II - - I*, ES ws,y4,T,ig.i.. , i. s grun,b4 Atoqurpro, DEC,'23c 1848 tboriand to rate Ire suascrlp 8 '3."Y" " forthe nme . sl o ;the . p4iners• Journal, and receipt ; Drug afore. In Tarnagna F The present number of the Miners' Jour_ concludes the I"teelltrfcnsrlh volume, and the trfourth year of its existence. We would hi g hly gratified if those who ere in arrears .Equare tip", in the course of the ensuing We are noxious- to discharge some bills ar e pressing us—and unless our friends will as, we will be deprived of the pleasure of aid otherslustheir time of need. -Distanusubscri . sill please remit the amounts duo through I . THE CHARITABLE. e understand that there is an unusual decree offering in this region. 8o disastrous .has the business, that many of the working men deprived of the wages doe them, and their (am . are ablohltely Buffering from want. Every . rt oueht to be made to relieve them—and we , .Niptions will be commenced at once.— e Dokits Society are busily engaged in making elathing,—but a supply of food can only be • 'eta by dAdstions and subscription; for said , , Anjf. aubscrtptions left. at this office will Iledly handed over to the Dorcas Society, f or nil. Something Must be done, and in the of the poet, . • • it soon—with all tby mivbt t gi rl , . wing %scald droop. If long at rest; Good, Lnastire, were no longer bleet. z jg high and humble enterprise of good template, till Italian possess thy mind. fen= thy study, pastime. rest and food, Ladle in thy heart aflame refined. y Heaven for firmness, thy wirole non) to bind - Todds thy purpose—to begin. pursue, gh thoughts ail fixed, and teclings purely kind— Strearlito complete, and withricliglit review, Arai strength to give the praisn where all is due. _ . . GEN. TAYLOR. AND 3.1. R. CLAY The' Philadelphia North A inerican says: " A ' end in the West—and we take occasion to say, way ( of parenthesis, a moat intelligent and ac. mplisherl friend—hes written us a brief, gossip.. g letter, from which, though it was intended . ly for our own perusal, era are tempted to make following extract': • eI returned.yesterAy from a visit to Kent-wiry, . ring which I passed two days at Ashland. with •r. Clay. i I found him still very feeble, hut en sly relieved from all symptoms of disease, and gaining his strength daily. He was able to take hour's drive on a pleasant day. His spin . 4 ( sstillelastic,his mind is still active, energetic • d vigorous, ant 'his patrsotigen is erg ng glowing •• aver. He enjoyed with true relish the rHeat . Locoficoism in the, late Presidential election, indulged in living hopes of the good to b, complished for the country by Gen. .:ministratioo. On the day of my arrival, he ••. ceived a long, warm hearted, effeettonate letter .m , Old Zack,' full of the same confidence and tachment the latter hoe felt for r01..1 Hat' to, ore than thirty yea's. l'He noble-minded so significantly repelled the idea that the efforts petty mounds to estrange them could p o ssibly, any case, prove effectual; and this wss but the ••: hoof sentiments Oontained in a letter from Mr. ay to him a short time before the election. You :; •I, I am sore, be glad to hear all this, and that r. Clay enjoyed it with a sensibility becoming him and proper to the nccs6ion." Mr. Clay has invited den. Taylor to visit Ash and partake of ita hospitalities On hie way . Washington. PROGRESS OP TILE FINE ARTS. The Arnerican Art Union of Now York closed tieir books on the 15th inet., with is list of sub • . --• •; . mt.-m. 14 yearn.:_,T.ti...l7.n-rttntrO: On the it day, they receiseil one', thousand subscribers their Rooms in New IYoik.l The distribution the 400 prizes commenced on the 20‘h tad of the prizes, .Cole's Voyage of Life," is tided at $5OOO, and a Painting by Lentz° at 1000. Subscribers in this .vicinity, will please • lot our office and receive (belt certificates,' is sabered in Now York. 01110 DIFFICULTIES ho compromise has been effected,—and the House of representatives is not 3et organized. If hey,should fail to effect-an organization, the Whig Ovemor will hold over and appoint the United Was Senator, and admiiiiater the Government ntil a new election takes place by the people.— ' he Locofocos, it is true, threaten anarchy and °dation, but they dare not attempt to carry it .ct in Ohio. • 1 PROGRESS OF FREE TERRITORY .9enetal ,Whitconlbc, has been elected U.. S. :motor by the Legislature of Indians. They 'are reptidiated Senotor Hannegao, on the ground if his opposition to the Wilmot proviso. The 'maul candidate is in favoi-of free soil. ;Great efforts ere making for* the success of a ire soil Senator in Illinois; also. The people :edema their present doughfaces, Messrs. Breeze .fid Douglass. •- • t Some of the Locofoco Journals, backed by :a Secretary of the Treasury, continue to prate bout the immense quantity of produce we shipped tp Europe last year. It is true the quantity Was bilge, but they forget to tell the people that We live imported a much larg,er pant fiy of Euro. jean Agrieulturalproducte this year in the shape :/* foreign goods, than we exported last year—ea • st the account is more than balanced against us. Printed petitions for the repeal of the tuff of 1816,—and also for Cheap Postage. can te obtained at th.s office. Wehope those inter ested will be active in circulating them far ..ignro. lures. We . have draWn theni up and printed them—this, we think, is contributing our due proportion to the business. .t 7 Old Winter paid us a real, old-fashiuned , sisit yesterday for the • first time thie seasnn Increased age, and his prolonged absence have not effected much clump in the nil fellow—his lock , lam .silvered o'er!' as usual, and our coal opera ,tors, as well as our citizens gei.eraliy unite iu c ,v -:mg him a hearty arcico:no. LP' A Sunday Schual,r.thbition will take ..,,,' 'place on Christmas Everiin g, in the Secoml Methodiat Episcopal Church. The rIeVITi.CR -. 'will doubtless be as interesting as their object i. .. praiseworthy. - M .7" The new Cuunty officere were sworn in Iszta offiiciated during the last Court. Tbey imadea favorable imprission,ltod bid fair to become all , popular officers. `ll7.lVorth Carolina Senator—all right.-We i nj pleased to learn .that Hon. G. E. Badger. Whlg was re•elected U. S. Senator blf the tegialatt,:p of North Carolina, on Wed xesday ism, ix ths tam 6 PAN, t Mr. Delamater, a Portrait fainter, on a , rich to our Borough; bas place a likeness of Gen. :Taylor in our window, which is Yell creditable to his talents. as an accocapDshali artun: 'Phu ;portrait ist for sale. f?' A Series cf Lectures on the 4Wondets of the World," will be delivered et Eltichtees Hall, commencing this evening.. See advartiso ment. • ny George Lipp ard, has started a weekly Nettspsper in Philadelphia called °The Quaker City" It will be sometblng original. re ilAretfur Manadisse.lo .Bity 7—A lump algal, rata i sid tins been:foiina !eat Taunton. 30, 1‘ containing cent, pure gohi. , Ho brMautelkutet.ta t Sndell-Holams; la a flue poem, ipitei said idea se o tenni lisle niping their brtms a$ youth begin litbSn life Intgjenelied Its noon, igsvinted tlieta tac shady."'• to t . be - 'Lehigh ersety, Dee. 15, '49 Mr. Benj. Hannan: • " Dear SiirNamerplas petitions:6 .Congress are sigoed here by all parties fors resirion of the Tariff and protection to !sitar. They are a prop er reply to the. Report of the Secretary of the Treasury . ; this report is au ingenious argument in defence of a bad cause, but it is a revival of old abstract doctrines that have beau often re. puted. The Secretary does not seem to remember thal we have tried Free Trade th-ee times, and each time ghastly ruin has stalked in behind it.' Et perience condemns it ! We - are sufriring from it now! _Let the hundreda of thousands of poor workmen deprived _of empliiyatent witnesa -this truth. and answer him by they petitions for relief. Congress will listen to their complaints—abstract theories cannot contradict evident facts. Hia ar: gummy. seem to be based one Utopian ides, that if all the nations of the earth would permanently open their Emits to Free Trade it would be a benefit to mankind. We admit this—and if all mankind were angehT they would require no laws to restrain and punish them—but all mankind are tot angels, nor ever will be, and all nations will not open their ports. therefore we must form ourselves accordingly. It is doubtful whether it would be well for us to open our pots even 'if ell the rest of the world would. But it is useless to argue en the basis of an improba. bility. The question is what had we better do 'under existing _cirdumstances l" We moot have manufacturers' and mechanics and workmen, and they must live somewhere. Shall It basin Europe, and we pay them wages there, to sup port royalty And nobdity and institutitins inimi cal to our own I Then our Farmers would suf fer, for their workmen would not buy our pro duce if they live in Europe where they could get cheaper provisions." Wheat can be bought in Europe for twenty-five cents a bushel. and our Farmers . would be ruined by importations if they were not by a heavy duly. We do not object to the dutY; . We wish them protected and encouraged in all their agricultural pursuits. But shall - not our manufacturers and mechanics and laborer,. Is protected also, to,. -ufficoint shod we 'drive tbem born their trip!,,y in , to.. and torn them over to agriculture. Then tlt F.trm ere would to buffer, for all would revs and there to cold ho no rousone'rs. W fai then iv our !•.?.st policy 1 It Is a- pllOll and /le aline: as the light of WS sural— We shoual en rourrago the i'etabl:shment of manufactories - and workshops here, on our ' own soil and we should encourage workmen to come here from Europa to conduct them. • Then our Farmers would be sure of Celhnd ttietr produce to thom—the wages i shou;il pryl would not be lost to this country, but avoids be Spent riming us—our ii.duArious population mitt i.e increased. and they are the real strengthrind wealth of a nation—their next generat.on would be American born citizens, and would be-republicans educated under our free in , elitutions j —We would be more independent of For .eign Governments in case of war, and in fact we should be lientfittcd in every way. It is the poli cy recommended by Washington and Jefflion. and this should entitle it to our corgl.:: ce _lt ' should be permanentlY adopted- Our vacillating I course has been ruinous. Our manufactures have •..1,../been allowed to pa'ss the age of infancy— they have been crushed down time after time be fore they could stand alone. Take for example the manufacture of Iron: It raised its head when wo were Colonists. The English apprehending it would interfere with their sales here, sent an or ' der to the Governors to suppress it ; and it was put down by the sword and bayonet. When we became an independent nation, it again sprung up; but before it attained growth, our Govern ment withdrew the necessary support, end it' tot tered and fell. This has been the late of birth after birth. At length the. compromise Tariff of 1842 took effect, and people were induced to he :love it would continue, for it was a popular Tariff with all 'parties. This import tin manufmtu re again sprung up, but before it was four years old, the Tariff of 1846 struck it down, and it is now expiring. A similar fate has attended many use ful manufactures, and with . .them other equally greet interests suffer Otis row materials' are de prived of a market, and our workmen of'employ ment. Pennsylvania has nobly spoken in the legiti• mate language of the ballot boxes—let her now speak to Congrese the respectful language of petition•, and it will not ha that the report of one man shall starve a hundred thousand people. F The follotring Prayer to be used in the congregation' , of this D•oet se. while the (1120.81111 celled Mirth': Cholera fa imp.rohno, po' forth in conformity with Canon XLVII. of 1832. of the General Convention of Protestant Etti-capal Church in the United :St flea, A. Pourca, Bishop of the Mors , . of Finns!,!coal,: Philoda.,Der. 12, ISla. • • Prayer:-:-0 God, with whom are the issues of life and death, to ivirom it justly belongeth to punish 'sinners and to be merciful to them that v e ly . repent, save us, we humbly beseech Thee, from tho ravages of that Pestilence with which we are threatened. We hava provoked thy rightinus judgments by our minifotrl toritegreeions and haniness of heart, and though we should utterly' pensh, our puniqhment would hr less than our sins deserve. But 0 G rd, who desir , re not the death of a sinner, hut rather that he should turn from his tvielvdnees and Ice; have fa , V upon u. thy un- wo't'y en'atoo C. and grant that we, repeotma of our iirquito- ,11.1 eu. sine, ro,v en ro•wence toy 1. - o,c,nor .-niteenrie V, '6 A thou p e o f hen 'hey m•,,ed ro :r-o-o (tore' ,. ol,ln r l-I , i ; 1‘.1.1. eau-0 Ithy iVe4t , 1 , 11..q ne•l ro Cr )111 poritelrina, thole :r.eff or kiv arkno..l -rd4e eJor repent us our sins Spare thoee echo 'Cr' u.ay eulTertt; from this grievous •ir knees, tra.rqa the voice of jay and health to their dwelling., and grant that nil who shall torte thy forbearing mercy may dram« their' 'nubs and hodieg • Irving sacrifice to thee, through Jesus Christ our Lord. 'Amen. • ;17 The Pennsylvanian says of the Prrei.b tat's 11e•emCe, thAt i 11111,1.1111,141 piii+e While talvnir in the ,tetaikot th.11.111,044b1.• piper." It would be dttEctut for any tinnd, however cnmprehro•ivM its greet', to "take in" this mass of stuff—lsct, falsehood and fieti it—withnut upsu■ing" to rest from the labor. L a The Gold from California which has been assayed . at our mint, yetided nincty•eiaht and two thirds per rent., being within one and one-third per cent. of the Government standard. It will do. c o- "mull,- .aid a little boy, the other dev, "why are orphans the happiest children on earth?" "Why, you little brat they are not; why Jo you ask that question?" "Because they have no mother to spank them." 4 - 7 A Young Girl tried to poison herself at Pittsburg last week. Gause—love and over.con Wince. „ has become a vary common com plaint. ••• 7 - rirA tidy wriler gives this rough hint, to overgrown Juveniles. "glen of senie—l speak not of boys of eighteen or twenty, during their age of detestability." ri?'"l do declare, SA, you dew look pretty ennf to cat." "Wall, Solomon ; ain't I eating as fast as lean," replied Sal, with her mouth full. IGo.JI While You are Young female burglar, only( eleven years old, has been caught in Boston. She has committed four,burglaries I UrEnglah Thieves represent themselves at the west as travelling nobtesoen, .naking notes," which they do only by picking pockets. aTisn't it father an odd f et to flannel history; that foe softest water is caught when it rains the hardest. TY* Coa—"John, his the doctor arrived!". oyes "Tt .n go immeitiiitelytir the undertaker." ca ohm Floyd, loestbeo. was elected Iliieer inor of "rginio on the 12th inst., by the Levitt ;lure.. EM C1AL11'02.7511A 2 773 t7OIIthgEEOIAL ADVAN VAGES recent oninbertif that iery able tiorif,"liarit's, Merchant,'" Atagazinx," ,Ciatims • • in .cx•crlleht article on' the comaterciti ativii3tegic . of California ! from which we m ike'rzuacts : • Whoa Di sc overed and, Cantiat&—Xpper- Celifornia was discovered 1658, Davello, the tpanish nsviiator. 113,1578 the northern portion of it 'was, visited by Sir Francis Drake, who called it New: 7 Albion. It was fitst colonised by the• Spaniards in 1768; and formed a province of Mexico until after the revolution in that country. ba boundary and Errent.—qt is bounded by Oregon un the North, the forty-second degree - of north latitude being the boundary linear the two territOriest on the East by the Rocky Mountains, on the by Sonora and old or Loever-Cali.. Canis, sod on the West by the Pacific Ocean; its extent horn North to South brine about 709 miles. end the‘ av rage distance froth Etat to West is shout the same. The 'trip of country along the Pacific Ocean, about 700 Mee in length, and an average of 125 miles to bfrath, bound un the Eist by the them, Nevada, and On the We 4 bY the Pacific, 1. the only fertile unarm) of this ex tensive territor." Rs. Rivers and Midi Valley.—"TbP Ssera ntento and Joaquin rivers hove each a course of from 300 to 900 mile+ : the first- flown from the North, and the 1441 from the South, and both erm.- tying into the Bay of Stn Francisco at the same [mint. They water the large and fertile valley laying between the Sierra Nevada and the coast range.of mountains. This noble valley the first in Ealifornit. and one id' the tnott mignitieent io the world. to about EinD miles long and on wide. It is bounded nit,the East by the great Snowy M.tutittint and on the West by the low range, which in 11111ny.pjacre dwindles into insignificant hill+; and has its nouhern terminu' at the strait of Carguins. on. the. Bay of an !ration°, and its Anutnern netr the Colorado river, which is the - largest in uppet-Calitorms, and has a course of thrita 1,000 miles, emptying itself into the Gulf of latitude about, 32 degrees North." Bay of San Franoisco.—"l'ho Bay of San Francisco is about 45 miles long at iis extreme points if taken in a straight line in ei mirth-north west and a south-southeast direction, and its greatest . width ab wt 12 miles. From as petition and extent, the city a.rd port or the same name must become the depot for all the produce of the great rivers and valleys. It will also become the great n isal station of the Pacific, an.l here alga will be ihn great rendezvous for whaleri." Town of San Francisco.—“ The town of San Francisco is .egulsrly laid out in lots of fifty .011'30 erielare, generally six of which fora) a block. Sierne. however, :Ire itl lott'of 100 earl+. and are telie.ilts of -it. Ttre ete: ets are from 50 to I or Ho. Toe,. Bru Large hotels here, br-ide l...irdintt seed t.iubfc houles. 'Poo whiervet ac e ire I tii the morsotrutte 1:,:: oeh. r ifflponlnt to: Undo a, in firot;reni . • . Tit(' Chpia.te 011(1 her tagize. it •4.troku Gil to 751,4 App.cf, orcl jrJ bloomed lli „I tquOV aril, 111.- fruit • umujuyed. Ountisty vegetables are raised the Year round. Wheat succeeder .admirably. yielding in quality equal to Gent;sew.or Egyptitiri. In grapes ernd wine, this land Will, ere long, challenge the world. It is emphatically the and of the vine.. "Sheep are very polific.'and subject to no dis ease; end brie jo-t•the pavturage and climate for grotving the finest Merino and Saxony fleeces, Ohl Spain and New-Holland not eicepted." - The exports from California last year, amounted to $49,597 53—and the imports to 553.589 73 More About California.— population of San Franeiceo. Calitornta; in July last, wee 5000 soul+. The Government troops and paceengere who have since gone out and are going, will swell the number ,by June next to 9000. More dry • goods have been chipped to that reginn aiute the the gold.fore'r .roar cen could' be made up into clothing in a year, if all the inhabitant' were tat- , lora. Heady mace clothing has been mein the same Proportion, and of broadcloths sufficient have cone to clothe ail in the couotry for five .yeats to come Toe Journal /if COnsinerce adviiies that t ee emigrant to C.d deem i, it he Lisa any money, should isle it with him in half thillain, and when there, purchase what he inly want (.chich will be very little in the slinpe,of clothing)lo - eriable him ,to dig gold in summer. . • . APPLICATION OP GIITTA PERCHA Among the discoveries of the last few years, days the Episcopal Recorder, not the Pact impor tant I. the applicatton of Guth l'ercha in the. fottnatioh of Many useful and ornamental articles. Llama Perch, is toe voncret. juice of a large tree of the 'came Horne, aboundin) l o 'the Wind' of Romeo, and is obtained lay taping the tree. Anuoat every . tarticlre from atemotype plate- Dr whip-ntocka, cofistable. 7 re. I, e formed rititl.f.e3At a recent in. tidu of the BrittM A4stintrOtrais ,wir learn Ignrn the Amertvati .barniiiiirPfiliiinedi. a Mr' Whe3naW, One of its former .44iii ' ncilee, read an int - ere:A:Da paper on the e*hibited, :q1 other articles, two handsomik-iihnida, a ndtd COMMOniOn dish and service,•and a sub- ..1113 fpleii mar' me rope for the conveyance of telegraphic wins. We are most itit,rested, however, in the Telskouptionon, or speaking trumpet, an applica tion of this material to speaking tubes as the means of calling air , ntion . by them of a person et a distance, whiuh is accomplished by the insertion of a whistle, whiCh being blown, sends forth a shrill rental at the other encl. When tle whistle is removed, the .amplest whisper of the voice is conveyed audibly for a distance of at least three quarters of a mils, and a conversation kept up.' Mr. Whi.haw amused his auditors by causing the end of a tube, which WAA of the length of 100 lest, to be inserted into the inotritt.tnece of a flute held in a person's hand who regulated the notes, and 'placing his own meuth at the other end.of the tube, "G - al else the Queen", was played et the titstanFe of one hundred feet - from the' person giving the flute breath.. Turning to the Bishop of St. Elivid'e, who was present on the occasion, .he saitOrist in the event of a clergyman having three livings, he n3iellt:by the aid of three of tfiese tubes, preach the eVne sermon in three different churches et the same lima. EXPERIENCI - : The mast extraordinary invention of the age is thr chemical telegraph of Mr. pain, now in New York. Wonderful as are the present systems for transmitting intelligence. this, upon an entirely ro.ta pirn, aprars, i:carding to the New York I. xc..11 'Mein all. The rapidity of Caltli1•10411C1110:1 from c , nc to on eunwit intinito IC amoit:! Mr wonders of .0, tis prortrrO tit Et , liat , •l , of an oti of a , OffFp,r, ',Ally for chop 1.1;d thei . ,,,L,ne once I :mitre!, the 00.0.0 if i3-Fit , :r. a;th odors than the ruriOoy ul ih ,w4ht. orft" 1 Wire t , e of ion,, and thus - rho erral , :e ' , sill ha greatly diminished Th e Copyrua Telegraph transmits a fie of the hand writing of the party rending the coin municatum, the advantage at which must be obvious to every one. Another curiosity here is that all these roLvert• urges likewise apply to clocks, which willirun three veers and upwards without cleaning,,and without any anent on to the course of electricity, and theiimc ii regula.ly indicaleil the year through without windine, or say other attention to, tue icfsirument. PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH The Christian Observer publishes a table, which -bows the increase of the Protestant Epis— copal Church in the United Sitars: The joinnal of the Central Convennon reports: Clergy.* '' .Conaunieelste. 1835 763 36,416 1838 951 45,930 1841 1052 55.427 - 1842 1096 72,090 1847 . 1904 67,550 This shows an average annual increase of 2594 members for the last twelve years. But from 1842 to 1847, there has been a loss of 4599 inernlms, or en annual (CM . of 1516 comminit— cants. The communicants in the city of Phibi—' delphia constitute one half, of the whole number in Pennsylvania and one-twelfth of the *hole number in the United States. The correspondent of 'the N. 0. Picayune, under date of October 13. remarks t—h may not be uninteresting to our readers to learn a fact be coming more visible every day here, and that there is e growing feeling in Flynt of the Americans 'amongst the people of tnis couetre: and ispecialy amongst that.; of the' higher, siesta'', and enlights erred class of the people. From ongtiestionable . authority I have ebbs ,circumstances,. and I may mil vest amongst none is the tle,ire.ttr prernote &tensile and closely allying interespietturiger than . ir g o o f gat t!.a darhwyeil daughters of Mexico. They make nu secret of the matter—they avow it most distibctly and .uneguitiocally that they ••ge ire" for animation with Uncle Sam or Uncle S ,amsiserive. I imagine ••the latter" however would, by 11166, gm by th e ghakineei in Ilia comedy, be worefenid.'!: Tom. MINERS' JOURNAL; ANp'-PPTTSVILLE GENERAL - ADVERTISER OBE NEW ITINTENTIOIC ANNEXATION Or MEXICO 0 - ..ir.:. , : - The Coal Trader 1br:1114S. . .. ... . . . . The quantity Beni by Rail Road this week to 17.121 01 —.by dirial 1,749 02—for the week 19,87043-4otal lir . Rail amid 1.209,122.11-414 y Canal .435.150 l Is: The following are die rates of Tolle and iratilporta tatlon establlAed by the - Rail poil erwapany, for the ensuing year: - " ' -.. . - ~. . OPPIOIS OP THE POILADELPHIL 1 .8-REAMNG RAIL ROAD COMPANY. 5 . PAiladrlpilia, Dec. 20th.. 1848. v OTICE la hereby given, that the rates of Freight, 1 and Tolls on Coal. transported. by this CompooF, will be as follows from January lot. 1840: - To, : From' M.Carbon.l3.l.lasen.P.Clinion Richmond, UntllJons 1,1819 60 I ' 135 Philadelphia... do . do '- 60 1 55 5 5 1 35 !defined Plane,untilDec.3l,do. 70. dI 65 - 1.45 Nicetown. do . 70 165 - 145 Cermantowrrli, R., ido 70 165 .'1 45 Fal'ai of Schuylkill, _ do 70 .1 65 ~ 145 Monayunh. . ' do GO 1 55' L 25 Court ehocken and Plymouth IL IL, do, 50 145 1 ,30 Turn Out 1 mile be low Norriornwn. Norristown or Bridge- pnrt. do 40 135 120 Port Kennedy, do 35 33 lIS VaPey Forge.- do 50 25 110 Phrenixville, do • 20 15 100 Royer's Ford, do 20 15 100 Pottstown, do 15 IS 100 Douglassville. Ob 15 10 I 00, 1 Itaumstown, do 12 05 9 5. Reading. . - do 05 - 00 . 95 Between .Reading - - and Mribraville, do . 00 45 •90 Mohrovilit. , do 95 90 - . 85 Hamburg; ' do • 75 •70 65 Orw Soho rg, do 65 60 55 . TIM freight and tolls on coal to Richmond, and Phllidelphia, during the months of Jane. July, aad August will be From M.Carbon. I S.llaven.P.Clinum. 1 70 O5 .1 45 do 1 45' t4O .i 25 And nit and alter Sept. lit, to December Mtn, 1849, 1.60 1.75 105 By order of the Board S. of Managers. BRADFORD, Secretary, Dee2'i 8-52-tf) Amount of Coal sent over the Philadelphia and Read ing Rail Road and Schuylkill Navigation, for the week ending oupunday evening RAIL ROAD. CANAL. WREN'. TOTAL. WEEK. TOTAL. Pt. Carbon, 4,376 07 365.355 12 1,438 08 257,706 19 Pottsville, 2.463 67 210,157 12 77 14 34,071 01 8 Haven, . 7,631 19 481%337 19 05 60 125,109 01 Pt. Mitre, 2.646 1.1.3 ; . 1.39,271 06 153 00 18,514 09 17,121 01 1,209.132 11 1.749 02 436,601 13 436.601 13 MI by RR &IDOL 1.645,731 OS - - TRANSPORTATION ON TIIE RAILRONDS IN SCHUYLKILL COUNTY. The following is .the quantity of Coal transported over the ditrerent Railroads in Schuylkill County. for the week W EEK. TOTAL. Mine Hill and S. H. R. R.7,V2 It • a 8.649. 01 Mount. Carbon do 1,500 14 20.500 15 Schuylkill Volley do 5,1116 05 314.792 09 Mt. Carhonand Pt. Carbon da 5.059 19 309.701 03 . Mill Creek do 2,762 17 291,052 al Li:t1e , , , ,,,..mi1i R. e R. 2.793 13 160.729 18 Cnlon can sill. R. - - .1,290 04 3 00.853 03 0 Sw +taro Ilailload. 1,559 07 1 35,799 05 3 • ri ERVIN]; BE' R'S GREASE, put up In pots like kTiPitilocnkie, Purified (Throat Paste, a new article ( or whitening and pre Mai the teeth: °dentine, n Rose Tooth Pilate, a superb art tele for the teeth. aid purifying the breath, Roae Lip Salve, flit the occeket. Bose Vegetable Tooth Paste, Charcoal Diintrifice for the teeth and gums, Mere Fun, Die celebrated Chinese Skin Po - cyder, for restorini and beautifying the complexion. Fenner's Poratule Divine, fur chapped hands, Lips, Scalds, Bruises, &c.. a standard article, Treble Extracts (or the ilandketchiefs, to choice article, ItousselPsyktriandine, fee chapped hands, Roussell'i Ce.ebnited Emollient Saponacenua Piste, for softening the skid, Pomatum Stilts, for giving the lidir a gleasy, appear • mace,' Floating Sand Simp,ii new and excellent ankle, Jones' Banco Chemical Soap, a celebrated artieleTeri • removing freckles, eruptions of the skin, &c.. Roussell's Almond Soup, Otto of Rose Soap, Circas. Sian Son). Orange and Lemon Soap, Taylor's Ox ' ygenatad • Floating Lilly Soap, Olive Oil Soap. dnermaceil Snap for softening the akin, &co RoUssell's Vegetable Cosmetic Cream, for softening the, skin, Michang's Treckle Wash, a complete remedy...l.6Z. freckles, •- Otto of WHIP In bottles, for Drawers, Glenn's Roman Kalydor, Curling Fluid for tin. Hair Roussell's Sharing Cream,' Taylor's and Glenn's Rape naceons Sim lug Compounds, and Windsor Sha ring Soaps, Brusbee, &c. - Double Distilled Bay Water, best Cologne in betiles and • on drag, Florida Water, Eau Lltst ra le, for the bah'. Disinfetting Fields for Cholera times, Chinese Lie d pilatory Powder, Rouge. Wheeler's Teaberry Tooth Wash for curing the Tooth t. ache api purifying the breath, Odoutalgic Toothache Preps for the cereal' Toothache. ' 2nd Part. Fancy Tollerle.Rottles and other Fancy Betties, . Chorus—What is the German's , Tatheriand. Together irith ell new and choice wattles of Pure e: Terzette—Song of Loire. by Eisenh tree. mery for The inilette.. All the Perfumery sold by ,he 3. Dihttio—Codue, my Dear One, &c. subscriber isosareftre, and not the worthless imitations 4. Cluitus—My Father land. by Frach• which are hlwked river the country.by Pedlera, &c., 5. Solo of the Opera—Tampa, or the Marble-Bride, be which Is purritiased at half the price of the genuine ar. Herold. titles. fall at 6. Brothers, let us sing together, by C. Blom. TICKETS, 50 emus, for the CiMeeri alone, and Al for Concert and the following Balt, admittiee one gen tleman and lady ; are to be had at Mr. J. O Brown's Drug Store. Mr. Ailstadt's Bookstore, mid by different members of the Society. G. SCHMID. Dir, Pottsville, Dec. 23, . —52 3t. Itktf, t- - TOLL AND TRANAPORTATION OR RAIL ROAD From Auz. I. 1849. - - From llt.liortion. rlch• Haven. Pt. Clinton Tn Phil:l4.4plaa, Pt 45 ei 40 ill 2a To lbrhniond. I 60 I 55 1 40 . ... . _ . ......... Tot additional New d.dvertisements see Next Page. They will there be found " arranged tect d if Suitable . Head'e. DEsCRIPTI YE OP SOMF: OF THE:WONDERS OF THE WORLD, IN NATURE AND MIT Illustrated by Sphadtd Thmestic noes MESSRS GREENAWALT& SAN DEMON. would respectfully announce to the inhabitants of :Pottsville, that they will commence a series of Lectures on the above sullects on TIIIS EVENING. Dec. 23.1615. in MR. STIGHTER'S HALL. To commence at 7 o'clock. Admittance. 2.5 eta MC:2I '4 6 1.-52 It. THIRD MUSICAL E VTERTAINMENT • OF THE GERMAN- CALLED POTTSVILLE LIEDSIENGRTAFEING L.SOCIETY, TO DE HELD THE lwr Or JANUARY, 1649, tit 8 O'CLOCK IN THE EVENING. IN TIIE TOWN HALL.- UNDER THE DIRECTION OF, O. SCHMIDT. PROGRAMME:—Ist Part. I. Chorus—The last hours of the year, Music. by --- R. Solo-Ariella. Ch. Keller. 3. Chorus—The commencement of a Serenade, by Assmayer. 4. Solo of the Opera—The castle of 13 rsino, by 131111n1, 5. Chnrus—Social Song, O. Solo—ln those Holy llalle, by Great .tttraetton. ENTERTAINMENT FOR CIIIII4TMAS NIG IIT• `HE I'IS.IILIC are re.peottutly informed, that an ex hibtilors or et-It:bunion of the Sabbath Schools at tached M the M. E. Church, Pottaville, will be given in said Chu , oh, on Choi-'I'M AS Njoirr, Mon day, Den..2.sils, ISO. at 7 "'clock. The overuses Will COtliiSl of beautiful Hymns, Dia logues on 11.1,10114 subplots, RA:Mations and Speechei, by Chthlren and Infante. An ADDRESS will be deli vered by MARQUEZ, THE MEXICXN OIERIGUILDO _ , Recently brotteht from Mexico by Cript. Nagle, who will give a short account of his history sing a national song,.k.c., which. together with othe r jriterestlng ex ercises, will form the most attractive Moral and Roll gious enteltainoteot of the season. and worthy of the patronage of al l favorable to Sabbath Schoril enterprise. Tickets for adults, with Hymns included, 25 cents; Admission for children. 121 cents. Tickets for saln at Kelly's Watch Store, Iletherington's Clothing Store, and at the door ori the evening of the exhibition. December 23.1545 0 . 52-1 t IIIo! For, Calltbrnia AND THE GjOLD•UEGION I 1 , D v atirm;ecero etlperb t i d ct direct el front . signed fur Christmas and :sew Year presenta, among which may be found fine Frrnch Perfumery, Fancy Toilet articles. and all the etceteras for I.ndles and Gentlemen's Tniletlg ; Itoquet stands, elegant Card Baskets, Cut Glass !Smelling and Tolltt Bottles. &c, Dec. 23-52] .1. C. C. HUGHES. Charles flarlet_., FASHIONABLE HAM CUTTING AND SHAVING SALOON, 'him- the corner el Centre and Market Streets, POTTAM!LLE. KEEPS CONSTANTLY' on hand and for sale. the following articles: A large add splendid assortment of colored Lithograph• to prints. single or by the hundred, Turner and Fisher's Song and Toy Books in great Yetis ety.single or by the dozen, Dream Books. LI-Itot Writers. Spelling Books, Primers, ' Emerson's and Cobb's Readers, Copy and Pass 5 Books ' Comic and other Almanac. single or by the dozen, Steel Pens and Ifolder.s, Pocket Maks, Playing CUMIN Do ininnes, Conversation, Fortune Telling. and'Cnurting Cards, Shaving Cream and Snap, Wash Balls, Sand Soap, and other Fancy Soaps, Extracts, &c., Jules Gaiters Genuine Bear's Oil, Ox Marrow, Curling Fluid, ant coieeno Water, finale or by the dozen, Toot twill:wine, flair, and Ciplbea Blushes, Diessina, reeitet. and Fine Tooth Combs, ; rank Millites Water Proni Oil Blacking, 4. Cell', es. and Suspenders. stirs , 7‘ , .(0r13„ I.aran• n,-nritarnt 4.1 curls, • 5 • s.y.cecii dot, °p it; thr hest manner. also fill hand During's Terpsichore or Ball It,no (::fide_ :shoving. Hair Coition. Scc.. periiSimed In in, 111 , 131 approved style. eteltazurs done up authe shoriest notice. rpecil3,'4B-52-1y ------- Ladles , Curls. 'TIE SUBSCRIBER keeps constantly on band a a larce assortment of Ladies' Curls, of every de scription; all of which will be di.poied of on'reasona ble terms, at CHARLES BARLET'43` . O 'Fashionable hair Cutting and Shay tnetaloon Centre St. two doors below Market. Pottsville, Pee. - 23. '49. 52-31 To California for $l6O on Shares. lINION-CAIITION-UN TERPRIZE. A GENTLEMAN improved Ivaractical Geologist and .La.the inventor titanmachine for e.parating gal.Ldtist. has arranged a pang.to proceed to Ca ilthrli ia. He provides tools. machines, tents, and a full equip ment. An Assayer and a Physician accompany the expedition. There is room for a few more. 8160 in cash needed! See Philadelphia Ledger or MIMI, ci apply fur particulirs to H. Hannan. Pottsville. nr to A. COCHRANE, Agent for the Advertiser,ll3 Walnut Street, . Dec23-52. , 1t5) Philadelphia. Beautiful Illustrated 'Works . , ~ PAESI' SUPPLY. WILLIS'S POEMS, Crimson gilt; illustrated. Lelia Ritokh, . . 'do , , ;do • ' r Lady of the Lake. olci , :do Lonefellaw's Poetical Works, do 'do ' - Hailerk's Poetical Works, do - do Mrs. Sigourney's Illustrated Poems'. - . Miss Cook's Poetical- Works, illustrated, The OToring to Beauty, f2,,r 1819, . The Ruby, for 1819. . Robinson Cruise, Illustrated. Together with an elegant assortment of other sea. seeable RIR Books, just received and for sale at . , HANNAN'S Cheap 'Book and Fancy Storei. Der 23 ::23 To tlie Honorable Judges of the COURT OP COMMON PLEAS FOR THE COUN TY OF SCHUYLKILL.. rim's . Grand Grand Inquest for the body of the Coanty of 1 Schuylkill. respectfully report: That they have had them fifty-four bills of io dictrnents. forty-one of which were returned true bilis find thirteen Ignored; they have also. under direc tlon of the Court: visited the public. buildings and County prison. • The Jury report that undefthe pres ent existing CireUttlita noes that no alteration, be made to the County Prinon rot the 'weevil. as a law 'has hen mewed by the Leaislature. mid Strong efforts are-made forks removal by the citizens of Schuylkill Connty. The. Grand Inquest report that theyi have examined the County Pont Heave, and report thaPit Is in gond ren dition —they further report that it requires some elle; rations in the cooking department. titer -foie we autho rise the Directors Mimi Poor, TO mike such alterations, as their judgment may dictate—we also recommend th it suitable. alleratintut be made In the . Treadaret'a oMte.as the books dad patient era not safe lathe men, net la which they at- now kept. It is further recom mended that a .umtroft be appointed tri take raid of the small children at the Aires House. allot which . vie moat respectfully submit to the Himorable Court 1 ' - . • .. • JACOB M. LONG. thiellt4l-10. • - • t •- • intsuaci. • 0 Books. • Airrows l'excLevesTs on inoctineubs, irV — o:N*4:sib:Otte lug of_ttie_Coiirts of the,llnited States. and Those of the several State 4 together with Notes and Criminal pleading and practice eas:. .7 ....hearing the English and American( ad th orifies •.. gimpy, by.. Francis Whatton. • ; -Purdon's Digest.soventh edition. Duni opes Lamm of Pennsylvania, 1700 - Hine:ran Executors, - • Doane on th e Laws of Roads; IlighWays, Bridges, and Ferries. in-Pennsylvania. , • Bins' blagistratee' Daily Companio n , McKinney, Pennsylvania..luepce. ' . Graydnn'i Forms. • Robett'a Digest of Ettithedßuttutee, Brightly on the Law of Costa, Smith on Contracts, . - I Chitty's Btackstone. - . • Barre Reports, complete as - far as published. ; •• Gtla's and Dunlop's Forms, - Just received and ftir sale by the subscriber. *Alt We Books not on hand obtained to order at put:Mete& Otlrca, at , • Dia23142) . BANNAN'S ' ' Sheep Law and Miscellaneous Bookstores. •.• utheran and Reformed : • illynat Books. • • T - SUBSCRIBER . has Jost recessed and will herbaftgr connect ily keep on hand, a supply of the fo owing Bookr,,which be will wholesale and retail at b pu Wier, rice t . . _ Ger' an and English Reformed Hymn Books. Ger an and English Lutheran Hymn Books. I „ mon German Hymn Hooke, •I . " German Prilters and Testaments. ' German and English Lutheran Catechisms. German ansl English Reformed Catechatus. Stark's Prayer Book. • . Nlehodemur,end Haberman's Prayer Book. German Fairtlly eibles,the People's Bible, Testanienta, A LI C Books. &C., Ac. . All of- wgth will be sold fiery cheap et ' HANNAN'S - Dec.11.32] beep Wholesale and Retail Bookstores. Dancing School. y MR. P. STOUCR D ETHILNI his sincere thanks to the Citizens of Li•Pollsvilli for the liberal patronage with which they have favoreithirn heretofore, and respectfully.informs them that h has now assneibteil with him Mr ti. Slouch. withtvlinse nagistunee he will continue to give Instructions n dancing. fu the large saloon in the Town Hall. Hours;or tuition fur ladies and youth, front 3to 5. P.M., for tentleinen, from S to Pi, P. 511„ on Friday and Satiltdatt Private lersans given, if desired. Pottavillti, Dec.l6, • . 51.3 t Now Is! the. Time to Subscribe I TREIMAGAZINE9 FOR 1.8491 . Stbatriptiots r faired for the following iforranss at - BRA X.401"S BOOKSTORES: GRAII.VeII,CADEY'B. II A RT41109, COLIIMBIANMATION IL, p krat i E are most splendidlyem wisp andteigr.is, del Cottares. rashinn Plates, rte.. They also contain Stoties..Talel, Poutry,'&e.., by the beet writers in tile country. Terms /13 a year, nt 25 cent, per number.— The number ltlrJattuary is now ready,and tingle 'copies for sale at IiriNNAN'S Dec 16.511 Cheap Bookstores. The Great Pictorial Brother Jonathan. • FOR CER.TSTMAS & NEW YEARS, '49, PAPER contains imwitrds of .50 1,- Engraaligs‘the most conspicuona of which is nne entitled, "Thp,PhristinauSleigh Ride." This splendid _Menne covelt the entire one side of thin great paper: and itilFelf Korth the price of the paper. The Jona than also coguina Stneles.Tales, Sc ,—price cents or ten copies:for St. Persons In the country can have It by encloslag 121 cents in it letter. post paid,to SANNAN'S Decl l l-51 Book and Variety Store. New And Cholce'Perfumery. MEM HANNAN'S. Cheap Perfumery and Fancy Scores, Docl6-51) Pottsville Elegant Presents for the Holt- 1 1 HE Slflt CRhAER announces to his numerous I customers and friends that he has Just received, in addition to those already punished. one of the most elegant assortments of hooks and fancy articles ever offered in this place. embracing a much larger assort ment than gin be found at any one place In theeities, all at which wilt be cold at unusually lure• tates.l following emarages bill n portlun of the ailsortittr lit: The Women 'Of the (tilde, splendidly illustrated, am borse.4 shiep, gilt, a splendid gift book, Book of Pearls, (Me steel engravings. goat, extra gilt, Sacred Poets:cloth, 'area The Moils rd itoinnion Prayer, Antique,- Scripture l'arshles, do, Friendship's Offering for 19 tO, Arabesque, gilt, The Opal, inuttrative steel eunraFiegs, goal, extra gilt The Amaral,' goat, extra gilt. . Wreath of Friendship, cloth, extra gilt; The Chit:dam Year, cloth, ixtra gilt, The l'orget ?tlii Not for ISO, rl.uh, extra gilt, Chrirttnaa Ettr, cloth, extra wilt, Lady's Annual Au 1810. I.eal t•of itsinory, Jove:111a ricras,Book, cloth, extra giit. Evenings at titsme. do to Holiday Boort. do do Fairy Gilt; cloth. embossed, Fairy Tales, cloth. untboasqd, extra G iris' and Boys' Mi..cetlany, cloth. embossed. The Gem, clothh gill, Tenether with a number of smaller works of Poetry and Preen. variously hound ; an eleaant assortment of Albu ms, Toy Books and Cards. GeogrophicaLli istarical and Scientific Games, and a large collection of Piney articles Intended for presents' in the coining season of gills, just received and for sale at.less than city prices at Deel6-51] . . Cheap Weak and Variety Store. • PEEEWIUTE. LEAD. Wettierill K Brother, I INIEZI,u7,F,T4I;I°. g ° ,;'„:,..'u",`,TyY,f 7 t'lltel'rtsvreactr•-• ranted pier WIIIII7. LEAD, and those customers who have been sparingly supplied in consequence of a run on the article, shall now have their orders tilled. No known substance possesses those preservative and beautifying properties, so desirable in a paint, to an initial extent with unadulterated white lead; hence any admixture of other materials only mare its value. It has,therefdre, been the steady aim of the manufacturers, for many years, to supply to the public a perfectly pure white lead; and the unceasing demand for the article, is proof t hat It has met with favor. It is invariahly brand ed no one lead: WETIIEItILL & BROTHER in full, and on the other. warranted ;lure. all in red letters. STAIs - TON , S EXTERNAL REMEDY,. CALLED HUNT'S LINIMENT. IS now universally acknowledged to be the infallible I remedy. far, Rheumatism, Spinal Atfcctmne, Con traction of the Muscles, Sore Throat and Quinsy, Is sues, Old Ricers, Pains in the Back and Chest, Agee in the Breist and Face, Tenth Ache, Sprains, Bruiser!, Balt Rheum, Burns, Croup, Frosted Feet, and all Ner vous Disessea. The triumphant success which has attended the op nlicatinn of this most WONDERFUL MEDICINE in curing the most severe cases of the different diseases above naned, and the HIGH ENCOMIUMS that have been bestowed upon it wherever it has been introdu ced, gives me the right to call on the afflicted to resort at once tothe only remedy that con be relied on. A year has scarcely elapsed since. I bent introduced to the notice afthe public, this WONDERFUL REMEDY, and in 'that Shan space of time, it has acquired a repu tation that tanks tt ansonpt medicines as arrest Exter nal Reused thejlest sad bent. It has tecctvrd the no. probation of the Medical Faculty and ninny citizens of influence aid wealth have united nod recommending It to the Pubbr's use. as a medicine that can he aafely re sorted to foe speedy relief. The high characteralready attained by this popular Medicine, has induced some base and evil minded persons to palm off a counterfeit as the genuale ; and no doubt the country will be flood ed with a spurious Hunt's Liniment. Be carefhl and examine wsli before you hay, and ace you get STANTON'S EXTERNAL REMEDY CALLED ' .t HUNT'S LINIMENT See that each Itottio has my nano blown uponit, and that It Is artornpanied with directions, and with a far simile of my signature on the second page ; otherwise you will be cheated with an article that will injure in stead of bene fitting you. The tow price at which it is sold enables every dee, even the poorest to bebenefitted by this excellent reme dy. It is unfortunatelythe case that the working clot scn,from exposumare more. subject than the idle and neh,to those very Infirmities which it Is Intended to cure, yet the exbrhitant -price usually asked for came % diet of the like nature (one dollar per bottle,) robs' the needy of their use. Thousands are now suffering the most int ense agony arising from maimed limbs, distortions of the frame, inveterate rheumatism; many of them, perhaps, have already given lip in despair all attempts toobt air relief. atter repeated and unsuccessful trials—but let no sneh feelings or despair be entertained:4u HUNT'S LINI M ENT, it has done wonders, mutely be seen by loading the several rages reported in the pamphlets which are to be had of every Agent. Try It and despair not. But should you in carelessness, or incredulity neglect to seek for relief In Its proper application, either for your self or your friends. thou let the blame bp upon your as fonlyanr Providence has now placed within your ' reach a safe and certain remedy, which has - already afforded relief to thousands, and whose healing proper- ties ate ipcontestible. CEO. E. - STANTON. : Sill!' Slag. July I, BC . AGE .NTS: .. . - ' John G. Brown. Pottsville. Jonas Bobinheld. Post Clinton. ... .. • Bickel & Medier. Orwigsbure ' LewilO. Plunder, • Miners, haven. 'James B. Falls, kiinetille, , . .... ' • Geo.Beifsnyder, New - Castle. -- '-- , , , , • '• Walter Lawton, St Clair, . . _. - . S. 11..Kempton. Port Carbon. . - .P ' Oliverls NM, Beim:mt. ,-. .. W. IL Bartow,- New. Philadelphia. J. Williams, bliddlepart: - . . George IL Potts. Brockville, • . - • 3ox. U. Alter,' Tuseamra. - . . _ Refiner & tforganworth, Tamaqua. • . • • July 14.11117. Pottsville. !lf tv, A 501,1817 4.1"19.- A irlitOlititt EitifeaLVDMEG—Lowis .4. Joha ll monspetent atoznaphetie auras, na an Improved . priecirs, Ws:rioted to otos sathifikettnn. flu ealkby NOv. MUT grArriritr- Co. GE , CllllOOll Extra._ taanby the name of CLAPP htur migarred.with a 'young imam of the name of d. P.' ToWneend, and uses his name to put up a Sarsaparilla. which they call Dr. Townsend's Sarsaparilla, denominating It GENUINE Original, etc. This Townsend is no doctor, and never was;- but was formerly a worker on railroads, ,canals, and the :ike,- Yet he assumes the title of Dr.; for the purpose of gaining credit for,whit he I not. This Is to caution the public not to be deceived, and purchase none but the Genuine Origins( Old Dr: Jacob Town send's eari131 , 36112, Navin; on it the Old Drs. like- ness, his family coot er anZi, end his signature across thotoat of arms. - • - , • i GenuineTtiwnsend Sarsaparilla: l Llr' is;Townsend nowab:Oears of lageC a.4lasontbenllwnastiVarttararl:l„oy! .ererof the Genuine Original "Townsend Sarsaparilla " Being mum he was compelled to limit its manufacture, by which means it bas been kept out of market, and the sales circumscribed to thine only Who had proved its worth nod known its value, It had reached the ears of many, nevertheless, as those persons who had been healed of core diseases', end saved from death, proclaimed its excellence and wonderful HEALING POWER. - Knowing, many pars ape, that he had, by his skill. sciente, and experience, devised an article which would be of incalcuable advantage to mankind, when once known and extensively used, be hoped and perseve red, eipecting the time to. arrive when the means would be furnished in bring ltt Into universal notice, when its Inestimable virtues would be known and apprecia ted. This time ha s mine, the weans are supplied; this GRAND AND UNEQUALLED PREPARATION. Is manufactured en Our largest stale, and is called for throughout the length and breadth of the rand, es- Ileriallyeal it IS found incapable of degeneration or deterioration.. , .. . Let every, loan ring throughout she land, that 01.1 Dr. Jacob Townsend 'in now manufacturing the real' 'Townsend Sarsaparilla,' which nerve sours, Weser pr menu, and never elan , . ire character: From this day birth' the people shall have the Pure Ganyine Tornsend Sersapardja, whirl; shall never sour in the brittle, or to the stomach, and It shall yet banish from the land all For venting, Souring, Marto. ding. Vinegary Sarsaparillas, now in use. A gnarl Sarsaparilla. pare and geanine. ought to live s.a poor souring. stip , slop.sareaparllta.ought to droop and rile. The Old Dr's. Sarsaparilla will keep pure and per fect WO years. Vold, yGung S. P. Tawnsend's it impinves with age. awl never changes, but fir the better ; because it is prepared on setentific principles by a scientific man. Tjv highest knowledge of Chemistry, and the latest discoveries of the. Art have all been brought iron requi sition Intim manufacture of the OLD DIES. SARSA PARILLA. The Sarsaparilla root, It is troll known to medical men, contains many medicinal properties. and some properties which are Inert es useless, and others, which, if retained in preparing it for use. pro duce fermentation and acid, which is rolitrious to the system.. Sonic of the properties of Sarsaparilla are so volatile, that they entirely evaporate and are lust in the preparation, if they are not preserved by a scientific process, known only to those experienced in its manu facture: Moreover, these volatile principles, which Ay MT in vapor, oo ze s an exhattation, under heat, are the very essential medical , properties of the root, which • give to It all its value. Any person can boil or-stew the root till they get a , dark colored liquid, which is.more from the coloring Matter in the root than from anything else ; they can , then strain this insipid or vapid liquid.sweeten with n cL o r u tUr ' r: i p a "I'll a i : id s such call „ot the ..S n ' ;t7elci P known aiilr roTie t GENUINE OLD DR. JACOB TOWNSEND'S SAR SAPARILLA. _ This is au prepared, that all the Inert properties of the Sarsaparilla root are first removed, every thing capable of bemitning acid or of fermentation. is extract ed and rejected ; then every particle of medical virtue IS secured In a pure and concentrated form; auditing it it rehdered incapable of losing any of its valuable and healing . piiiptirtles. Prepareil in this way, It Is made the inner powerful scent in the . _ CURE OF INNUMERABLE HISEABESI. Hence the reason .why we hear ihminientlatloni on every side In its favor by men, women, and children. We find it doing %Yonders in the cure of Consumption, Dyspepsia, and Liver Complaint. and in Rhettnialicm, Scrofula, Piles, Costiveness, all Cuianenus Eruptions, Pimples, Blotches, and all affection. arising from r IMPURITY OF THE BLOOD. It possesses a marvellous efficacy, in all complaints arising, from indigestion, from Acidity of the Stornnrh, front unequal circulation, determination of blood to the bead, pelpitatton of the heart, cold feel and cold hands, cold chills and hot bashes over the body. It has Lot its equal in Colds and Coughs':: and promotes easy expectoration, and gentle perspiration reining stricture of the lungs, throat, and every other part, But in nothing is its ear silence more manifestly seen 'and aeknowedged than in all kinds and stages of Fe male Complaints. It works wonders In ease of Fluor Mims or Whites, Polling of tit/ %Vomit. Obstructed, Suppressed : or Painful Menses, irregularity of the menstrual periods, and the like; and is as effectual in.euritig,all the norms of Kidney Discus'. By removing ebitirlicliongi and regulating the general System. it pier, mile and strength to the whole body, 11114 thus (Litres all forms of NERVOUS InsEAscs .Ni) DEBILITY, days. nd thus prevents or relieves a great variety of at ter maladies. as Spinal Irritation, Neuralgia, St. Vitus Dance. Swooning. Epileptic Fits. Convulsions, tr.c. It Is not possible fot this medicine to fail to do goad ; it has nothing in it is iintrit, It can nev sr sour or sPoil, and the 'of loose its cura tive properties, It cl nl, ercittmtbe liver to healthy action, tot I, and gives good digretion, relieves lit nor and constipa tion, allays Intlamatii skin, equalizes the circulation of the b t gem', warmth equally all over the I insensible perspire: don ; rt Isoya all obit mi tsor nine Piet, tire nervous system. is .ion then,, tine medicine volt pre-etolnentli. need', But can aoy of I terse things he nail of S P. Townsend', infeti , r :wide I Title young man's liquid is not to lie COMPARE!) WIT!! THE 01.11 DR'S. Because of true gr Ind fact, that the one teuputde of deletion hon.:wit NEVEtI SPOILS, %tithe the elhei (lore; Ii sow , Pruttits:. aunt blow the leatles ~on. Minh,: It into fragine tt‘.; the sent. at i.l rind dilitmeitig 'other goods! ?Asst nor thi• hmlltde compound 141.15MMn% to tine en stem? Moo! put aridigio a.Fgltelnalreatiu acid! What c.auses Syspensis but :teat Do we 1101 nit know. that .wlten food sours In our stomas he, what talseliMf it product:al dattilenee, heartburn, pail itatto or the heart, liver complaint, diarrlialy dr,turry colic, and corruption of the mood l Whit is Sr:coin:a his °acid humor in the hotly! What produces all the' humors which hring on Ertrations of the Skin. scald Ilrad. Salt:Rheum, Erysipelas.l„VhiteSweltlags.Fever Sores, and all ulcerationt, !Meryl! and external! It Is notli. Mg tinder heaven hot an acid Itnliatar.cf, which sours and thus spoils all the fluids of the body, more or less. What rawer. Rheumatism. hut a sour or acid which Insinuates itself het ween the joints. and else where, irritating and-inflaming the tender and delicate tissues upon which it actsl b of nervous dire leo, of impurity of the blood, or deranged circulations, and nearly alt the ailment: , widen afflict human nature. Now Is it not horrible to make and sell, and isjini•e ly worsc4n use this • SOARING, FERNICNTING. ACID "COMPOUND" OF S. P. TOWNSEND! ..„..._ . And yet he would fain have it nutlerstond that Old Dr. Jacob Townseniri Genuine Oiie . trof Sarsaparilla, is so IMITATION of his inferior prepatation • , Heaven forbid that sue slemid dent in an articl e which wmill hear the, most distant rescinblatire to S. P. Townsend's article! and tvhleh would brine down upon the Old Or such a mountain load of roniplcint and Criniteatteris from Agents whp have sold, and piic. tuasersitrchave used el.. P. TownsemPs Fermenting Compound. t 1 a wish it understood, because It is the absolute truth. that S.-P. ,Townsend's article and Old Dr. lae.di Tow wind', S.lrlapirillt are hearer-wide apart end infinitely dissimilar; that- they aiss.Jinlike in every particular, having not nne.single thingln com mon. As A. I'. Townsend is no doctor,and never was, is no chemist. tin pharmaceutist—knave no more of medi cine or diseasegian any other cominon, unscientific, unprofessionshilan, what guarantee can the public have that they are receiving a genuine scientific medi cine, containing all the virtues used in preparing it, and which lire incapable of changes which ,nitcht ,rcn der them the agents of disease instead of health 1 lint whet Clue should he e t apecled from one who knows nothing comparatively of medicine or disease It requires a person of. come experience, - to conk and serve up even a comthowileeent Meal, liner eunclisnore important is it that the persons whn manufacture niedi-, tine, designed for weak stomachs and enfeebled sys tems,simuld know wealth, atedicalproperties of plants, the best manner of securing and concentrating their beelike virtues, also an extensive knowledge of the va• rious diseases which affect, the human syStern, and bow to adapt remedies to these diseases ! It is horrible to think:and to know how cruelly the • afflicted are imposed upon by presumptuous men for the sake of money ! Fortiknes made out of the agonies of • the sick! and no eqnivalent rendered the despair- I tag sufferers! • It is to arrest frauds upon the unfortnnate. to pour balm into wounded humanity, to kindle hope in the de spairing bosotch; to restore health and Morten, and vigor Into the crushed and lirol.eu, and to banish infirmity. that Old Dr. Jacob Townsend has sought and. amid the oPportunity_and Means to bring his Grand m eal Concentrated Remedy within the reach, the knowledge of all whn need it, that they may Ie r ian know, by Joyful experience. its. TRASSCENDENT POWER TO 'DEAL. .And thus to hays the unpurrhasable satisfaction of having raised thousands and millions from Gm bed of sickness and despondency to hope, health, and a. long life of vigor and usellltness to themselves,. their fami lies and friends' Agents for this County. John G. Drown. Pottsville; James D, Falls, and .1. W., Gibbs, Mineisville; F. J. Fry, Tamaqua. [Dec. 15, ISIS. .)I• TENNENT,S WASHINGTON GALLERY OP DAGUEGEOTYPES, .Ya. 931 N'ortk Secaid Street..k .w, earner of • Calloicitill Street, PAilmielPia. E Lircneases taken are licant,tulty entered at due JL welOcnown establishment, for Oas natter, are ;mi. vernally Conceded to be .equal in every respcnt to any In the city: Pictures taken equally well in enmity und clear weather. A large - assortment of Medallions and Lockets on band, at from ea to 85, including the picture. • The klubabribera 'reapeetfully itteite the citizens of Schuylkill County, to call and exmnine speeimen* of tke latent Improvements in the net of Danuerreotyping, which will be Exhibited cheerfully and without chem.. in .1. C. TENNENT. T7-tlinto. Phl 4detpgla, June :".5,'49 A.IIP - STLA.3II'S,' LWil tIRACING ALL. hI NDt3 OF CORNELIUS. ARD Lamps. some nett and beautiful Patterns. Fluid Lamps, nil kinds. ' , Phosgene Gas Lamps, also PhosgeneGas. ' The light given byLbete Lamps Is soft, does not :rad the oyes, and is superior in brilliancy to- Gas. It is. not as ex pansive as Oil—and is attended, with about -only, one." hilt the trouble.. Also CaMphine Stand and. Hanging - Latnps. All of which will be sold at Manafacturers prices, at • DA'NNAN'S Nov L5-4d! Cheap Don and , Variety Suites- .„ IXAIDER:—Tho anderslanea nal far sale / PERFECTLY SEASONED Susquehanna Panel Boards and Plana, cullenloards, and a lot or. two Inch Common Plank., -- • - • ile would give notice to those Indebted for Ltimbar. prarsbased either of tin:melt or P. Goa d & Co., to come forward_ and SeGIOGIOiT reepective azzoneita. • - .3iiil4-413 , • • '• V- COVO. -. BOOKS. 808 THE AOLIDAYS. A 8 the time for makmg presents Is approaching and linearly upon Os, we would invite-attention le the following catalogue of elent works which have been prepared for those who toay,destre to show their re gard for &friend, by the presciat of a beautiful book, and thereby strengthen their claims to the Affectionate remembrance of those they esteem. ry Scenes in the tile of ottr'Saviour,eplendidlyilltis- Waled, by the finest steel engravings, orniruen- .. • tad cloth, gold edge; •- - 83 75 Atones in the Lives of the PatriorcliS and Pioph- • .ets,- illustrative steel engravings, •. 375 nook of the Modern Poets of the Nineteenth Century, ornamented cloth; gilt edge, 1 73 Mrs.Embery's Natures Gents; With twenty color- ' • ed plates. bound la cloth, and beautifully ' ' embossed and gilt, 7 00 Byron's Poetical Works, complete In one vol. - - eplendidly illustrated, and elegantly bound, 300 Heman's Poetical 'Works, complete in one vol. illustrative steel engravings, neatly bound in sheep,'2 50 , 'lemon's abridged, ornaMented cloth, gilt edge, 175 '. • Do do plain, - 100 Campbell's Poetical. Works, illustrated, cloth, 1 • gilt edge, •- 250 . • bo do - plain, 150 Crabbe, Heber, and Polk*, inane col. Mastro ted by highly finished steel engravings, neatly bound In sheep, . ' 2 50 The American ,Female Poets, wit's Tito-"raphical and critical notice; with a portrait of Frauds S. Osgood, neatly bound in cloth. - 22 5 Hiltons Works, elegantly bound in cloth.gllt edge. 0 50 Willis' Poents, with a portrait of the author, cloth 1 50 Popes Works, illustrated, cloth, I 50 The Sibyl. or new oracle from the Poets, erne- • . mented cloth.. gilt edge, -150 I : Tupper's Proverbial Philosonhy,beantlfullybouniLl 00 - 'Flora's Interpreter, ornamental biodidg, 1 00' Scott's:Complete Poetical Works, cloth, 1 .23 1 Eliza Cook's Poems, illustrated, - 1 12 Berne's Pttetical Works, complete In one vol. 07 Tappan's Poetry of Life, neat cloth binding, 52 Poems of (lesion, o2 Childe Harold, '.-:. ; 02 Latta llookb, illtmtrated,• l O2 Miss Lambert's Hand Book of noodle work, 12 25. Lodi& work-table book, with Illustrative cuts. . 57 Together will a vory large collection of smaller works of Poetry and Prose variously bound, at prices from 35 CM 10 50 cts. a volume. New and -elegant Al bums from 75cts. to di cach,niarge assortment of Toy Books, Cards, &c., and fancy mercies, Intended for presents In the coming season for glgs. for sale at ex ceedingly low prices, at • HANNAN'S Dec. 2.491 Citron Bonk and Variety Stores. 1 lIUGIIES , EXPECTORANT, cELE.nitaTEII For the Cure ref Coughs, Bronatifie Incipient Conalonption, Van, matron of the ft Lange, tnuf 134ea,e3 of Mt Pubsan ary Organs. - - rrIfIS valuatde preparation is highly recommended by physichuts and by a celAtated chemist of Philadel phia, for its uielical effects and rhentical combination, as Well an by thousands of others who have tirade ese of it , —as it never has been used withbut producing !enchant nthxts, and ultimate cute of the diseases for which it is It recommended. And being a regular graduate ofPharma i t cy, I can assure the public of its perfet safety, It Is composed of such preparations as slat,' tattle very high est repute among the medical faculty for the cure of that Nr start of diseeses whicharoi co often only the forerunners ii t of that fatal disease, Conlstlnip:ioll. in most cases whore ~, there is touch pain in the breast, and is Idyll ellen extends , t through to theshouider blade. I would strongly:Advise the vt application of ono of the compennil Galli:maul Plasters , to the breast, and ties the Expectorant as directed. In r fact, the useof the Galbanuitt Plaster etuthet belts; stronly is recommended, as I have seen so 'many Instances of tin al of the. Greatest relief in a ecru short spare of time, even in confirmed cowoomion. The rspyolor.tot xcill be found to relieve the couch, noddlee. gluten the pain` it and, at the sante thue, draw the intimation to the surface, and thereby act as u tauter-irritant, w hid, every physi cian will pronotincis good, without the least hesitation whatever. Persons Ate uncn said to have the consump tion, when by a Judicious use of sortie of the best Expec torants, and a carefal.tliet, they have been completely cured, so that their experience should act as a warning to those who are said to have the consumption not to de spair, but try on.. The I:specter:int trill be found to afford great relief. even when a cure is said to be impossible. Before malting use of an Expectorant - it would be as Well to exatniire the Ur Oa, commonly termed Palate, to gee if it is trot swollen or elongated. In such cases an eSpeCtOrrint, is useless. • blacking rough and a continual disposition to swallow la frequently caused by all el9nZalion, or the palate. Au excellent rented) in such rases ls to us?fi small quantity 011111mb - a Myrrh, say about a teasimenfitl too Wine glassful of water, and use as a gargle, three or font tithes day. IT 11,0 abet., ...dy SIIOIII , I or one of the Nine halo re, it Would be best to apply to a surgeon,. and have a mall pottinn of it taken tiff. so as to obviate the irrßation and the continual cough wltudi a wolll , l be like ly to prodidex in the throat. The operation is trifling, and attendstrwith but little. if any pain whatever. In Bronchitis., anti diseases of the throat, the gargle should he used. Prepared by.). currrli Winlesale an Retail Druggist end Chemist, Centte . t4tretit, Pottsville•d A. most gemarliable I.lrcunt stance. ' • lls A. N . occurrence r weeksn e niece,t ok oar h t e in , v , c a Ponce o. i its nature, has not, we think, been surpassed in modern times. Irds an old saying that "truth is stranger than fiction" nod we challenge the imagination of n Radcliff -or a Dickens to conceive anything containing an many elements, not only of the seemingly ouperuatur_il but of the Intrinsically beautiful, and resulting so nearly traglenhye; so transcendently beneficial: At the solitary hourof midnight when the denizens of rate ClithotNereti HIV of the hills were candy repo sing in the arms of Morpheus, their minds perchance wandering through the Elysian fields of fancy. and partaking of those'andanzial fruits no which we poor mortals are permitted in Imagination to feed—ahthis hour one of our citizens was awakened, and not only awakened but -confounded by a crash sn tremendous in its nature as not only to completely dispel the rand fol world which had gather.] 1 around nue ceighlmur, lint to lead him to suppose that some griat convulsion bad taken place. A fall or sotne kind bad certainly occurred, that whether in the world of fancy or of fact was tint clearly ascertained until the return of .day.' The phenomenon nrrnrred in the house if Ceo. W. Slater, and urns an examination of the premises the next morningth wan ISeertaine.l that the prices of the 'various articles of his stock of Cols had conic down' twenty-five per cent t The astonishment of our hoc may be iniagined, but we desire to near witness that he submitted to the dispensation with (=menda ble philosophy. and that he decided at once upon the proper coutse.of action—viz.: Inlet the prices remain no lie found them on this eventful morning, especially inasmuch as Ids stock do on trim:endow:ly lathe that the task of restoring them to their position would he Herculean. Any person who d-sires to witness the ,effects of the phenomenon Can call at Mr. Slater's store in Centre s , rect, a few doors below Market street. Dee. 2, Isla. • . 49.3 tn PURIFY TILE lILOODI lilt- KEELER'S PANACEA, LI Oft the removal and permanent core of all diseases arising from an impure state of the blood and habit body, via.; Chromic IlrmiChitig. Catarrh. Pfrlitiry, Coughs, rte.,. .crofola in ill its forms, Tettcr,Scald Ilea l S ill Rheum, cat-meons eruptions of 'the head. IM - e, body, :Ind ex ensioes. Chronic iliA,ases of the Liver, Stomach, slot Ravels, Chronic Rhentnatimn. Chronic tinlareenient of the .loisio and Licartimits, White Swellings,. llip Joint Mr, Abres,..es, Ulcers. Syphilitic disorders, iner cmial and hereditary fitedisposition, etc., etc: From the known -pail which the Illsod performs in the el -finery processes of nutrition. who doubts that I does not undergo important alterations when the pro , CeO.ll`3 t 31,11 place in an unhealthyittannerl These al terations are sometimes the cause and someti:nrs the effect °film morbid phenomena, which) COnstitnic what we term disease. That there io n strong analogy be tween many constitutional diseases and the effects of p0ie40.0.3 stems 11111'01in 4,011 into the blond, no one will deny, and that these' disra,es are due to the action of some morbid,: nottk-,•which has affected both its physical and vital properties. What that client may lead to is forcibly sketched by Dr I.Villiatna - The ap pearance of pethis(llisciiloration) on the external sur face. the nrcurrenre of more exten.sive hemorrhage in Internal patio, the general fluidity of the amino and frequently its unusually flail: or otherwise altered as pect,its poisonous imiperties,as exhibited to its delete. riots opt-rations On Miter animals, and its pronener's to pass into decomposition, pciot out time Blood ea the first part of disorder. and by the failure of it, natural proper. ties and offices as the )tier of ell strnetiire and function, it is , plainly tile medium by which death to-' 2111.4 In the holy. "' All of those alf,ctions in which the Panacea is applirable an alteration of this fluid has ta- i, ken place—it must be changed before lun!th can follow.' That it.has this petti - .er the most ample testimenysan to given. On not hesitate'. ncuaenatter a responsible me• Meal person tolls ytai Bead the following evidence! Mork trooiltoo,. N J.. Feb, G, ISIS. 'Of. Kceler:—Dear Sir Int entirely nut of yo'cr Panacea: I was called on dry berme yesterday for hal a doznn.. Your medicine,, hi:cam:tie very popular %%here 1- have introfltired if. and I think the more it ir used the more popidar it will gut, • • • , Respectfully t oars, - Wit. Ps nit sm. M.D prepared and sold N.W. coiner 21 and South meet Philadelphia. For sale by .1. 0. Drown and J.S.C.:ll:pc liti,'PottsVille ; .1. Krtntitoin Port Carton ; B. Fat a, Minersville, and by druggists and merchants threOhl nut the County • fries SI per bottle, or six bottle's for 85. C5-For partirulars see pamphlets. . / Also, Da. I:EELER'S CORDIAL and CAM MC., the most speeds and permanent remedy now far Diarrhrea, Dysentary, Cholera Infantoin, Coli Flatulency, dec., and forth° many derangements Of th Stomach and Bowels from Teething. No family hool be without it. l'rice onty m 3 cts. [Aprls'4B.ltl r.l4 -t TO rumLi AND T snu E ns, B PUBLIC. OOKSELL DOS, H TIIF, subscriber has completed, with the aid f the most experienced and capable assistants, a I 191- NE9S MAIN'S ALMANAC for ISIC, tthieh he is con fident will enumiend itself to the decided favor n the Trade and the public. Although bharing the humble designation of Alm. nae, It is believed that this work will be found equi.l fat nese and merit to many which assume n much oft i• Cr distinction. It has been prepare.: with a deter illa tion to bring witlitn the smallest comprise all Mei:alb:its facts which a man of liiisine-s will "have occasiOn to refer to in the course of she year ; such r.s.the conden sed Statistics of ear National Industry, in its various departments; or Agriculture, Manufactures, Milting., Commerce, &c.,he.—itschannels and means of T ans. imitation—Railroads, Canals, principal lines of Pit sam ' boat and River Communication—Tables of Duties, Im ports. Evports, Revenue, EYpelltlitillt3. dcc, &c. To these is added a large,amount of Information wiyh re: gard to the most approved modes of commencinga'rans acting, and extending Business ; the means of intring success is Commercial undertakings; the relati ad vantages of Cask and Credit dealings; the powet and ' Influence of the'Newspaper Press, Systematic Ad. 'eras sing; Roles air Business Mae, dec.. 4. The Business Man's Almanac is-compressed tilthln 01 doubte.column pages, of fine but new and fairitype, though containing more matte; than an ordinary 12mo volume of 200 pages. It will be supplied to the Trade at el per hundred" or $11.5 per thousand. Sing!ecPpies. 121 cents. Terrns.eash on delivery. Orders alle res pectfully solicited by " W. 11. PALMER, General Newspaper Agenc4 'Nov 4-41.2.m] Tribune Buildings, N. TABLE OF CONTENTS. This Tariff. Population, f Mon l ey and Exchanges, lmmigration, 1 1 1141 1 oal Trade. ' Rules•for Business Mein. Artfand Commerce.. I Wages Sad flours of tabor, The'Post Office. Tonnage and Shipping, Tim Patent Laws, , Mechanical Inventions. Weights and Measure:, , Land and ItivenNavigation Finance. Routes and Distanced, Partnership. 'The Electric Telegraph, rota The IradNewspaper. • - The Newspaper Prey , • Ralltaady, Systematic Advertis g. POlthrille Steaun Planing 1 , d TunNalovt, NuFAcToRY. r undersigned Una Made complete and perms - .L sent arrangements for the manufacturing of Floor Boards, Window , Sashes, sawed Laths, Bed PoSts, Ta• Ide,erib, and Washstand Legs, Awning and fittching Posta:-Baturters, Stump Feet. Rotting Pins. Potato Bench and Hand Screws, Porch andiNewsl Posts, Bed Pins. and 11- get eral variety of ttlftlirit of alt. tie- will keep constantly on hand Yelkow and Whito' Pi nerloor Boards, alashins and Laths, add other dashed' - work worthy the attention' of builders. He has circular saws/hi slitting attar to any dirriension required for bthltdittgor edttsrptirpotes- Pe1i541.441. . ; - N. STII • _ Postscript. From our Telegraphs Correrporolent NEWS TO VA:LATEST MOMENT PHILADELPHIA 'Dec.ls.l } 0 o l c.looc,r P.M. . ... • lour is held at 5 per borzoi, Corn Sisal and ' • Its. Flour era dull. Wbeatt"sl,osai,o7. Rye. 60.62 e. per bush. Corn, 62.133 e. Wuiekey, • 82.221. rn vEN DAIS LATER VIt0.1103V1101"El; REVOLUTION IN ROME 3che 'Foreign News by the Steamer Maitre; ich arrive ! at Boston . the beginning of the • ck, is important in many respoc4. -' , Revolution had broken out at Rome, and the i 0" ace of the Popo was attacked.. The 1.311w:elm! r. some of the particulars: • :i, ' 'After the assassination of Aft Rossi, before re; irlted, the Mob; at the instigation of the clubi, ceeded in a body to the Quirinal Pelace., - ori .h 16th oh. where they demanded a new Mini*: .r , the immediate declaration of war, &e. "t About MO Sirri.s Guards resisted them. The li !await body also enlaced the palace, to protect th Pope by their moral influence. Some endeo wir was made to set fire to the principal gates;, hi A a tete shots tient the Sodas caused the me; . . . . I Shortly eiterwitrds the Civic Guards, the ,elts 'd Armes, the Line, the Roman Legieo; Lumbering some thousands; infested the Palace . int order of, battle, end commenced a fu ao& eainst the windows. The Swiss were over whelmed, end the Pope's . Secrete:l, Moneignoi Palms, was shot in the breast. The Bescanete by their overwhelming force, coMpellcd submid• sion. Thu beiieging party nave the Pope but one hour to comply with their request,cinti if he re= ford they would Massacre all thixinmatexat 166 P lace except himself. Negotiationswere opened; and a list of Mini,ters, cam - prising the names of ' th?se who had got up the conspiracy, was sent In , li th Pope, whl,, under the duress of arms and the fe r of pereonsPdanger, was compelled to submit to any dictation. The auththity of the Pope id . in fact now a nullity. . On the 18th the Minist r y was formed, with Mozzarrelli President of the upper chamber; Pres; idiot of the Council, 43c., Memiami, Sterbine; Gampello, Lunati, and Serini. .The Swiss 9TO sent away, and the National Guard occu: Aed their poet in the castle. The popular club , s the Supreme . Government, and decides upod 1111 combinations:. lrhe new ministry has put forth an'address, valich they may they will convoke the chacri. The French Government hoe° sent ri kircia to Civita-Vcchie, to eupport the Pupo against hie . kIITCI4: Affair.: were apparently quiet at Vienne. Ttui Previdential election 'was the abaurbic topic id Franca. ' 1 1 ,0 W A.— be.n; G. W. 3011(11 and Hon. A. 6, Dodge, Locolecos, have been elected by the ter, t.la ore V: S. tienatore. 'Phey wore chosen on tho first ballot. The W big candidates were Messrs. Low and Wallace. ,71:e" A company has been formed et New Yeti Citte, (or making a railroad across the Isthmus of Par r iams. General Winftel I t•.:coot, Cornelius W. L+ ranee and others, have been api.ointed trustees; of the compriny. The right of way has heed . sec retl from the government of New Grenada by then Aniirican Consul —This will open a way Ito a the Atlantic to the Pacific, for the gold hunter:. The distance is ailiy mileci. A Decided improvern;nt.—aloy have a now way of hatching eggs in'the west. - They fill a harril with eggs and then put a hen on the bung ho ' o. k .. 7. Who Caresl—Louis Philippe and family hie left Cleremount. on account of the unnholo soneny*s of tho water, and gone to Richmond. f?tal Woe.— A daughter wooed in court, at Pilitsbmg, last Thursey. to testify agalnat a faits; who hod murdered hertsnother. . . ""If i/e deril should lose his tail, where tvo Id he get another!" "In the drain shop, to be .nre, because they is-tail bad spirits." _ j There clic 'Aid to be PiX thonsand people' at anomie; waiting for conveyance up the coast. SILENCE .1 • at dreadful Cough ! 7•he Lungs are in &Nor 1 The work of the destroyer bath Levin! T'Nt , The rough of consionMion Aat h in it a sound of Death r RE you ft T:1 1 r' Yoord' l ii"gchlld' g)uriLl4anteartl3iT, is now, perhaps, confined to chamber by a dangerous cold—herpale cheeks, her thin rldunken fingers, tell the bold disease, has already, galiwit upon hi r--the sound of her sepnlehral cough pi Ices your soul. • "oung man, when just about to enter life, dlserdii. se ,Is a 'wart-crushing blight ever the fair prospectrof tlie future- your hectic cough and feeble limbs tell: of y air inns of hope, but you treed not despair. There la a balm, which will hearth,: wounded lungs, It is g nog :a: g li b...y :lo l l ) h r :: s 'ii g w h a L i , 1, ,f -I: l }l , l g l g L h l ig N g f , l og ll . A b L:A . 51 11g . g gn4 , Mrs. Arift EE. the %sire of Wm IL Attree, Esq. wan 3 ceitillan of Philadelphia, and Dr. klott of New York. I er friends all thought she mast die. She had every . ppearance of being in consumption, and was so pro. 1 lainced by her physicians--Sherman's Balsam was ham and It cored her. 'Rev. HENRY JONES, DIS., Eighth avenue, seas ured of couch and catarrhal affection of 50 years tending. Tife , first. dose cave binn more relief than all the other medicine' be had ever taken. Dr. L. 3. Beals, 10, Delaney street, gave it to a sister-In-law, who was laboring under Consumption, rind In another Sorely afflicted with the AStlirria. in both cases Its; , elect were immediate, addeoori restored them to cora -1 fortable health. I DR. SHERMAN'S: COUGH LOZENGES tore the most obstinate cases of Cough in a few hours. They have cured „a large number of persons who has t e been given up by their physicians and friends; and many who have been reduced to the verge of the grave by spitting blood,Comiumption and Hectic fever; by their Ilse have had the la se of health restored to, their haggard cheek, anti now live tp speak• forth the praises Or this invaluable nirdirine. DR. SHERMAN'S WORM LO7.ENGES Have been pros eit in more titan 400,000 rasi-1 to ha infallible, in fact the May certam worm destroying„ medicine, ricer discovered. Children n ill eat tgiets . when thy cannot he (treed is take any other medicine: and the benefit clerics,' from the mlinintatration of, medicine to them its MOS form. it great beyond descrip-. . Wm. When tits breath of the child becomes offen sive, and there in pickizis of the nose, headache, dross, sine-s. starting daring eccepalirturbeddrcoms,awaking a with fright and screaming, troublesome .cough, fever-, Witless, thirst, voracious appetite, sickness of the, stomach, and bloated btomach- 7 these are among the many proud:tent symptoms of worms, and can be re-, lima' by these ttirmariarable Lozenges. They have never been known to Cad. . Oft. SIICIZMAN'4 CAMPIIOR LozracoEs PAM v e headache, nervous sick headache, palpitation of the heart and sickness Ina very few ininutese•- They cure lowness of spirits, despondency, faintneisj colic, spasms, cramps of the stomach, summer or. bowel complaints-1114 keep up the spirits, dispel all the distressing symptoms of marsh' of disalpatioll, and . enable a person to undergo great mental or bodily toil. s DR. SHERMAN'S, POOR MAN'S .PLASTER Is acknowledged by all who have ever used It to bO, the best strengthenteg plaster In the world;' and a soir. ereiga remedy for pains and weakness in the back, oies,.,side,• breast, neck, limbs joints, rheumatism, lumbago, Sze. One million a year will nut supply the demand. Caution is necessary, as there are many, unprincrpleil persons ivho would form a spurious arti cle upon the community. Be careful to get Sherman's. Poor Man's Plaster, with a llie simile" of his written, name on the back—nuite others are genuine, and wITI do more hurt than good.' • Die. 2 40-13( , THE GRAN)) PCROA.TIVE. VOR the cure of Iteadache,alddiuess, Itaeumation,. Piles, Dyspepsia, Scurvy, nnuallpos,JeurliveaPalng in the Pack. Inward Weakness, Palpitation of •the, Heart, Rising, intim Throat, Drat['V. Asthma, revers or all kinds, Female Complaluts, Measles, Sala 'Rheum; Heartburn, Worms, Cholera Motions, Coughs, Quins3r, Whooping Cough, Consumption, Fits, Liver Complaint; Eusipelas.l.)eafness, Itching of the el ktu, Colds. Gaul,' Gravel, Nervous Complaints, nod a variety of other diaenser, arising from impurities of the blood, and ob structions in the organs of Amestion., Experience has proved that nearly eaery.disen se OTI: - Mentes from itffpurities of the blood or derangement of the digestive organs; and to needle health, we must it. move these ohatrurtious or restore the blood its na• , tural state. The averainn to taking medicine is most effectualy tee, • moved by Cliekner's Vegetable Purgative Pills ; beteg. 'completely any elittpcd with a coating of puritehitesem Whim] la as dist inet front the internal ingredients Oil nut shell from the kiniel) and have no tasteormedleite. Moreover thafneither vindicate or gripe in the al ighlett degree, buraperate Aqually no all the diseased parts of the system, instead of um fining themselves to and rack- ing any penicillin region. Thus, if the Liver be affec- Jed. one In:regent will operate un that particular oft: gait, and by cleansing It of any excess of bile, restore t it to its natural state. .another will operate on bloodmed remove all impurities In its circulation, while a third will move all impurities in Its circultaloriovhiln • atlasd trill effectually expel whatever impurities may' • • have been discharged to the stomach, and lignin they. 'tribe at the roof ttA diocese, remove all impure humor,' (loin the body open the pores externally andlnternallys separate all (entail and obtrusion" particles nom the' . chyle. so that the blood may be thoroughly pine—thus' . • . • eecuring a • free and healthy action to the heart. Ittlags. - - • - and liver;. end thereby they rciasse grelti,even when' aft other means have failed. The mane truth of the above can be ascertained by the trial of a single bon; and their virtues are so posi-t. live and certain in restoring health. that the proprietor, - binds himself to return the money paid for thorn in all tcases where they re turn not gave nniVentabsatisfaetiOn. Retail prices.'2scts. per hut. Principal office,' No. CO, Yeasty stieet, New Yeti. _ • The following are the agents in tituylkill nanny (of •-• Clickant'a Vegetable Purgative and Dr. !hero ' man's All-dealing Balsam, Lltienges and Plasters : •• • J. 8. C. Martin, .1. f. 4. Prawn', and F. Itlanderant,r, Prattville ; IL Shiasler. Port Carbon; Wm. Iv. New Philadelphia; Thos. Williams. bliddlepon; Schwartz, Patterson; J. IL Alter. Tuscarora; Kellett " & Mongenroth,lamagna ; Win. Price, St. Clair; Can. - Relfshyder,"New Castle; James B. Falls. bliteraville ', Jonas Kauffman, Lleniallyn ; Jacob Kauffman. Lower,'-- Mahantaogo ; Paul Ben, Pinegrove; Shooter te-Cast:t. ret, Orwlpburgt; Lydn & Itistiel,Purt Clinton; Levllll7,;:ti & Katiffutan,Scbuyikill 'learn... [Dec 2. 'O.. o.ly STU ECEIV ED —A la to assonment of ALa-' 0 dies , Cuuctiet.ESAGSardreßSEß. Alto steal Rat and Puro Cingie„ Steel ands 414 Vapelhasit Tovfn - for uterd .6sis RI . -eePL , " 4 ;S. ,\ Baky, • El - IS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers