The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, April 21, 1849, Image 1

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    ' The and most Splendid
. • ASSORTMENT OF •
• VTATCBES AND .TENIVELDX
?.• IN PIIILADA..
' . LEWIS LADOINES, - • • -
M. 413 Xtrict Street. st,fus 'demi oases EAreratl,
• earth side.7-entcalte• • 1
• ' MASJust received by late arrivale..frOm the
most celebrated manufacturers of Europe, a,
Magnificent and Joditiously selected assort.
ment ofGold and Silver Watchet; which be will
• well cheaper than any other eetablishment in the Unit
ed-States. - Among the assortment will be found—
Cold Levers. IS k. cases, fall Jeweled, •3 • •
-SilverLevers,•falljeweled, .15 - •
Gold rEnims,lo It eases. jeweled,. -1„5 •
, •Silver l'Epines Jeweled, 10
- w. Quante? Watches, . • 4 to:4110
Tea spoons, equal to coin, per set, 4.50
• Monett " " 10,00
• w Table. " " 15,00 ' • -
Tosether with a splendid assortmont of Chaste and
Itlctelswetry. fte- , - •
GOLD CHAINS, , of *ariottit- styles, from the best
•lidattatheftrress. • • • •
.13.11 ease preserve this advertisement, and call at
LEWIS LAROMUS'S •
413 Marker:Street, above Itch. north side.
*I have Gold and Silver Levers still clomps, than the
drove prices.
• 0 , 1 liberal discount made to tbit. Trade.
phita.,Apt7-I*-3mol
L. IL Broomall's - •
IGILE&T BARGAIN WATCH AND
I - . JEWELRY STORE.
WHERE Gold and Bawer Wattles of every
description can be had at from ten to fifteen per
' tea. kaa than any °Marlowe In New Yolk or
?hltadelpbis. ..remoot 'rho winh to ace a good
tynttLyiertectly reaulated, would do well. to call at the
;store of tbn snhacriber and, compare th e quillty and
?PIM orbit Watches with that of'otber stores.
,Gent Waukee at WM/owing czar-Rag/a lola prizes:
' , Gold Levers, fun jewelled, IP carat eases, 029 00
,elver do do do 19 00
(old tapioca, jewelled, 18 CArat easels, n
Slrver do do 9 00
Allver Verge Watcher, Mina $3 00 opararda,
"Geld Pencils tom $l 00 to Ir 3 u 0; Cold Pena, wiib
silver cases, and pencils attached, for 75 cents. '
Also, a handsome assortment of new and fashionable
.tervelty. at pricey far below the usual store prices.
ltild,guicl and silver bought or taken in exchange.
I.EWIs oftooMALL.
• •
Nr;. 111 Nerth,§PCZ:dat.accond door below Earn.
Philadelphia. . (April it, '49. 10.1 y
Cot this advertisement nut, and bring It along. you
will then be =re to se: :Lilo the right stilts.
-_—_—_--------.
The Mines of California Ouitehe:
_ FINE WATCHES AND JEWELRY.
This Diamond City of Philadelphia Still Ahead! •
I= . JACOB" LADO3IILTS,
. ,2415 'Narks: street, below Eirkta, &ma side,
] • • PHILADELPHIA. • ,
' . IS CODALADDy 'receiving from alt the best
iellmanufacturers of. Europe, every style of
FINE GOLD AND SILVER WATCHES.
Celtead this advert isment7.-eut it out of the ,
payer—putt it In your pocket, e and call the first time 1
you visit the city. Among the assortment VII be
found :
Gold Levers, ill k. cases, full jewelled, • 11 30
Silver Levers, full jeWelled, 15 •
Cold I'F:eines, 18 It. cases, jewelled, . 25
Silver PEpines. jewelled, 10 • •
.Quartler Watthes 4 tolllo
Silver Tea Spoons. equa l to coin, 'per set Iso
j .. Desert " ' " ' ~ ' 10 to
• Table
rs st .. • OF 15 00
Togetber with a splendid assortment of Chaste en
Rich Jewelry, to .„ &c., &c. '
Gild Chains of every variety and pattern at a slight
advance upon the original cost. Examine them by all
means.
Thu Trade will be walled upon the most advan
tageous terms. J. LADO MSS,
No. 240 Market Street. below Eighth,
'all 14:40-18.3n4 south aide. Philadelphia.
Watches. Jewelry, Slicer
Ware, &c.
I ITHODIAS ALSOP,
NO. IS SOUTH SECOND ST., PHILADELPHIA,
HAS on jamd se large and beautiful Stock of
- . 44. Gold and Silver Lever,Lepine.and other Watch
. in t es of all prices. Also a beautiful stock ofJew..
- dry of-the newest styles, which basal] been
lately purchased at the lowest prices.
A fUll supply of Silver Forks. Spoons, Butter Knives,
&c. of all weights, and warranted to be alt equal to
American coin.
!Spectacles for all agespwieh convex and concave
Masses in Gold, Silver, Plated, and Steel frames.
Plated and Britania Wore in sets or single pierce, re
ceived direct from the Manufacturers, a n d sold at a
iery small advance. A large supply of Curtis' supe.
nor plated Spoon., Forks &c. the best article of the
kind in the market.
Rogers' Fine 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 If "Quick miles and email profits," and—
I am undersold by none.
• N. 11. Particular attention *sidle repairing all kinds
.r Watches and Jewelry. 27-1 y
• visireIIESANiiJEWELRY. •
CHEAPERTIIAN EVER. .
IFlslssals and Retail, at the "Philadelphia Watch and
Joretiry Store," No. 95 Xenia Second Street,
•••• "roe , Of ILADELPB
Ofi r Gold Levers, 18 carat cases, full Jewelled,.
*3O and upwards.
- Silver Levers, full Jewelled, 15
Gold Lepine, Id k cases jaweJled, 25 "
Silver Lepines,Jewelled, 10
Silver Quartier Watches, 4 to 4110
Silver spoons,,equal to coin.persett,Tea.* s ; Desert,
$10; Table $l5; other articles to proportion. Alt goods
warranted to be what they are sold for.
Constantly on hand a large assortment of fine GOLD
JEWELRY and SILVER WARE.
Also, an assortment of M. J. Tobias &- Co., E. Simp
son, Samuel & Brothers, F i .d.Yaled & co- John Hal l o"
sin, G. di IL Beesley and other superior Patent Lever
-'Movements, which will be cased in any style desired.
Arrangements have been made with all the above
lamed most celebrated manufacturers of England to fur
fish at slant notice any required style of Watch, for
,which enders' will be taken, and the name and residence
of the person ordering put on if requesten.
0. CONRAD, Importer of Watches,
i Thtia,Ort2.3•4B-41-Iy] • No. 90 N. Second St.
BRADY & ELLIOTT, .
1 Watchmakers and -. Jewellers;
AND DEALERS IN THE SANE
1 . Br WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
, Iltere next dont to the Miners' flank, Centro street.
I • POTT3VILLE. •
MESSRS. D. & E. keep constantly on hand
#an extensive assortment of WATCHES, em
• bracing every style, price, and manufacture
to be found In this country • among which
they may particularly refer to the cele brated gold and
silver LEVERS of M.l.Tobias 4- Co., Jos. Johnson,
Robert Roskell,. Wm. Robinspn, kc., of whose manu
facttire they have a splendid collection. ALSO, gold
land silver Anchors and Le`pines, towhlch they would
I Invite attention. ALSO, a large and complete assort
went of Jewelry and Silver Ware, embracing nearly
!every article properly coming under those heads.—
Dincks In great variety; Musical Instruments and Fan
ley Articles of every description. Repairing of Clocks,
Watcher, Jewelry. 4-c., promptly attended to.
Merits. B. & E.deem tt unnecessari in advertise-
Mont to enumerate their stock more s ['Scatty ; fur
-1 Ace to jay that it has been selected wit much care and
discretion, and in one of the most extensive to be found
'in the country. Their long experience in the business
I erfll fully warrant them in inviting the attention of
purchasers. In the fell con fidence that they are enabled
lto vents atop as any other establishment here or else-.
where. IDectfig74l-ly
-
STOVES! STOVES : STOVES
WINTER is COMING:
SOLOMON no o v En,
cerse, of Nertosiriao and Railroad Streets,
POTTSVILLIC,
ANNOUNCES to his friends and cue
tomers and the public generallythat he
has nn hand the most elegant assort
meat of STOVES ever ofiered in tlitla
community embracing all the newest
and most approved patterns. Ile 'par
ticularly calls attention to McCREGOR'S PATENT
PARLOR HEATER. which Is pronounced the beet
stave now In use,both for comfortpeonomy; and health.
I have the tactilelys right of making these stoves in
Schuylkill County. Also "
Cam Iron Radiators,
Empire Conking Sloven, a superior article (or hotels.
Willis' Air Tight Conking Stoves, for wood or coal,
&superior article for families. -
Parlor and Chamber Stoves, .
Together with a large assortment for all purposes, all
of which will be sold at nnositallylow rates:
TIN AND JAPANNED WARE.—IIIs assortment of
Tin and - Japanned Ware is very large, and embraces
all the art ictes.in famtlits, Which he will warrant to be
ofa superior quality.
All Mods of Tin and Sheet Iron Ware manufactured
to order at the shortest notice.
IMMO & SPOUTING. As he Is prepared to ex
mete Tin. fooling and Spouting, be invites those in
want of such work, to give him a call, ay be pledges
himself to do it cheaper and better than It has ever
been delve In this place before. -
The public are respectfully Invited loran and exam
lie Ms Mock and Judge far theme , lyre. [Oct7-4I
gip' FIRE! FIRE! FIRES '
THE old ;daze, "take time by the
forelock " commends Itself to every one
by its - plain enmirion senie• and, when
the Chill wind. of emu mu tie . gln to blow.
giving notice of the approachof winter, every prudent
wan will at once make provision against cold weather.
Knowing that the mmple of Pottsville have a common.
della regard Tor comfort, ennvenienee, and economy.
LONG & J ACKSON have Just - started their new store
in Centre street, opposite Trinity church, with an ex
tensive assortment 'of PARLOR AND COOKING
STOVE/I,4mm; which will be found all the old and
app r oved • s tyles, and ariumber of new ones adapted
particulerly to the wants of the Coal Retina. We have
the pleasure of introducing to this neichherhood
PIERCE'S AMERICAN Ali{ TIGIIT COOKING
STOVE. Witt' BRICK TOP OVEN.
f hisstove, which is ofrecent invention. bids fair to sti
percede every other kind now in use. During the past
year tt has grown into public favor with unprecedented
11176drit.it'iaPS113131F.R AND WINTER AIR TIGHT
COOKING STOVE.
This stove, which in e.mally adapted to wood Or coal,
Tai received silver medals lathe fairs of the American
Institute, New York; Mahe Mechanics' institute, Hos
'ten ; of the Franklin Institute, Philadelphia; and of
the Mechanics' Institute, Wilmington, Delaware. A
number of their Stoves are now in operation in this le
glen, and have given entire satisfaction.
Call sal cr.vslisit our assortment of parlor and ann.
Aar @gores : they are of ell sorts, sizes and prices.
A large and splendid assortment of Shea /ran, Tin,
g od Japanned Ware kept constantly on hand.
TIN ROOFING and all work connected with the hu..
illness executed with neatness nod despatch, and at the
- most reasonable prices . LONG & .IACISPON.
TILE. BUCKS COUNTS' ECONOMIST
PATENT AIR-TIGHT COOKING STOVE..
The Ortraust Imprownext of the Dag!
TILE subscriber respectfully Interns
... the public that he has recently secured
I • • the patent right for Schuylkill County,'
far the manufacture and sale unite new
and admirable Cooking stove called the
BUCKS COUNTY ECONOMIST.—
Among the many Improvements lately introduced In
Cooking Stove,. it i acknoieledged on nil hands, that
nothing can surpass this In all the Paints requisite and
Actinide In that neces tory article oftiouse hold economy.
The facility with which it la regulated, the regularity,
yerfeass and dupatel with which cookery and baking
can be done inane and the same time. and the small
.quantity of fuel consumed, are Matters of surprise to all
1-who have tried it, and gives it the first rank among all
!,tha mires yet Introduced.. It Uunneressary.however,
to specify its peculiar facilities in advertisementai per
.4nnaletamination of I:llfeaturss will hest satisfy thote
who may wish tumults purchases: end it will afford the
:cindersigried mach pleasure to receive calls. and satisfy
Inquiries with respect to, its capacities and perform-
I ernes...The store will be.put up for thirty dein. and if
found riot CO niece the expectations ofbuyen; or Cu) Per
form as represented, it will be taken away without
charge. ; There are three sleet—Not. 1,1 and I--and
Ironstracied to burn either wood or coal. . Call and ea
enders spechnens.now ready at the Move and sheebiron
.ware manufactory of Om subscriber,ln Centro Street,
two doors above the Public Schoola—where. also, any
thitig jointing oftinsiness may, be had Oylaccommoda.
till terms.
Tottsvillet„oo7-41 - ttl - ABRAHAM ST: cunt;
- - -
,VIEDEpyrtG PILES% AT ONLY d 3: tuiiile
at the auhoeriberhe Cheap !took Store.
I Apirtl tl, te-.1 . B. 13.111111 AN.
MINERS'
VOL. XXV.
. .
STOVES I STOVES 1. . ' '
• THE Underatencil respectfully, beg
leave to inform the petite alai they base
commeneed a ST OVE POEN RV
which is no* In felt operation; oh dial
' - treet,- nest to Henry Jenkins' WIN
Screen Statinfactmy In Pottsville, and kith* It at, the
Pea/frit& Stove Works: they would, the refine:Call the
attention of stove dealers of this region, and altothent,
:o their Stock °filmic!, as they feel confide,;,,laki they
mn supply them on as reasonale.etertniTuid with stoves
sfany pattern D.:;,' equal in beauty and material to those
monied at the Philadelphia foundries.
.—A ,
N. 81l kinds castings done to orderat theshort ,
est notici and on the mostyeasonable terms. .
MILL & WILLIAMS
Pottsville. May 29. 1847 ' r..—l y
Summer Arrangement.
PHILA.., READING & POTTSVILLE
BIM BOAR
y . - t_ -A ouy _ -'_y ~ 3 Nw~caN_ .
r:
i.~"v—
CHANGE OF HOURS
AND TWO TERME EACH WAY DAILY, EXCEPT lIVED•Tt.
N and after. Monday. April Rd, lel% two trains will
run each 'way, daily, between Philadelphia and
,Pottsville.
Morning tine (accommndation), leaves Philadelphia
lit 7X o'clock A. , (Sundays excepted) passes Read
ing al 10.45
The atme lin e str ps at all way stations, as ructoerty..
•ITEEREOOII Taste. • •
Leaves Ph Ilada. daily, (ex-Leaves Pottsville deity (ex.
cept Sundays) at 2.5) eept Sundays) at 'l3O
Phcenixville. 3.4; Bet, Vin, Ray
" Pottstown, 4.15 , M.,'Poagt •
.3.00
Reading. 5.00-. Restil . 3.50
Port Clinton, 5.45 .'"• Pottstown, • '4.30
" Sch. Haven, Pticentxville, • 5.00
Al's at Pottsville, 41.5[0(Aregat Slate Road, 5.50
The afternoon train wilpstop at the 'above named
stations; passenger for' % other potots, mast therefore.
take the morning line. -
Depot is Philadelphia corner Broad and Vine etc
No passengers can' enter the cars, auks, provided
with tickets.
NOTICE.—Fifty pounds of baggage will be allowed
to each passenger in rhea.- Ilnes; and passengers arc
expressly prohibited from taking anything as baggage
at their wearing apparel which will be at the risk of
the owner. No freight will betaken by these lines. .
By order of the board of managers. •
S. BRADFORD, Seel
42-
y.
lENIM
SCH. HAVEN, DINEILSVII.L.N. AND
TREMONT PASSENGER LINE.
"'".,
CHANGE op, HOODS.
ON and atter Monday, April 2d. the lime will be
run as follows, viz.:,
Lease Minersville for , Schuylkill Haven at 61 and
8.1 o'clock. A. M., and 4 o'clock, P. M.
Leave Sctinrlklll llaven for Mnnerevilm at before
8 A. M., 121. M., and 61; P. M.
Leave Minersville for Tremont at I o'clock. P. H.
Leave Tremont for Pottsville,MinesiyAle and Schuyi
kil I Haven, at S o'clock,
• FARE.
From Minersville to Schuylkill Haven, 25 cis.
" • Schuylkill Haven to Tremont, 50"
Minersville to Tremont, 10 "
An Omnibus will run between Pottsville and West
wood to connect with the Tremont Train. leaving
Pottsville at 121 o'clock. M . and leaving Westwood
immediately on the arrival of the Train tram Tremont.
Fare from Pottsville to Westwood, ' 15 cis.
*Ali baggage at the owner's risk.
WM. T. cualp,
Pottsville, 0ct2,848-441 Proprietor.
LITTLE SOIIUYLKILL 11. ROAD
:I -- M,
. =ow.
ARRANGEMENT FOR THE FREIGHT AND .
PASSENGER CARS ON TIIE LITTLE
SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD.
TIIE Passenger Tralnleaves Port CI Inton,dally, (Sun
days excepted) on the nrrtval of the morning train
on the Reading Railroad from Philadelphia—nth. in: at
Tamaqua In time to dine. Leaves Tamaqua at3talf
past one o'clock, P.M., in time to connect at Port Clin
ton with the afternoon train, on the Reading Itailioad
from Pottsville to Philadelphia.
FARE,—To Port Clinton 75 cents; to Philadelphia,
*3 50.
The freight train leaves Tamaqua daily, (Sundays
excepted.) at 6 o'clock. A. 11.. and Port Clinton at
o'clock, P.M. A paisenger car runs in connexion with
the Freight train, so that pasuengers for Philadelphia
can take the mimningtmin of care on the Reading Rail
road at Pott Clinton. Fare the same as in the other
train. JOHN ANDERSON,
Tamaqua,oct2B-44] ,General Agent.
'New Arrangement.
74 : 07 TAI SU% ; 1: Pro
LIVINGSTON'S EXPRESS LINE.
EAIM PREPARED TO receive and forward
Daily per Passenger Train, (our Express Cars
being alwave in ebarge or special messengers) mer
chandize or all descript ions, packages, bundles, specie,
bank notes,
Also particular attention paid to collecting Bills,
Drafts and Accounts. .
Package. and Goods delivered daily to all interme
diate places between Philadiflphia sod Pottsville.
OFFICES, •
Centre Strret, , Pottsvilte; No. 43, Smith Third street,
Philadelphia ; No. 6, Walt street, New York ; No 8,
Court street' Boston
Feb. 24. 9-01 LIVINGSTON, IIOWAiItD &Cm
OFFICE OF THE PHIL& DELHHIA /
&READING RAIL ROAD COMPANY. f'
Philadelphia. Dec. 20th. 184 e.
rwo OTICE i. hereby given, tha: the rates of Freight
IV and Tolls on Cnal tranaported by Bala Company,
will be as follows from Jemmy Int, 1849:
To From M.Carbon.B.l aven.P.Clinton
Richmond, until June I, 1819 60 15 35
Philadelphia, do do 80 55 35
Inclined Plane,untilDee.3l,do. 70 65 45
Nieetown, do 70 63 45
Cermantown'R R. •do 70 65 45
Falls of Schuylkill, do 70 65 45
Manayunk, do 60 53 . 25
Cone ehocken and I •
1 Plymouth It. R., , do 50 45 30 '
I Turn Out I mile be-
low 'Norristown, do 41 40 15
Norristown or Bridge
port, do 40 35 20
Port Kennedy, do. . 35 30 15
Val - orge, = do 30 25 10
centsville, do '2O 15 00
Lapeer, Ford, do 20 15 00
Pottstown, do - 15 10 ' 00
mulaciavilfe, - - do 15 10 00
hometown, ,do - 16 03 95
Reading. - do 03 00 95
Between Reading a
and Mobraville, • do I 100 ' 05 go
Mohravalle, do 95 129 85
Hamburg, 'do 75' 70 65
Orwigeburl.- do 65 60 - 55
The freight and tolls on coal to Richmond, and
Philadelphia, wring the months of June, July, aad
Augtut will be .....,--
From M.Carbon.S.llaven.P.Cllnton.
170 •1 65 - 145
. . .
And nn and after Sept. let,
In December As?, 1949, 180 175 155
By order of the BoardS .of Manneers.
BRADFORD; Beeretarl.
Deem, , 4B-52-in
pIILLA., READING & POTTSVILLE'.
RAIL ROAD. .
'g=
RATES OF FREIGHT ON iidEREAN DIRE.
()N AND AFTER April lox, 1848, Goode will be ,
forwarded with despatch at the following rates
of freight. between Pottsville and the points below
stated, per ton of 1000 lbs.
Beretta Potttrills Between Pottarills
and PAlia. I asd Readier,
Plaster,timestone, Bitumin
ous ORA. Sand, Iron Ore , 00 1. 0 ,
and Bricks.
Bloome,Lime,Timber.B lone,
Rosin, Tar. Pit xh. Raw
Turpentine, blartile,Grind- si
stones, nails, spikes, scrap
and pig Iron, Makes cast-
Inge, cuann, and poodrette.
Bar Iron, flour, salt. lead.l
bark, raw tobacco,sall bee
and pork, lumber, Milli f
iron castings, surar, mei; 4 71
lasses, green coffee. pota
toes, salt pore, brimstone,
and rye chop.
Flour, per bbl.
Oil, groceries .v inegar, whis-1
key,. machinery, cheese, I
lard,tallow, rag . ..leather, J
raw hides, paints, whito ).41R
and red lard,oysters,benip,
glue and cordage, steel, 1
. bran and ship stuff.
Raw cotton and wnol.elears, - - •
fresh meat, fresh nib. dry
coods,drugs and medicines. .
foreign liquors. wines and I
teas, glass, china, and I
queensware' poultry, son- I
fecticnary. books and sta. }5 00 IS
GollarY, spirits turpentine, I
cumphine, burned eatree,
hate and caps, boots and
shoes, bonnets, feathers,l
Dees, hops. spices, turn! ,
lure, by weight.
No additional charges for commissinn, storage. or
Receiving or delivering freights at an v of the Company's
demnsion the line. [Aprills, 29-tf
Luzern Iron. Works, near
• llazleton.,
~ t aa
'LEESON & ALLEN, -
PROPRIETORS of the above named establishment,
respectfully informs their patrons and the public
generally, that they hare taken the large building for.
merly used for the Machine Shop connected with the
Snail' Loaf Coal Works, to which they hav,enddedu
Fnundry, and are now prepared to build Ateain Era.
nines of every *lee. , Pumps, Coal fireaters.Esitroad
and Mitt Can. and to furnish Iron sad Ilms Cutler,.
of every description suitable to the Coal mining or any
other husinets,cm the most reasonable - terms.
Repairing of all hinds done - with acetones, and - 0- -
mnetcb. at the lowest prices. - "
All work (twiddled by them willleamurted,to
perform Well.; They would solicit, the Matra of (Dose
who may - wereartkles in their line le iblevlcially.
All orders wilt 'meat with - Immediate and pitooprat.
motion. S. W'. HUDSON,
March 17, 1 kn. 12.171 L-11. ALLEN.
AND. POTTSWLLE
i ale ' Gibe tavi of the • b and WI Cro. , e• • 0. e.. 'll/ APIPMIPPWrIR.
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY _BY ° BENJAMIN BANNAN, - POTTSVILLE, SC}IUYLKILL COUNTY, PA.,
tittitelFlANl l S
Elly rOtTSVILLE
- ytiairaTlT PHILADELPHIA,
~ ,
. a“
-
C.' CONRAD, Jr: It CO.
ODWARDING and Commission Melihants, take
F
this method of informing their friends and the
patinc in general that they- are prepared to forward
Merchandise, Packages and Parcels of all descriptions,
to the following places :—Schuylkill Haven,
Minersville, Tamaqua and Potteville.—also to,Ltewel
lye. Donaldson, Ttemont. Pinegmve, Port Carbon,
eq. Clair, New Philadelphia, filiddleport, Patted - 2de.
Tuscarora: New Castle, Ashland. Danville. Northar-!.
Berland, Sunliery, ithamokin, Williamsport, Milton,
Caltawima. Bloomsburg; Orangeville. Erpytown,Light
Street. MiMinville, Soydeitown,' Georgetown and
Washington.
Goods for Mauch Chunk, Hazleton, Deaver Meadow,
Summit Dill, Cunningham. Berwick and Winesbarre,
will be shipped thiough to Tamaqua without the de
tention, heretofore caused by reined ing at Port Clinton.
Orders for geode will be punctually attended to.—
Penitent attention paid to the selling of Country
produce.
Merchants In the Country sending for their goods
'will please send en order with the Teamkter, as goods
cannot othenvlse be 'delivered. . •
J. C. CORR all. JR. B. De FOREST. Jr.
Philad'a. Bch. Mina.
April,l4'49-18.1y•
. •
t7;got 7 41
lIIMW. I . , , •
• .0111L .rag..'
. 6 . A. j
IN
. . .
• . PHILADELPHIA. ,
TVELEIE.D Wrought Iron Flues, Suitable for Loco
motiviis,Marine and other Steam Engine Boilers,
from lto 5 inches in diameter. Also, Pipes tor Das,
Steam and other purposes; extra strong Tuhe for Hy
draulic Presses; Hnllow Pistons for Pumps or Stew'
Engines ke. Manufactured and for sale be ;,
MORRIS, TASHER & MORRIS,'
' Waiehouse 8. E. corner 2d and Walnut sta., Philada.
Philada• Nov. 22,1 ISIS 47
•
Irt t CSI X
F-ti
Subscribers having aienciated themselves. to
gether, trading under the firm ofS.Sillyman k Co.,
for the purpose of carrying no the Foundry and Ma
chine ebusiness at the Franklin Works;Port Carbon,
letely owned by A. O.• Brooke, are now prepared to
Manufacture to order at the shortest notice Steam En
gines.Purops, Coal Breakers,and Madhinery of almost
Alsoi or description. for mining or other purposes.
Road and Drift cars, Ironor Brass Castings
of any size or pattern.
O. ORDERS ARE RESFECTFULLY SOLICITED... 3
SAMUEL SILLYMAN & Co.
FRANKLIN SHOVEL WOR - ER.Z.The subscribers
are now prepared to furnish the Colliers and deal
ers or Schuylkill county, with Shovels of all kinds at
ihelnwestPhiladelphia prices. Attention Is pa. lieu
la rly called to their Coal Shovels. Orders for Shovels
of any sizear pattern promptly
S attended Y to,
Co.
Vt. Carbon , Aug. 14.'47. 33-Iyl . SILL:VAN &
rre4l-0 1 - Vt•V_ ctf
•••?-it,. 'FS
POD:V. I DV AND SkACHINE_ SHOPS.
WE subscribers, at their old stand, corner of Ra
Al Road and Callowhill streets. are prepared to man
facture to order, at the shortest notice, Steam Engines
and Pumps, o any power and capacity for mining and,
other purposes, Bartin's Coal Breaking Xashin% with
solid and perforated rollees,as may be it g ai,gd,
Also Engines and Blowing Cyitrtters with all neees
ary machinery for Hiatt r*.,rrinees. not Air Pipes, of
be most approve, inane, Cup and Bali Joints and We
riserri!, of tbe very best construction., They par
ti; ,fatly Invite the attention of Iron Masters and par
• ties engaged in the Iron trade, to their large stock of
Patterns for nailing .dills, having lately constructed
the machinery for two of the largest Mills In the Conn
try, viz -,--The Wyoming Mill at Wilkebbarre.und the
Rolling "Mill at the Montour Iron Works. Dzinville.
They are fully prepared (or this kind of work. together
with every variety of general machinery. Of the qua!-
1 Ity of their work and material,. It is ennui!' t t say,
that time and esperienre,the most infallible -rata, bass
amply demonstrated the genuine character of their en
gines and machinery.
Orders ire respetfully Rail will be promptly
attended to. itAIWOOD & SNYDER.
Pottiville. January; IT, 1646 3-ly
POTTSVILLE IRON WORM. 9.
• •a• ".
5
'Mr
" 41.434.
SPEN Eit & CON.
D ESPECTFULLY announces to the public, that
it they hive taken the Establishment known ea ths
Pottsville Iron Works, on Norwegian street, where
they are prepaed,to build all kinds of steam Engines,
manuacture Rail Road Cars, and Machinery of almost
every description; at the shortest notice, and on the
moil' reasonable terms.
*.Persons from abroad, In want of Steam Engines
will find it to their advantage to them a call befoi•
engaging - elsewhere. May 11 .
OFFICE OF TILE SCHUYLKILL /
NAVIGATION COMPANY. I
/kraut/tor Md. 18 .
\ 4.:reettr, ri t i be nz fo n l i l pn ow irg rates t i e f
Canal and Work/tot the Schuylkill Navigation on Corn•
pang Willa year. 1999
_
T — , —rom—,
Mount Schuylkill Port
Carbon. Dairen. Clinton.
eta. per ton. eta. per ton. els. par tom
Om igsburg, •• l5 12
Haniburc. 35 • 2$ 13
Mobravilla, 35 32 23
A Ithouser, 40 ST SS
Reading. 45 43 33
Unionville, . 55 32 . 43
Laurel MIL 55 53 43
Pottstown Landing. 55 112 43
Royer: Ford, 55 -33 - -42
Pineniteille, 60 ' 57 49
Patildinc'e Dam. 60 57 43
Ltsmberville, 60 57 49
Valley Forge, 30 57 49
Port Kennedy, 65 62 53
NorriszoWn. • 65 • 61 52
Coneohneken, 70 65 SS
Spring Mill, 70 67 r 58
Mananna, 75 72 63
The y toll to Philadelphia will he ae follows:
lit. Carbon. Sch. Sloven. Pt. Clinton.
March, April and May 65 cis. 64 cm. 59 cts.
June,July and Almon. 75 71 33 --;
Sept. Oct. Nov.& Dee. 95 in 73 -i
The Coal shipped Wm Port Carbon loth, above points
will be charged one and a half cent, per ton more thin
said rates. .
The charge will be mode per ton ormto lbs., and an
allowance of fire per cent. will be made on the weight
shipped to cover Wallace. '
Dec-30-1-Iy] FREDERICK FRALEV, President.
Jos. iticlllurre.y 7 s Passage Agency.
ARRANGEMENTS FOR 1849.
S. SANNAN, POT - MILL., SOLE AGENT
OLDEST ADD THE lIERT ESTABLISHED AAAAA OE
' OFFICE IN THE VISITED STATES.
- .
TIIF, subscriber respectfully begs
leave to tender his sincere thanks to
.:4os •••
~ his numerous friends and the public,
. A_ , for the very liberal support be bas re
_ crived for upwards of twenty years,
and solicits a continuation - of their
confidence. The despatch with which has passengers
have been Monett out.nnd the prompted'ss with which
his very numerous drafts have been paid at the different
banks, are, he flatters himself, a sufficient guarantee to
the public for the faithful perfortnabee et any future
contracts entered into with him.
The following are the REGULAR LINE OF PACK
ETS, which sail punctually on their appointed days, by
which passengers will be brought out without delay or
disappointment. viz.:
attics' SAXES caress. Dais OF SAILING SIMS, N. T.
Patrick Henry, Delano. Jetty. IL May 6 Sept. 4
Waterloo, FA-Allen, •• II II " It
Sheridan, Cornish, " 26 " 26 ".
Henry Clay. Nye, Feby: 6 Jute 6 Oetr. 6
New Ship, "- ti " 11 " I t
Garrick,! Hunt, " 2 1 1 '," 26 26
New World, Knight, March 6 July 6 None. 6
John R.Sklddy.lLuce, " 11 II " II
Roscins, Moore, • " 20 " 25
Ashburton, Howland, April - .Ang. 6 Deer. 6
West Point, W 11 Allen " II ," .11 16
Siddons, • Cobb, " " 25 " 31
. slurs' ?CAKES. carr'ss. DAYS SAILING 711011 LIV'AP'L.
Patrick Henry Oman°. Feby 21 June 21 Oct 21
Waterloo, F.R.Allen, " 20 " 20 " 26
Sheridan, Cornish, Mar. 11 I uIY 411 N0v.16
Henry Clay: Nye. " 21" " 21
New Ship, " " " 26
Garrick. Iltint, April II An;. 11 Dee.ll
New World. Knight, ' 21 "21" 21
John R Skiddy, Luce. " 26 " 20 '• 21
Rosclus, Moore. May 11 Se pt. II Jen. 11
Asblturton. Howland. " ' Si " -21
Wirt Point, W.H.Allen " 26. " 20 " 26
Slddona. (Cobb, .!Jane 11 Oct II Feb.ll
In addition to the above regular line; a ntimber of
splendid ehips, such as the Adirondack, Mannlon. Rap
pahannock, Liberty, Sea, Sc. Patrick, Samuel Hicks,
Columbia, and Niagara, will continue to sail from Liv
erp,ml weekly in regularaucedssion, thereby preventing
the least possibility of delay or detention in Liverpool;
and for the accommodation of persona wishing to remit
money to their family or friends, I have arranged the
payments of my drafta on the following banks: • -
Armagh, Clonmel, Enniskillen, Omagh,
Athlone, Cavan, Ennis, Parsontown,
Bandon, Fermoy. Ennlscorthy, Skibbereen,
Belfast, Cootchlii, Galway, _
Banbridge, Dmgheda, Kilkenny . ; Strabane,
Ballymena, Dundalk. Kilrnsh. ; Tralee. -
11allyshatinci0Dungartan, Limerick, Wexford.
gallica, Dungannon, londonderry.Waterford, •
co,k, Downpatrick,Monagban, Youghal.
Coleraine, Dublin, adanasv, -
Eactand.—Mesars. Slimmer, Atwood & Co., bankers,
London: - mid Mr. Z. B. Flynn, Liverpool. •
Scaland.—Tbn City of Glasgow flank. and. all Its
branches and agencies. .
O. Passages can area ha engaged from Liverpool to
Philadelphia, Roston.-and Baltimore, by the regulsr
packet ships, on application being made personally or
by fetter post paid addressed to B. 13ANNAN.Pottaviller
JOSEPH MCMURRAY. corder of Pine and. South
New York.;' of• Mr . -. GEO. MeIdURRAY, • N 0.117,
Waterloo Road, LtVerpoo,l-- ••• • • '• Ilaide4l+
El
CARRIAGES.
„
" THE SUBSCRIBER SECS LEAVE
inane the attatitkerrif hi' eilende Ind
the public to Mattock nt o.l.lUlsAoun
'z'arLip tre. -iATAGeiONBI nosi.nkaffitaltd
and entitling; which he wet dispose
aa.AII kinds or renalrina promptly attended to:
Recolleal Corner qt Union and Railroad Striate,
tge.k of the /smartest' Sonar.
June 5,1&1t. "3-1 y ' WISTAB 8.. EIRE.
PASCAL IRON WORKS
FRANKLIN WORKS.
COLLIERY WORKS.
, ,
SA.TURp.AY,Jst MORNING; . , -APRIL: 21, 1849
1 -
. liozinets! liourkettl
T. z. LOTH.ROP.
Xi;'3o Solid' Second - Witt, ',pre? sids, asst doer to
' Ekanals 4 . Zeut.enttrit*Dttlnia... . I -
RESPECTFULLY Invites the - at.
' .c.;_=,. - p
tention of the Ladles of. Pottsville '
and its sitinityito BIS tem chola*
assortment of.-
SPRING 61. SUMMER STUAWIS IS,
fiNNEiS rii T
',toast/emir low prices. -- thereat - anti arieftetlem
sunnlie4-43 . • .- . • .
. .
Altering, Bleaching, and Ytensing;dona in; an_ parlor
manner, and at abort notice. .. .. - -.- - ~
..
T...Z..140711110P. •
. Zio. 30, Muth Id st..weerslde,iiest
door to Townsend illtarpless &Son, ,
March3l,lB49-3mo] • 4 Philidelphia. '
Millinery Store,
====t==l
C3=i7833
THE undersigned respectfully announce to
li b s e Se La u d p i e e n s el ePVlZnallia6b ti xi tney
at tae
&hose ou...where they will keep a eoaitfint
supply of
FASHIONABLE BONNETS.
Comprising Cbinn Pearl, Frencb Lace, Jenny Lind.
Rough & Ready. Little Mese,. Cirops.&.e.,
Together with n general variety of Neu. Laces. Stag
ings. Ribbons Artificial Flowers, 4c.
Apr7-15-4t] Its. 11. & it-FERNOLER.
Milliner! Goods. •
?THE subscriber hag now on hand sn sesortment
of SPRING GOODS.Tor the Millinery Trade—
consisting of
, Ness,Stiles of Ribbons.
Fresiith i ltd Americas. Fowere.
Silks: Laces, Foundation Lece.
sllonlisetli[hines of Buckram, %Vire and Late.
_
rowti. Tips, Strew. Contl, and Gimps.
Lawn for Casing flats. -• •
Also, Paencli Panora lints.
S. L 111ALLIDAY.
65 N. Secoad Si. four doors below Arch,
Ap.7.1819-15 3r.] •
Sprinm Millinery Goods
JOHN STONE & SONS,
1 ..PORTERS AND DEALERS IN
MIAS. DIODONS MID MUMMY GOODS,
&X/P. 45 Sava Sand Si., Pallas.
WOULD call the attention of 'Merchants
and Milliner' visiting the city, to their large
and rich assortment of
- 7 - SPRING MILLINERY GOODS.
Received by late arrivals from France, such as
Glace Silks for cooing bonnets,
Fancy Bonnet and Cap Itilitions—a lugs and beautiful
assortment, of all prices ;
Plain Mantua and Satin Ribbons. from, No. I Id No. 11;
French and American *Official Flowers, (la great va
riety) ;
Colored end White Crapes; I .
. ,
Fancy Laces and Nets ;
French Chip Hats ;-
Face Trimmings-40114m;
Covered Whalebones-Cane i . ,
Buckrams—Willow :
Bonnet Crowns end Tips.
Together with every article appertaining t
ot the Milli
nery Trade. [arch 34, -Imo
Silk Hats.'
N.
GEORGE S.
.„.
. r
..t. A A.
Corry WARDER
PIIIILADCLPIII,4. t ß Sizt a : s c grtt.,
• SOLI I T TIIR ORDERS OF RATTER.,
inThey manufacture cam*, quality of Isla
HATS, ranging from $l4 to frs per dozen,
and as they a.!i! Largely e-,,v ite i to the burl
nese, :art All ordhrs expediti. , :my. They manufacture
erslasiocie J.
~0 * ' hi mat, and respectfull request a trial
of their hats 4 iesi Angola Hatt off hand. .
arch IT - Pl-ti) ‘, -
_ •
11u11
ding hardware and Tools
AT LOW MUCUS.
THE attention of Mindere and others
•• 3ltow
Ntslskiltjx7 reepectflully invited to theextenalre
PJ r - and well-selected Mock of
U ING HARDWARE AND TOOLS
Now offered by the aubvcriber. In nail as
American Front Door Locks, upright, with night work,
plated or brass furniture,
American Front Door Locke. plain plated or braes do
Do• do do and :More Door, liOnao ULM or
Upright, brae. furniture.
Do Rim Locke. all sizes nod qualities. White or
braes furniture.
Do Mortice Lecke, all alias with plated, white or
brain furniture.
Do Mortice Latches, all sites do do do
Do Mortice and Rim Closet Lochs, plated or brats •
escutcheons
Do Drop,Stop,Tbumb,Gate pod Store Door latches.
Also, Imported Locks and Latches et every description.
Baldwin'e and American Run Hinges, of all sixes, fast
or loose Joint.
Shutter, Gate, Strap.T, and Backdap Homes, all kinds.
Shutter, Gam, Door. Flush, and Spring BA's. of isfro't
or cast iron and bras, every description
Screws, Sprig., Glue. Stud Paper of the best quality.
American Axle and Sham Axle Pulley., of
S every vari
ety.
Do Buttons, plainer on plates, brass, iron or Wa
ne Nobs, potted, white, Iron, or wood, every CM.
Sash-Cord common and patent, with other articles too
num....nesse mention.
NAILS and SASH-WEIGHTS at Fattory primm.
Cf• All goods delivered free of charge to any Depot or
Landing,
TOOLS.
Spear & Jackson's flack, Panel, fiend and Ripp Saws,
imported expressly for retail sales, oU pointed with
rae,.
Sole agent for the celebrated PLANES, Ac., made Ity
E. W. Carpenter. of Lancaster, Pa., being all made
ofsplit wood, and the bats ground and trier , . Beaty's
and Williams' make of CHISELS, AXES. HATCH
ETS, Drawing IlEnrree, Ac., all warranted good.
Push's and Stack's make of AUGURS and AUGUR
BITTS, every size.
American Squares add Revile of eveey description.
Do Rules, Goatee, Sawsetts, Compasses. Sieraw
drives. kn.
Do C. S. Hammers, Claw and Riveting, every size.
Steel, Iron and Wooden Brace., with C. S. llitta, in
great Varlary.
W. Grooves & Son's, !Blither's, and other celebrated
makes of Chisels. Files. Plane-Irons, &e.
Addis's Celebrated Carving Toole, every shape.
Making one of the best and most extensive assort
ments of Building Hard.' are and Tonle In the City.
O•At this emabtisliment it is considered a pleasure to
show the (WNW Builders and 01110,11 life invited to
call and examine the assortment, and hear the prices
asked, before purchasing elsewhere. ,
WM. M. !der:LURE. ,
Na. 157 Market Pt., between 7th A Sib, tipper side,
March2,11349-3tho], Philadelphia.
Gum: GUM ! !
'MIGHT POT?,
TOWN HA MAROS STORE.
DOUBLE and Single barrel SHOT
BENT, POWDER FLASKS SHOT
•
DU PONDS CAN ISTER POWDER,
PERCUSSION CAPS.
REVOLVING PISTOLS.
SINGLE AND DOUBLE PISTOLS.
The above are a Ina assortment (4E1411A and Ger
man manufactere.
T.ABLE. POCKET, CUTLERY, SCISSORS, AND
aartas a line atenoment (Wine molt celebrated makes.
• . •
ROPE, lIE.MP, PACKING CORDAGE, ANVILS,
Bellows, Vices and Files,
BLASTING TUBES FOR WET PLACES IN
Mines, Safety Fuse, Long and Short handled Shovels
made expressly for our own sales.
BUILDING MATERIALS,
Consisting o f Imam, Laienes,llin ces, Pa ints..ol447laas
of American, German, and Ennlish manufacture.
• IRON AND STEEL.
Hammered and Rolled Iron, Sheet, !lin, Band, and
Hoop Iron: TOOLS,
Blacksmiths', Carpeniers . ,dhoenaakere,and Saddlers'.
SADDLERY, HARDWARE. & COACH TRIMMING,
With a variety of iron notions. lAtit.l9 17 35
Cherokee.
LATE ARRIVAL.
THE subset fiber having iust returned from
Z.. 1); Philadelphia with the largest stock of goods
lA^ ;V ever °Retort for sate in this place, m:misting
of Dry Goods, Groceries, Provisions. Spices. Fruits.
Tobacco and Sepal', summer Hats &Caps, Queen'-
s-arc, Glassware, Lamps. Burning Fluid. &c.
has opened' a NEW STORE in FOX'S BRICK
BUILDING. in Norweuian Street, below the Arcade.
where.ke is prenared to sell on terms more favorable
to purchasers than those of any other establishment
in the Borough of Pottsville.
life assortment of Dry Goods embraces all the new
Springstyles, which are various and beautiful.
Men's and Boy's fashionable Caps for kale •at
12ii cents.
Persons can save at least 25 per cent. by earthen
tog at C. IN hIAN'S
Ap.7,'49-15.111 . New Cheap Store.
New Firm.
.iif,
T o HE subsc h r ip ib eors hthaev in u g
p Wa e d oef,t entered Into
rx t wen p ralw n oesa f le r and p eai o batne r se n l sa lßON
ORO cERI ES, PROVISION S,IIA %%FLOUR, and nen,
at the well-known York Store In the borough of .Potta•
eine, would mostrespeetfully begleave to say that they
have now on hand a large and well selected stock of
Bar Iron of all descriptions, also Flat Bar and T Rail
Road Iron of various alzet,suitable for drt fts and lateral
roads, which they oiler for sale al as tow a rate as can
be had in the County. Alen.; fresh stock of Omceries
and Provisions constantly on hand at very tow priers
for cash. Also, Cast, Blister, and Shear Steel; Nails
and Spikes, Otto, Floor, Feed, &c., all of which they
would respectfully solicit on Inspection all the public,
and relying as they do upon amulet attention to business
to be able at all times to accommodate their customers.
E. YARDLEY & SON.
P. R.—The ■nhaeriber ',mild take this opportnnity to
return his sincere' thanks for the liberal patronage he
has heretnfore received from hie friends and the public
generally, end respectfull} solicits a continuance of the
same for the new firm.
Prittaville,Marchl.lB4B4ol EDW. YARDLEY.
• NeiV 'Grocery; Flour. feed, -
. - /LND PROVISION STORE.
Tiff. subscriber announce!' tp tha citizens of
, - -'4._.. at tevllle, that be has Jul t opened a new G race
,,etity, Flottrand Feed State, at Ws old stand.w he re
ri ,
~,,,,..,e will always keep no hand a/uprise stank of
'choke GROCERIES..PROVISIONS: . Fa miIx,,FLOEW
TEA. COFFEE, SUGAR, ar.i.; . all eitwhich will be se- ,
lected with 'gieat care,. and will be Sold at very. low
rate's.. Ife gaiters himself that he can make it to the
Interest °tilde community to deal with him:. he there-
Ibre soilelts thelr.,paucinage. , .' . ..: -
• Re raturnsenaelts to his inunernue customers for the
immune they taystnwed upon.him In his other business
dee 11.4740 .- : . -. R 9.13,110ENE1L
• .' ' 41.. DASD .LITTLE k. MARTINi , , - ' ,
=BOLE/MLR and „Stegall. Dealdrarli DAY ;
.00DSTGROCEMES. TEAts,..LlClArgisAr.e.
,
Mon Centre 'street, near the a?tnalt 014.:
balneddo.ta Wifely BM attention of the elitzenaOt toes
nd eintatia lirespettlnlly *dialect ' '
!WV tr, tiTTLE.
Pbcievillo.OitT4 . 447 ICON 8: elk MARTIN.
Anthracite Hail. • •
.• IMAM:IT .1711Ur7, NIMAITILLI, PA.
The subscriber would respectfully Inform
," friends mall Ilid , publie that be bat mama
err -to tbo above named bouse. (formerly kept
by Rapp) where her will be happy to give
envy attentbm to those who may favor trim with a
ap.7249-45.tf.1 • JACOB SRAM. •
Sheldralie 9 s Allegbany House,
X. 280 Narks4 Strut, rdoso Eighth, (South side.)
=BEM
-
, . ... .
- TIILS lure and splendid Hotel has been.
ARE: furnilhed with 'entire new furniture. The
• up! Bar-Room is the tarred in Philadelphia. The
`` Partouri and Sitting -looms ere entirely cep
crated from the noise and bustle, consequent to the
arrival anddepartnre of the cars, The Portico eaten.
dine the whole from of the house. affords a cool re
treat In warm weather, and a splendid view of the
greatest thoroughfare to the City. - •
The Lodging Rooms rse Well- finished. The Table
as welt provided for as any other Hotel, with every at
tention of the managers to make It the best Hotel for
Merchants and Business Men. during their stay in the
City. Toe terms will be one dollar pen day. On' the
arrival of the Cars from the West, a Porter will be in
attendance to convey baggage, la, to the Hotel, which
Is adjoining the depot. [Feb 'in "1-I.kno
WHITE SWAN lICITEL.—T II E
' Subscriber begs leave to inform his friende
and the public in genera[ that be has taken
the WHITE SWAN HOTEL AND•STAGE
OFFIOE, No. 10$-Race Street, formerly kept by J.
Fetes. & Son. The House belo a large and convenient,
and in the business past of the city; be hopes by strict
attention to business, that his friends and all who may
eorne to the city on business or pleasure will give him a
call He pledges himself that nothing shall be.want
ing pa his part to make them at home.
TERMS, ONE DOLLAR PER DAY. . •
GEORGE RAHN,
Hardin' 11-2mol Formerly of SchuyikllLenunty.
Washington Hotel,
(FOIMEILE KEPT IST SAMOLL 'BLARE) ••• ,
•
The subscriber announces to hts Mande and
it.u. b the travelling public that he has taken the
S 7. 7 o above mentioned establishment, and fitted up
throughout, so that It will equal any estab
lishment in the County. It is located near the Depot
of the Philadlephla and Reading Railroad and on the
Main street of the Borough. His table will always be
abundantly supplied With the choicest delicacies °film
season,
his chambers are large and airy, and his bed •
ding of the ben kind.
The stabling attached to the hotel is large and coin
modieus, and attentive Mutters will always be found
In attendance. Ile has also accottunodations for Dro
vers. &e '
*Vehicles 'trill always be kept to carry visitors to
any pall of the County. or elsewhere.
All be solicites is a trial of his iiollll4, feeling cone
dent be will give entire satbfattion to, all who find It
vonventeot to sojourn at his House.
. Ap.7,49—15Af.1- JOHN JONES.
Furniture I Furniture I
CARPETS. YEINITI A N & PAINTED DIANDS, &IL
• GRESSANG & SILLIIMAN
RES t ECTFULLI :tallounce to
theciliens 'iroltsville and the
neighborhood that they
hove opened :
• * -RNITURE WARE-ROOH. lin Ara.
g4 ,4l mir;._ oireit.. i4lll doors fr.. Crinre, where they
!;gee ott "rut n large and-fashionable stock of Furni
ture...M*ol'olns the latest and most fashionable styles,
Lit of which Lasbeen manufactured to their order by
Ore beet makers inner cities. Their stock embraces a
general assortment of all the articles embraced in fur
nishing dwellings either plain or in the most luxurious
=nom Bedsteads ranging in price from $3 to $3O,
—and all other articles of furniture in proportion. In
their stock is also embraced a large assortment of Ve
netian Blinds and Window Shades of the Most approv
ed patterns, selected with great care.
CARPCITING, BEDDING AND UPHOLSTERY.
. .
•• They, have also added to the stock a lot of Carpeting
lathe wino& qualities, and Bedding, to which they
'call the pa Wally . attention of those in want of these
'articles.y.
•
It Is our design to keep all the articlei of Furniture
required in, tichoilkilleounty, and prevent the neeea
any nf persons going abroad in search of elegant aetl
cicanf Furniture, all of which they are determined
In sell at less prices than they can he obtained else
where, with packing and carriage added. They there•
fiire earnestly lava° those who are about furnishing
houses and those also who require additional furniture,
In give them a call, as they Ratter themselves they can
give them any kind of a""fit out" they may require at
a great:saving of funds.
HENRY GRESSANG.
ALEXANDER RILLYMAN.
Aprily 15-tf]
_ ,IL:Vse and Itush Seat Chair
..
Manufactory. -__ -
NO. 131 NORTH SIXTH STREET,
Oppaxiie Fronkis Bream Philadelpkiet.
PPON THE PRINCIPLES OF BETTER
AND CHEAPER. quick gash sales and small
profits. An assortment of Cane Seat Chain, In
the greatest variety of Style and finish. made of
Walnut, Birch, Maple and Initiation Woods, at the
cheapest prisms for CASH ONLY.
Light nod 'durable patterns, Cottage Chairs, Cane
Settees. Lounges, large and small Rocking Chairs,
Store Stools, Arm Chairs, dm., &c.
Huse-keepers and all who are .filing up," for
House -keeping, can gratify their taste in .electing
styles, and procure a warrantable artwle, by calling
on the mgular Planurahtureo
N. F. WOOD,
No. 131 North Biztii, eight doors above Rect.
March 12, 12-3iool Philedelphia
Ii lliltlSO~i, BROTIIERS;& Co.
ANTI PASTURING CH KIST S,'
011 as No. 43 1.3 South Fens Street, Philadripkic
Pure Pitlor White Lead; Alum.groundand inerystal;
Ems Ground " " Copperas;
No. I " Pyrolignenas Asti
Red Lead; Red Liquor=
Lithargr ; Iron Liquor.
Omni Mineral; IMaside Black;
Sugar of Lead • Metallic Fire-Proof Paint.
METALLIC FIRE-PROOF PAINT.
THIS EXTRAORDINARY substance Is
• th i n : found Ina strata of rock,of a basin forma
tion. When taken from the mine, it re
x.' gemlike in appearance the Artist Indigo.
and is aboct the coneistence of cold tallow;
but on exposure to the atmosphere, iris
. short time turns to Stone ar Slate. Geolo
gists who have seen it. are of the Impression that this
eubstaisq, alien to a liquid state, has been effused
through a fissure aria Ailed up this basis formation In
the rock.
It has been found upon anylysation by Dr. chiiton.
of New York, to coneist of
Alumina,
' Proroxide of Iron
Lime,
. Lime,
Magnesia,
Carbon,
• kiati r ur,
*Loss,
100 00
For use it is ground to powder, "nixed with Linseed
Oil, and applied with a Mush, thr same as paint to
wool]. iron tin, zinc, canvass paper, Ac. &c., which In
shorta time turns to Stone. which is fire-proof
It is particularly adapted for wager buittlings,Steam
boat and Car Decks, Railroad Midges. Fences, &e.,
&c. ..roof coated with this article Is equal to the best
of slate, at a vast caving of expense.
. Every variety of Iron work exposed to weather will
be prevented from rust or corrosion, a. it forms a com
plete Stone covering. School Slates are made from it,
by covering boards or paper.. As it is susceptible of a
high polish, it has been used to great 'advantage by
Carriage Painters and Cabinet Maims.
HARRISON. BROTHERS, & Co.
No. an South' Frpnt St. Philada.
I=EllE
Nebolas &
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
-
DRUGGISTS AND APOTHECARIES,
• I-Starker Street,--eorrsvitts.'•
• IN VlTE.thb particular attention of the citizen',
of Pottsville and its vicinity, also Physicians,
Veterinary, Surgeons,and countryStorekeepers,to
their terse end general assortment Of '
DRUGS, CHEMIcALS & FAMILY MEDICINES.
Their stock not only embraces the beet Drugs and
Medicines the marketatfords, but also all the ilea Phar
maceutical and Chemical preparation,. Surgical and
Dental Instruments, Gold Foil, Patent and Family Me
dicines, Fresh Shakers' Herbs, Dye alters, Paints. Oils,
Varnishes, pure Camphine, Glass, Putty, Snuff. best
Ca . .endish Tobacco and Cigars, Perfumery, Brushes,
Combs, and every variety of choice. fancy and miscel
laneous articles - also, that excellent article, Farina.
for the sick and Infanta' diet-1n fact every thing and
env ling can be found In their general and well-assort
ed stock, which they otter to sell at the lowest cash
prices.
N.B.—N. & C. flatter themselves from their knowl
edge and excellence in .the business, one of them, (J.
T. Nicholas. M.D.) having held, for several years some
of the ,most responsible offices id England and Paris
What dispenser and operative Chemist, they would
- -.erefore respectfully solicit the confidence and share
o patronage, as none but genuine Drugs end
Me clues can be had at their establishment.
co; 'me and Cattle Drugs, of the hest quality on the
most t - .Atonable 'terms. • (Marcti3,lBlo-10-ly
BOOTS AND SHOES,
Rt thea:d stand, CantreS &
t.nestdaarte .
tAtrottsvitlellowe
8. .1. FOSTER
. . - . • - - -
. -
ri' ARE now receiving their
.
B tin" supplies of BOOTS 6:. -
IOgS
,comprlsi ng a first rute
& • S eltiolo'
^...!, assortment. which they now
2. offer at wholesale or retail at the very lo west:
prices: They have also on hand Trunks, lia
ises, Ca rpet flamand Satchels,Soleand Upper Leather,
510 rOcco. Calf Skins, Lining and Binding Skids, Shoe
Maker's' Tools, and a general assort mentor She.: Find
ti-
es.
1i.8. , --Boots* Sheen manufactured !stilton nollce.
The it friends and the public who are In want of any of
the ahoy e a rt Itles are rospect fully requested t ogle e their
a call. :'` May 8.1817. •.. ' . . ICI-
- Dentistry—ltemoval.
GEORGE J. ZIEGLER, DENTIST,
*HAS REMOVED, 70 No. 373 ARM
STREE7,tIio doorstelmv MAO Phlladel
-
ItAll .oPerathins performed In the most 'approved
elaborate, nod judicious manner. •
March 10, IBID.
•' . SHOVEL • DIANEVAI
:,' • , .
Eagle Worksi
.- a evicts Sinert..Nrrrastu.s.; wet dor? Mae the
. ~
.. . • Americas Hosts..
. THE intiarriber would call the attention of
itioCoal Operators. Merchants. and Muer,. to ex •
amine hli Round and Square point Coal and
Grain Shilvels. manufactured by himsel, and
expressly thr the OCat Region—warranted to be made
of , Una first. quality ;plate:tato and workmanship.' at
City prices. . All ordertt hanblully realised andpuctu
-- -, Na .01.41notela Eepalred..! -S
Dec.l-42413
lIIST RECEIVED—At the York Store a ebotee
U !lot elvers^ superior HABANA sod PIIINCIQS Be
s. E. YARDLEY ft SON.
R
0
NERAL Al/VERTISER.
The trembling waves beneath the moonbeams qutver.
Reflecting back the blue, unclouded skies
The stain look down upon the still, bright tire;
And smile to see themselves In Parading t -
Sweet songs are heard to gush from Joyous bosoms,
Thit lightly throb beneath the greenwood tree,
And all around g re happy—all but ma I
And yet, I (Omit b 'ninth the light, that trembles
O'er these. dim paths, with listless steps to roam;
For here my-bursting heart no more dissembles,
My sad lips guivesoiritlthetear-lrope come r„
I come once more to list the low•voiced turtle,
To watch the dreamy testers as they flow
And ley um down beneath the fragrant myrtle,
That drops Its blossoms when the west winds blow
Oh! there li one on whose a weet face I ponder
Ono angel being 'mid the beauteous band,
Who Its the evening's bush comes out to wander
Amid the decked eyed daughters of the land!
Her step is lightest where each lied foot presses,
Her song's sweetest 'mid their wogs of glee;
Rattles light her lips, and rose buds mid her t sssss s
Loop lightly up their dark redundancy.
Youth' weal th, and fame me mine=all. that entrances
The youthful heart on me their charms confer ;
Sweet lips smile on me . too, and melting glances
Flash unto mine—but note glance from den
Ohl I would give youth, beauty, Rime, and splendor,
My all of blisa—my every hope resign,
To wake in that young heart one feeling tender—
To deep that little' hand, and call amine! •
In thi i sweet solitude, the sunny weather ' .
Rath call ed to life light shapes and fairy elves ;
The rose buds by their crimson lips together,
And the green leaves are whispering to themselves:
The clear, faint starlight on the blue wave flushes,
And, filled with odors sweet, the south wind blows
The purple'clusters loan the I ilae bushes, '
And flagrant blossoms fringe the apple boughi,
Yet, Tam sick with love and mtlancholi'.
* My !poke are heavy with the dre..,4: T i n gaew• ;
Low mu rmurihnuot me—murmurs soft and holy. '
4 And oh, my lip keep murmuring, murmuring, too_ ;
I hate the beauty of these calm, sweet hewers. . -
The birds' wild music, and the filustain'stall ;
Oh, I am sick in this lope land of glowers
My seal is weary—wean of them slit
Yet, bad I that sweet face. on which I ponder, •
To bin otn for me within this Eden-home,
T hat tip to sweetly marmotwhen I wander.
That cheek to softly dimple when I come. •
low street would Ode my days in thee• lone bower',
Far from the - world and all its heart lees thrones:
Iler fairy feet should only tread on flower. ;
I'd make bee hope melodloue with my songs!
Ala met such blissful hopes once filled my hosom,
And dreams of fame could then my heart enthrall;
And Joy and bliss 4round me seemed to blossom:
But all these blissful hopes are blighted—all:
No smiling angel docks there Eden bowers,
No springing footstep echoes mine in glee
Ob, lam weary in this land of flowers!
I sigh— I sigh amid them all—ah me I
The rebel patriots of !rebind, O'Brien, Mea
gher, McManus, O'Donohue, and others, at this
present 'time, (November, 1848.) and in their
present position, form a spectacle of fearful in
terest. _'lo the earnest, concentrated gaze of the
world they stand—for them 'the hearts of millions
throb with irrepressible admiration—for them
tears of mournful apprehension arid indignant
sorrow fall, mid prayers of passionate entreaty. as
cend. But from no Christian country goes bah
to them a more full add perfect sympathy than
from our own, the land of Washington,. the asy
lum of an Emmett. They seem to us so much
the incrustation of Irish freedom, that woman but
fear that it, their exile.or death, she shall be ex
iled forever. But no—as God liveth, no! Rath
er shall the sacrifice of their young lives, with all
that mode them beautiful and .glorious , gift their
dying country with 'newness of life l. —with vigor
and power, and a hops grand and solemn, and e
ternal as the heavens: While she may number
such heroic sons among her living, or her dead,
she,may not, she will not despair, though she
clank chains on every • limb—though she was
bound to the earth with s thousand thongs.
Whether.these heroes meet the death of shame
upon the scaffold, or drag out a wretched exist
ence as the galley-slaves of tyranny, their hinter;
fishable names, exalted and sauttified, :Abell pass
into the watch-words of the brave, and become
the rallying cry of liberty throughout the world—
in the last great contest of freedom with oppres
sion, shall lead the battle van like living heroes,
and mingle in the grand anthem which rings to
Heaven in the hour of victory. Oh ! immortali-.
ty of love, and gratitude, and reverence l—oh !
godlike spotheoais!—will not the assurance of
this bear them up through all, while they toil
through sultry days, or sigh through weary nights,
where the wild west-. of southern sees stretch.
around them; or when the more terrible sea of
human heath surges about the scaffold, in that
hour when the life-blood 'of their brave hearts
Must he poured forth a mournful oblation on the
ruined and desecrated shrine of their country's
liberty 1
$4OO
34 20
12 05
1 31
31
43
50
11
00
41
• Where, in all the urinals of history or the re.
cords of eloquence, iirly he found a nobler ex
pression p 1 devoted end undaunted heroism then
the last' vindication ofyoung ttlesgher? • Grand in
its simplicity, beadtiful in its truth, end solemn
in its prophecy, it must live while er human heart
throbs for freedom, or reverences her defenders.—
flow lofty, yet bow mournfully tender is the CO2
elusion ;-his country should lay theirs words to
her heart as deer and sacred things, to be ponder
ed oft and treasured forever:—
ttfirly lords, you may deem this language, unbe
coming in me, and perchance it may seal my fate;
but I am here to speak the truth, whatever it may
cost. lam here to regret nothing that I have
ever done—to retract nothing that I have ever
said. lam not here to crave, with living lip, the
life I 'consecrate to the liberty of my country.—
Far (mini' even here, where the thief, the Mier- ,
tine, iheinurierer, have left their footprints in
the dust—here, in this spot, where the shadoies
of death surround me, and from which I see an
early grave in an unanointed soil open to receive
me—even here. encircled by these terrors, that
hope whieh beckoned' me to the perilous sea on
which I ' have been wrecked, still confides, ani
mates and enraptures me: No! Ido not despair
of my poor old country—her puce, her liberty,:' her
glory. For that country I can now do no more
than bid her hope. 'To lift this island op-;ta
make 'her benefactor to humanity instead
what sbeis—the meanest beggar in the world—
to restore to her her native powers and her an
cient constitution—this has been my ambittod,ard
this ambition has been my crime. Judged by the
law of England, I know this crime entails the
penalty of death. '
"Bat the history of Ireland explains my crime,
ant! justifies . it. Judged by that history lam no
criminal;'—tend turning round tewarila his reliant,
prisoner,McManus)—you are no criminal"—(and
to O'Donottue)—..you are no criminal, and we
deserve no punishment. Judged by that history,
the treason of which I have been convicted, loses
all its guilt—ts sanctified as a duty—will be en-
;added a• a sarrike. With these sentiments,my
lard, I await the sentence of the court. Having
done what I feel to be my duly ; having spoken
now, as I did on every occasion during my short
life, what 1 felt to beihe truth, I new bid farewell
to the country of my birth, my plosion and my
death—that country whose misfortunes have in
voked mrsympathies—whose factional sought to
on ill...whom intellect I prompted to alofty Sim—
whose freedom haa'been my fatal dream. I or
fer to that country, as a pledge of the. lova I bear
byr, and the sineerity with which thonght 'and
spoksomd struggled for her freedom...the life of
syoungbesil; and with that life. sll the hopes,
the honors. the endearments 'of it happy - and an
honorable home: 'Prononnee, then, my lords; the
'sentence which' the law:directs:llnd I tnast I will
be'preperiltomeet it.rtnd fo"hieysitsesecodein.
I mug; bli'VrEciated - 'pull
heart to appear before a higher tribunal -,7; Wham
esthete e judge of lolaite goodness. sit-well as
11-3 mo
CTOR
EM
_ "neNgyxo)
iboice Poetni.
•
HOPELESSLimn.
1? .1311ELLa L, VISLOY.
1 slictcl).
[From Our Lady's Rook ]
TIIE IRISH! PATRIOTS
DV GRACC 01160..W00D
of Infinite justice, will preside; and where, my
!only, many, many of the juda meats alibis world
will bo reversed."— - •
.•
How dare England even abademn. ouch men to
death at this time, when the roused elements of
justice and freedom are rocking: and convulsing
the world!-the day when the whale air is fitted
with strange,fearful sounds and confused: voices
of warning and dismay !—:
. . the waking cm of wines,
From 'slavery's fatal steep !
The marmot of the manna, -
Peep calling unto deep!"
Is she not thus pouring oil on the quick flames,
hither than on the roused waters of rebellion !
The gallant spirit of old Ireland can no more be
(lushest by English law, or frowned down by En.
glisb judges, than it can be standout byEnglish
extortion. There is a Volcanic element at work
in helane still—darkly and silently at work, but
which obeli vet
Break on the darkness of her thick despair,
Like Etna on deep midnight—lighting up•
With lucid glow; opprersion'a pall like cloudi;
To ocaikeand whehn the ECM of ancient wrongs!
Let Engler:id beware S' Patriotism is an immor
tal spirit—heroism en eternal truth. The political
as well as the religious martyr but gives a higher
beauty ; a more solemn grsntleur to the cause
fur which be dies. Eighteen huntil.red year+ ago
on Calvary's accred mount. wee taught a sublime
lesson of self-sacrifice; whenever man dies for
man.
It le vain to say that the sacrificed life of -the
patriot 1 ,5 - evesthrown away. His blood, wheth
er poured upon the battle-field, or reeking from
the scaffold, is not drank up by the insensible
earth and then forgotten ; but from every drop
may be said to spring an armed defender, or a
fervid apostle of the faith he taught-; or it is ex
alted to Heaven end descends in a dew of, terrible
vengeance upon his enemies. - His death quickens
the life of nations. His memory, fills the spirit of
youth with grand arpirations,kindles a quenchless
fire in his heart, put. an invincible strength into
his arni; it becomes to the brave almost an object
of adoration; they turn' to it in the darkness
of strife for high hopes and heroic promptings,
and in the brightness of success with grateful joy
and pride—it is written on their hea4ens, at night
in stare, at noonday in rainbows.
But, as when we contemplate the crucified one
and the martyred saints of old, we 'see them with
their majestic glories round them, wearie.g their
'•crowns of rejoicing," encircled with the halos of
divinity, ntid.behold not the wreath of thrones, the
scourge, the piercing spear, the rack, the fire, the
flood, end all the infernal inventions and varieties
of torture—so now, as we fix oar wrert gaze on
Erin's heroes, we speak of them in wards of tri
ump, for the moral height on which they stand
seems a vertumount of transfiguration;' and
wrapped about in its glory, they seem exalted
above earth, its weakness, ties, and transient
as
sociations. Ah! we sea nut the mocking and
scourging of their degredation, the crucifixion of
their manhood,' the racking of the spirit, the
tiderlangs at the breast, the molten leed•drops
stalely burn.ng into the brain, all, all, the fearful
tortutes of their human natures—intensely hu
man—for from their perfect humanity their hero..
ism took its life.
Conk! we look' into the depths of their hearts,
and behold how dear to them is the I,fe they are
about to resign,for the murderer's fate or the slow
death of exile—could ws remember with them
its early promise, end romance, an ideal beauty,
or the grand aspirations and splendid dreams, and
many struggles of its prime—could we know all
the hopes, the honors, and endearments •rwhich
made that life.beloved," and all the sorrows ' bur.
led loves, anal vain, sweet Vi4olll that hallowed
it, then we might measure tho height and depth
'of their sacrifice.
Could we look iotothe cell of the condemned,
in
the deep midnight, when the gaze of curipusity
and enmity was excluded—when the tide of out.
ward life was atilled, or beat against the prison.
walls with faint murmurs, then could we behUld
the mighty spirt of vitality, the unconquerable
love of life tugging at thecheartstrings of the doe.
med patriot ; could we witness his vain efforts
to crush it down by the power pf heroic endur.
ante—could we see the convulsive quiver of the
lips, the swest.diops oozing from the brow, as the
stern confiict goes on ; and, oh ! could we hear
him as thoughts of deeper and more whelmicig
agony beet at his heart, groan forth the names of
his dear ones, or whispesthem in a tone like that
of dying tenderness, in a love stronger than death,
■ lore overcoming all i tho fears and auffering.of
self; or see him lift eyes heavenward, and
gaze so burningly intense it might almorit pierce
the Stony roof of his dungeon, and breath for
those loved ones the prayer of a breaking heart;
—could we see all this, we might measure the
height and depth of their sorrow:
Could we look into the darkened homes of
those who hotl thim dear—could we mink the
gray-haired sire, boric,' towards the earth, as
though impatient for its grave rest—could we
mark how, at the morning and evening prayer,
his lip trembles ar.d hi 4 voice falters at the sacred
words, "Thy will be dene;"--eould we look in.
to the face of toe mother, and see by its paler and
its tears that the bean was breaking within her—
ebuld we mark the sister's anguish, the brother's
agonized sympathy, the bitter wailing of the
child, the fainting, the despair, the unutterable
grief of the wife—the lonely weeping, the fright-
WI vision., and wild prayers of her nights ; end
the nick gaze she opens on the dawn which brings
no hope to her own worn ,epint; could we con•
template the fair, - young life of the betrothed
maiden, ao uadenly laid desolate, struck down
and bro kenl like a rare vase once filled with bloom
end' sweetness, shattered and lying in beautiful
fragments before es, with all its moumiog Bowers
trampled in the dust;—could we see all this, we
.might measure the height and depth of the comm.
lily of that condemnation which, rends so many
clinging ties, immolates so many lover, filis so
many homes with the voice of weeping, and flings
upon so many paths thick shadows from the wing
of death.
To perish "upon the, gallows high," or endure
a life-long exile, what a fate for thosoproud spirits
who so lately raw In their enraptured visions a
career of heroic struggle and glory before them,
end their beloved, country redeemed ■nd disco
thralled, taking her up place among nations
oh, God I' can these things be 1 Alas! we know
that they are now, but how Ling shell they en
dure 1 Yet let us still the impatient voices of
our hearts, for we know that the Author of liberty,
the Divine eouree of right and justice, !broth and
roletb, and that ell will yet be well. ,
Ots, royal England, may not thy great heart tie
.even yet touched with compassion, and thou be
constrained to off, r • full end perfect forgiver/rat
to tho , e who havevo bravely, perchance madly,
rebelled against thy dominion ! But, if thou wilt
show 'no relenting but continue fierce and rnercy
less to the end, In Heaven is above thee, the day
of thine own fell, the day that shall see thee ut
terfy overwhelmed shall come at last !
And now by all thy glory then,
By armed' bolts arrayed,
By pomp.ana power. and mighty men,
Can God's right arm be staud,c.
Then shalt thou feel the earth heaved beneath.
and the skies darkened above thee! Then shall
thy fees exult, and thin• • allies tremble,—then,
from the SKIM south, and the chill north. and the
gold east,lhall ring shouts of derisive triumph—
from the isles of the sea shall go up pens of
re
joicing; and then shaltthe angel of freedom ep
pear, sod roll away the'siono item the sepulchre
of Ireland's national• spirit, bidding it arise to a
glorious resurrection—while thaS armed watchers
over a . eleep'they deemed eternal, stand aghast,
drop the swords from their rlsied hands, end faint
in theft- sneer. • -
When thus Ireland, thy freed sinter, begins
anew. her national existence, cosy she be warned
b thy fall against pridC.cruelly; impression, ex
tortion, and that defiant forgetfulness of God which
Is-the soul of all tyranny , „: .
,SCA,NDAL..
,Dr.•,/qhnson, beloci:uteri in company_ with some
ocan'dat•annsgers, ono, or thorn baring licensed 'an
abient (iiend or .tionon3g to' ..imirpo, obearred
Phil; perhaiartier ranch better fora lady•toi
redden her own cheeks,- than to blackln other
people's character." •
ems f)0';61)..
Beapty La bat a eihr and donbehrt ;nod.
. AShloing glen that fedeth Suddenly,
Cower that dies when hat 4'1111,101:ma,
A brittlettlats that's broken presently;
doubtfalitooll,,alrlus a glaisoatiower.
Lint, broken, faded, rked within an hoar.
• I fines
1
Anotliet fact thus sings of Beauo—
It epeaketh In the modest rose,
It whtspireth in the nieht. 1
thundereth in the bowling f!tOttn—
The electric itashorllght f
I But rose, norglght4 not trcetuor Wltldo
Nor llghtnuses glare, nor Kotaa, •
Such beauty bath as women'S eye.
uwoman's matchless tonal
NO. 17
TEARFUL BEAUTY.
When melancholyhits in Woman's eV. • ' -
And horn her besot:awakes the heart-wrung slater.-
When o'er her damask cheek the tear Mays.
And when each ringlet to the nephyr plays,
tailing dishevell'il on a neck at snow; •
That sinks and that ansiously below—
she more lovely he her hour of bliss,. •
More witching al another ikon than titbit . •
Oh: no:- . .for there be beauties when her mind
Ia troubled, as the arpen to the wind,
Unmark'd before—for empathy Inipires
Soft pity for her grief, and colt desires
Mankind, in genital, one alert! end pursue.
And all their deeds have happiness In view
dome thiak robtitin it in the bony eosin ;
Others, in gold, stilse happiness to ;
By travel, some would gain n happy mind.
But all these means will Mil, nor en o Impart
A tasting blisacoi inyvays Once the bean.
Would you be hnipil sink a •Irtaona infr,t
A quiet conscienaa..na a holy lih.
thoici Benbing
"What Is the Pease 'Tie what the league
Was to the world 'ittien Timis was young."
It has been well ;aid that the printed thought
can never die. Unlike the appeals of the orator,
which Nara but a temporary impression behind to
waste'into forgetfulnim, the printed sentiments re—
turn again to renew . ita influence upon the human
mind. It may be thoughtlessly perused, cast„eiiithr
and the mind diverted to other things, but it meets
the reader again and echoes bath its virtue or its
vice. Take a glance at our country, end who can
measure the present influence 'and future destiny.
of the Pres.! It finds no man so learned, that it
cannot improve; none so determined that it can..
not
. influence ; none an elevated that it cannot
elevate ; none so virtuous that it cannot instruct
in virtue, and none so vicious that it cannot restrain
in Tice.. The printed thought ! where is its tee.
mination—wbere ire destiny, j Who can measure
its exietence, or who determine its effect 1 Who
can tell its evils, or who recount its bleuings
Who can point to its resting place. or who recite
its history ! Calculate the vice and virtue area..
ding; recall its inestimable blessings in elevating
public moral.; in advancing pcli g ion; in dissent.
Mating intelligence ; in the overthrow .of error;'
in forcing popular prrjuiicea to the potency or
truth : or glance at the vice; it hue engendered ; •
the dissipation it has wrought; the misery it has
entailed, and we mey form some ides of the power
and destiny of the Press. The printed sentiment,'
freighted with evil or fraught with good, may not.
arouse the feelings of the- readers; it may brat no
new, doctrine, but it gropes its way upon thousands
of human beings and effects no perceptible change.
yet seals its truth or fiction on the wiling mind.—
/reify. .
•
Heavens what a moment must ho that when
the last flus ter expires on our lips ! What a,
change ! fell mu, ye who ate deepest read in.
nature and in OA to what new world are we,
borne I _Whitlier has that spark. that unseen,'
that incomplehensibli intelligence fled Look
upon the cold, livid, ghastly corpse that Ices before
you 1 ! That was but a shell, a gross earthly cov...
siring, which held the immortal essence that has
now left us ; left no range, perhaps, through il
limitable space ; to' receive now capacities to de
light; new powers of conception, new gloriesot
beauhtudo! Ten thousand fancies rush upon the,
mind es it completes the awful
. momenst between .
life and death ! It is a moment big with 'magi.,
flattens, hopes and fears ; it is tha consummation
that clears up all mystery—solves all doubts—
.which removes untradiction and destroys all et- .
- roes. Grest-GetTl What a flood of rapture may
at once burst upon the departed soul. The un
clouded brightness of the celestial region—the
solemn - secrets of nature may then be divulged; ,
the iminediato unity of the past, the present, forms
of itriperiattable beauty, may then suddenly disclose,
themselves, bursting upon the delighted sense, and
bathing them in immeasurable bliss.
Tho smell of new hay is more delicious end ra
hashing to me than the choicest perfumery en the
world; end the sight of mowers mowing down a
meadow in the dewy morning, and of children-ton
ing the grass; or of reapers reaping down harvest
'Golds, and binding up the corn, is tome more pie.
turesque and charming than the eight of a gala or
coronation day. I loves those rural scenes; 1 know .
what they are. I have been part of them myself,
and I would rather go and be a part of them again
than be a mover in the proudest show of the most ;
sumptuous aristocracy and royalty on earth. I .
would rather know how to till the earth, and to
mow down a meadow, and to reap down a harvest,
field, than to be an adept in all filo games and the
amusements that ever were invented fur the psations
of the wealthy and the idle.[—H. C. Wright.
Never tell a 'Able tie, or half lie, o'r a quitter of
• lie, °rife. ny part of odic,. Many boys, who know ,
wall enough what a sheaking, dirty thing it is to .
tell a lie, gill yet twist the truth, or deceive a little
bit. This is about as: bad—and a good deal more
cowardly than n plump falsehood. If a boy does
something -moult, either through ignorance. care
lessness, or accident—and then tells one half truth, j
and one half lie about it—ha mightialmost as well
have told the whole untruth, that be-didn't do it at
all. Now sit how the spirited, manly, trueshearted
clear-tongued boy will do. after an error: he re
solutely determines to acknowledge it, without
being afraid of anybody's anger—to tell it just as
it was. I never in my life knew any one to be
injured by telling the truth in this way; but
have seen many a boy and man too, who was
looted upon with contempt, and thought poorly
of, because ha would tell sneaking lies, or half lies,''
or quarter lies The worst sort of untruths—those.,
which ire deliberately made up—stories about
people—or little stories magnified into big ones—
prove the teller'of them to ba a more worthless,
Impure, and mean person. - The liar is,indeed
despicable both' to God and good men. On' the
other hand, nothing is more beautiful thin a strictly
truth -telling young person—ono who never varies
from the truth, who is open,. candid, and above
deceit. To betomo our, a boy should strive hard
should II ttarminuto become so—and ho will become
so. Besides. it is so easy always to speak the truth --'.
.rind so very hard to arrange a plausible falsehood ;
—which even then will in all-likelihbod be found
out nineteen times out rit twenty. ,
Society has been aptly compared to a beep of "em..
biers. which. whenseparated, soon languish,darken,
and expire; but. if placed together, glow with. 6
ruddy end intense beat—a pm .emblem of the
pength. hsppiness„ and security deriver from the,
union of mankind. The savage, who never knew
the blessings of conbination, end be who quits So.
clay from apathy or misanthropic 'spleen are Lk*
the sepsr.ted ember,. dark, dead. useless; they nei
thee give nor receive hest, neither lose nor ire he.
loved. To what acts of heroism and 'virtue, In
every age.or nation, has oath* impetus of affection
given rise! To what gloomy misery, - deepir, and
even suicide, bas not the desettion'of society led.
How often in the busy. haunts 'of men are all 'our
noblest end gentlest virtues called forth! And bow
in the bosom of the recluse do all the sofp emotion*
languish and grow faint! •
• ,
I hare found that the men who aro really the '
most fond of the society of the lea irs, 'who cherish
for them a high respect, ore seldom moat popular
witta the aex. Men of aesurance,.whosf tongues
are lightly hung, who make words supply ; the •
place of ideas and place sompliments in the fOOM
of sentiments ate the faroritee. A due..respect for
women leads; to respectful action towards 1 1114E4
respectful is usually distant , action, • and this.
great distance is often misuiteo tbem. for' ig.-
led or want ;of intereat.—Addison. ,
ar. Mar coe PrOsta a• good. Min .AihrtlillY
been) hid rats, he itclaimed, "Mid do itot
fee so near my tinder."
HAPPINESS.
TIM PIMSS.
DE ATII
TIIR COUNTRY.
nnriln iltircle.
TO.BOYS AND GIRLS.
SOCIAL AFFECTION
TO lOUNO LADIES,'
=3
MEM
I i
1