°The Cheapest and most Splendid ASSORTMENT OP 'WATCHES AND JEWELRY IN MIRADA- • LEWIS •LAVORLUIL • , , e. 413 Afi m ait &red. afro &wig Maw Erma • ' aorta Sid•inittADL: • HAS jest reaped' by, late arrivals. from the "*" 1130111. celebrated outauSieturere of Swope, a • anignitleent and Judiciously selected Wan. inentofOold end Silver Watches. which be wilt' sell cheaper than any other establishment In the Unit ed Stites. dineegtheassorttatut will be Cooed— Gal Levers, IS k.cases,fulljeweled, 030 • pureelevers. foil jeweled, . Is emu pEpfnes. IS k. caste, jeweled, .la i gu ire y ;'Spines Jeweled. ~ to - 'Qua:tier watches, 4 to 010 Shea Tee eiled " ePatalateClial to =in. pa set. 4.0 ". " " 10,00 ••V : Table. " - u .. 10,00 Totether with a splendid escort:moot o Uhtettu sad' Pith Jew el Ae. GOLD cuAINB;ot various . styles, Rom the best Manufacturett. . . • *nesse prearee this advertisement, an d tan et LEWIS LADOMUS'S tia. 413 Market Street, above 11th. north side. 10.1 bate Gold and Sliver Levers r.iitskesper than the above pricea. CrA. libc rat discount made to the Trade; Pbßa.44ll-10-3mo] 13 Preserve 'this Advertisement if I YOU WANT A BARGAIN. CfIEAMST 'WATCH STORE IN PHILADA., 'No. 160 Neftil Second St , Come of Niro. - • Good Silver Verge Watches from 83 to 1110 Goat Silver Ludas do II to 111 x. Good Silver Laver ' do 813 to 831 ` Good Gold Vertkal , do Int to /20 - Goon Gold Wine do 412 1 1 to 4230 - Good Gold Patent Lever • do 4130 to 835 Some very heavy Gold Levee • do 815 to 850 - An gArrztofd to keep correct time. Also, Silver Tahle and Tea Spoons Manufactured, 'wholesale and retell, with a wreath to surround the came, the handsomest patent ever made, or plain. Also, Silver Spectacles from 81 to 82, Gold do from 15,5^ to 88,50. ' °Constantly on hand a good assortment of Farb . Janette Jeweled of every description, such as Finger 11Ings, Ear-rings, Breast Pins, Gold Chains, Keys, &c., at the lowest cash prices, at March 31, 14. 3t Watches. Jewelry, Silver Ware, ac. T11031A.13 ALSOP, PIO. 153 BOUT/I SECOND .ST., PHILADELPHIA. DAS on hand a large and reantltal tock of te Gold and Silver Lever,Lepinemnd otherSWatch dor all prices. Also a beautiful stock arde ott dry nt of the newest styles, whach hush been lately pp rebated at the lowest prices. Arun supply of Silver Forks. Spoons, Butter Knives. &c. or ill weights, and warranted to' re all equal to American coin. Spectacles for an aim with convex and concave glasses In Gold, Silver. Plated, and Steel frames. • Plated and Britania Ware In sets or single pieces, re ceived direct from the Blanufacterers, and sold at a Very small advance. A large aupply of Cams' super riot plated Spoons, Forks &c. the best article of the kind In the market. Rogers' Pine Cutlery, and a variety of other articles. Persons wishing any articles in my line of business are invited to examine my stock before purchasing. My motto is, "Quick sales and small profits," and— I am undersold by none. N.B. Particular attention paid to repairing all kinds ,of Watches and Jewelry. • (July 1.'98. 21.1 y 77 — WATT CIItSAWJE 'WE LUX. • ,CHEAPER THAN EVER. • inoletate aw4P Retail. at the "Phitodstpkits Nitta cad JawitrY &ore," No. 96 North Second Street, corner nf Quarry,—PIIILADELPAIA. j af t. . Gold Levers, 18caratcalea, full Jewelled, • 930 and upwards Sliver Levers, full Jewelled, •13 Gold Lepine, 18 It casesJawelled, 23 Silver Lepines,Jewelled, Silver Qu artier Watches, Silver spoons, equal to co roar sett, Tea. 85; Desert. 810; Table 815; other articles to proportion. Ali goods warranted to be what they are cold fur. Constantly on hand a large assortment online GOLD JEWELRY and SILVER WARE. Also, an assortment of NT. J. Tobias & Co., E. Simp son, Samuel & Brothels, E.S.Yates Jnhn Barri- Eon. 0. &. R. Beesley and other superior Patent Lever Movements, which will be cased in any style desired. Arrangements have been made with all the above 'shamed molt celebrated manufacturers of England to fur nish at short notice any' required style of Watch, for which orders will be taken, and the name and residence of the person ordering put on If requesten. 0. CONRAD, Importer of Watches; Phtia,Oct2.9 . 4B-44-ty] No. 96 N. Second St. BRADY & ELLIOTT, „lralehatakers and Jewellers, 0 6 / 1 1£11• IN ?HS 11.116 DT WHOLESALE AXD RETAIL Stara next door to the Miners' Bank, Centro atreet POTT3Vttiv. MESSRS. B. & E. keep constantly on hand an extensive assortment of WATCHES. eat .. bracing every at le, price. Etad manufacture L:ts' to be found In this ,country ; among which they may particularly referto the celebrated gold and silver LEVERS of M. T. Tobias 4- Co.,Jos. Johnson, Robert Itoskell, Wm. Robinson, &c., of whose manu facture they have a splendid collection. ALSO, gold and silver Anchors and Lennie!, to which they would invite attention. ALSO, a large and complete assort ment of Jewelry and Silver Ware. embracing nearly every-article properly coming under those heads.— Clocks in great variety; Musical Instruments and Fan. cc Articles of every description. Repairing of Clocks, Watches, Jewelry, ke.., promptly attended to. • Messrs.)]. & E. deem it unnecessary in advertise ment tokinumerate their stock more specifically; suf fice to say that It has been selected with much care and 'discretion', and is one of the most extensive to be found In the country. Their long experience In the business will full' warrant them In inviting the attention of purchasers: la the full confidence that they are enabled to idles tkurp as any other establishment here or else where. -" (Recta 47.51.1 y STOVES! STOVES: S.TOVES S WINTER 111 COlllllllO2 \ SOLOMON IllifON'Eß, Censer of Norwegian and ft..tieodd SO., ea, roTraviLLaf •_:-. - ..ANNOUNCES fp his friends and cos `tnmens and the p/i.blic generally that he 4 7e- .; has on hand the. most elegant soma meat Of 'STOVES ever offered in this community embracing all the newest and most approved patterns. De par ticularly ails attention to McGREGOR'S PATENT PARLOR HEATER. ahich is pronounced the best stove no •• In use.both for co inforLeconomy, and health. I have t e exclusive right ol'enakine these atones in SchuylkllrCounty. Also Cast Iron Radiators, EmPlre Cooking Stoves, a superior article for hotels. Willis' Air Tight'Cooklng Stovei, for wood or coal ; a superior articltfor families. Parlor and Chamber Stoves, Together with a large assortment for all purposes, all of which will be sold at unnsualty low rates. TIN AND JAPANNED WARE.—His assortment of Tin and Japanned Ware is very large, and embraces all the articles in families, which he will warrant to be of a superior quality. All kindi of Tin and Sheet Trod Ware Tllll:lUfactured is order at the shortest notice. ROOFING & SPOUTING. As he is prepared to ex- Sleet* Tin Roofing pnd Spouting, he inviter those in want circlets work, to give him a call, as he pledges bitnislf to do it cheaper and bitter than it has ever been done In this place before, it - Tba public are respeciftilly Wilted to tail and exam ine his stock and fudge-far the 'selves. [Oct7-41 FIRE t FIRE! FIRE! THE old adage,',." take time by Inc forelock " commends Itself to every one by its plain common sense; and, when the chili winds ofaktumn begin to blow, giving notice of the aliproachof Winter:every niudent man will at once make pros isiosfkgainst cold weather. Know's% abet the people of Poltaxaile have a commen dable regard for comfort, torigdoience, and economy, LONG JACKSON have just *baited their new store In Centre street, opposite TririlWchurch, with an ex tensive assortment of PARIANOAND COOKING STOVER, among which will be.;fSed ail the old and approied styles, and a number*. new ones adapted particularly to the wants of the COI Region. We have :he pleasure of Introducing to this neighborhood :PIERCE'S AMERICAN AIR TIGHT COOKING STOVE, %mu BRICK TOP OVEN. ,e fhisstove, which IS of recent invention. bids fair to kb percede every othei kind now in.use. During the put year it has grown Into public favor with unprecedented rapidity. Also, STEW ART'S SUMMER AND WINTER Alit TIGHT COOKING STOVE This stare, which Is e4uaily adopted to wood or coal, has received silver medals atthe fairs attic American Institute, New York ; of the Mechanics• Institute, Bos ton ; , of the Franklin Institute,'Philadelphio ; and .31 the Mechanics• Institute. Wilmington, Delaware. A ■umber of their stoves are now in operation In this te stae, and have given entire satisfaction. Call trial Ovestine our assortment of patter and cham ber starts: they are of all term, Mae., and prices. . • large and 'aplendleaasoriment of nett leen, This, mid Japanned /Fara kept constantly on hand. TIN ROOFING and all work connected with the bu siness executed with neatness and despatch, and at the most reasonable prices. LONG Oc JACKSON. =I VIC' 'undersigned respectfully beg f . ..:FZe`j7 leave in inform the public that they have comeieneed a STOV C, FOCNDRV which is now in full operation, no Coal street, next to Henry Jenkins' Wire l‘ereen Manufactory in,Portsville, and known as the Pottsville Store Works: they would, therefore t callthe attention of stove deale re of this region, andall othenr; \ their stock ofstuvek, as they rcelcontldent.that they, un su pply m ea ner, aSteainnable terms and with stoves 'lsf. any pattern and equal ill beauty and material to those purchased at the Philadelphia foundries. ' kindrOf testi nes done lei orde r at the short -40, uotica and on the umit reasonable terms. HILL & WILLIAMS May; 29, 1942 22-17 TB MUCKS COUNTY ECONOMIST PATENT AIR-TIGHT COOKING STOVE. The -Oreatut Imprormeme edge Dap! 'THE subsc nher respestfully Informs the public that he has recently secured the patent tight for Schuylkill County, for the rnanufartare and sate of the new and admirable Conking stove called the BUCKS COUNTY ECONOMIST.— A mons the many improvements lately introduced in Cooking Stoves, It Is acknowledged on all bands, that nothing can surpass this; to alt the points renalsite and desirable in that neressaryarttele of household economy. The facility with which it Is regulated, the regularity, perfect:vaned despatch with w,:htch cookery and baking eau be done at one and the same time, and the small quantity of fuel consumed, are matters of surprise to all eche, have tried It, and fives it the fist rank emong all the stoves yet Introduced. It is u nnecessary. huweVer, to specify' its peculiar facilities in ladeertisement.a per sonakelattllnation of Its features Will hest satisfy those who may wish to make parch:tees toed It will attired the undersigned much pleasure to receive calls, and satisfy all inquiries with respect to its caned:ie. and perform •neca. The store will be put up for thirty days. and if found pot to meet the expectattonscifbuyers, or to per form as represented, It will betaken away without charge. There are three slzes—Nos. I, and 9—and • constructed to burn either wood,oAkoal. Call and es , amine spacimees,now ready at theitove and sheet-Iron waregnanufactury of the subscribergin Centre Street, two -doom above the Public ficboolsw here, also. nay.. • thing In his line of busineas maY ballad ea accommoda. Ong terms. Pottsvllle,Oct7-41-tfl AIIit,IRAIT Sr. CLAIR. - Lee & Walker. • SUCCESSORS TO CEO., WILLIC, • .RAVE removed - heir stock of Music it.'" , "=4.l.Vr.- and Moira; Instruments, tn therms and ePut Ches nut in Sas s Building, Nn. . Street, below Seventh. Phitadelfibla, where they Invite the attendance and patronage of the :While. LEE 4. WALKER having purchased tbe entire stock • of - Geo: Willis. (who has declined bounces,) are nnw prepared to emote all order* in their tine. Their as sortment of Home and Magical Instruments, is u ex tensive as that of may Other establiahment in the coon- Piano Foeset,frpot lading well known up 3 apginv ed estaufamorlae, novekt store. Utli t wet be ecn"42l" iy dffevad Cos mite. as Country deem .rappayd on very relseinable terms. Mb 10 " 7-than. VOL. XXV Summer Arrangement. Pntt.A.„ READING & POTTSVILLE -#ao: AHD TWO TEAM EACH WAY DAILY. EXCEPT WEND/IY% ON and after Konday.April 9d, 1n49. two trains will ran easa way, daily, between Philadelphia and Morning line (aceornmodation),.leavea Philadelphia at n o'clock A.M , (Sandaysexcepted) paaaesllaad togatlo.4sA.M. The above line arm, at all way matlona, as formerly •FTEINOON LIA7-.-TAST TILUN. Leaves Philada. daily. (en. a Pottsville daily (en. cept Sundays) at 2.34 eept Sundays) at 2.30 •• Phtenizellle, 9.45 " 80. Haven, . . 2,31 Pottstown. 4.15 " Port Clinton, 3.00 ' " Reading. 5.00 ".Reiding. 3.50 " Port Clinton, 5.45 " Potutown, 4.30 " • Bch. Haven, 6.10. " Phanlatrine, 1.00 A.T . 11 at Pottsville, 6,2olArt's at State Road, 5.50 The - afternoon train will atop at the above named stations; passenger for other point" mast therefore take tho morning line. Depot ift Philadelphia corner Broad and Vine eta. No passengers can ester the ems, aniesa provided with ticket". 701 IN FRIE6' NOTICE.--Fifty pounds of baggage will be allowed to ear% passenger in thes, lines; and passengers are expressly prohibited from taking anything as baggage ut their wearing apparel winch will be at the risk of the owner. No freight will betaken by these lines. By order of the board of managers. S. BRADFORD; Sec'y. Phila.. 0et.28. 1843. 43- SCH. HiLl/"KN, MINERSVILLE AND TREMONT PLSSENGER LINE. J }~~o_'(_'.ru~; eac~pen~_w _ CHANGE OF HOME. ON and after Monday, April Rd. the line will be roman tallowy, viz.: Leave Millersville for Schuylkill Craven at 61 and Ell. o'clock. A. M.. and 4 o'clock. P. K. Leave Se urlkill Maven for Mlneravibe at }before 8 A. M.. 121 bf.. and 61 P. M. Leave Mineraville for Tremont at I &cloak, P. M. Leave Tremnnt for PottavilleAlleuemlld and Scbuyt ant Haven, at 3 o'clock, P. M. FARB. Prom Minetsville to Schuylkill Haven. 15 cts. Schuylkill Haven to Tremont. 50 " Mlnersvllle to Tremont,, 40 " An Omnibus will run between Pottsville and West wood to connect with the Tremont Train. leaving Pottsville at 121 o'clock. .51. and leaving Westwood Immediately on the arrival of the Train from Tremont. Fare from Pottsville to Westwood, 15 cts. It}All baggage at the owner's risk. WM. T. CLARK, Pottsville. Oct . :W4@-441' U. Proprietor. 4 to 1110 V i ' i 1(171 b :11= - ARRANGEMENT FOR TILE FREIGHT AND PASSENGER CARS ON THE LITTLE SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD, T DE Passenger Train leaves Port Cl inton,dally. (Sub day. excepted) on the arrival of the morning train on the Reading Railroad from Philadelphia—arriving at Tamaqua In time to dine.= Leaves Tamaqua at half past one o'clock, P.M , in time to connect at Port Clin ton with the afternoon train, on the Reading Railroad from Pottsville to Philadelphia. FARE.—To Port Clinton,7S cents; to Plmladelahls, $3 50. The freight train ieaves TaMaqUl (iltintlays excepted.) at o'clock. A.: Si., and Porttlintnn at 4 o'clock. P.M. A passenger car rune In connexion with the Freight train, se that passengers for Philadelphia can take the morning train of cars on the Reading Rail road at Port:Clinton. ,-Fare name as in the other train. JOHN ANDERSON, Tamaqua.Oct2S-4.11 General New Arrangement. ,~~~~ .-_., LIVINGSTOIVS EXPRESS LINE, tE ARE PREPARED TO . receive and fortathrd Daily per Passeurer Train, (our Exprevs Cars helngtalwasts In utivree of special messengers) ' chandize of all data iptions, packages, bundles,' speciet , hank notes, td-c. • Mao particular attention pill to collecting Bills, Drafts and Accounts. Packages and Goods delivered daily to all inierme Gate places between Phllad.lphia and Nitwitle: OFFICES, Centre Street, Pottsville:. No. 43, South Third street Phdadelphla No.'6, Wall street, New York ; No 8 Court lured! Boston ~~ ~,n.~ -~?' ~tirY 'ksi ~tirT ef' ~~: OFFICE OF THE PTITTAIIELPIIIA & READING'It All. ROAD COMPANN. 5 Philadelphia, Dec. 20th. 1848. V °TICE I. hereby given, that the rates of Height l • and Toils on Coal trinspnrted by this Company, will be as follows froin January let, IN 9: To From 111.Carbon.S.1 aven.P.Cllnton Richmond, until Jim. 1, 1819 65 55 35 Phlladelphta, do •do 63 55 35 Inclined Plane,untilDac.3l,do. 70 rts 15 iiicetown, do 70 65 45 Germantown RR. do ' 70 65 - 43 Falls of Schuylkill, do 70 65 45 , klanayunk, do 60 55 3.5 Consl ehocken and - MEM!=iiMMEI low Norristown. do 45 1, 40 1 25 Norristown or Bridge port. do 40 135 123 Port Kennedy. do 35 .1 . 33 115 Valiey Forge, do •0 '1 25 110 Phmnts•ille, . do 20 IIS 100 Roydr's Ford, do ;20 IS 1 00 Pottstown. do 15 1 10 1 00 Dnualassville, , do 15 110 100 Boomtown, , do , le •105 95 Reading• • do 05 r I 00 95 Between Reading ' and Mobriville. do 1 00 05 GO Mohrsville, do 95 ', 93 85 Hamburg, do 15 " 70 65 Orwigsburg. do 65 60 53 The fretcht and tolls on coal to ',Richmond. and Philadelphia. daring the months of June. July, sad August' ill be . . From 51. Carbon .B.llaven.P.Clintnn. 1 70 1 65 1 15 And on and after Sept. tat, in December Jlet, 1819, 1 80 1 75 1 55 By order of the Board of Manama. . • S. BRADFORD, Berretary Dee'2l,4B-324f3 PHILA., READING & POTTSVIrbt RAIL ROAD. ' RATES OF FREIGHT as MERCHAN DI E. ()N AND AFTER April Ist, 15419, Con& will be forwarded with despatch at the following rates of freight, between Pottsville and tile points below stated, per ton of 2000 lbs. Between PotUrille I Bspersa Poturille . and PA/La. and Recultng. Plaster,Limestone, Bitumin ' out Coal. Sand. Iron Orel': 00 .1 00 and Bricks. . - Bloorns,Lime,Timber,Stnas.) Rosin, Tar. Pit ih,, Raw I Turpentine. Marble;Drind- t . „ „‘ ' I 10 stones, nails, spikes. scrap, r* "" and pig iron, broken castl Ings.guano.and poudrette. ~,. Bar Iron, dour, salt, leadd --‘,. bark, raw tobacco,salt beef; • and' pork, lumber, grain. I iron casting.. .near. m° - 5 1 30 lasses, green coffee- polo- toes, salt petre, brimstone, ' - • , . and rye chop. Flour, per bid. ' 14 Oil, groceries vinegar. whiz-) . ..' key, machinery, cheese, I ~ ' lard, tallow, rags, leather. I Taw hides, painta, white }Gs i . - 100 and redlard.oySters,benifl.l . ,- , glue-'and cordage, steel, . bran and ship stilt/. .1 • ~ Raw cotton and wool. cigars, - - fresh meat, fresh fish. dry - I. goods,d rued and medicines. foreign liquors, wines and I teas. glass, china, An d I ' nuee'nsware' poultry, eon- fecticnary, hooks and sta. '5 00 • 211 tionary, spirits turpentine, csmphine;:sburned coffee. .. hats awl , ' daps. hoots and abbey, -,. Minnets, feathers, trees; hops. emcee, furni- tore, by weight. " ..i No additional charges for commission. storage. or receiving (440P/eying freights at any of the Company's depots on the line. , [Aprills, '49: 221-tr Luzerne Iron Works, near Hazleton. nagel HUDSON ALLEN, P ROPRIETORS ,,i„,c.rye n 4,i f m tb: gc i r r y epantarm,,Ld agtl the public generally. that they have taken the large building for merly used for,the Machine Shop connected with. the Sugar Loaf Coil Work., to which they have added a' Foundry, and are now prepared to build Steam en gines of every size, 'Pumps, Coal Breaker... Railroad and Drift Cars. and to furnish Iron end Brass Castings of every description suitable to the Coal mining or any other busineis, nn the." moat reasonable terms. Relfairing of all kind. done with neatness, tad de spatch. at the Inwest prices. . All work -.furnished by Medi will be warranted to perform well. They 'wonid snitch the custom nfihnse who may 10111 t articles is their line In this vicinity. Mt orders will meet with immediate and prompt at tention.: B. %V. RIJOBON,_ March 17,1811 , L. R. ALLEN.— mmix Ell ,S=co •M 4 147 1 'PHILADELPHIA. WEL DCD Weroughtlron Flues, dutiable far Logo. WY motives. Marine and other !Steam Engine - Ur:iem from eto 5 inches In diameter. AISO, Pipes for Oaf, Steam and other purposes; extra strong Tubs for fly. draulk Presses; Hollow Pistons for Pumps of Steam Esteems rte. Ntuatthetbred and for sale by MORRIS TAXMEN & 5100.411 4 . 31 Wuaboas 41. IlLeorcir Id tad Waist!' P Mad'. Nov. rid 47 - • Mr\FRS' PUBLISHED EVERY' SA,TVRDAY; BY . B - E-N.M.MIN 1 3ANNAN, ' POTTSVILLE, SCHUYLkILL COUNTY, PA. HAIL ROAD CHANGE OF HOLIiS. LIVING TON, HOWARD &Co. AND POTTSVILLE I will teach} onto place the bowel" of the Elicit, aod brig , C 192 heat the caverns of Moantaios, Hetth which will dive strenvb to not hands and subject all Native to out ass and pleisote.:.-Di. Jaw* FELNECLIN NVOILICS. ;PN.e.^. Q t .. • MITE Subscribers havingnesociated themsetwea to getber, trading underthe firm MIL Wyman & for the purpose or carrying on the Foundry and Ma chine business at the - Franklin Works, Port Carbon, lately owned by A. 0. Brooke, are now prepared - to Manufacture to order wane shortest notice Steam En gines. Pomp), Coal Breakers, and Machinery of almost ant - site or description, for mining or other purposes. Also Rail Road and Drift cars, Iron or Brass Cutlass of any size or pattern. 0-ORDERS ARE RESPECTFULLY SOLICITED..ct SAMUEL. SILLYMAN & Co. VRANHLIN SHOVEL Wolliti--The subscribers are now prepared to furnish the Colliers and deal. era of Schnylkill county, with Shovels of all kinds at the lowest" Philadelphia prices: Attention is particu larly netted to their Coal Shovels. Orders for Shovels of any sine or pattern promptly attended to. Pt. Carbon. Aug. 14.'47.33.1,1 ,S. SILLYMAN& Co. • COLLIERY WORKS. t"- - - • POEN IRY AND MACHINE SHOPS. THE subscribes., at their old stand. Corner of Ra Eciad and Callowhill streets, are prepared to man facture toprilee.stt be shortest notice. Stunt Engines and Ptimpi, o any pima, and capacity for mining and other purposes, Battier Coal Breaking Jfaaines, with solid and perforated rollersois may be required. ' Also Engines and Blaming Cylinders with all neces ary machinery fel Blast Furnaces. Rot Air Pipes. of be most approved plans, Cup and Ball Joints and Mi te, 'Payers, of the very best construction. They par ticularly invite the attention of Iron Mastery and par ties engaged in the Iron trade, to their large stock of Patterns for &Mae Mills, having lately constructed the machinery for two of the largest Mills in the coun try, viz .—The Wyoming Mill at Wilkesbarre, and the Rolling Mill at the Mnatour Iron Works. Danville. They arc fully prepared tor this kind of work. together with every variety ofgeneralmachinery. Of the qts . - ity of their work and materials, it is enough t say, that tints and szperiritee, the most infallible _eats, have amply demonstrated the genuine character of their en gines and machinery. Orders arc respecfully 'altered and will be promptly attended to. i tAYWOOD & SNYDER. Pottsville. January, 17. 11345 • 3-1 y POTTSVILLE IRON WORKS. . C.` F.IPENCER & MASON. RESPECTPULLY • ntinonnees to the pnblis, that .1% they have taken the Establlahmeat known as the Pottsville Iron Works, on Norwegian street, where they are prepaed to build all kinds of Steam Engines, manuactureßall Road Cars. and. Machinery of almost every description, at the shortest notice, andon the most reasonable terms. Peron from abroad. in want of Steam Engines will fled it totbeir advantage to glee them a call before enshrine elsewhere. Mao II OFFICE OP THE sciwyLiciLi. NAVIGATION COMPANY, 1 Deana.. 23d,' 1848. (.. ?I v i i i :i s; ; a t e e r c e t t v d e o n n t that a t i h t, following .pori r ed o a n te a t : e l' Canal and Worksof the Schuylkill Navigation Com. party fur the year 184 Vi To Mount Schuylkill Port Carbon. Ilaven. Clinton. cu. per ton. Cl.. per ton. Cl.. per ton Cirwigsburg, . 15 12 " 11amnnrg, 25 21 13 Mahrsvllle, 35 39 23 , Althouseg, 40 37 . - 28 Reading. ' 45 42 . 53 Unionville. 55 52 43 Laurel RIP. 55 .51 43 Potisto.wit Landing. 55 52 42 RoyereTord, 55 52 43 Phcennville, CO 57 41 Paulding's Dam, 00 57 48 • Lumberville, 60 - 57 48 Valley Purge, 60 . 57 48 Port Kennedy.. 65 . 62 53 . Norristown. 05 63 53 Connobocken, 70 ' 65 59 Spring 51111, 70 67 59. Manayunk. 75 72' 63 The toll to Philadelphia will he a i follows 1 Mt. Carbon. Sch. Haven. Pt.-Clinton. March. April and Met. 65 era. 61eta . 53 eta. Juhe,Jiity and Auntie'. 75 yi 63 Sept. Oct. Inv. be Dec. 85 ql. 73 The Coal chipped from Port CerhiM to the above point. will be charged one and a half cent+ per too more th in eaid rate.. . Thecharge will be mado per ton of-2230 lba, and en allowance of fire per cent. will be made on the weight shipped to cover wastage. Dec-30-1-Iy] FREDERICK FRALEVrPreeldent. Joi. - 111cMarray , s Passage Agency. - - - :~ POTTSVILL 011=2121 OLDEST fID THE BEST ESTABLISHED PASSAGE ' OFFICE IN 7116 UNITED NTATEs. TUE subscriber respectfully begs leave to tender his sincere thanks to Ilia numerous friend, and the public., it It AI! , for the very liberal support he has re _ reined for upwards of twenty years. and soliCits a ?continuation of tlieir conddence. The despatch with which his passengers have been brought out, and the promptness with which his retry numeral's drafts have been paid at the different banka, ire, he flatters himself, n sufficient guarantee to the public for the faithful performance ef any future contracts entered into with MM. The following are the REGULAR LINE OF PACK ETS. which sail punrtually on their appolnied.days, by which passengers will be brought out without delay or disappointment. viz.: intro' N'AIIIES C•rt'lla. !UPI COY CIMINO YROSI a. Y. Patrick Henry. Delano. Jany. 6 May 8 Sept. %Valeria°, " II 1i II Sheridan, Cornish, " 26 " 26 • " 26 Henry Clay, Nye, Feby. 8 June 6 OM. 6 New Ship, " II " 11 " II Garrick, Runt, " 2R " 26 28 4lnrch d July 6 Nom 6 ,••• II " II • " II 26 26 • " 26 Knight, Luce, New World,. Joho:R.Skiddy. Roseius, Moore, Howland, W H Allen Cobb, •••• - ents. • Deane, F.ILA nen, Cornleb, Nye. April 6 Ant. 6 Deer. 6 11 " It " 16 • " 25 " 26 " 31 ...Ts tutus° Lrearl.. Ashburton. West Point, Ertddons, SHIPS NAM= Feby 21 June 21 Oct 21 25 " 26 • 26 Mar. 11 ;.11t:y 11 Nay.ls Patrick Ifenry Waterlnn, Rhertdnn, Henry Clay, " 21 4 , 21 "21 New Ship, " 26 " 26 26 Garrick., Hunt, April .11 Aug. 11 Dec.ll New World, Knight, '• 21 •• 21 . 21 John R Skiddy, Luce, " 26 " 26 ,• 21 Regan., Moore, May 11 Serit.ll.; Jan 11 Ashburton, Howland, ' 21 u 21 • 21 .Wort Point, WILAIIen " 26 " 26 " 26 Siddonx. 'Cobb, lions Il Oct 11 Feb.ll In addition to the above regular line. a number of splendid ships, such an the Adirondack, Narmion. Rap pahaanock, Liberty, Sea, St. Patrick, Samuel Hicks. Columbia, and Niagara, will continue to sail from Liv erpool weekly in regularsuccession, thereby preventing the leant possibility of delay nr detention in Liverpool ; and for the accommodation of persons wishing to remit money to their family or friends, I have arranged the .payments of my drafts on the following hanks: Atmagh, Clonmel, Enniakillen, Omagh, Athlone, Cavan, ' Pariontov.-n, Bandon, Fenner. Enniscorthy, Skibbereen, Belfast, Cnotetilli, Galway, Sligo, Banbridge, Drogheda, Kilkenny, Strabane, • Ballymena, Dundalk, Kilrush, Tralee, BallyshannonDlingarvan, Limerick, Wexford. Ballina, • , Dungannon, I,nndonderry,Waterford, Cork, Downpatrick,ldonaghan, Yougbal. Coleraine. Dublin, Mallow, _ _ . . . Enetand.--Messra. Spooner, Atwood & Co., bankers, London; and Mr. E. B. Flynn, Liverpool. Scotland.—The City or Glasgow Bank,. and all Its bunches and agencies. at Passages can also be engaged from Liverpool to Philadelphia, Boston, and Baltimore, by the regular packet ships, on application being made pervonally or by letter limit paid addressed to B. BA NN A N.Pottsville; -JOSEPH McMURRAy, corner of Pine and Booth sts.. New York; or Mr. GEO. McMORRAY,, No. 117. Waterloo Road, Liverpool Pant -1l • Liverpool and New-York • Passage Agency. • : E. W. 'KIMBALL & 00, • 84 'Wall Street—ssw . -tosa. DUNKIN. KIMBALL & C0..-I.lvettroot.. ' RESPECTFULLY Informs their friend, and the public that they have commenced the )GENERAL MOPPING and COMMISSION RUMNESS. together with the GENERAL PASSENGER IlitSlNESS.gcesurier certificates ef poi ' see from Leaden. Liverpool. Dahlia. Belfast or any part of the old coast's to to Nolo-York. Burton, and P keladelpkia. on the moat reasonable feting. Drafts and Bilis of F.sellasts, from ZI to any amount on the•Rnyal Rank Of Ireland audit, branches. • The days of sailing of the Repatar Ll.* of lirerpool Pockets. as fixed upon. am the lat. 6th, 11th, 16th, 21st, and 20th of every moth. These ship arc all of the !arrest class, and are com manded by men of chataeter and experience.. The cab in accommodations are, all that can he desired la paint of splendor. enmfort and cnnvenience. They are fur nished with every description of stores of the best kind. Punctuality in the days Of sailing will be !Aridly ad. bored to. Packet Mips Rossini, &dd.'s*. Sheeidaii.and Garrick, are vessels nt the lorgest class ; and those desirous to bring outitheir friends, cannot select finer it:realer ships. 1. Paseage ran be secured at the lowest rates. ' • Xeto Orleans line of packets sail weekly. For par /decor /Yacht, apply as above. i -... i E. W. KIMBALL & Co. S sl-The ' sabeeriber has been appointed Arent (or this 411ne in Sctinylkill County. Apply at hi, office In Mar- 'ket Street, Pottsviile. Der16 , 451-Iyl - N. M. WILSON. J. P. • T - CARONA &TARLAC/NIL OMNIBUS. l et wv. TITE subscriber announces to the pub lic, that he will run an Omnibus he. tweenTurcamra and Tamaqua.TWlCE A DAY. on the arrival of the cam at Tuscarora: Re turning. leaves Tamaqua every day at 0 o'clock, A. !IL and at 3 P. N.. in time to take the Pansy Railroad Cora for Pottsville, at Tuscarora. I Fare fen m Tamaqua In Pottsville, and Timm Pottsville to Tamaqua, each way. 50 cents:, . Tickets I. be had at Jones's hotel, Tamaqua, and of tbii ; cieindnetor of the 'Care; Tatnanna. Nov. 25 - 701. STEPHEN JONES. CARRtAOES ilie - sitniCßioin. BEGS LEAVE to call the attention of hie friends and the pato nte mak of CARRIAGES and LICIITNVAGGONdi now on hand and finlshink, which be will dispose of low. e .All kinds of repairing promptly attended to. 'Recollect Corner of Colon and Railroad Strada, back of the American Anne. ions 5.1817. • 113—ly' , WIRTAR' 4.IAIRR. • "CIO la: IILIG4FOWEFLOTI3—.Ii tb t 'town of .1:, MAU" j to . SCPIM I 4. Arne 10 21-tf "Wanting° Street, . . -- • - nutinegy ,Store, • SSecond Strut, Blond - dos, aces Eaßoraisli. , - 20114T.5. THE undersign l72 ed respectEißmannaltull to "At?' the Ladies et Pottsville and vicinity. sitat., hove opined a MILLINERY STORE. at 'the &bore placie.wbar, they war kn.& &constant supply of • ' • • FASHIONABLE BONNETS. - ' Comprising Chine Pearl.Frecrett Lace, Jewry Liirdi Rough & Ready, Little blister, Gimps, &e., Together with arreneral variety of Nets, laces, Egr 'op./Ur:bons- Artitlclal Flowers, ke. Apr7-15-41] Mu, 0. 4c B. FERNSLIM • Millinery Goods. THE subscriber ban now on hand so srmitalerit of SPRING GOODS. for the Millinery Tradwa consistaq of New Stylee of Ribbons. French ar.d American Vowels.. Silks. Laces, Foundation Lacs. Bonnet Frames of &migrant, Wire end Laco. . Crowns. Tips, Straw. Coml. aid Dmape. Lawn for Casing Hats. Also, Emelt Pattern Hate. • S. L. HALLIDAY. GS N. Sectißd St. four door, below Arch. An.7.lS-19-15 Phi laAelphi a. nprinc Millinery Goode JOHN STONE It; SONS, IMPORTERS AND. DEALERS IN Mee. lIIEBONS OttetteCßY 00001, :• ' Ns. 45 Small Saved 52.; . WOULD call the attention. of Metall:its and Milliners visiting the city, to - their Dirge and rich assortment of SPRIND MILLINERY GOODS. Received by late arrivals from France,, such as Macs Silk, (or casing bowlers. Fancy Bonnet and Cap Ribbons—a large and beaatllhl assortment. of all mien; Plain Mantua and Satin Ribbons. from No.l to No. 12i French and American Attiticial Fingers, (In great Colored and White Crapasi . . Fancy Laces and Nets ; French Chip Flats ; Face Trimmingse-gall'ingat Covered Whalebones—Cane ; Iluekoims—Wiltow Bonnet Crowns and Tips. Together with every article appertaining to the Milli nery Trade. • [March 21, I YA mo Bonnets! Bonnets 1 ' T. Z. LOTEROP, , No. 30 South &cord street, upper side, nut dour to Sharpie. 4- Souu—enitenztrnio. gy RESPECTFULLY invites the Rt. ~e.),a. tentinn of the Ladies of Ponevil e ~... ../ and hs vicinity, to his very choice ~l' t . _ ...... ~..- assortment of SPRING & SUMMER STRAW BONNETS & HATS. At extremely low prices. ea-Merchant* and Dealers aupplied..ge , Alining, Bleaching, end Pressing, done In a superior manner. sod at short notice. T. Z. LOTITROP, No. SO, South 2d et., west side, next door to Townsend Sharpleetr & Hon. March3l,lB9-3mol Philadelphia. ........._ Silk Hats, GEORGE A. WARDER dr. CO. AL ,R. Cerra,. of . Owl" and Sixth Streets, PHlLtoEhritta. ...e:. SOLICIT THE ORDERS OF HATTERS. ~ - . 4 ,,, They manufacture every quality of SILK' HATS, canning from d 34 to *l2 per dozen. ''‘. and as they are largely engaged in the beet nese, :no all orders expeditiously. They manufacture tuctuotoely for the trade, and respectfully request • trial of their hats. A few;Augola lists 00 hand. ' March 17, 12-6 t 57112 Dulldlir Hardware and Tools AT LOW PIIICE.S. ti , 4 9 W. attention of boilde,rs and others rciipectfully malted totheeztensivo and inicil-selected,ntock of 81.1 LSO HARDWARE.AND 1'001.3 Now offered by the sObscriber, In part 41, (Of American Frunt'DooLocks, uprighti with eight work, plated or brass (=Miura, American Front Door Lock., plain plated or bran do Do do do and Store Door.Horiiontal or Bpriait, brawl furniture. • Do BIM Locki, all sizes and qualities. White or brass folniture. Do Mortice Locks, all stool with plated, white or brags furniture. Do littinice Latches. alt sizes vdu do 'do Do Mortice and Rim Closet Locks, plated or bran escutcheons Dn Drop,Siop,Thunati,Gate,and Blom Doorlatches. Also, Itn , ported,Lackit and Latches of every description. Baldwin's and'Ameticau Butt Hinges, of all sizes, fart nr lonseJuint. • Shutter, Cole, Strap. T, and.Bachtilap Iftnges,all.hlnds. Shutter, Gate, Door, Finch, and Spring Bolts, or wro't or cast iron and brass, every description Screws, Sprier,, Glue, Sand Paper of the best quality. American Axle and ShauCAzle Pulleys, of every varl. DO Buttons, plait: or on plates. brass, Iron °thron ged • Do Noticptated, white. Iron. or wood. ernry sort. Sash-Cord. common and patent, with other arcking too numerous to mention. NAILS and SASH-WEIGHTS at Factory prices. *All gond, delivered free of charge to soy Depot or Landing I= Spear & Jackson's Back, Panel, Hand and RipPllases, imported expressly for retail sales, all ,beard with Cart. Sole agent far the celebrated PLANEP.. made by E. f. Carpenter. of tar:raster, Pa being all wade °folk wood, and the bin, emund and trier'. Elealy's and WiMaine make of CENSELS. AXES. HATCH- ET 4. Drawing Knives. get., all warranted grind. Pugh's and Sink's ,make of AUGURS and AUGUR [MTS. every FiZr. American Srptures and Bevil' of eve.). description. Rttlei, G toga, Sawsctta, Compare', Screw. drives. Ac. . Do C. S. Hammen. Claw and Riveting, every else. Steel, Iron end Wooden Braces, with C. B. Bats, in great variety. " W. Weaves In Son's. Botcher's, and other celebrated makes of Chisels. Files, Plane-Irons, &c. Addis's Celebrated Carving Tools, every shape. Making one of the beat and most extenetve assort ments of Building Hardware and Toots to the City: *At this establishment It hrceesidered a pleasure to show the goods. Butldcre and. others are Invited to call and examine the atteurtment, and hear the prim. , asked, before purchasing elsewhere. WM. M. McCLURE. No. 257 Market St., bet Ween 7th In Saw-taller vir,..; March7,l649-3ma) rblindelphm. - - DOUBLE and Sinrlc barrrl SHOT Ce 3/ MINA POWDERFLASKS, SOOT • BELTS. ' ,PONT'S CANISTER POWDER, PERCUSSION CAPS, I REVOLVING PISTOLS. SINGLE AND DOUBLE PISTOLS. The above are a rine amortmeut of English and Ger man manufactote. TABLE. POCKET, CUTLERY, SCISSORS, AND aaznna a fine Lineament of the roost celebrated makes. ROPE, HEMP, PACKING CORDAGE, ANVILS, Bellows, Vices and Files, BLASTING TUBES FOR WET PLACES IN Mines, gaiety Fuse, Lone and Short handfed Shovets made expressly for our own sales. BUILDING MATERIALS, Consisting orLocke,Latchre, Hinges, Feint*. 011.0 lass of American, German. and Enclish manufacture. • IRON AND STEEL: Hammered and Rolled Iron, Sheet, Flue, Baud, and Hoop Iron:, TOOLS, C 2 rpentere.Shnemskere.and Saddlers. SADDLERY, HARDWARE. & COACH TRIMMING, With a variety of iron notion, tAue. 29 47 25 TUE iber having just returned from 44:Philadelphia with the targest stock of goods _trAIP ever oil - ere-I for tale in this place. consoitine of Dry Goods, Groceries. Profivinps. Spices. Fruits. Totacen and Segars,iummer Dais ti Caps, queens- Ware, Olasaware..Lainps: Burning Fluid. &c. has opened a NEW srottr: in FOX'S BRICK BUILDING. in Nome:llan Street, below the Arcade. where he is preparedto sell on terms more favorable to purchasers than those of any other establishment in the Borouttfi of Pottsville. fits assortment of Ory Goods embraces all the new Springstyles. Which are ?minas end heautirul. ' and Boy's fashionable Caps for sale zt 121 cent?. Personi can save at least 25 per tent. hp purchas ing at C. INAIAIVti, Ap.7.41-15.11) TIIE subscribers having this ds y entered Into cal.rtorrship forth rrpose of =marling a ceneral wholesale and retail huelness It, IRON, GEOGERIES, PROVISIONS,' AY.FI.OIIII, and run, at the well-known York Store Id the borough of Potts ville, would most respectfully bipleave toasty that they have now en hand a large and well selected stock of Ear Iron of all descriptions", also Flat Havant! T Rail Road Iron cautious eizes,suitable fur dnils and lateral roads, which they offer for sale at as law a radius can be had In the County. Also. a fresh stock of Groceries and Provisions constantly an band at very low prices for cash. Also, Cast, Blister, and Shear Steel, Neils and Spikes, Ors, Flour, Feed, &c., all of which they would respectfully sot kit an inspection of by the public, and relying u they do upon a stile:attention to business. to be able at all tittles to accommodate their customers. , E. YARDLEY & SON. P. s.—The subseriber would take this opportunity to return his sincere thanks for the liberal patronage he has heretofore received from his &lends and the public' generally, end respectfully solicits nutritional:ice of the same for the new hem. Pottsville. Slareb4,lB4B-101 EDW. YARDLEY Nest• Grocery. Flour. Feed, AND PROVISION STORE. THE subseribtr announces to the citizens et that he has Just opened a new Croce ry, Flour and Feed Store. at bla old stand, where 1., rt e will always keep on hand animist stocker choice GROCERIES. PROT1610:48: Family FI. IO I I /1, TEA. COFFEE, SUGAR, a.e. ; alibi' which wilibe se lected Pith great care, and will be sold at very low. rates. Ile flatters himself that he can make it to the. interest of this come:enity to deal with him: ho the re :ore so.lelts their patrbnage. Re raturns tyanks to his namerous customers for the patronase they bestowed upon him in hit other business dee. 11.47-50 . •E. D. 811 OENER. • 7 - A CAILIN—LITTLE AA MARTIN. WHOLES/ LE , sitai Retell Dealers In DRY: !=s , 00Do, GROCERIES. TEAS( I4QUOR6.Ittic ?tip Store on clentre Rued?. hear the corner tif Ma bantongo,in atilth the attention of the clyzens attics tad estoLtry Is respectfully soiteited. ;01114 Pet.i2ile;detig-441 letri B. n. NAtrrm. SA.TIIRDAY NRAINPIG, APRIL 14, 1849 BIM Guni! Guns!! DRIGOT & POTT Y TOWN HALL IRON STORE. Cherokee. LATE ARRIVAL New Cheap Slm:e New Firm. Washington Motel, • (iromeats Err? B 7 Seaton, Beads) Sekayaila Reuss. ' lit=3/4 The .p a uhric up tirat t tle h h is u rk t i get a tre jilishoye mentioned establishment, and thud up thnsug:=4; Ito that It will equal any estab lishment In the County. itli::rated near the Depot of the Philadlephla and Beading BailreVland on the Main street of the Borough. Hie labia will abundantly supplied with the choicest delicacies orate *capon, hi, chambers are large and airy, and Ws bed • 'dine of the ben kind. ••• • . The catalog attached to the .botel is large and com modious, and attentive butlers will always be found to attendance. Hs has also accommodation, ibt Dro vers. dre It... Vehicles will always ha kept to carry visitors to any part orals County, or elsewhere. Ail he Nantes h a trial of his rfouse, feeling confi dent he will give entire satisfaction to all who End It convenient to snJourn at bb Home: Ap.7,49-15,1r.1 .1011 N JONES, Anthracite Hail. iteirstrar rrartr,'Nnizesvias, The subscriber would respectfully leform • his friend's/id the. publle that be hairsateved yy to the above mimed house. (formerly kept *by Rapp.) where he will be happy to give every attentinti to those ,who may favor him with a cell; ap.7.'49-15.tf.J JACOB BRAM. Sheldvakeys Allegheny House. Jr.. 280 Market Strut, acme Eig AtA, (Soma *lie) PHILADISLPIIIA. THIS large and splendid Hotel has been furnished with entire sew furniture. Thu o -- • Bar-Room is the largest in Phlladetphla. - The Pertain' and Itlitang rooms are entirely sep arated from the noise and bustle, consequent to the arrival and departure of the can, The Portico erten distil the whole front of the house, affords a cool re treat in warm weather. and a splendid_ view of the gteatest thoroughfare In the City. The Lodging Rooms are well finished. The Table as welt provided for as any other Hotel, with every at tention or the managers to mate it the best Hotel for Merchants and Business Men, during their stay in the' City. The terms will be one dollar per day. On the arrival of the Can from the West, a Porter will be in attendance to convey baggage, ac, to the Hotel. which is adjoining be depot. [Feb 10 T-limo WHITE SWAN HOTEL.—TH E Subscriber begs se...veto Inform his friends ; and the public In general that he lots taken the WHITE SWAN. ROTEL AND STAGE OFFIOE, No. 108 Race Street, formerly kept by Peters & Sen. The Howie betel large and cony enlent, and In the builnees path of the city, he hopes by strict attention to business, that his friends and all who may comet,' the city en business or pleasure will give him a call lie pledges himself that nothing shall be want ing on EA part to make them at home. TERMS, ONE DOLLAR PER DAY. . • GEORGE RAHN, ~ M arch 17 12-3ronj -Formerly or ethuyiktil Cnuoty Furniture! Furniture ! CARPETS, VENInAN & PAINTED BLINDS. &c GRESSANG & SILLYM&N . . . , RESPECTFULLY immune* to s ! the cajun' of Pottsville and the surrow.ding neighborhood that they have opened a FURNITURE WARE-ROOM. in Ala kantanga Street, a few doors front Centre, where they 'have on band a large and fashionable sock of Funds -lure. embracing the latest and most fashionable styles, 'all of which has been manufactured to their order by the best makers In our cities. Their a tock embraces a general assortment of all the ankles embraced In fur nishing dwellings either plain of in the Most lux Uriollll ;manner. Bedsteads ranging in price front 83 to $5O, —and all other articles of furniture In proportion In their stock is alan embraced o large assortment of Ve netian Blinds and Window Shades of the most approv. ed patterns, selected with great care. OARPETTINO, BEDDING AND UPHOLSTERY. . They have also added to the stock a tot of Carpeting oftbe various qualities, and liediling, to which they tall the particulae attention of thine in want of these articles. • It he our design tokeep all the articles of Furniture required In Schuylkill County, and prevent the neces lily of persons going abroad in search of elegant sell dies of Furniture, all of which they are determined to sell at less prices than they can be obtained else where, with packing and carriage added. They there fore earnestly invite those Who are about furnishing IMUSetiand those also who require additional furniture, to give them as they gaiter themselves they can give them any kind of, a out" they may require at -a great saving of fuuda. . . HENRY GRESA_ANO. ALEXANDER DILLYMAN APril 7 15-tr] Cato) and Kush boat. Chair Alanufactory. - - NO. 131 NORTH SIXTH reTREET, . Opposite Franklin Square. Phatldelphia. SUPON THE PRINCIPLES OF' BETTER AND CHEAPER. Rotel cash sale. and small . profits. An assortment of Cane Neat Chairs, In the greatest variety of style and finish. made of Walnut. Birch. Maple and Imitation Woods, at the cheapest prices for CASH ONLY. Light and durable patterns. Collage Chairs, Cane Hermes. Lounges, large and small Hocking. Claim, Store Stools, Arm Chairs, 6r.c..:Arb. Ilhuse-keepers and all who are "fixing up," fur House-keeping: can gratify their taste in selecting styles, and procure a warrantable article, by calling. on the regular Manufacturer, N. F. WOOD, No. 131 North Sixth, eight doors above Race, Bran:hp, 12-31no1 • Philadelphia 111ARRISON; BROTUERA & Co. MANUFACTURING CHEMISTS, ' Of No. 43 1.2 South Front Strut, PhlhnistpAla. Pure Parlor White Lead; Alum,ground and in crystal; Extra Ground " " Copperas; 1 No. I "• " if Pyroligneolas Acid; Red Lead; • ' Red Liquor; Litharge: Iron Liquor. Grande Mineral; 'Mastic Slack 1 Sugar of Lead; Metallic.Fire-Proof Paint.' METALLIC FIRE-PROOF, PAINT. THIS EXTRAORDINARY substance Is / foundin a strata of rockora basin f0rma .:..L..,.- clan. When taken Ram the mine. it fa. VMC ' sembles In appearance -the finest Indigo. ,-..i c .; and is abot.t thaconsistehce of Cold tallow; • C but on exposure to the atmosphere, in a short time turns to Stone or Slate. Geolo gists who have aken it. are of the impression that this substance, when in a liquid state, has been effused through a fissure and filled up this b asin formation In the rock. It has been round upon anylyzation by Dr. Chilton. of New York, to consist of , Silica, ' ' ' i 54 00 ' Alumina. 24 20 Protox.de of Iron. . • 12,05 . Lime, ;12 31 Lime, ' ... 291 Magnesia, .- 0 49 Carbon. ' 150 Sulphur, - 0 11 --, Water, . : 500 Ella, 0 41 • 100 00 • For use it is ground to powder, mixed with Linseed Oil, and applied with • brush, the name' as paint to wood, iron tin, zinc,canvau paper. &e. &c., which In a short time wrap to Stohe. which is fire-proof Ills particularly adapte'd for roofs ofbuild ings.Steam boat and Car Decks, Railroad Bridges, Fences, &c., Ste. roof coated with this article is equal to the best of slate, at a vest saving of expense.' Every variety of Iron work exposed to weather will be prevented from rust or corrosion, as It forms a com plete Stone covering. School Slates are made from It, by covering board■ or paper. As it Is susceptible of high polish, it has been used to great advantage by Carriage Painters and Cabinet Idaktia. HARRISON: BROTHERS. & Co. April 42. 17-tfJ No. 431 South Front St Philada. Nicholas & Collins, WHOLESALE AND RETA TI DRIIGGISTI3 AND APOTHECARIES, • Marka Street, —POTTSVILLE. gINVITE thn particular attention of the citizens of Pottsville and its vicinity. also Physicians, Veterinary Surgenns,and countrySiorekeepers,to their large end general assortment of DRUGS, CHEMII :ALS & FAMILY M EDICINES. Their stock not only embraces the best Drugs and Medicines the market atTards,but at/mall the new Phar maceutical and Chemical preparations. Surgical and Dental Instrument', Gold Foil. Patent and Family Me dicines, Fresh Shakers' Herbs, Dye Stuffs, Paints, Oils. Varnishes, pine Camphine, Chiss, Putty, Snuff, best Ca .endish Tobacco and Cigar,, Perfumery, Brushes, Combs, and every variety of choice, fancy and miscel laneous articles; also, that excellent article. Farina. for the sick and infants' diet—in fact ever) thing and anything can be found in their general and wcll•auon ed stock, which they offer to sell at the lowest cash prices. . ' " N.B.—N. & C. flatter themselves from their knowl edge and experience in the business, one of them, (J. T. Nicholas. M.D.) having held, far several years some of the roost responsible offices in England and Paris lath as dispenser and operative Chemist, they would therefore respectfully solicit the confidence and share of public patronage, as nabe• but genuine Drugs and Medicines can he had at their establishment. *Horse and Cattle Drugs, of the beet quality on the most reasonable terms. thisrett3,l649-alt-ly BOOTS AND SHOES, • At the okt stand, CrntreStAnext door to Us Pottsoillatinzra S. & J. POSTER. ARE now receiving their spring supplies of BOOTS ;‘• • BHOES . 3 . ,comprising a firat rale asnortrilent, which they noir cllfer at wholesale or retail attbe very lowest prices. They have also on hand Trunks, Va ud. Carpet Bags, and Satchels,Soleand Upper Leather. Morocco, Calf skint, Lining and Binding Skins, Shoe Makers' Tools, and a general anon recut of Snoa Find • nra. N.8.-110ot** Shoes manuthstured at abort notke.— Their (hands and th e public who are Itt avant of any or the abov radicles ate reepect fully zequested to `iv e then• a call. • May 8, ISM . Dentistry—Removal. GEORGE.J. ZIEGLER, DENTIST. ...,-=—..—. HAS REMOVED TO No. 375 MICR ,„ Aa - i.,.... S? REET , two tloorr below Tenth Philade! •Hilmas pits.. • . ¢S.• All operations performed to the most approved elabarato, and judicious manner. Darth.441.,11119. 11-3 m o. StIOVEL , aI A ..".". - , OVEL. MANUFACTORY. Eagle.,.Worloi, . I . Contro Strut, rorrscuot.frezt dotr Wow di llitterfeas -Musa. . . . 40 ' THE subscriber wnutd call the attention of Coal Operators, bletchanta. and Miner!: to ex amine his [toned and Sqoare pniot Coal and : Grain Shovels; manufactured by hinfself, and azure's's for the Coal ti inn—warranted. to •be made of the trot futility material" and workmanship. at MP Prices. -Alin:dent hanktutly retained mad puma idly attended to. • . • N,,D.—shavela r.laPirea-Ertftie P0it.:621- pec.. 2-40-01, eyel43l s • t i pttliz et in LAw. IP4 enwthw in •• • ri.rhm matt .• JOUW\AL, NERAL ADVERTISkIit. ottmire poctrn. 017 R. HOMESTEAD. - , aT sun rawly laaUT Oura.d brawn homestead reared Its wills, From the wayaide dera'aloof. Weera boughs could anon cart; • Their fruitage on ItsVenre _ dad the cherry tree so near It grew, -, That whets awake I've lath, La the lonesome nights I've heard the limb!, • 'As they creaked against the pane : And those orchard trees, 0, those orchard trees I have seen my little brdthers racked • Its their tops by the summer breeze. .The sweet briar under the window sill, Which tie early bin!, made glad, And the damask rose by the garden hue, Were all the dowers we bad. •, I've looked at many a dower lints theo. Erotica rich and rare, That to other eyes were Weller, But not to me BO fair, For those roses bright, O; those rows bright t I have twined them In my sister's looks, That are laid In the dust from stet!, We bed a well, a deep old well Where the 'pries way never dry, . And the tool drops dawn. from the mossy stones Were falling constantly:: ' And there never wee water half so sweet As that In my little cop, Drawn op to ibe curb by the rude old eweep. Which my father's band set op And that deep old well. 0, that deep old Well: remember yet the plashing bound Of the bucket as It fell. Oar home stead had an ample hearth, Where at night we loved to meet t There my mother's ;voice was always kind, And her smile was always sweet; And there I've sat on my fAther's knee, And watched his thoughtful broil% With my childieb hand In his raven hair-. That hair is sliver now t Bat that broad hearth's light. 0, that broad hiarth'e . light t And my father's look, and my mother's smile. They are In my heart to-night. 01.1)oice ticabing. TUE SOPREDUT POWER 13=1 !!•It has been as beautifully as truly said, that the undevout astronomer is mad." The same remark might, with equal force and justice, be applied to the undevout geologist. Of all the absurdities ever started, none more extravagant can be gamed, than that the grand and lar•reaching researches end discoveries of geology are hostile to the spirit .of religion.. They seem to us, on the very con trary, to lead the inquirer, step by step, into tilt; more immediarenrisence of that tremendous Po 7/. er, which could alone produce and can alone cc. count for the pimitive convulsions_ of the.globe, of which the proofs are engravers in eternal chit. teeters, on the sole of its bare and cloud-iiierced . mountains, or are wrought into the very substance of the strata that compose its surface, anit'which are also day by day and hour by hour at work,' to feed the fire of the volcano, to pour forth its mol ten tides, or to compound the salubrious elements 'of the mineral fountains, which spring In a thotw sand valleys. In gazing at the starry heavens, ell glorious ea they are, we sink under the awe of theiernsgnitude. the mystery of their secret end reciprocal influences, the bewildering conceptions of their distances.. Sense and sciences are at war. . The sparkling gem that glitters,On the !Wow of night, is converted by science into a mighty orb— the source of light end heet, the centre of ettrae• tio'r, the sun of 's system like our own. The beautiful planet which lingers in the western sky, when the sun hes gone dowri, - or berilds the sp- - preach of mornin - g—whose mild and lovely beams seem to shed a spirit of trariquillity, not unmixed with sadness; nor far removed from devotion, it.to , the heart of hint who wanders forth in'soiitude to behold' it—is, in the contemplation of science, a eloutkvrapt sphere; a world of rugged mountains and stormy deeps. We study, we reason, we calculate. We climb the giddy scaffold of induc tion up to the very'stare. !Wiri borrow the wings of the boldest analysis and flee to. tho uttermost' parts of creation, and twinkle orthe fault of 'night the well instructed mind sees opening before in mental vision. the stupendous mechanism of the heavens. Its planets swell into worlds-. Its crowded eters recede, f expand, become central suns, and we hear Offs rush of the mighty orbs that circle round their. The' banks of Orion are loosep, And the spark ling rays which crow each ether on his belt, are resolved into floods of light; streaming from system to system. across the illimitable pathway o f the outer heavens., The conclusions which we reach are oppressively grand and sublime ; the imagina tion sinks under them; the truth is too vast, too• remote from the premises from which it is deduc ted; and man, poor, frail man, sinks back to the earth, end sighs to wolihip again, with the inn°. cence of a child or Chaldean shepherd. the quiet and beautiful mere, es before them in the simpli city Af sense. But in' the 'province . or geology, there are some subjects in which the senses seem, as it wire. led up into the laboratory - of divine power. Let a man Gz his eyes upon one of the marble columns in the Capitol et Washington.— He sees theta a condition of the earth's surface, when the pebbles of every size end form and ma• terial, which compose this singular species of stone. were held suspended in the madmin in which they are now Imbedded into the solid, lustrous, and vs. riegsted miss before his eye, in the very substance of which he beholds a recojd of a eonvuleion of the globe. Let him go and eland opon the sides of the crater of Vesuvius, in the ordinary state of ita crap. tinny, and contemplate the glazy stream of molten rocks, that oozes quietly at his feet, encasing the surface of the mountain is it cools with a most black and stygian crust. or, behting• up its sides at night with streaks of lurid fire. Let him93 ( n. eider the volcanic island, which aroce a.few fears sirve in the neighbvtood,Of Malta,spouting flames from the depths of the sea ' • or accompany one. f our own naviga t ors from Nantucket to the An tarct:c OcesO, who, finding the centre of - a small island to which be wee in the habit of resetting, sunk in the interval of two of his voyages, sailed through an opening in its aides where the ocean had ((mod way,, end moored his ship in the smoulderlbg crater Of a recently extidguiehed vol. cane. Or, finally, let hitb survey the striking phone. menon which our author haedescribed, and Which his led os to this train of remark, a mineral foun tain of sslubrious qualities, of a temperstUre great ly above that of the surface of the earth ib the re. gion is found, compounded with name. roue ingredients in a constant proportion, and' .known to have been flotving from iistsecret springs as at the present day, at least for eight hundred yeara..unchacited, unezhausted. The religions of the elder world in en early _stage Of civilization, place a genius of a divinity by the side of every spring which gushed from the rocks, or flowed from the bosom of .the'earth. Surely it would be no weakness for a thoughtful mob, who should resort for the renovation of an eshoustett framo,,to one of those salubrious mineral fountains, if he drank in their healing waters sea gilt from the outstretched, though invisible bind, of en every where-present and benignant Power.--IFrom,thi N. American Rciieut. j , THE TRUE, WO,RISH9FEE. - The veneration is not confined to' acts of im mediate worship. It is the habitual temper of the soul. Notoely when engaged in proposer praise, but in the ,eilence of. retirement', and eases amidst the oecupoticias . of the world, the Divine Being dwells upon' hie thoughts, -No place, and. no object, appears to him void of God. .On lb. works of Nature ha . views theimprescron of his band ;. and in the actions of men he traces the eperatioho of hie Pro h ate we r he beh ulds on earth, that is lkeaunfut- or fair, that .ia great or good, he retire to God, as to the supreme origin of all the excellence which is scattered tit mutton t his works. From these eff e cts, hi litres to the first. cause. Vain " theme streams , he ti•eentle to the foruitiin whence They fitw. By those ram ho is lea .to that eternal mice of ti^ifts in which they .etiutre., .ilksir. 4 - ' , filiscellanp. INOVNY.SIN SCENERY. There is eomething in the wildness and itabl/- ti;lty i of mountain scenery that tends to remind as rather of eternity than decay. . The perishable works of man are no whererto be seen. No city lies in gloomy ruins, to show:the outline of faded greatness; or remnant sanctuary here stands to show the worship that passed away.. We see ha failing r;:::-ids of the gloriour deeds of then whores names ere learnt in tir.iuv'spege. We stand upon +he mountain end we szerceil know that man exists upon the earth. This is not the land where arts have died, or science been forgot; those rocks never echoed' the eloquence of orators, or the songs of poets; the waters never bore the proud ships of the merchant; the soil um, yielded to man the fruit of his industry. it is not here than the finger of time can .be recognized. In vain would he set his mark on snows that never fail to disturb the fait bound form of adernantirne ice,— In vain be stretches out hie hand where the rushing torrent and the wavering, water fell. blest with an eternity of-youth, dash on. their headlong course, 'regardlrika of- the blighting power that withers strength, or lull to rest the creation or the creature of mortel4. Here - we may pause and say that Time has last his power. Here may we view the faint efforts of, Time overthrown in an instant.' Changes there - are; but the work of an hour has defeated the slow progress of decay. The ',lightning of f the thunder storm, the blowing ter pest, the engulphing flood, the overspreading as alanche have effaced frcim the surface of nature the impress of time. and left naught in the changesto remind Ms of age. Surely there are scenes in life which Teemed created to awaken in mankind the recollection that even Time can lase its power.-- Who will not feel the nothingness of the pleas. urge, the cares, nay, even the,sorrows of our petty span, when for a moment he dwells witinria heart' end eau; upon the thoughts of an eternity! Yes, it will sober the gay—it will comfort the grieved. —[Edward Everett. SHORT. SERMON FOR PARR igTO. h is said that when the mother of Viraahington was s asked bow she had formed the character of her son, she replied that she bad endeavored early to teach him three things: obidience„ ddigence, Indetruth. No better - advice can be given by any parent. Trial yOur children to obey. Let it be the first lesson. You can hardly begin too coon. It requires constant Care to keep .up the habit of obe chance, and especially to do it in such a way as not to break down thestiength of a child'. cheese. Teach your child to be diligent. The habit of being always employed is a groat safeguard thro' life, es well asstints - I to the culture of almost every virtue. Nothing can be more foolish than an idea which parents bays that it is not respects. hie to set their children to work. Play is a good thing, innoAt recrcation is . en employment, and a child may le a d! to be diligent in that as in other things. But lot them learn early to be useful. lie to truth—it is the one essential thing. Let everything else be sacrificed' rather than that.— Without it,' what dependence can you place in your child 1 And be sure to do nothing yourself which may countenance any species of prevarics. ton or falsehood. Yet how many parents do teach their children the first lesson of deception. ',WONG NAN. STOP You, foung man; on the way to the ball alley. or the billiard room, with a cigar In your mouth, and with en appetite fare mint julep—atop a mo d:tent. Are you not in a dangerous way I %b ill those places or ythiti'habits, lead you to respects- Why or usefulness:in society? Will you, by them, become more Moral, more virtuous, or in telligint I If not,stop where you are, Te beseech of you. You here u9bleness of heart:perk/4,3.m • generous disposition. You may do good to those about you, if you 17 .11. Your example, if tbe such as will lead to virtue, will 'draw others after you; or if it leads to vice or error, will also, and the more readily lure others in the way of evil.— Then, young man, stop and think upon your course! Where is it tending I If to bad habits and low association!, stop instantly. Stand firm. Take not another step in the dangerons way, but turn back While you have power, and seek the ways of virtue, the path of intelligence, and you may do good in your day and generation, end bo .ssteemsd by those who enjoy youraquaintance. THE UUMAN HEART. The velvet mnes will grow upon ihe sterile rock --the mistime flourish on the naked branches the-ivy cling to the mouldering ruin—the pin . p and cedar remain fresh and fadeless amid the tnutations of the dying year—and, Heavens be praised'. something beautiful to see, end grateful to the soul will, in the coldest and darkest hour. of fate, a:ill twirls its tendrils around the crumbling altars and broken arches of the desolate temples of the hu• man heart. EN fiE3 EIARAIAGLE. I 1 Marriage is at' wise regulation in harmony with nature and religion, and the only efficient preven tative of lieentiourriesa. The happiness of the parties and the interests of society require that' it should he free froth. either coercion or restraint. Bonds to procure and contracts and condition to ,respain are a like lot bi.tden. It is the appropriate regulation of that great instinct of nature which was designed by the creator to replenish the Earth It is alan this aathorizeil un , on that ell civilized nation depend for thin prosperity in peace and their defence in war. The pincipal of reproduction stands next do importance to its elder born correlative self.tg,attr vetion, end is equally a fundamental law Weak tenet,. It lathe blowing which tempered with mer cy the justice of expulsion from Peredise. It was impressca,upon the human creation by a benefi dent Providehee to multiply the image of htmielf and thus to promote tfis own glory and the happi nese of his creatures, ' Not 171,113 alone, but the whole animal end vegetable kingdom area under en imperious necessity .obey its mandates.— From the lord of the forret to the monster of the _deep—from the suttliijc,of the serpent to the inn° . cence of the dove—from the elastic embrace of the mountain Itaimia to the descending fructifica tion of the lily of the plains, all nature bows sub. mireively to this primeval law. Even the Powers which perfume the eir with their fragrance' - end decorates the forests and fields-with their boat, are bUt "curtains to the nuptial bed." : A SUBLIMER TRUTH. Let a men have ell the world can give him, be is mill miserable, if he has airovelling, unfettered, undercut mind. ' Let him have his gardens,, his fields; his woods, his lawns, for grandettr,.plenty, ornament,. and gratification ; while at the_ rime, tune God is not in all his: thoughts. Anil let enother have neither field ,nor garden ; let '.him only look at nature with an enlightened mittd— a mind which can iteaand adore the Creator in his work., can consider them as demonstrations of his power, his sviktorn, his goodnesr,ind his poverty, than the 'other in his rithes.-The one to ihtle higher than a .beasr, the other bur little lower than an angel. CONTEMPT. . Theta is not in human nature a more l atlious disposition than a proneness to contempt,which is a mixture ofpride sad i.l mama. Nor is therefany which Mate ecitoinly denotes a bad mind, fdr in a 'good and benign tempeotbera can be no room for this sensation. That which constitutes an object of contempt to On Malevolent, becomes an object of other passions, to a svorthy. and good natured man ; for in such s person. wickedness end vice Must raise hatred end aSborrence, and weaknese and folly will be sure to excite compassion so that he will floci no - objsra-of. his contempt in all the !pions of:Men.—.[Preklierg. . . , 'L #' Werik" , Eges.-1 wonder what makes ;toy eyes . weak," safari loafer to a 'gentlemen - 4 - ; • ..Why, they art is a weak phee replied sh° !atter. • Orme of troesn.; Flail on t the. Co such Word as Atli t Press acibty 0111 the goal La nose.' Me end the SOCIUMIIIII t breast the gates Look upwrexo, onward, never teat Why should thou fhb: i Reaves, stollee shove, ThoVgb stothrand vapor thtervene ; 'lbtt shn shines on, whose t 111260 I. Love, liereaely o'er Life', shadowed scene. INTERNAL EvknErics. . . A maxi atatibtille 'cassaba: i asked A peasant, If ba knew i Where was Oa latesaat ciatenoa That proved the Blid• anal The firma of dispateUve aiL Had never reached his ear — Be bkt tile band upon b Viten. And only answered—lisnAt NO. 16 Ptlandlen orphan sad and Iva,: ?busts onn who hears thy =as. Sind to snail', ■tmog ten's. Tboagb thini all Is In the viva t Faint not Ibis' beneath tits tog, Iwo Is the Orphan's God. OVERLOOKING ,SAT/LTEI. The Nana nod the hepplVst pair oczasion to &Rheas . Acid sotaethiog every day s t they live, To pity. it ad perl.ape. three.. TIME AVID ET:ERNITT. Tirnesiihoz4, let there thy stain boo au 4, tastikternity embut 1 . 11 all. TUE WEAL OF .A; TRUE LIVE. OLISZLIT. `d - h, a l l e , 1 , 2 C, &C = • - There is Oven this aide of grave.. haven where the storms of lite break net, or ere felt bet in gentle undulationief the unrippled and Mirro ring waters—an Cathie, not In the desert but beyond it—a web Regrind - end bliesful es that of a sol dier returned forever from the dangers, the bard. throe, the turmoil of war, to the bosom of that dear dodeatie circle, whiles blessings he never prized, at half their worth , till he bit them. ' Vila haven, this oasis, this nest, is • serene and hale old age. The tired traveller has abandoned the dusty, crowded and jostling highways of life. for one of its shadiest and noted by-lanes. The din of treffic end of worldly' strife has no longer magic for his - ear—the myriad footfall of the city's stony walks—is hot nether or nothing to him now. He hes run his race of toil and traffic, or ambi tion. His day's work is 6ecoinplished, and he has come - to ',enjoy tram/Oil and unembarrassed. the .pleader all the sunset,! the milder glories of late evening. Ask not whether he has or has not been euccessful, according io the vulgar standard of success. - What matters it now whether the multitude has dregged his; chariot, rending the flair with idolizing acclamation; itr howled like wolves on his tteck, as he Bed by night from the fury of those he had wasted his vigor to serve.— Whit avails it that broad lands have rewarded hiii toil, or that ill bee at a lastmorneut, been stricken from his graspl Ask not whether he Mins into retirement the wealth of the ladies, or the poverty of a bankrupt 7 i.whether hie couch be of down or of rushes—his dwelling a but or a mansion. lie has lived to little purpose, indeed, if he has nut long since realized that wealth - and renown are not the true ends of creation, tier their absence con. elusive proofs of ill-fortune. Whoever Reeks to know if his career has beenlpensperoue and bright ening from its out-set to its , close—if the 'Wining , of his days are, genial and hissful—ghould'oot ask for broad acres or toweridg edifices, or flee coffers. Perverted old ageimey grasp thee Mit the unyielding clutch of ineanity; they add, o his Mee end anxieties, not to ibis mama:tent. etc rather—hao he I mastered end harmonized his er- I ring passions 1 } Has he tired a True Life. A true life! of how many lives does each hour' knell the conclusion? :110 poor child of shams and sin and crime, who terminates her earthly be ing in the clouded moraine of her scarce budded. yet blighted existence—the desperate felon whose blood was shed by the conimunity, es the dread penalty of hill violated law—the miserable de::, bauchee, who totters down to his loathsome grave. is hie opiingtneo of his year,, but in the fulmar of lesteriaa isda , e:ties--thel,se, th e world valiantly' affirms, have I not lived true lives I restless and; righteous world ! how profound, how discrimini i i. Ming are thy I judgments! I But the base idnieto '' of self; who devotes all ha energies, his moments; and his thoughts' to schemes which hegira and end in personal advantego—the grasper. of gold and , land and tenements—the devotee of pleasure the man of ignoble and 'Miner ambition—the woritin of frivolity, eetravegance and fashion—the idler, the gambler, Iroluptuery—on all these and Atieir myriad en:neaps, while born on the crest of the I advancing bill w ' how gentle is the reproof, how charitable the judgment of the world. Nay, it not even our read Chriatiaoity, which picks its ways so dainti v, cautiously end..inoffensively-4 which regards , rith gentle rebutk, acid is regarded with amiable t leration, by tromet of the foremost vices of the times; is it not too often obvious in its paramount Iduty to leach men haw to . live • worthily and nobly 7 Ani theta not thousands to ' whom its incolrtions, so far as duties to men are concerned, ar tsubstantially negative in their Chi meter 1 who are fortified brit. teachings in the belief that to no good is e essualty, and, frame of being who are taught by it to feed the - hungry, clothe the naked, when they force themselves upon the charity of portly effluence, but es en irksome. duty, for which they **ld he rewarded, rather then a blessed rivtlego, for which they should be profoundly gr taint? I 'Jf the millions new weekly listening to the Ministration of ',he Chris.. titan pulpit, hods many aio clearly and vividly im. pressed with the great truth, that each in his own, sphere should live for mankind, as Christ died for the redemption, instruction, exaltation of the race —end, that they power fo do this in hie proper sphere abides cetrally with the e humblest el gilt highest 1 Homany centuries mare will be re quired to teach, vett the religious world, so called, the full meanie of the term Christistil • i . A true life na st be eimple in_ell its elements. Animated by ode grand end ennobling impulse, all _ lesser eepiritiel find their prOper piacea in har monious Rubin vience. I Simplicity in taste, in appetite, in lign i te of life, with a correepent:ingin., dfference to worldly honors and aggrandizement, is the natural result of a predonfinance'of a dieing end unselfish it. Under the guidance of etch a sentiment, VI tee is not an elf in, but a lets Of nature, like grailetion. , , It is- Vice , alode that :memo unaecoun ble, monstrous, well nigh mirsO. edema Purity.i fe't to be es necessary to thi mind, as health o the body, end its absence 'alike the inevitable so rce of pain. ' 1 A true life m st be calm. A life imperthill* 1 , directed, is mad wretched through distractinn.4 - We give up our youth to excitement, and then eii, wonder that de pit old age steels on ns so some We wear out ntir energies for gold or fame, and then wonder alike - at the cost and worahlesenesi . of the meed. "Is not the life more than meat p a ( Aye, truly ! but tow few practically,. eonsistente ly, so regard it ! And 'little as it is regarded b* the imperfectly _virtuous, how muchless by the vicious end the worldling 1., What a chaos of struggling emoti ne is exhibited by the lives of the multitude 1 How like to the were of tin y infuriated animal a le in a mignificant drop of was ter, is th e strife netantly ranged in each little: mind! Howl el h is, jostled by gluttony, 'and, pride wrestleltf by variee,and ostentation bearded' 1 by meanness! The soul'that is not largasnotrgle for-the indwellingiof virtue, affords lodgementrindi 1 seeps for a hundred rides. But their warfare can. not be indulged id with 'impunity. Agitation and i wretchedness are ,k he inevitable consequences; in' the midst of which the fame of life Wiwi flaring+ ly, end awittly to its close. A true life must he genial and joyous. Tenn , me net, pale enchoret, of your emulate vigil,. your fastings, your scourging/. Telesis are ilt of. faring* to Moloch, not to, one Father. 'The Mari who is happy Tibia path he has chosen COS* be very sure ho ha t, chosen analie,oe he la self., deceived. "I love,God end little children:" 81 .1 1 i German poet. The 'toed are ever Attracted and made happier by lb presence of the innocent eini - lovely- And ha w h finds his religion adverse to. or a restraint upon the 'filly innocent pleasures andeayities of life so that the latter do not inter ferewitb and jar upon its more sublime object,. may well doubt whether be hu indeed .learned 4esua," • I. I . . CS. • . A ,filtiEßttli" LOVE. flow beautiful and bind:king the sister's-lots , as manifested-ht thel following affecting incident' , relinid by a Donegal4sper :—A young buy end kle slater, x stmnina to Pettigo, bomoward, bad ' . 'to =Xs'* marital!), The night was dark and stormy, and they lost, their way. Neil morning ; both were found dead .'from exposure.. The bvc ; end girl lay rii.n by side—the latter with bee inn , sroond her hi - other ? isek. end her: tlsorretytetti ' tioatismosed.from bar own person. lasi wray.4447. iiroundhts feet. Ti , EM 41d the rrestme;ierhapt l / 4. ; ea ciiflee tuir own Ilk ,tu I ,* vain . elt?rt, 10 . ql*ti.P 3 • that Other blather.' 1 • '"" • - fguarri..3 IM? well closed to the the leteatarz. • razes O. TUE ORPUAU. Sketcl). scws abut' t,ttincot bio t, but tbry till Hi opra to
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