to elector, of tbis Com monwealth, passed the Id of July, 1629," and Its sup plements. 6. The electors of Wayne Township. will hold their election at the house of Leonard Shot!, innkeeper, In the town of Friednesburg. ' 7. The electors of Upper Mahantougo Township. will hold their elections et the house of John W. Hepler, in said Township. S. The electors of Barry Township, Including the house occulted by J. 0. Woolson, withhold their elec tion at the house of Francis Dengler, in said Township. 9. The electors of Porter Township, will bold their election at the-house of Jacob Heberling, Jr., in said Township. .10. The electers of Lower Habontoegofownship will hell their general election, at the house of Joseph Os man, in said Township. And the electors of Franey Township will-hold their elections as berate:ore, at the house of Joseph Osman, aforesaid. 11: The elector, of Wert Penn Township, will hold their election at the house now occupied by, Jacob Schwartz, in said Township. 12. The electors of Union Township, will hold their election at the house oY.lohn Eisenhower, in said town. ship. 13. The electors of Rush Township, will hold their electioa at the house now occupied by William Kaup, inokeepee, In said Township. The electors of the Borough of Minerswille,•will hold their elect ion at the house now occupied by Michael Weaver, in said Borough. 15. The electors of Blythe Township will hold their election at the house of Joseph Balliet, in, the town of hi iddiepot t. 16. The qualified elector, of Schuylkill Township will hold their electiou at the house of widow Bensinger. in said Township. 17. The Township of Norwegian will hereafter form a separate election district, and the electors thereof hold their election at the public house of Ira Lake, at Deer Park, in said Township. • IS. The qualified electors of Branch Townghip,,will hold their general electienres heretofore, at the house now occupied by Philip Nehru, In the town of Llew. ellyn. 19. The electors of Eut Norwegian Township will hold their elections at the Port Carbon house, in the town of Port Carbon. 20. Alt the qualified electors .of the South Ward in the Borouth of Pottsville, shall hold their elections at the public house of Wm. Matz, in-said ward. 21. The North Ward in the Borough of Pottsville, ly ing eastwardie of Cc nt restreetehall be called the "North East Ward," and the qualified electors thereof shall bold their general elections at the house of Maxamillith Drerflinger, in said Borough 22. The North Ward In the Borough of Pottsville, ly- Ing westwardly of Centre street, shall be called the "North West Ward," and the qualified electors thereof, shall hold their general elections at the hoses now oc cupied by Nathaniel]. Mills. 23. That part of the Township of North Mantielmt yang north of the summit ofthe Second mountain, ohall form another and a separate election district, and the quali fied voters residing - within the hounds thereof, shall hereafter hold their general elections at the "Mount Carbon 114.1e1;• in said Township. 21. The electors of that part of North hlaniteim Tow n ship, eastwardly a aline commencing at the house of Philip Di umbel ler %nice to the house of George Del bert; thence to tiresome et John Betz; thence to the house of Robert Jones ; thence to the Schuylkill Town ship line, will hold their election at the Coun 'louse, in the.Bnrough of Onvigsburg. ' 23. The Township of South Manheltn, shall hereafter form a separate election district, and the qualified vo ters thereof, shall hereader hold their general elections at the public house now occupied by George. Reber. G. The electors of the remaining part of North Man heim Township, will hold their election at tho house of Samuel Beard, (Washington hotel,) innkeeper, in the Borough of Schuylkill Haven. The Borough of Schuyl kill Haven. hereafter forms a separate election district, and the qualified voters thereof shall hereafter vote at the general elections in separate boxes from the town ship at the house of Samuel Beard. The qualified elec tors thereof Abell elect their officers annually at the time and place for electingjulges and Inspectors, fur conduct ing said elections agreeably to the provisions of the Act, ea titled, "An Act relating to the electors of this Com monwealth, passedthe second of July, one thousand, eight hundo•d and thirty-sine," and its supplements. • 27. The electors of the borough of Tamaqua, will hold their election at the school house in said borough. 26. The electors of Tremont Township will hold their 'election at the house of Samuel Hippie, inthe town of. Tremont. 29. The electors of New Comte Township will held their election at the public house of Washington Reif 'nyder, in the town of New Castle. • At which time and places are to be 'elected by the freemen of the county of Schuylkill r Oat PERSON for. Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Ott Pinson for Canal Commissioner. One Pouros to represent the Congressional Diutsict composed of the Counties of Schuylkill. Dauphin, and Lebanon, In the Congress of the United States. • Two PERSONS for Members of the Ilopse of Repre sentatives or the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Osg PERSON for Prothonotary and Clerk of the Courts of Oyer and Terminer and Quarter Sessions, for the County of Schuylkill. ONE PERSON for Register, Recorder, and Clerk of the Orphans' Court for Schuylkill County. ONE PERSON for County Commissioner. One Pgason for Director of the Poor. . Oat Pusan for County Auditor. The general election to be opened between the hours of and3lo o'clock in the forenoon, and shalt continue. without interruption or adjournment until 7 o'clock In the evening, when the pulls shalt be closed. In porsuante of an Act of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania entitled "An Act relating to theelectione of this Commonweetth," par aid the second day of July, A. D., 1839, Mike Is here- by siren: "That the Inspectors and judges, chosen ail aforesaid, shall meet at the respective places appointed for hold ing the election in the districts to which they rempec lively belong, before slim o'clock in the morning of the second Tuesday In Octnber, In each and every year, and each of said inspectors shall appoint one clerk, who shall be a qualified voter of such district. " In ease the person who shall have received the Sec ond highest number of votes for Inspector, shall not attend on the day of eleettrm. then the person who 'shall have received the second highest number of antes for Judge at the next preceding election, shall act as inspector In his place. And In case the person who , shall have received the highest number of votes for in ' Spector shah not attend. the person elected judge shall appoint an Inspector In his place; and in case the per son elected judge shall not attend, then the Inspector who received the highest number of votes shall appoint a judge in his place; and if any vacancy shall continue in the board for the space of one hour after the time flied by law for the opening of the election, the quail- Bed voters of the township, ward, Or district, for which I such officershall have been elected, present at the place of election, shall elect one of their number to fill such vacancy., "Italtall be the duty of said assessors respectively, to attend at the place of holding every general. special, or township election, during the whole time said elec tion is kept open, for the purpose rallying information to the inspectors and judges.when called on in relation , to the right of any person assessed by them to vote at such election, and such other Matters In relation to the ents of voters as thesaid inspectors or Judge, or either of them, shill, from time to time, require. "That no person shall be permitted to vote at any election as aforesaid, other than a white freeman of the age of twenty-one years or more, who shall have ree -1 ded within the state at least one year, and in the nee ' clan district where he offers to vote at levt ten days lob mediately preceding such etc etion,and within two years paid a state orcounty tax, which shall have been asses sed at least ten days before the election. But a citizen of the United States, who had previously been a quail ded voter of this state, and removed therefrom and re turned, and who shall have resided In the election dis trict, end paid taxes as aforesaid, shall be entitled to a vote after residing in this state 5 months ; Provided that the *bite freeman. citizen of the United States. who had previously been a qualified voter of this stale, and removed therefrom and returned; and who shall have resided in the election dtstrict, and paid taxes as afore said. shall be entitled to vote alter residing In this state six months; provided, that the white freeman citizen, of the United States, between the ages of twenty-one and twenty•two years, and having resided in this state one year, and In the election -district ten days afore said, goal be entitled to vote, although they shalt not have paid taxes. "No person shall he permitted to vote whose name is not contained In thrtissof taxable inhabitants An ointed by the, Commlasioners as aforesaid, unless first he prodnees a sculpt for the payment within two year*, ofa elate or county tax assessed arreeably to the eon stlinikm. and give satisfactory evidence, either on' hie own oath, or affirmation of another, that he has paid such a tax, or, on failure to produce a receipt, shall make oath to the payment thereof; or second, if he claims a rigid to vote by being an elector between the ages of twenty-one and twenty-two years, he shall de- I pose, on oath or affirmation. that by has resided to the state at least one year next before hb application and make such proof of residence in the distnct i It s re pelted by this let, and that he does verily believe from the account. giving him that he is of the age aforesaid, and give such other evidence as is required by this act, whereupon the name albs person so admitted to vote shall .ba inserted In the alphabetical list by the inepee• tors, and a note made opposite thereto by writing the word "tax" if he shall be admitted to vats by reason of having paid a tax, or the word "age," If be shall be admitted to vote on aecouneof his age, and in either case the reason of sueh.vote shall be called our to the clerk., who shall utak It In the list of voters kept by them. - "In all eases where the name of the person claiming to vote is not friend on the list •ftirnistted by the com missioners and assessor, or hie right to vote, whether found thereon or not, Is objected to by any qualified citizen, It shall be the duty of their inspectors to exam. Ine such person OR oath as to his qualifications. and If be ealms to hate resided within that state for one year or more, his oath shall be sufficient proof thereof, but he shall make proof by at least one competent witness, who shall be squalled dexter, that he has resided with in the district for more than ten days next Immediately preceding said election, and shall also himself swear that his bona fide residence, in pursuance of his Awful calling, to within the district and that be did not remove in the said district for the purpose creating therein. "Every poison qualified as nforesald.and who shall maks due proof If required, of residence and payment of taxes, asarclesald , shall be permitted to vote in the township, ward, or dharks in which he shall reside. • "lf any person shall prevent or attempt to prevent act otter du glutton under OW act trom holding rash Cellos, orate or threaten any stance to any md 4ib, back of E 3112 such officer. or shah interrupt 'or Improperly Interfere 'with him in the execution of his duty, or &hall block up or attempt to block the window or avenue to any win doww here the same may be holden, or shall riotously disturb the peat:eat such election ,nt atall Ole or prac tice any intimidation, threats, force, or violence, with design to influence unduly overawe any Order, or to prevent him from voting, or to restrain the freedom of choice, such person on conviction shall be lined 'in any sum not exceeding Bye hundred dollars tied, be im prisoned for any time not less than one nor more than twelvemonths. And if It shall be shown to the court where the trial of such offence shall be had that the person so offending was not a nwident of the city, ward. district, or township, where the said offence WA] com mitted. sod not entitled to a vote therein, then on con viction, he shall besentenced to pay a fine of not less than one hundred dollars, and be imprisoned not less .than six months not tutore than two years: "If any person orpersoits stall make any betor wager upon the result of any election within this Common. wealth, or shall offer to make any such betwager, either byverbal proclamation thereof, or by any written or printed advertisement ; challenge Or invite any person or persons to make such bet or wager, upon conviction thereof be or they shall forfeit and pay three times the amount so bet, or offered to be bet. “The judges are to make theft returns for the county of Schuylkill, at the Court Rouge In Orwiesburg, on Friday,the lath day of October, A. D., 1848. , *- Given undermy hand and-real at he .berifftioffice at Orwigsburg, and dated September 11th, In the year of our Lord, one thousand, eight hundred, and. forty, sir, and seventieth year of tho Independence of the United' States of America. God tart the Coviewerrattk. JOAN T. %VERNER, Sheriff. Sheriff'. Otheec,Onvies • burg, Sept. and- 1849. J 37—.% TO ENGIN HERS,MACHINISTIIit AND OTHERS. I.RU Chesapeak and Delaware Canal Company de sign to have built. at Chesapeake City, the western debouch of their final, a Steam Pump. or other Mach inery, capable of lifting into the Canal at an elevation of sixteen feet from Broad Creek, in the %est mannerAs regards efficiency and economy, two hundred thousand cubic. feet of water per hoar. The Company invite Engineers; Machinists, and cohere to offer plans for the abort work, to be accom panied with drawings and descriptions, and estimates of the daily cost of fuel and attendance: they will also receive front such persepsiPropoests, for building and fitting up the Machinery' if detruble to the party fur nishing the plans respectively offered. The plans to be delivered at the Aire of the Com pany, under seal, before the second day of October next. at which time they will he opened and judged of by the Board of Directors, as follows. viz: For the plan which may be adjudged etas best a pre mium of three handreddoollare will be paid. For the next best plan* premium nftwo hundred dot lars, and fur any others which the Company may choose to retain, one hundred dollars each. The Company will ' return, under seal, to tha parties rrapectiliely, all take other plans. Any iniormat ion requirgd will be Arrnished on applica tion a: the Office of the Company. No. GO} WALNUT street, Palladelphia. . . Aug. 13-811 C. NEWBOLD. Jr..Prealdent: !The Youth's Friend and the Teacher's comfort.' COLUMBIAN SERIES OF ARITHMETICS. Our ern Country—our eiej. curriney--ond our own Books. The attention of Teachers, Scheel Directors, Parents. Merchant., and the Publiejgenerally, is called to • series of Aritiuneticx prepared with great care by Mr. Almon Ticknor. a Teacher of upwards of twenty-fivo year.' ex perience. They arc called-;- THE COLUMBIAN. CALCULATOR. THE YOUTH'S COLUMBIAN CALCULATOR. A complete KEY to the above works to ho had separate or together. TICKNOR'S ARITIDIETIC TABLES. Tho first named is already introduced into some of the best Academies, and a large number of School., where its use has given universal oat:Realm; both to Teachers and Pupils. It has the claim of being purely Amerman in its character, based upon our own beautiful decimal system of currently; and to considered by Teachers as the begin ning of a new era in the beginning of science, by rejecting the old English system (front which nearly all our present Arithmetics are copied) of confining the pupil for years In the processor reducing pounds faJitreAinsrs, and farthings is pounds. This book is strongly recommended by the lion. Thomas H. Burrowes, the late able Superintendent of, and r..ther of our Commtin School System, as one of the best AritliniZte4 In the Market. It is also recommend ed by Mr. Olmstead, Pra.. - .40r of Mathematics in Liday- Eno College; Mr. Stoover, PritiClVel of the Preparatory Department of Gettysburg College; toget.::::f With several hundred Professors and Teachers in various oecil'lLl Of the country. No Arithmetic published in the United States bus such a host of recommendations from practical teach ers. See Primary Book, which only contain a portion.— n erh cdeapct Aridanctic in tar neerku. THE YOUTILIS COLUMBIAN CALCULATOR, by the same author, has juet been issued. It contains 94 pages, with about 000 examples for solution on the elate; igem braces the fundamental rules. Compound rtules,Sinecand Compound Reduction, Single Rule of Three, of Propor tion, ste.' Teachers who have examined this woik are of the opt nion that ills just what Is very . much wanted rat this time In our District Schools as a Prlmary Arithmetic for those commencing the study of numbers, for the reason that those Primary Books heretofore in use are either too ju• vanile or, too far in eidvance for the pupil ; in fact, that there has been no suitable Primary Treatise on Arithmetic before the public. It Is oleo believed that this volume will contain a suthcient amount of PAACTICAL Annutorte, as will commonly occur in the tranmetion of ordinary bus ness—more varticularly in the FrmaleDepnrtrnent of our District Schools, mouy of whom seldom learn the lase at numbers as fur as Reduction or Proportion; and as the work La intended in part for this class of pupils, great care and labour have been bestowed with a view to render every part perfectly plain and easy of comprehension by the pupil. '1 be calculatious are in "our currency," with the use a t a few fractions, sufficient fur general use, as a knowledge of fractions can be acquired from the larger volume. • The KEY embraces several hundred examples Arith tactic and Mensuration, and other valuable matterfor the use of the teacher. The examples are given in full, with notes. explanations, illustrations, demonstrations, &c. TIOEICHUS AIIITILMETICAL TABLES, is designed for the use of younger classes in the Schools of the United Mates. This Book is now published for the find time, and is considered by competent judges the best Table Book in ,4 the marks . . These v umes contain about threetliourand six hundred meatiest. itestions fur solution; a greater amount of Arithmetic ,Science than has ever been published in the name space In this any other country, and are destined to become the text hooks of the Union, being purely Ame rican' is their character, and adapted equally 'to the wants of the student, the man of businera the mechanic, and the artisan. SaeThey ought to be introduced imtnediatelyinto every Common School in the Union. nrThee banks are for sale, wholesale and retail, nt Itrutifer, Hayes & Co., Market at. Philadelphia. Daniels & Smith, Fourth Ind Arch,. do. W. A. Leary, Second-et, - do. J. B. Smith & Co.. South Eighth it. do. E. W. Earl, Reading. B. Connao, Pottsville. D. Robinson, Harrisburg. J. Gish & Co.,"Lancaster. N. Rank, Lebanon. Enron & En g lish. Pittsburg. E. D. Truman, Cincinnati. . J. W. Randolph & Co., Richmond, Va. And by the Booksellers generally throughout the United Suites, where-Teachers and School Directors are respect. oily requested to call and examine the Hooks for them selves. HENRY C. OLIV THRSAD AND NEDDLE STORE hi, 178 Chesnut 5 ,oboes Secerita,—Parleda/phia. KEEPS constantly on hand the largest and best as• snrtment of Zephyr and Tapestry , Worsted, Can vas, Steel Beads. Bag Clasps, Tasse'e, Purse Rings, plain and shaded Purse Twist, Crotches Bags, Purse., Sewing Silk, Spool Cotton, Patent Thread, Needles, Pins Tidy cotton, Knitting Pins, Silk and Fancy But tens, Taped,. Silk, Cotton,, Worsted and Linen Snail's, Embroideries, Perfumeries, and t general as sortment of English, French, and American Fancy gloods. Also,sole agent for BRINCHURST'S CELEBRATED HAIR' MIXTURE, for removing dandruf f and dressing the hair, giving it a flue glossy appearance, being deci dedly the best Article now an one—cheap for cash— ' wholesale and retail at the THREAD AND NEEDLE STORE, No. 128 Chesnut Street, Philadelphia. Philadelphia, Sept. 4,'46 3B-11mo ' CARPETS AND OIL CLOTHS, At Eldridge's Cheap Carpet Store. DEMONS wishing to buy Carpets and 011 Cloths 1. very cheap, will find It greatly to their advantage to call on the subscriber, as he it under • very low reek, and tits other expenses are so light that be is ena bled to Bell goods, wholesale and retail, at the lowest prices in the city, and he ufrers a very choice anon went of Beautiful imperial, 1 , . igfeellini:lerligiri:iinn'ao. CARPETS. Veoluans of all kindsi And Oil Cloths from 210 24 feet wide, to cut for rooms, halls, &e. with a great variety of low priced Ingrain Carpets, from 25 to 50 cants, and Stair and Entry Car. pets, from 10 to 50 cents per yard. Also Hearth Rom Table Coven, Floor Cloths. Cotton and Rag Carpet, &c. 11: 11. ELDRIDGE, No. 41 Strawberry street, one door above Chesnut, aug2o 35 3m , near Second—Philadelphia. - NIQY MUSIC. Welcome Home, Song. . - , . The Melodies of Many Lands, Song. , Coale Back Sieben, Negro Cavatina. , When Stars are in the Quiet Skies, Song! • Indian Hunter Quick Step."? Rail Road Steam Gallop.. Wire Bridge do Mephista Gallopade. , • . . Dearest Mae, arranged as an easy Rondn.' Lindianna, or Jenny Lind's Dream Waltz. , La Barceuse, a Brilliant Waltz. Pick Pocket Quadrille. Together with a large assortment of thlnwest and most admired songs, &c. for sale at . BA ."AN'S , 31-] Cheap Book and Variety Stores. • NE:w - LUMILIEIC 'YARD; - 7 - J.HE subset Bier begs leave to Inform his friends and ' the public in general, that be has opened a Board and Lumber Yard. at the corner of High .Street and Mount Carbon Railroad, in Potuwille, above Haywood & Sn 3 der's 'Foundry ; where be will keep a constant assortment of Oak, Hemlock, Pine.and Poplar Lumber. Having three Saw-mills running,. he flatters hirusel that he will be enabled to supply his friends with any description of lumber for mining nr building purposes, on the most reasonable terms, and by she prompt at tention tiv their orders ensure a continuance of their favors... [jitay2o 21-ly] WM. STEPHENSON. Aag. 19, TO BUILDERS AND CARPENTERS. frlIE subscriber begs leave to inform his friend, and J. the pubblic in general, that be has purchased the Lumber Yard, formally owned by Zinn dr. Wilt, at Schuylkill Haven, opposltethe Farmer's Bank. Where be intends to keep constrintly on band a full assortment of seasoned Susquehaana Lumber, consisting of white and *yellow pine boards. Weather boards, pannel boards and plank, from I to 2 inches thick, and door stiles l; to 1l in thick, 6 in. wide. Hemlock pike and scantling,Joint and lap shingles. Plastering Lath, &a with a few thousand feet of seasoned Ash Flank from l to 3incbes thick; all of which be will Bell on the most reasonable terms. He would most respectfully Invite all purchasers to call and examine for themselves, before buying elsewhere. . DAVID D. LEWIS. August lb, '49. 33.tf NEW BOOKS A Whim and its Consequences, by G P.R.James, 23 The Cabin Boy, or Life on the Wing, a Story of Fortune's Freaks and Fancies, by Lieut. Murray, 25 Lena Canteron,or the Four Slsters.comPisie in one volume, by Ws. Grey, 25 The Orphan Neice, a Novel la three volumes com plete in one, never before published in this coun try, by Miss Ellen Pickering, 23 The Spanish Beauty, or the Cruise of the Gentile a Nautical Tale, by Frank Byrne, ; • 25 Brageloine, the Son of Athos, or Ten Tears Later,_ being the conclusion or the Three Guardsmen. . a netwenty Years Aftef,ar lib spirited e ogravinp, complete, by Alexandre Dumas, • 75 'or sale at . BANNAN'S Cheap Bookstore. Pottsville. Sept. 2 - 36. FAMILIAR DIALOGUES. Avery interesting Book for Sunday Schools. jest pubtishedand for sale at the subscriber's Book storm Pottsville. Subscribers erUi please call and pro cure their copies. B. BANNAN. Boabeller and Stationer. P. S.—diubselitterata Miaehrrille and vicinity, can procure the ttcroky frezeiNz, WM. Crltatoom jarE l .l9o. - • DEL. TOWNS END'S COMPOUND EXTRACT OF SARSAPARILLA. , Sender and Husk" of the ago. Th e sett extramdies• rpXedicies is the ...arid. Tilts extract is pat ep in part &atlas: oh times cheaper pleat aster. and warraitted superior to any • pelt/ R aura lei/A.2 essairrez Ferrier, sicttniay or ichi:i atm: t e Patient. T HE great beauty and superiority of this Sersaph. rale over all other medicine is, that while it eradi cates OM:disease, it invigorates tte body. It is one of the very best sprintand summer mealtime ever known; it not only oblides the wbule system, and strengthens the person, built resales env, pore muf rich deed: a power pouessed by, no other medicine. And In this Iles the grand secret of its wonderful mamma. it has performed within the last dye verve, more than 100.000 cures of severe eases of disease at tract 15,000 were considered incurable. It lies sailed the thee of more than 5.000 children during the two rest seasons. 10,000 CASES OF GENERAL GEBILIry AND - t WANT OF NERVOUS ENERGY. • , '—Dr.TownsetiTa Sarsaparilla imigorates the whole 'Timm permanently.. To those who. hate 101 l their m xacular energy by the effects of rnedicineor Indiscre tion committed in youth, or the excessive indulgence of the passions, and brought on a general physical prostration of the nervoussystem.. lassitude, want of ambition, fainting sensations, premature decay and decline. hastening towards that fatal disease, Consump tion, canbe entirely restored by thin pleasant remedy. This Sarsaparilla is far superior to any INVIGORATING CORDIAL As It renews and Invigorates the system, gives activity to the limbs, and strength to the macular svitem, in most aaaaa ordinary , degree.' CONSUMPTION CURED. Cleanse end strengthen. Consumption can be mired. Bronchitis, Consumption, Liver Complaint, Golds, Ca tarrh, Coughs, asthma, Spitting of Blood. Eortmets lu the Chest, hectic Plush, Night Sweats, Difficult or pm fuss Expectoration, Pain in the Side, &c have been and can be cured. SPITTING BLOOD. Aim Pork, April 2.9.1847. Dr. Townsend—l verily believe that your Barmpa• villa has been the mean., through Providence. of env. Mg my life. I have for several years hada bad Cough. It became worse and worse. At last I raised large quantities of blood, had night Sweats, sod was greatly debiliated and reduced, and did cot expect to live I have only used your Sarsaparilla a short tirne,and there has been a wonderful ehango wrought it, me. I am now . - . . able to walk all over the city. 1 raise no blood. and my cough has left me. You can well imagine t heti am thankful for these results. Your WM. servant, WM. RC9uEI.L,Gi Catherine-et. 1111EI1MATIS31. • - This is only one of more than fror thousand eases of Rheumatism that Dr. Townseud's Saresparilla has eared. The most severe and chronic cares ars weekly eradicated by Its extraordinary virtues. • JanteaCnmminirs, Esq., one of the assistants In the Lunatic Asylum, Blackwell's Island, is the gentleman spokeu of In the following letter a Marta:roll', Wand. dent. 14, Idl7. Dr. Townsend—Door Sir : I have Antlered terribly for nine years - with the Rheumatism, considerable of the timel could not eat. sleep or walk. 1 bad the ut most distressing pains, and my limbs were terribly swollen. I have riled four bottles of your Sdrsaparil is, end they have done me more than one thousand dollars worth of good. I ammo much better —indeed I am entirely relieved - . You are at liberty to use this for tbefbenefit of the afflicted. Yours, respectfully, MMENINEI Dr. Townsand not having tested his Sarsaparilla In eases of Fits, of course never recommended it, and was surprised to receive the following from an intelligent and respectable Fanner i 1:1 Westchester County. ' - /knives's' August 13, ISM Dr. Towsend—Dear Sir: shave a little girl seven years of age, who has been 'several yeari afflicted with Fits; we tried almost everything for .her but. without success ; at last, although we could find no recommen• dation in our circulars for cases like hers, we thought, as she was In very delicate health, we would give her some of your Sarsaparilla, and are very glad wo did, for it not only restored her strength, but she i 13.1 nu raturii of the fits, to our great pleasure and surprise. She is fast becoming rugged.and hitarty, fur which we feel grateful. Yourf, respectfully, JOHN BUTLER, Jr. =a! - Dr. Towsend'a Samsun SIM to a sovereign and a speedy cure for Incipient Consumption, Barrenness,, Prolapsus Uteri, or Palling of the Womb, Costiveness, Piles, Leucerrhees, or Whites. obstructed or dttlicult Menstruation, Incontinence of Urine, br invotuntry dlxcharge thereof, and for the general prostration of ,t•e system—no matter whether the result of inherent eau,e f-auses, produced by irregularity, illness or ac cident. Notia4 can be more surprieing than Its invig orating effects on the L .- ZS= frame. Persons all weak ness and lassitude, from taking !t. at once become robust and full of energy under Its itilluenEc. it immediately counteracts the nervelessness of the feniZie frame, which to the great cause of Barrenness. It will W..: be expected of us, In cases of so delicate a nature, to ex; hlbit certificates of cures performed, but we can assure the afflicted, that hundreds of eases have been report ed to us Thousands of cases where families have been without children, alter uatog a few bottles of this in valuable medicine, have been blessed with fine, healthy offspring. TO MOTHERS AND MARRIED LADIES. This extract of Sarsaparilla has been expressly pre pared in referenue to female complaint.. No female who has reason to suppose she is approaching that era cal period, "The turn of Wt." should neglect to take it, as it is a certain preventive for arty of tLe numer ous and horrible disemms which female., are subject at this time of lite. This period may be ilM s aysti for several years by using this medicine. Noe It less valuable fur those who are approaching womanhood, as lice!rotated to assist nature, by quickening the blood and invigorating the system. Indeed, tins medicine is Invaluable for all the delicate disease. to which women are subject. - It braces the whole system, renews permanently the natural energies, by removing the onputities of the body, not so fur stimulating as to produce subsequent relazatiti, which is the case of mac! medicines:taken for female weakness and disease. lip using a fete bot tles of this medicine, many severe and painful surgical operations may - be prevented. GREAT lILESdING TO 510THERII - ANS CIII4.DREN. • It Is the safest and most effectual medicine for puri fying the systemond relieving the sufferingsattendant upon child•birlt ever discovered. It strengthens both the mother and child, prevents p.tin and disease, in- creases and enriches the food, these who have need it think it Is indispensable. It Is highly useftil both be fore and after confinement, as it prevents diseases at tendant upon childbirth—in Costiveness,Piles, Cramps, Swelling of the-Feet, Despondency. Heartburn, Vomit. log, Pain in the Back and -Loins, False Pains, He morrhage,and in regulating the secretion, and equali zing the circulation 'tins no equal. The great beauty of this medicine is, it is always safe, and the grout deli. cate use it most successfully, very few cases require any other medicine, In some a little Castor Oil, of Magnesia, is useful. Exercise in the open air, and light food with ibis medicine, will always ensure a safe and easy confinement. HEALTH AND BEAUTY. Cmimetiee, chalk, and a variety of preparations gen erally le'use, when applied to the face, very soon spoil It of its beauty. They close the pores of the skin. and check:the circulation, which,when nature is not thwart ed by disease or dowdcr. or the skin inflamed byTthe alkalies used In coupe, beautifies its own production in the •human face Divine,' as well as in the garden of rich and delicately tinted and vericated flowers. A free. active and healthy circulation of the fluids or the coursing of the pure, rich " blood to the extremities, is that which Inverts the indeseribable shades and theh es of loveliness that ell admire,"but long can describe. This beauty is the of:ramie. of sature—not of powder or ,soup. If there Is not a tree and healthy circulation there ono beauty. If the lady is fair as driven snow, if she paint and use coemetics, and the 4t.ad is thick cold and impure, she is not beautibil: If she be brown or yellow, and there is pure and active blood, it gives a rich bloom to the cheeks, and s brilliancy to their, eyes that is fascinating. l This Is why the southern, and especially the Spanish ladies, are so much admired. • Ladies In tha north who take but little exercise, or are confined inlose rooms, or have spoiled their, complexion by the a plication of deleterious mixtures; if they', 'w ish to regain elasticity of step, buoyant spirits, sparkling eyes end beautiful complexions, they should use Dr. Townsend's Santa. patina: 'Thousands who have tried it. are more than satisfied, are delighted. Ladles of every station, crowd our office daily. • NOTICE TO'TTIE LADIES. a Sarsaparilla, have Those thal Imitate Dr. Townsend' invariably_called their sierra great remedy far females, &r., to., and have copied our hills and circulars, which relates to,the complaints of women, word for word—other men who put up medicine, have, since the great success of Dr. Townsend's Sarsaparilla in. complaints incident to females, 'recommended theirs, although previously they did not. A number of these Matures, Pills, &c, are injurious to females, as they aggravate disease, and undermine the constitution. SCROFULA CURED. This certificate conclusively prince that this-Horse patina has pet Ica control over the most - obstinate dis eases of the Blood- Three persons cured iu one house is unprecedented. THREE CHILDREN.. Dr. Townsend—Dear Sir: I have the pleasure to in form you that three of my children have been Cured of the Scrofula by the use of your excellent medicine. They were afflicted very severely with bad Sores; have taken only four bottles; it tank them away, for which I feel myself undergreat obligations. Yours, respectfully, F. ISAAC W. CRAIN, Ina Wooster-st. aia‘c OPINIONS OF PHYSICIANS, Dr. Townsend is almost daily receiving orders from Physicians in different parte of the Union. This is to certify that we, the undersigned,Thyalcians of the City of Albany, have In numerous cases prescri bed Townsend's Sarsaparilla, and believe it to be one of the most valuable preparations in the market. ii. P. PULLING,II. D. J. WILSON. M. D. R. 11. RIZICOS, N. D. I'. E. ELMENDORF, CAUTION. Owing to the great success and immense sale of Dr. Townsend's Sarsaparilla, a timber of men who were formerly our Agents, have commenced making Sarsa parilla Extracts, Elixirs. Bitters, Extracts of. Yellow Dock, &c. ' They generally put it up in the same shaped bottles, and soots of them have stole and copied our ad vertisements, they are only worthless imitations, and should be avoided 1116 any, Apia I. '97 Principal Office, 125 FULTON Street, Sun Burbling. N. Y.; Redding & Co., 8 State street, Boston; Dyott & Sone, In North Second 'street. Philadelphia; S. S. Dance, Druggist, Baltimore; P. M. Cohen. Charleston: Wright & Co. Lit Chartres street, N. 0.. 1115 , South Pearl street, Albanys; and by all the principal Druggists sad Merehants gene:llly throughout the United States, West Indies and the,Canerdas: • • - Ce The General Agency for the sale of the Sarsapa rilla in Schuylkill County, is at Banana's Bookstore. Pottsville, where Druggists and others can be supplied wholesale at the Manufacturers prices. h Ia also for note in Pottsville it John G. Bniwn.s. Clemens & Perrin's, John S. C. Martin's, and J. C. C. Hughes's Drug Stores; E. J. Fry, Tamaqua ; J. B. Falls, Minenaville ; C. Frailey, Orwlgsburg ; Henry 'shhislar, S. M. Kemptis, and W. 1.. Heisler, Fort Cu ban ; Paul Barr, Flnegrove. . (July 8.'49. SI& E=I=INI NtrADE of pare Cream, and highly flavored. always L on hand and for sale at the Drug and Confection ary store of the subscriber. whir:l:twill be served to cup. tomer' during every day and evening. Families parties and pleasure excursions furnished at short notice. Give us a call. We are always ready and much pleased to wait on our friends and customers gen June y erallr 30IIN B. C.. MARTIN r 11 . • . t AA GOOD CHANGE CI.ChiI,FRON *7OO TO *l.OOO A YEAR. Agent* weated,in every Town and County in the I.ln to selPideuratnev; aid as Periodical Works." universally allenowledged to be the best nod cheapest ever ottblistied, u they ter, minty aro the moat saleable. Any. mire agent way clear .500 or Itl,ooll a year. A rub 'repeal of 833 or *SO will be necessary. nit oattletelar* of the Pisa plea and pronto of the agency w lithe rein on applies lion, either personally or by letter. The postage mast in all cans be paid. Please to address RODEDT BEARS. rablhher, Ico. Nasau Si.. New Tort.. DNewspspers copying the above. (iorkidleg this notice.) and giving H sight insertions. shalt IMO* any one of the boundvottnnes, which retail at IR gre 26, An vocal Sired ority ova paper direteied as atom. - vil 1841. • - ' Pi.. At IMI stscript. elegraphle Correspondent. HE LATEST IHO!dENT: 1, Prom our NEWS TO t witADELPtite, Sept. sin. I_` . 6 o'cleek.P. N.(' Theis is an irproved demand far flour, aol prices rings from $5,75 i 5,67.5 far ezport:—s des closing fi rM., F r city use good and extra blindly are worth $6 a 6, O. Rye fl our is firmly held at $4. Corn meal as advanced to $ 3.25. Wheat is in request tut 1 6e • 120 c a 122 cents per bushel. ,Corn is wanted a 1 1 68 aTO ets. by weight. Oats are worth 36 eta, pet bushel. : Whiskey if Up tot 20 eta. per gallon in Ws. . OPT ELECTION VER Ine have been received 60123 this St the Whigs brie swept every v . ',:they have gained. upwards a Of the Legislature. end their iotly will be es ttnit to one Loco , his is the way oh Zach is going ; heie 4a(Lei•at rota, State to show- t. thing before the. or twelve mem. majority is that foes doe-faeri.- to fix. 'era every 1, 1 L 13' u lithES. • I • Berke County flare nominated' • Congress, end Wm. Graff, C. liertolet, and Wm. Trexler for The Whigs . ° Peter Adams fo Harrison, line Assembly. eZ!Bets on t e Kentucky Election.—WY o urt.: derstand drat th Democros in Washington city hate lost $5O 000 on the Kentucky Gubernatorial' election. Boyd, it is said, lost $6.000: The bets ranted from OA to 5,1300 majority for Crittenden. and of mine the backers of Critten den hare won all. The: boasting, of the Loccee. co central committee ed Kentucky has been a sore business to their friends shroud.—[Louisville Journal. , ----- BURDEN'S PATENT HORSE SHOES OMADE OE THE best refined American Iron, . on, for naleatAbout the same prices °Me Iron in tinr,heing a sat int of about. too pd cent to the finrchaner. All shoes told. ar warranted.-and if not satisfactory. can be . returned and the money will be refunded. DRAT & BROTMER. 42 Walmit in.. Dhilada. 'L WantIVERY AP:t.4 BOOK.—The Menses of I.Womet,ttielr (imself and cure timillatly explainud with Practical Ilium for their Prevention and fur the Preservation of Health. hy F. UOLLICK. price $l. Formate at [Nnv2o] BAN:CAN'S ilookstorem , • , NEW BOOKS. Mysteries and Miseries of New York, Fart 5 25 The Deaf ittpv. '25 I The Little Nti I,—by Mrs. Grey, fresh supply, 41 First Bier' to Crime, cr the bottle illustrated; 25 Pelf Control, by Mary grunion. 25 Tosether with a vartntS of other works, Just received and fur stile et MANNAN'S June 17 25.1 Chenn Bookstores: No* Stare ,at Brockville. TILE Subscriber has NO received from Philadelphia and has nos opened at Brockville, a large andgems eralassoriment orseatoniilile.gooda,suchasDry Good's, Groceries. Hardwire, anitQueensware. In aildltlonto which will be !Mind constitni4 on hand, Eishoimoksid and fresh Meal", as well aS a good supply of iota, produce.. Call aid examtheourstock,andyou us prepared toSell goods at as low n rate as they has ever Mien hold hay where, in Schuylkill county. . N. B.—Con try produch of all kinds wanted, for which the Ma • cot price will be paid. CEO. II POTTS. BOOK-BINDERY; IN POTTSVILLE• !im subscither has in Lis employment two Boa.: IBinders. and 1.. prepared to bind, re-bind and TIMM -4:lmre to ordpr, hooks of every description. PCIIIOIII wlvhing Binding done. 0 111 pleise vend in their Book( lormeiliatelyoto keep the hands employed. Ile,rules and hinds Blank and Time Books to alma! i. any pattern, t short notice. B. BANNAN. Play2o ..7!-1 At hi. A.iheup Book & Stationery Store. • Pi. 11.—.1 I ulzher of books left to be bound, are lull( remaining a the EstaPlialiment--some fortwoand three years. Hnl as called forst:a:lly they will be sold to pay hinding. PROCLAIIIATION• AUDEBE d the Hon. 14.7111:11 BIDDER, Esquirei VI ['retold .nt of the several courts of Common Pleas of the counti .a of Seintylkill, Corkin, and Monroe, In Pennkylvani , and justice of the several Courts or (loaner Bess ona of the Peace, Oyer and Terminer, STRalitrat: ?J. s and General Gaul Delivery, in said counties, ' ant 1 \ .., xstru,and Cu...Brea FRAILLEY. Esquires, Judges of the 'min of Quarter Sessions of the Peace, Oyer and Terliner and Cenerui Gaol Delivery, for the trial of all e pital and . Other offenders, in the said county of etch ylk ill—by their precepts to me directed, have ordered Court of Common Pleas, Oyer and Ter miner, and 6 c oral Gaol Delivery, to be holden at Or wigsildrg, on louday, the 11th day of September next, Ju continue ts a weeks, if necessary, Notice is th refute hereby given to the Coroner. the Justices °flirt Peace. and Constables of the said county 'of Sale, lkill, lint they ore by the said precepts com manded to lie hen and there. at 10 o'clock In the fore noon of eald d iy. with their rolls, records, inquisitions. examinations, and all other remembrances, to do thrum things, which to their several ()Ricca appertain to he'. done; and althoie that are bound by recognizen , ces. to prosect t o against the prisoners that are or thew shall be in the gaol of said county of Schuylkill, are tee li . be then and th .re to prost-cakrthem as shell be Just. , . God save the Commonwealth. • - JOHN T. WERNER, SheriT. Slierfre Offic,Orwiga- I burg, Aug. 5, 1648. I --/ 3d- N. 8.--The witnesses and jurors who are munitioned to attend saulCourt, are required to attend punctually.- In case of non -attendance, the.law in such cases, made and provided, will be rigidly'enforced. This notice I. published by order of the Court; those concerned will , govern theme .Ives accordingly. .. NEW B OOKS OOKS I NEW BOOKS! I ~ cl 3 The:Victimiz r: the life of Richard Jennings, giv ing a hist ry of hit robberies. Peisonings , as ductlnns,i cests, &c,; with k short account of 23. his last da a, by James Knight Levenworth, a Story of the Mississippi and the Pralrie9-4 gulled and Interesting work, by • J. D. N.l O,IIP, , 2.6. Cowrie: or, the King's Plot. A Novel by 0. P. I. ' James—written kilns usual dinsed, yet neat • • and elegar t style nOlOll Friend. An admirable production by ,the Author of the Gambler'. Wife, The Younari . ma Donna Ac. ' 96 Charms add Counter-Charm.. by Maria J. Mcln tosh, bean) in cloth, beautifully Embalmed and Lettered ''''Ss 111.15 • Now and Ther ; elegantly bound in cloth and Lat. Scrod • . ' 75 Together with all the latest and meat popular Novels,. and works of every description variously bound and', In paper cover assortmenttassortment. Also, a larg assortment of new and beautiful Pat terns for Croc het and. Worsted work, for sale at pricer tomtit the Omer, at ' • HANNAN'S Aug. 10.31.] l Cheap Book and Variety Stores. T n ALC, MUSIC, .&C. : THE following is a catalogue, of new sa-i vl d popular Mric, , just recelved Redo . forsals. at 11. '.s. AN d Cheap DUOk and: • Rum , by Stores sNOS The Hunt Mill by Oen. Wm. 0 Butter, Kate O'dhane,at beautiful and admired melody, , The Bowers that binsseni to the vale, Ream Lee, the &mite Negro song, , What's A' tke Steer Kimmer, a popular Scotch ballad`' I'll gather summer flowerer, ' t Come Jain in the song. Patriotic, She Is fooling thee, from Longfellow'/ Hyperion. They eay there) i. a Fairy La ml, a favorite Ballad', Ariscerons of F,rin, mire in year might, • ' Th.. Cricket on the Hearth. Farewell my Fatherland.. I've tell the snow clad bills. The moonlight Dell. - Star of my Boni, the Patriot Soldier's farewell, I'll hang my bit on a Willow Tree, Romance, Float beaatifulflag.a. new National song, TbrEr.ying WttiTiOT,PTI admired song, - /sad must they part, a German•Baltad, Vertiuto Caro. Trin. by BLOM. The false friend.. The Orphan flailed Singers, new edition. Scenes that are Brightest. The one we love, Come, come td me love, a Serenade, Mire Lucy Neal, a celebrated Negro melody, There Is a II ow'r a lovely flnw'r, Beantiful Venice, a ballad. Woman's hearLa 'roma)... My heart it throbs for thee. The Warrior's rewire. The Widow of Wei. Nothing elee to do, third edition, Come to the Lattreeredy lave, a Serenade, The nay of the Chamois Hunter, a new song, The olden time and present time, music by D. Russell,. Oh, think not,less I love thee, a much admired ballads. My heart is like a Piletal lute, a ballad by D'Lsraell. ' Thee and only thee. The Sailor Bey, He's on the Sea; List thee dear girl, • Serenade,. Sam of Tennessee.'' The May Queen, Oh. send me back tit my native Cot, , 0' Love Dwell. not In Royal Hall., ," Sweet were my. dreams of thee, a favorite ballad, The Indian Hunter. music by Henry Russell, Come, I've something sweet to sing thee, , Joy is a bird, tramilated from the Persian, Take Back the Genii you gave me, a favorite snug. The night berm...tireßridal. Israel's Daaghter, I've wandered in climes. I.ong• long nen, Irene, from the book of love. The American Nag,. Little Nell; air froth Beltini's opera of Le Norma, The flappyjetymis hours. The Sea King'. Bride, The Stars of Heaven are gleaming. I'll think of thew when morning light, There is a Sower that bloometh, • Shall we roam my love to the Twilight Grove, The Sailor's Bride, on admired Song, When gentle hands its tendrils train. Strike the harp Columbia, a new national song. 't 0-Slogre.pleces of slnsic not on hand, obtain - id ter order. . r TAYLOR'S ,STATISTICS' Or COAL. ri 'HE Geographical and Geological Distr thutian oe mineral combustibles or fossil fuel, including also.. notices and localities of the various mineral Murata. ons substeoces, emploYed in arts and manufactures, Illustrated by 'maps and diagrams; emqln'ing ham official reports of the areal Centuries, the respective amounts of their production, constubotion and am. menial distribution, to all parts of the world ; torten, - er with Abele priers, tarifik, duties and international regulationsowtOmpanied by neatly par hundred sta tistical tables, and eleven hundred analyse. of mineral combustibles, st4tll Incidental statements or the etatb tin of iron mannfartuwo, derived from antheour au thorities. Prepared by Macre Csornwr Taylor. Fellow of the Geological Society of London, member of the Anwri.. ca „, pag a pophica seckny, the Ifittorical Society of Pennsylvania. of th e Aeld4mr of rill:WV Sciences of Philadelphia, of Ihw Albany Innffinte New York, to 4 of fari.nskliher SOtiellPP ts I:larap and America. A sapply of these NV °As Jun rt calved and three?* at , ANNAN•s 2una3ll Cheap Bookman". 0-1 jam - - TEICDt ITI ARIIINPMN GALLERY or DA GU =WM'? Ett. Ai. A3l :toil :.:zstri Strut. X. 1V...nu,. irad&W ia. rri Littiboorolt:gm Amon falt Waled at lb% wall knows osta est. iror Ova boUnr, Wit mit smellyabbioa tote it4gal in entry bunt to aajr b ay'. pktaxis bibs osisit7 wort b amity and ettor ember.. A bump liortatagrat at leottatiAan utt Latin aa hrod l as bola 02 to I& babillatt 'acting.. l ct.lEbbet9tszs two t tAOI7 bvlle.tAir Mane of 6ttotylt4 County, to salt. nog P/1.18ill• 1}11.112111101•Of tbs ttt.at. koptowoon ts la 'lt oil of nairsmetinf. wadi If DIU otauldis 4 rAtirfolty ibt. *PAM ptatitigulallup =IAA • 1. •VTIPM. . • 0
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers