„I 'PHILADELPHIA. • To the Citizenk of Schuylkill Co. • 13,011ETLI" STICE34K-EV4 • liow on jam}, aini teliPern faint! , on the most reasonable terms, is full assortment of Fresh Drugs an 4 Medicines; Windage' Ghia*. all wises and qualities. of:French, F.nglish\nd American Manufacture; White Lead. Pure wad No I. of all the most approved hrams, by , -the barrel or keg. Colors of every deserigtian, elthei dry of In Oil; Linseed Oil, Spirits Turpentine, Varnisher. Paint Brushes, Diamonds. Putty, Putty kirftSeS. and a fall assortment of painters materials. iltketvise—Glue, Potash. Die Stuffs, Bleaching materials for milliners use, kc., de- All the popittar Patt•nt Medicines, as' Swaim's Panacea and Vercuifuk . e ; lie. Jayne' s Medi vuiecrolter's Renowned Rheumatic and Btrengtheidne plasters, the best remedy in existence i for Rheumatism, Pains or Weakness in the Back, Breast or Aide. Every article warranted genuine, and "all article§ sold will be delivered at any of the wharves La depots, free of expense to the purchaser. " Quick Sales and Small Profits" - ROBERT SHOEMAKER. t ' R W coiner Second and Green Sts., Ph dad's; 111 s—Orders by mall promptly attended to. !larch 27,1650 12 Om William 11q1loway, oltucnisr, X. 3711.Varke2 St;ect, a - bucelipt, (Girlti - Z R.w) PHILACIELPUIA, ' I ' ! - ' OFFERS for sale, Wags, Chemiea'st ••••-j - r7.- Paints, Oils, .Window Otass, er.c.,l at tha j.."`"...-.-"".. ~,. lowest market 'prices. , ' - SW . The poronage of Physicians keeping i„ . , -,.., their own medicines. and she trade genes --2....% ally, arc respectfully solicited; assuring . --- them, that all medicines furnished 'will he .toprcan, of the best quality, and prepared with the 414atest accuracy. . . tore Keepers will find it tu their•advantare to call, Is the Stock is large, well selected raid of unques- Irilible quality, and put up in forms convenient for rt:i mailing_ 211 Ilkill.n asiortiment of-Chemicals, Glass, ,Sce., suitable 'fir Daeuerreotypi,ts, always on hand, at low prices. ' Oct V ISIS. . ,41-Snit- 41-Snit Spring Millinery .Gonds J C TABER. _ _ I'MPORT'ERS' .4;VD JOBBERS I .lyo, 19 SoutA• Secou9 Street, cortur of Black Horse , • • • no ! ! HO! HO: • . . I an 12, BEG ii-.avi, to announce to their CA:SVMM? re, ~. d the trade in general, that the.y have now I - In etore,-and are daily receiving, a large as .,-...—.......... sorttnent of Spring Millinery. Goode, consist lag of the following articles : ~ Col. erode Naps,all price Chip Eulkyamp, Col, Glassa silks, . do Crown Linings, • V01..-Poolt de Sol' ;'do inside Artificial Flowers, Col, Chidd Orlean do l Outsitie do , Bonnet liwns, do ICrapos. black English do c,int.Tarlatans„ - do Bonnut Ribbons. all prices, White do do (Satin du front No Ito 16, cowered Whalebones, ' ,Mantua .do , do Black Whalebones, - I White cord Illorions, i Arriniviis. Frames, Cotton and-silk QuOlingi. Bonnet %Virus,.&c., &c., &c.. , And by far the th , dcest assortment of Milliner goods in the city of, Philadelphia, selected o ith great care, and many ,if the goodsof .or On inspor tat:ons. *Melt are welt worthy of the attention of (.1P Milli nery trade of these zreut Caved Stases, and Ca lifirrita eold dust received at par. ~,-„, _ sarch 10,1'40. -11-tnt • - Bargains Itargalns H. WARD, .VO. T • ..Voh. s Et: uA - Er STREET. =I *TRAM: BONNET tT ACTI2 TIER, •keiip Consialki:y oil !land .1 . ;i1..d 21,1.qtale:d I,_itastfe" of all the 1,3r10U, kosis i.f Bonn'els, rush as Allioni. T 3 I.h se. Ca:l6dflia. Tllip, Fr. nth Laces; English, Dunstable's, s'ltioalsente &e.,&c., — ail of which hr Will sell at veil' small profits. at si holesale and retail. for cash. :11,1- inerlit and rdill•ZA are resperttany InVrted In tail and tuaminr befve purtliasina, as I; to , alidateldion It/ I'.o justice to all rh It r11.1'), favor with a tall Straw !tunnel . ',Manufacture. 49 SOUTII M anufacture. KO ST., 4 rktißD DOOR Anovr.cir .vorr, E.IJT SIDE ~.. PHILADELPHIA. _ i JOSEPH .1 , .. LIPP, respectfully Ternit..l.i , e _:i the'. trade that now is the Ilene e, make I ~./.7 I Froiny .. niirenasei. of Bennet.. Ilnis and Ant i—.: Demi Flowere, and that I can do as well if licit it lit le better fur you than any others at the Wide. li!lesse call and examine my. well seleriid winch of Slprius, :lallittery Goods, befits pn , chaeihr i I.i.v. here. Cain con 'tinily manntacluring and ter ilYinE toads from the N.... Turk Audits. which enable Inc to sell re,y h.e at wbulesale or retail March 9,,,1ti.50 1 New 311trsie ! • ... LEE M. ‘V„t•LKEIL successors to .....,--..... Geo 'Willie, No. 162 Chesnut street, I r. under Barnum's Museum, have just r...„ 3 . .publiehed the following beautiful Hal iiids, P.:knit, &c.: ' . a , , i Think ere von°pelt., by . N.,J. Suntle. i , The ezecrer. by the author of •• W:11 you love me then as now." 4 r au,/ Kate, asning by Mr. Iludsotr, Music by Dr. ~.,. Citnningenn.' i •• Raise the bright Flag 0t ... Columbia." adapted to the resinilar air of '•Evei be Happy,' in Opera •• Enchan tiers."l ul The' Thou art gone, by the late ".I. T. A. et llrean." llnpelsess Love,-, ", : ~- ' Womatt , • Love. •• " A'Dream that love can tte'er forget, by M. Kei.bei. :• 1 Itilligent Polka, he J. A Getee. Prim .... • do, by M Keller. ,_ -: Phcentx do, as performed at Cape May, by Johnicore.,,s rand. e' . .l.:.;: rzalop Brilliant, from the Opera of the Four Snits,of si.vraun. by 'l'. C. Wtererk.i - 2, - ti . plc Amusements, Eb.git'necß, by Charles Voss:` := i 1,. Sr. W. tit ee the pleasure to announce to the hub- Itc that their stock of Shret Music consists hr the largest and most complete assortment to be found in the country, they are e.mmantly :Wine t. 4 their stock all the new Music Niblistool in New l'erk, Boston, &c. PIANOS• A fee-arsnrtment of the best nartnufacturera of New .Park and Beet on, at the Inweet rash prirea. Alan, a general amourtuient of Guitars„Niolins. Ban pis, Fluter, Arcordeons, Violin, finite!. and Warn Stringy Of the hest Italian - qualities. ■'+l of Whicb wall be furnished to the public and the trade at 6111 lowest rates. rOrders ru netuely attendedl.o. Jan It; 18t0. 1-tf Plano Fortt.s. ' . THE Larnest. Fbenriest, Best and tfitimoat rlreant assortment of PIANO FORTES in the Inited Stairs. CUD always he found at the scarehorise of the Su slliber. 171 rharrtat .s:,ett. allAltt. FtfrA. at lite Old Stand'orenpied more than a third t,f a century. by Mr. Gen WlBig, wove publisher. ..TIANOP.S. • HARPS. -- pRC AN S. , ' . eERAPIIINES. ' . . . • ..COLIANS,.&c . Scc'.. Teeth from the mrist Celebrated Mantifacturers in t's; . York. Boston, Baltimore. Philadelp.hia, and else where. , Sold wholesale and retail, at the maker's sash prices OsrAR C. B CARTER, 171 Cpertnut street, Phihdepina 6-Iy. Tab I,]Boo . ! ' Wholesale and Retail CLOCK STOO.E• . No. 513 g MARKET' St. ABOVE SEVENTH, Satoh able—rumansLettra.,. I . AITI f (11 11 w:r sct y- est image lho v2lu.ifT ;l lr,,,,ciail7:li,iycani,a, •r , . the alloys Estahliallinent, JAMES fIARIIER t iti Vialai ' will turn:sit his friend,. aniiing Whom lie in clude* all %slip duly appri•citte its tieetnr-s, with a Beautiful and perfect laden for marking its progress; of whose value they can judEc'. llis.extenairetiick on hand, constantly changing In conformity to the improvements in tattle and str le of pattern and workmanship. consists iif -Ekkt-day and Tairty-himr liraaa COUNTEsiia tiht'r'E. PAIIIA/R. HALL. Clllintill and ALARM ' CI.OOKs. French. • *ethic and other fancy styles, as well as plain. tvhich frcurt Ms extensive connection and coirearumilente With the manufacturrts he finds lie can pit at the low tat cask jives. in any onantitt from oaf to a thousand. of sif hall lie is 01 warran. the accuracy. l'Yli'lretics repaired and warrautcd. Clot: tf . mut.ings En hand. . ' . i Call and see me :Imo": them. ' I JAMES BARBER, 2:t( Market St. Philada. Aug. 47, ISO. 35-1 y ~iatchc!c:,Walchels • • ,RZAI" INDUCEMENTS To rt - 7040:cs IN WANT OF A COODWATeIf. LEWIS.. U. 1111.00,1 A , 7 NO. 110 Notc7ll SPCOND STREET. ' n kVING re4:44 iv..d arbtitiorlt nupplteg nr ,• . . r . -44 Cold SIR,. Watf.',. nr,444-ry Oesvript! - nn. fromLondon:Lit . . ,;,: , ,t1 ;•,,i i,,,,..1,,,,...i.1 - mil i“,- pOrtail , ifif, it , non fir.ll"truil to furnish thr vrty t.Jilt art irtn at a Ku, f ,, r 0.-1“ n :iny rvor 41ti rr.i. i.f 1 1 ,e fame quality: and inh44ll 4 a!s IVA hi. 141,41.-r,old by R4,S , otht!r.tnrey in I'lliln41.114t1;a nr e.,1 , ..ev. her.. -Evers' ifittrh cold will be pre f.', r..zillati,sl, and warranted 70' he 3. : ,, Dd -444 repr,--04.41 Watches at the I... Mowing low orives : grid Lrrrrs, (1111.J.W.•ItCd, karat cs iii,ont 11 . 4 —fri - tver do An E do Woo it.*ALeft'ner, jer:rll,l, 19 karat c tt.. 22 oil fErlat.l4; An do i.tth Ttfit 1.. IL Briontalf,fintA ren, a 191prri..r article in Curer; case : with perietl, and warraneerl, .11.51; Gold renciti for *l.OO ,and 'met ardi, Gold Med ill .i., and Locker C'r Da purrent Gold 0,11 an I hair Btace Breart PITIP, Cur Bung-, Fit, Or Mott's...n.l a genera 14rortmettt of very titachfJituetry at unu-niat prirr•R. 1.1 WIC R. BROOMALL. kin 10 North Serodd it....C , •Dd door below Rare [April 1(,'(9. Ift.ty Tint-gar' More. (FORMERLY THE 01D STAID OF Mr. ALSOP.) 4 - : NO. 'lOl VINE STREET, - Two „Doors Below Fcltl, Street, Phandephia ar.A . 4 The Fubcenkr• revpeetfu;iy Inttrtns hitt,ad ustnmera a•nd whero, that he has enntotantlt, •=ll* italid Cider ai.d Pickling Vine gar„ 'whole sale and retail.. - - Ordern by mail promptly attended tn. - D. It .STRAINS 13-Im • a rCI 33, IS.5n ... Wholesale: t and Retail .1.. , STOVE - DEALERS, AN 231,.vacktu../.. nrar Sulk-14111A Dttrllti: i.... i. i.W... :..H..."& W..utotild inform their friends the public kerne:any, that they , :! #. 4 ,... , 7 5 - 1 ' IJc taken the above litot,. where they . L :, --....,. intend keeping a full and complete as . , ',grit:tent of tf t e nets c.t Myles and most . .. ' approved patterns- of STOVES, con lilting In part:as_ tillows i .., z ,„: . Wonstr,Piall Sr... Co's. Quincy •Ir Tight Conlis sizes. Waeor's Improved National . " • " " 5 " Ins Eagle Air Tight Cook. - • ' t 4 Aril all the most prominent Stover in the market !Cyether with an estensive'assortment of Parlor. Hall 7-.7.lnreb and Store Stoves; Wood and Coal Mr Tight .Eadiatorc .. . ... . . The.fact of oar having the IMft extensive, and thi ef% assortment in the market—twill make it emphatl tally for the 111ter.4 . 4t °Mose eonneeted . with the trade litcall and examine the sams. I , 4101114 FELL /z. WHEELER. i NC 245 Marko Sorel, near Sixth, Philada: ,Pieti 24. 1.42. , . 44. n) ' ' • A cAna).-LITTLE 141 ARTit sf C 4 WIIOI.EMA LE na•lirtetrllealers iti DRY .0,011t4.411:01.:Ett1E5. TEAS, LlQUnitil.k•-• ' • itore on Centre ictieet, nemr corner orMa bamon•so, 15 ITltleh the etieeinnof the - citizens of talon ttinticesitrit irrespertfully • • J 011 N LITTLE. • rerrovillthe eet JOHN fi. C.I4ART,IN ES VOL. XXVI. PHILADELPHIA. • Mercer donei, Whatley Leatirt-Grass, ITnip, Brush, C•mi t Basket axd WOODEN WARE STORE, O. 145• North Third Street, font boors above the ill Earle lintel, and di rectlyoppostte PA James Kent ; •& , S.antee's Dry Goods Store, between Race and Vine Streets. Philadelphia. ~'ll3arch 13, 1.550 • Spring - 31111inery Goods, JOHN STONE & SONS, I.IIPOIZTERS 4XI) DE.11.17.12S IX sass, RIB. BOWS :LW) .1:ILL:A-mil' lOOODs. - AO. 45 SOCTII SECOND STREET, PHILADELPHIA. • 1iT0y1.1), call the attention of Merchants and Mil -11 linens visiting the rity, to their largeaa rid rich assortment of Spring Millinery Goods, received by Ate arrivals from France, such as Glace Silk. for CaSitle Bohnets, • Fancy Bonnet and Cap Ribbrin.a, Plain Mantua and &tin Ribbons, troni No 1 tit MOIL Frrl,ch and A niezican Artificial Flowers. White and ci,lored Crapes, , French Chop Hato, • Funcy'Nets and I.ares. 'Fancy Trionningi. Quillings. Crowns, Tips, - Covered Whali bones. Iturtirams,,cane, To g ..th,r t% oh every stuck appertatiinc to 1.13e,..)1th linery r traJe. 31:irra '23, 1550 • I 1 . 4 stf.. Cloth Store. EV -Vora Second Street, thcce doors •iosi :11,1,44t PHILADELPHIA. n; A TIE( 7. 6 .1 T. CLAPP, :s;VITES the att,ta.,,n of hoe iend• and other* to hi* I .trfe 31V/choice ussortumili of Cloltta, Call3l - Ve.tingt, complaii‘g in post, - Fr-m - 4, CLOTHS, • - Lt,•!g•an. of every _Addy ari,l quality, Mori and , farge ',Nest of Erplanci 353,313113 T. SMIEII COATINGS Click ar.,l colurrd I ix.,t ,th.. 1.1,•1: :“1,1 c, , locr,l:;asiimarett• 1 mg • ' Dzap .1) Ltr.'s and Cr.tr.n PANTALOON STUFFS. Sure:blare From, ~..smoo r es aot Doeskins: Frei, It fanev`,.l mil d laAtin..ren, every istiety. Metro , Car,roeres. all tol/ ts an r qu PI tot 111114tria,1 Carbtrner.ir t In every variety. Wbite aud I.,lity Jan., colas and Beavort,, , o-, g ' all 'had ~ TESTI a NG73. Super black Satin an.! U;lNllalete V. rains's. Splendid fancy :lilt e-linsv.l.YW 11,11X1.6. and roloted large asoriarient. Drat) Cloth. and ..(her 1 ..." . 11 "I'nmuun Ys. ith a great varo•tv of for !hays' wear. Aland. A tares assortment of Tailors' Trimmings, r tale very low by Hit piece'or at retail. NAT: lIAN T. CLAPP, N' 8 N Second 't doors above 'Market. March 23 ISSO 12-3 in BM Blind Manneaclory. IL CLARK. VENITIAN BLIND N A NITFACTURE R 10-2 m .Ftgu of tile Go:den Eat to No. 130 aad 14.3 Soutk Secon d si. bel,tr,Dutk st. . PHIL.DELPHIA. VEEN!. always hand a Lace and fashionable na il. sortment ne WIDE ;lad NARROW SLAT WIN DOW tnanufact4ed in the lest manner, of the hest niatvrials, and at t lowest rash prices. Has lue refuted an.i oniar4ed his tstahlishment, he is if•renared to complete ortirts to any amount at the slnortest Oat ice. Constantly on hand an assortment of 11 #Ii OGANV FURNITURE nl every variety, manufactured expi easly fur his -own sales and purchasers may therefore rely on a good are tennis. 01ten in the evening. Orders 'fr_tri a d.stanse packed carefully, end sent freeeof porterage, to an) part of the city. If. CLARK. Augurt,2s, 35- I y Biddle, Reeves & Son, WISOLEIALE lETA!L BEDSTEAD 31A.NCFACTORV, Nos. S*9 4• 91 . ST. JOHN STREET, AIFITERE Cabinet Makers. lintels and Private Fam• VV. 'lira can be supplied with Bedsteads or ,very rattrrn an quality, made in the most' fashionable and substantial mantle'. N. II The patent Screw Bedstead, a ♦ery superior article, manufactured at this estahiishrnent. kinds of Turningdrineirt the lowest rates. March It% MO? 111-em The Tobacco Market. WM. S. DOBBINS, NO. 269 NORTH SECOND STREET, Iw the laveest and cheapest Tobacco Warehouse - to Philadelphia Ile has on hand, at 'present, over fro mations of Onto. from common to the best .imported, the most, of them are nvertwo years nid. If you want to boy gond Cigars. try - him once; he has 50 bales fine Cubt, and Ilavatia Leaf Tobacco. len hhds. of the host Maysville, Kentucky and Mary land Leaf Tobari-o. Igs b o x,. of the finest brads of Cavendish and Noe Tabasco. 25 boxes of the best old Clack Far Cavendish. not In he atirpa‘sml by any other for richness ortlavor and good quali r ty _A large stoc of Smoking Tobacco, Pines, &t -,; Con k" stantly on hand. The stil,critier liaa 'Constantly employed over three 'hundred hands, to make Cigars, which enables him to cell more reasonably thsit any other house. All dealers are invited to call and examine his stock. at 265 North second opposite the Golden Lamb Ho tel, and 51 south second St., one door abnie - Chesnut, east side, Pinta March 2, ;KO.' ; if 9-6 in Oliver r,rans, . x.. 61, gook .Second Striter.ritiiadalgitirk. Nl!,t;r•Crelirlt or . . 14 A LAMANDr.R. FiTtil 4.N1 - 1 TfllEFi.,t .10 F 11.110fiti CHF:SITS, I rn . ~ Colean , s (heap Cutlery Stores NviTti Powder proof dwitt, and . warranted egua I x . s. 2 3 an 4 33 : v . tc ,, DE a rid 408 CHr:S.VUT • 1 to ally ether niskednr secant ry against lire o 1 r Sresrt—PitiLADELPH lA. Imrglars, basin_ wth.t.out the test of bath, wothnut Injury or ins tfttheir owners. - fit•NTRI - merchants can save trim 10 to 15 par Al,l, in store and for sale, tent. by purrliastne at the nhnkii sturrk. fly Ins I C I.ottor Copying Pre‘sos and Books.. . porting my own mums, paying but tittle rent. and Its. 1.4. ii i 5,..,..., for eco !moll lon, Banks. Ate in economically. it i 4 plain I can undersell throw whe Vrttegi.t.e. Vr,a.... , s with rl b 011..., an d r a m purchase thetr ;nolo here, pay bieh rents, and iivii •iko 31..jszlnz flat uric fot Stares. Factories. &c. c f princes. Tortadle Shower ll : ;i1hit. or a n..w and ..tirwrlor ran- I cousin:lily nn hand a large apertritnent of Pen and etrurtion.intendod for e rtn.r add or w Lyn water. I Por hat Kid, WS, Scisnort anti limit .Table Knives Ref.le li , rain'. fir ~,nn: and pr ,, ersingjornts. hut- I- till Forks., iii ivory, stag, lottialo. hone and wood i.e. !oak, kr., in tM. w..rm.'.t woathi.r., suitable to ?itiates; Carvers and .Forks;Steels, kr ; Butcher stand in any psi I of flu , potter tr coldly , . Knives i. Dirks; !row ie,,{Nives ; Ite'ent sing and Plain Visor Fitters. Is arranterg to purify Mitddy or bad pistols. kr. Jussreireived,..a largedstrirk of Holger: watt v - ether al . -fled by camas, wart. Mle oinn:, ' and Wiistentottur! fin, Pen and flol;gress Knives I, arts of hor arse. I . ! gl.n, a large assortment of Accord , ,,,. Le., 8:e.; Mitch 9, 1.,5, . 9-Ir i also, fine Emil telt Twi.t eirol rief net ii! 4: n n.. JOIIN M. COI,EM VN, Importer. 1-tf 1. Wks Jones, rtao:c,,Te rr,oein. ira,e nroom, nruth Cam► Ln,kinz C'asi •nd rariettr. SCori NO; IS NORTH SECOND STREET, oPit.Alatit Nita, I tinder J. Sidney J,ivia' rarpet Wirefionae 1 ArING entire,: my store, I ham, on hind aid I I aiii rot...tar:lly nil norietirrier ind Pr eillinz (coin sii i t e , 1,1 r,t,n0e.a.1411.4 ,, n4 to try ~bark re far hare tos , t Periar arilVixt neat, tininted To'i. 40 barrel and '2OO horns; d Ono d'erg.ri pain•eil Patl•, 200 Board+, fOO do?. 11. , 1 : 4 117.3r and poor It all • if it', c irare —eoo., ...I ri.•t aryl nr , ('!vie !Pis. ('hays and tare to.atirtment of Francli lt.nnrattc 1111-itia p, , 2 nd frv,l,rr 'oOfif Wire firminta, 10 OAR stt , i•r Ho-•m. '2 0 11 , Z el , h 'Waif. Paint, Seriih'infili, rlyre :mil ; auit If urn ItrylOie‘ of attle dozen fancy ("nibs, of viribus pat. tem.. aide, trek, pietrt, Lrrraing and — fine moth Camilla of eine, Cherry. \Valnu', Mahrns any and of aft SiZes and ll:uterine ; Ger man. r I nil f;,,i,..i i holing was< Ph!PF. of ~a ll. r,ro 7by Nr , to 72 tiy Ii —'(pm king troSured to all Dins i•f the ein) v together U. oh a tare nation. merit of vatirly torn alen11•111.-- TI, atlenti•lit lerfrillnis is 1,911,1 . 6 th 1' Snllitr,ed to the t •,-k,r,i0n0,,0 n(rf wit( fir petd I.aw far cash Of City arireptan;ie, PO as toannef pate nor onintiet it tors that can fie olTi•reri trirrti flobeilri 9 CARPET •E74llPOltivaz , 46 . ..Vortit Seentid Street, retow Arek .:. THIALDELPIIIA. rrltE attention of flowekPrperc te.M.rehants 11l in , 1 vitell to nor ta u and ele7,ant aeoor meatof r,-..- 1 rietlre. Oil Cloths. ‘Vinlaw Shadee,—conglatinvln Rarrt of :2D 'pa. new et yle Imperial 3 ply Carpetinait, Se I' do' • Tatra atipPrrine. Inerain, do ,59 " do Sorwrior all wool fitltne. do 15.3, t• do P l ,l quality all woollen Vrnlttan do I zs''• do Cotton. Irizraln and Venitian. do A lame tot of Li.t, Rae. Hemp and Cotton Cartiehy, from 15 to 50 CtP prr yard: A law and splendid nasortment of new atyle Gothic and Land-cape Window Shades. direct ?rum the man -1 ufartory, which, with the carpet,. ran he t0 . .1d at the lowest cash prices, 15 heleattle and ftetaii.hy RINIATtD• ROLIF.Ittg. • . - . N0.,45 N. 24 St., helow Arrh.rltiia. I. March 14. IMO• 4 . -11-3 m Arch SI. Wall Paper Warehouse, O. 142 , ARCII STREET, nErwEEAr arrn * sEvg.,v - rn, SOUTH SIDE, E p rinkr,Euritto, Proprietor of the above - extensive establish 1. merit has lately opened hls superb crick of Wall Papers; %flitch are allot' the lateid styles, and of the Very hear mann facture. Pn havers finm the country dun rely en - brine ACCOMM fed with ,patterns suit -stile for every purpose, with ut the ineonicidenee of looklncfurther. . Fie is drierminird to ten at sigh prices as the advan— saga of a Cob businesstn aa.. . - EDWARD BURTON. N. L—Paver hang la the• Country at City Priem. • lard 0,1450, 141-3 s m in 2 PUBLISHEW, EVERY 'pATUR.I3OAY ,BY BENJAMIN BANNAN POTTSVILLE, SCHTYYLICI.I.I COUNY ; PA. PHILADELPHIA; DM NFR AND POTTSVILLE 1 will teach yoteiopiereethe.boteels of the Earth, and bring out front the caverns of Mountains, Metals whieh will give strength to our hands and subject all Naturi•to our use :!Lha pleasure.—Dv. Jskassa PHILADELPHIA. ' 1 Iron Storg. T . HE gutiscrlber. having TCMOViii his Iron business to the large Store. N‘l3 NORTH WATER STREET, - is now pr ved to receive order, to any extent, and for any des iption of Iron and Slid; his stock is re pleniched trom hia own imponotlobs, by almost every Packet,'and feels confident in his lability to give satis faction io all who -may favor blini with their,custoto. TLrms the moat accommodating. ,• VC3I. Dr COW,- . 13 N. Water Street, Philadelphia. . , Feb 16, 1950. ~ Sainuel U. Bibighiaus & Co. WHOLESALE DEALER IN FOREIGN AND DO AIESTIC HARDWARE: CUTLERY, &c. No. 1043 Nora 'TRIED Strert,24 door below VINE • , • \ tITIRT. they intend keeping a: general assortment or 4lardware on hand, at lowest market prices. Country M,.tchants, are respectfully invited to call. A. B. Depot fur - John Bell's Planes. Jan 14, 10. 3-1 y 011., Candles, soap, &c. 'TIRE Subscribere have In store on favorable tartar 3801 gallons Bleached Winter iSperm Od a roco do Unbleached do do MO do Bleached Fell do , - 2.1r0 do do Srilar I: do - do do Wlntet Dtrd 011, ' 7 .•: - .VBnir Afer g".. 1 1 1 1 . - •do -1110......:,d0 Whal 4-. • do . •;700 do traihriliorli Wrist CoastVtgauoi, .e,y Belo, inr 'Kg gallons Common Oil, suitable for greasing; 1,0(1 do do Paint (111, io,oop do Tanners* Oil. ciantolqing Straits, ,Benks. Shore, and Tanner? Whale. Oil, • 40(1 boars Ad.imantive con 44. d' ~id TLi tow Candles, as- . POrlt'll . r.i.f. , ll, ch..rre for boles,) ISO boxes Yellow . an-I Brown inapt, and Fatagiolia:l4:onno. 13 0 1.1!•EN & No. al *ortli Wha rves.l.l store above Arch Street. Feb t. 1650. 9-3rno 1 lIARDiNG. AND !lOLL, WHOLESALE COMMISSION PAPER WAREIIOU SE No.:1 Miner 5t.,4 -twean sth and 6th and Cht:nut =2==ff=l VEEP constantly on' hind a large and varied stock IN of all kind. of PAPEB: satin-dr Patitodo-es, Mer chants. Mniasfartorers,, Stritricas, sc, lr We have rnt'r airnnentnentv a i in the country to IDA no tarture pat-er ter ''''.‘ll,3l ev.•ry i!Xestissn 'hail he 'lt oln to give entire satisfac tion learnt r ru.toteers We rein'' our tonal .inters thank. to our old foends for p ist tkvor. and hope .frorn our int re ised sock, and e zeruons.A. , merit n continu l-ir of their Institut. ; Alt ssejer• fr.tat the tenon v pro:lnptly attended if, They raft llec,iumodste pytlist - ters With any rtven size or printing paper. at _rte shorrioakodire We would say t• - s 11n , , thodrouv of a good and give us a s 111 and 5 . 2 :Mille Ink atinritelvf;tt. 141. Market prices paid in en.', ur undr for rage. B. FRANKI.Isti 11')1.1„ No. IS Minor Street, Phila. Feb. IL 7-emo Cheap Blinds and: Shades: 11. J. WILLIAMS, NO. 12 .VOR Tlf SIXTII STREET, rinLADr.LrifiA, 1 - 7 EN ITI AN 111. IND AI AN (Ira Cti RIM anti whole- V sale and retail diet - In ed the hieheitt -Pre-initiate at the Near York. Philadel phia and fialtiotore exhibitions. - vortalne made and lettered for /Boles and Public Butldinait. A large asenoment of Blind. nod Shades of new styles and at the lowest Ca , th priced. The pub lic. will find it to theft intereSt to 6111. Old Blind. painttd and trimmed to look equal to blew. B. J W. informs the 'promos or,FREEMVS'S old ematdi,htnent,.NO 1131 Smith Serohd St., that he hoe removed from there to Nn. 12 North Sivilt' Si., where the respecifoity .otteits a conti luance of ortronrice• Marc+ 16, me. 11-3 m United Slates land Foreign PATENT AGENCV, Xi . 76 DOCK oppoiiite tic Exchange, PfItL•PELPIIIA. PA. `ATM. BULLOCK,CiviI Enginrei . and Marhanlclan. v ntrata fierVlC"' for tran.Action of all buslnrid connected with the PatenOtlice. Nloncicti, IpIAWIKON AID SPPI ITTCATIDNIII neatly and arc, ately mole nod Pa fenta obtained with despatch. Iltirthorough, theoretical and part lea knnwledge of the Mechanical arts,indures him to saY, i l that in all cares wh .tre lie advises tin application for a Patent, in rase ills of obtained, the fees for his ser vices will be relur led, and he will also guars nice, that all patents °Rai led t broil 'll liiiieffice, will be ails tamed by the courts. Many Inventors-are subjected to great delays and lo,ts online and money by employing Inrom pet yet person to make their , rtpeclfr.ations, and frequently have to surrender them Paten l ; , and gets IT.lst tie. .. Inventive at a distance ran 'mid Oteir models and a statement of their claim,. directed td Ws:. BULLOCK. U S. Patent Agynry, No. 75 Dock Siieet, Philadelphia, Pa., and the strictest secrecy will bd observed until the Patent is obtained. - Drawings and Specifications ror Factories, Atiils, &c., and all kinds ut Maellinery purchasad on Cominiirion, and 6,mq...frit' then rurniqh t.. p ut the saint , In Mpera lion in any part or the United stai.eii, ii_cJutti America and the Wes'. Indies. REFERENCES 7.• DOCK PRATT, Preside tacit' the Mechanics heti tute..New Yolk t. Mes.,rs.l 7ILWI.N, ALLEN & Co. , DißlCity %Vorkn,Ne w York. " PETER Moantr. A: Co., Columbian Foundry New York C o LT, ELLICOTT & DAYIER; , Philadelphia, Pi " AD• & Jtrtv Pitt3lotrO Pa. Mr. Tilnliv , 3• LoYEGItni IC, Haltimdre, Md. ROBERT A. Tss!.on,, " D•surr. Gook, I locinnati. Milo. " fit Tl:ra, rhicagn, Illinois " J. N. Mit.ct a. Savannah. C. " WIR, C. GRIOGII. Alnbdc,'A IS • R. T. Trnrsu LL, WaClinrtun, Miqs Tline. J Kcart', ChnrleMon, f.I.CJ "Any 12, , 20-41 Jan. S. Icl9 ! Paper !' Paper NO. 2L 6\\li ST[l.lo:r.• Behesex'3lssket and Chesnut, 4 , 14 24 end 2dits PIIII.ADELPIII • 'FITE soicolhor• hor !ea,- to calf the attention of coorory hover. In th -Ir acaortiiiiiiir of parlors ern hrwinr dirtiro'nt yd. loin,ni Pri - ritior, IlardwAro. Envelope, and Wrar?inr I.a prra• white and docirtrof rotors, also Bonnet and Hoz Boards, ezt. Heinz prirdred in the trinfironrr of Vintiii= orders from pritittirs. for inc oven sico. which will be rurninhed at Alvin notice, and at Cur iri-••. Nl -1 , 1E.- 1 to - iro• ; in rash or t rlde pNill for . RntrY tputncur r & KNIGII r, I.'l Bink rt. c. 15-19. 37-1y Ilarktit.ol is can's V.. 1, 151110N,A0T,E CLOTIIING STORE, ! So. 12S• m.taKET The Soloheact corner of rourtit —roiCAnEt.poia. N.'l3 —Look out for the rive Story; Building (1.213 ' 1 , 111 , 4 lemolar Establishm.nt has orris ' t Limit for the last. twenty years a To:m(4110a nr the eXcelltne,, and clrtion - e4 or Clot hiog onat a oned by any other h , :se in the In cor.olier• ai , oo of 1 . 104 cool , rse amount of lotblic patronage tie.' .towed on them, the proprietors bay , spared - neither pains not ...Tense in securing the riervi,es of totters nf nodotiteJ .tarty; an/ foe the 1 , 101 of Inl9, they ofTet such a mock of superior ready made Cloth ing a• they are confident enema 9P equalled In Phil adelphia or el.ewbere, F:very article of ctothine ma nufactitred thenris i t the cst materials and workmanship, and from the rapermr facilities they possess to the purchase of their goods. they.•rc en abled to..ripply the politic rat the loiyest rate.. Those who have not vet viSiled this Emporium of Fashion, by esarmaing 0.. style and grrintay: of their Clothing Wl: 1 be seti=fieil that it is their interest to purchase iif Ilarknesa& Son. . Amorg this immense nasorl.Mentl:of goods wilt b found elegant double stitched nver , iPats of the latest att les. from 39 ll to $l5, sold elsesiliere et $l5 no to *2O 01, superior black Dress and !Trott' Coats ,from $7OO to $lO 00, worth double the ItiPtleil! fancy and : . black Cossimere . P.ints, , ll3 00; ricifl,att black /gall" , Veils, ;2 50,.and a maenificent lot arCloaksi atslooo, _such as cannot be borscht at other stores for lees than 315 OD . All other article. at correspimdinc low rates. N. D.—Every Garment sold at this house is war= rarted to llt with care and eleeaore,d • ' DARKNESS & SO'( , R. E. Corner of Fourth and Marker•street. N. n.-6. Ilarknesc & .ion are `the only agents In Philadelphia tot the sale of R. rastscir s Premiuni Tailors Shears: Ladies Scisiors, &el 49-dmo Oct 13, 1649.. C. A. Du Boucilef , • BITICGEOII DENttISTi . 133 SPRUCE STREET. AB p VE FIFTH. ' ertzt.•nti-rnia,' RESPECTFRLILT informs the ch ls ise, of Pottsville that he is prepared 'to perform all operations on' the TEETH at Shaft notice. TERMS MODERATE. Students instructed in all the branches of Mechani cal and SurelcarDentlstry, Jan :G,1950 . TORENT—A FARM of low *ere, eleare d. a Ow,lllng House, near Mount OPthon. Apply, J. ii. CAMPBELL. Agent. 11.1 t err is: t s s f r . a.t 1111 S VrANVFACTURED of 95 per cent. Alcohol anditic pufeat sPirit,frte from smokkiamell, sediment or explosive qualities. Also, ti superior article of GANPIIPNE. warranted not to itimair by keeping, by the barrel nr lets Ivan. thy. Dialers will find it to their advantage to rail be fore puritaying elsen here, as the subscriber guaran tees to sell at the very lowest mar*et rare. MI ~5: SATURDAY. MORNING, - APRIL 6, 1 850. PHILADELPHIA. Burning Fluid, Fluid Lampa, for parlor. stortrand geiteral use. Tough's Patent CanipheneA.amps. acknowledged to be escelled by hone for economy and safety. ' I Lard Lamps, in great variety, Insured to burn lard, tallow Of oil, at EDWARD F.,ORPIELD's . Wholesale & Retail Depot. 111 death id St., (3, doors above Spruce St.,) • west side, Philadelphia. ' - Ilarsk Me, t•3ea We Study to Please. THE attention of builders and oth -1r - 4 era, is respectfully Invited to the el,. • tensive and well selected stack ,or DVILDING HARDWARE AND TOOLS, now offered by she subscriber, copes:sang in part as 'Tollow,s—American Front Door Locks, upright, with night work, plated or brags, rarniture..or, porteain all colors.; ...i : tt*. des , Plain, di) '., •, •;:'do :. - 'do do , Anil Store Door, Horlitonell;or 'Upright, do do Sim Locke, all sise• anal:mantles White or brim furniture, do do :. do dr -.0..M0rttit..... 4is nitt4lated, ' 'do •de •••••.3.lricheits, ••• 6ri."- ','ldo - • do k—do 1 -iind itidiOntek Cocks, do brake e*CLltcheons, do Drop,. Stop,-I.kumb, Gate, and Store Door Latches Ako, Imported Locke and Latches of evervdeeeriptind italdwin'e r cind American bolt iii•iges, of all sizes, last or 1011, joint, Shutter 'Gate, Strap, T., and Black(lip Hinges, all kinds Shutter, Cate, Door, ninth, and Sprins itolt:, of wrouellt or ca.t iron and brass; ev.•ry deserlpting. Screwv,'Sprip, Glue. Sand Paper. of the best qunlity. American Axle and Sham Axle Pulleys, of every vs- do Butoms. pinin nr nn plites brats. Iron Or bronzed In Nob.; plated. while. iron. or wood, nll kin 'is, itaatiA'ard, ctiiiimon and palt.nt. with other articles to nionerott. to torntiOn. Nails ritid Sash-I‘sialits at Facttiry priers rS All Ganda drlict•rrd free of cliarge to any part of tha Cuy and Ilistriclt. Al thii estaldiehmeiot ran be snood one of the la r:•!st red beet, assoritnent• of White and Pansy Nobs Or f.rks, kr... in the. City some patterns, of whieh,ean at be 36ett. ,r obtained. ret any other etore EU= pear s& Jatitson's nark, I'an.•l Itted and Ridp Saw.. c, ingl4tetrexpre;sty for retail Italop. all se,lected.tvith Stile .Ig:ng for the relehratei 'nide by r, •iv 'arlii• lit, or L.nea,dt.r Pa., bYIII2 all made or foil' dnd Mite zrnund and tiled .11eatty's and 'i r inutwe make ei Cbt.ele. liatebv., Diaw,!ne. knives. &c., all w:trranted gond. Pnglt'eund Sla.k's make or tu.;;er4 mild Auger Dios, American ..14113,a and Ileviln o.le4ry deserintlon. : do [Wien, Gauges. SAN teiie,CoinNksea, ncrewdrtkes, k.c. do liatume, flaw and Riveting, ati ■laea. An- yds and ires, all sizes. Steel. Iron and Vt'nnden Braces, With C. S. Ilitis, in treat %V Greaves S Ann's, Bnither's. and ether celebrated ma key 4,r ci,14,-1., roe, k c . A tl d rdel•ravel Cr ry al) Maki ha one ni and exteurdve arenrt tnentr or. and I 111 the SUS tr. At this' Establishment it is considered a pleasure to show the fonds. You are invited to cast and .ratilino the asshrtinent, and heal' the prices asked, before put- Fbasinji elsewhere. Come end see us. Yours, rsspectinile McCLURE, No. 267 Market 't . between 7tti.f tipper aide, Plillad . a II -3.11 I= Pure Fresh Cod Liver Oil. rrilkk new and valuable' Medicine new need by the medical ith titt.h at uttibtel tug eilictuy in the nt. Pub ..... ,ary nintbi, Sertilula Chronic Ithetini - iii.u, %pie al Debility, coin platuukur the Kidney+, km, itc.,/le pngi.rreJ Dom the liver of tite Cuel nett fur medicinal tier, eaneet , alv fitt our 1.11 , 4. • (Extract from tlLnndnn Men.icat Journal.) ('. ',JAI. Williams, M. U , F. it. S.. Frofennor of Minlit hie in I/ roverntry Collexe, ,Loudon, Corisultilic rhynician to the Ileq.ital for Connumption, !Lc , saye : I has e; pres, r ibed the Oil in above tour bemired mown of tuburrillim - - dinease of the Lunge in MIT-feint stages: whirlt have been under my en rep he last ivaii years and a half. In the large number of casen, r , 2116 out 0f:231, Its line wan followed ny marl-d and an equivocal improvement, vinyl,: in fir-glee in different canen,,Troni a tempoiary t mardation of the progrean pr. the itinimee, :Ind a:mitigation of dint reentlig F3itiptonli, up to d more or leas complete respiration to apparent The effect ,ot Cod Liver Oil in molt of Omni casein wan ver) renia•k able. Even in a few days the, cnivel , was mitigated, the expectoration diminished in qualm ty on,fopacity, the nigliesweats ei!ti,eel, the pulse be come slower , nsidof bolter volume, and the appetite, flesh and strength Wcit• grailtially : impruced. 'ln conclusion, I repeat that the pure. fresh nil from the I4er of the Cod In mare beneficial in the treat ment ill' I ' ,llll/011ar) CoIISUIIIIIIIOIIIII3,I any agent, 11,• dieina), died': or regimen:it, 11131 lias yet betel em ploye a." An have made arrangements to procure the, Cod Liver Oil, fre..ll from head eptartar , n It can now he had eliernically pure by the !Ingle bottle, or In boxes of onii dozen each. Its i.imderful efficacy' has 'wited numerous sp ri -0119 Imitations. As its silt CPPS depends entirely on its putity, too much.-cure Can not,be used In procu rig it gettiline. Evoy Wile having on it our wiitten signature may be depended npun as aenuilie Painphlets containing an arrilyshs of the 011_with notices of it from Medical Journals, wOl he sent 1.1) those who address 113 free corp.:bar, 101 IN BAKER & CO.. Wholertle Druggists and Chemists, 100 North Third-street, Philadelphia ' Julyll, 180. 30-Iy, Mentgomery's Patent Boiler. frlIE attention of the public. eenerally, is respect 1 Cully invited to this valuable improvement. Ex periments which have liven mad,; during the pits? year, nn srenmkoats. froth in salt. Andaresh water, ns, thoserbollers fur power purposes; on land have folly testrotirs superior qualities as a steam generator; and the snort saving .If weight, r.nd spice, occupied Ore, dny botlernow in 1111. t. Boilers on this plan, may now be seen In operation at ihe:estriblirliment of Hecker & Brothers. Flour M 19,201 Cherry st„ New York. floriper & Brothers, 11:1Pearlis,t :New York. Mott& Ayres, Foundry fool 111 , 25th,5t., North River. Atlantic Dock. Brooklyn, New York. A. IV. Illetralf.l3 and 15 Centre st , New York. B. B. Bulger & Cn..41 nod illßusne st . New lirir N. It. StathlWk • l6 IFOllllllf y. ' Ttrty, N e w York. Smith & Cutlet?. Baltimore, At s ind.o its • lonas C. Ileartt." and "Edward ray• ^ fist of l.rhertv street. New York, and no hoard F.tr , lno ,, w r ) ,- 141 Whitney,' New Orlettelt For, fir r information, applv t to J 4 ME. 4 MON 113 , ) mcnv & ,4v.runl. WARD 15 3nnrh IVdl.am st.. New York. Or to .liFNRV BELL, 4. South Thirds?. BM MUM lllake's Patent Fire-Proof Paint FROM OLIJO. TILE Sillncriber• have jus - arreived 3 further FUp Ply .4 thi. nunzttlar and valtatitle substance. In addition to the .late color. thry Itawn,,a benntiful chocolat.. or hen. n. re.prnltltna the sand stone now In use, and 30 mild, 3 +Uuirrd iur tile front buildings lit Nine - toil inzrediente are silira, , a'itirtina and pin toddy of loin.. st. hi, h lu thi; opinion of scirntiflc men satisf , trt ay at founts for, its fire-p ',attire-411e I iv" tprtnefealma twos being tinti.intidurters. and the lattet artincia• a cement. in hind the while together and rink« a filo moi durable paint. FOO are it Is' int zed with 1•11/feCd Oil. end applied with "a lirnsit. `pie sa as 'ordinary pa.at. to wood, itonflili. Lou., canvass, paper. scc It h, rd«ns ?Tarta n y int !ter...111,. fire-prrie f It- is part' mlarly so ita hie fOr roofs of buildings. idea tn!...at a id ear-decks. railro id bridge's. fences. &c. A tont cooed with the art Ile is equal t., one of stilts. at n vast saving or en pease. - sperimen. may 'N. 14,11 at the office if the subscri bers II A ftRION. 11120111r;fl$ & No .131 South From St., Philada. April :R. Ihi4. • 17.i1f John C. Baker's • 'COMi'OU\I) FLUID EXTILiCT OF SARSAPARILLA., tWS Article II emplwyed wish grewt perces and by e~ Oie•mrtlt eminent Plirdcians of Ibis city, for the core ,t the nolowina SOIIOFIII.A or King': l.v il. tthermatism, Cutaneous Thse:ties, i 4 yphitilie Affections, Timer and Elcer., White Swelling's. tic utyy, Neurslgia or ' l le Didoureits, ncerr:Coilre, nr Pronelomele, (rtweiting neck.) Spine Disease. Chrintie Diseases of toe Lungs, to counter. net the destturtive f frettg of Mercury, dwindle:v.,. lly pertliropoy, or erilsrgyment.of the heart, Ppithantotn and : ire.mhling in the reg th n of the heart 'and'atimach. Enlargenient of the iluiAP..fointo nr ligaments.alan all the mations diseaset of the skin such 'as Teller Ringworm, Riles, Pimple's. Carbuocles, & r,, Dyspep sia nod Liver somplaints, Nervous Affections, Drnp sirdl is welling,Canititutional Disorders. and diseas es originating from an impure state of the blood and other fluids of the hodyjn *holt all diseases where a change of thmsystern is required. PrICC 50 eta, per bottle. Prepared only by the Proprietors • . , .1011N'e. BARER, & Co.. Wholesale Druggists. No. 100 North3d St. below Race. Poinula. import ers and whnierale , lealers in Drugs, Medicines. Chemicals, patent medicines, Perfumeries, surgical Instruments. Diugaists Glassware, Paints, Oils, Dye Stud's, end Window Glass, alsn a new and inperior article of Imitation of Plate Class at about one-fifth the price of English, or French Plates; any size to drn.er. • The .Corittonnd Fluid Extract ofsSartiaoittilla, far Clernen• az Parvin, ['Ott/Ville ; W. 1.. Heisler. PortCarhon ; Janfes Falls. fillnersillte J. E. Carver. A ItCII:IITEtT AND • Xe.✓ sl North Sera Street. PlChitto. GIVES DRAWINGS AND SPECIFICATIONS Oft• Contracts to erect Dwellings. Ate. Old lay nut the grounds for Country Beats nr Cemeteries; together with the arrangement of Trees to give the prdper of fect.—Also,. Churches, hospitals, Prisons, Wallis Works, Gas-Works. tce., on thelatest and mostapprev edpions, ineludiu heating yantilating,die. Philattal'ab. I am aminvi,; trim going!—have ye no last word for met. No "God eked pan," on rny. polar 'path bry'ond the Northern sea I ' Have ye no kind farewell for ono your eyes may , see no more Why Are the voices ellant now that welsomed me of yore 1, I know that Spring with fairy gifts has travelled bask again, Willi fragrant airs, and singing birds, and blosioffiit in lisOrain ; And %is not strange that ye should turn from my un smiling fire To, fold the 'fair new comer In your rapturous em brace. vire are bidding me 2 glad I:arewell, smiling you see me I go. Though ye'-Rave me a right w,elcome In my first pure rote Of mew ; Now I hear the gladsome greeting, ye give my rival Oh: for *sr friendly wish to cheer me on my lonely way t - Have ye no memories to recall writ on my rugged tv bra, " Islhe syronatty that share!! your . joys and griefsfor , gi•tteti tmtv FOrvitril thelorig cm:unit:hours of converts full and ' free, {Wen at your warm firesides I held the kindliest mintatry I All vanished rows a (surer form is seated In ny place, And of. the former times Is left no memory or t me; I'e iv ill nnt miss me nor lament this truth too well know, We part, mitte—miss, is all the grief—acid weeping t thus I It were ton sad a thing to ray that thus old friends nod ties Are broken loose and cast away when newer ones orbs° ; Too cad 1114 thought that even %bosom faith and friend ship fide. And human hearts retain on trace that hothan lov e has made 1. The early Tie; or Childhood's Home. 0 ! The innu\t rable delights that cluster around that dear nat e--home! You breathe that word with an a - WO few others inspire. With it are assoeiate . 4s the dear remember ances of youth—of fi rst friends of dearest friends.,You pronounce that thrilling name, and, as i by magical inflUeuce, images of. loved ones, of ,by-gone years, dance before Our mind. The kindred spirits with whom your soul held sweet converse; are invoked, and your fancy revels in delightful reminis cences. You again walk over those grounds, aim in arm, with that dear one whose.meni ory von' love td cherish. You again bow at the family altar, with those whom, long since, time has made old, distance Separated'. or death matched from earth. You are again the prattling buy. ur the joyous, laughing girl, sporting with childish glee about the threshold of the deafly-lived homestead; or, you are the wiser youth. or more steady maiden, ,wandering over those grounds, and talking .to those trees, and birds and flowers —learning lessons oflife!s realities, ,fiom their fading—or feeling. as free from 6re as the little; brook that comes trotting'ity your feet, and leaves you far behind in the race. And what is it that endears that place, and makes you start with joy at the mention of it, or, brush the silent tear, whed you re call it? : You remember the form of the mother'inoVing there, in her graceful majes- ' ty, in her affectionate tenderness. You think of her,:in her angelic offices, ministering. to every necessity, anticipating every wish, and contributing to make the hearthstone the most attractive spot on earth. There she nursed you ; there she taught yowl° lisp her own dear title: to bow in solunin revered& at her. knee, to lift the heart and voice in prayer to God. You call to mind the, father, There you stood at his side, or sat upon his knee, and gazed into his manly countenance, and list ened to his grave instructions, until your love and - respect Was drawn out, such as only n child can know for a father. There you en joyed his counsel in all difficulties, and you felt the - need of his'guidarice, for your young and inexperienced mind.. Alas ! for those who have lost this fond parent, while yet they are Unable to wander alone in life's wilderness. You are reminded of a gentle sister's in, fluencp. She'L moved by your side, as a heaven=born attendant, and hovered near yoti when temptation would , entice, to lure you from its heguiling path. She was your con fidant, your very.self, only superior, milder, and more tender. You loved her, because she was your own sweet sister ; you loved het', as:the star of the family circle, as the devoted; all-abiding sharer in your youthful joys and sorrows. There. too, you recollect, was the brother. You watched his growth from helpless in fancy.• .You led him out to study the boy's duties; you listened to the first desire he bundled to make himself famed. You re member his holy ambition, his unchecked ardor, : his madly respect for himself and for the feelings of others. Or, if you be youn ger than he, you Call recall his tender care of you, his kindness in teaching, tit unsel fish daring. Most of all, you this/ of the intimate communion of spirit there was with vou ; he was free, open, joyous. Your brother was the pride of your father's heart —the bud of iliornise in the family tree." above Cbektr..ll,lsttlad4 The time-worn mansion now stands be fore you. Every stone in its walls, every tree on thi. -, grountX every hillock, and slope. and plain, is as familiar as the loved ones that dwelt there. The fancy wanders back, and the associations 'of each is present to your mental eye. In that room, lying next to the . roof, you slept. There you were often lulled to sleep by the heavy rain pattering over your head ; which has never sinced sounded sodelightfully. There your, treasures were hoarded. In the little sitting-room, on the stand, lay the family bible, and night and morning you bowed with the loved ones at .your side, around the family altar. • You enter with. awe the room above.— There your father's spirit escaped from earth, and you think of him now as walking among the saints in glory. Every spot in theneigh; borhood is endeared by, the recollection of some incident of by-gone ,years. On this you played in childish ; on that you stood to watch the far-off eagle, or the approaching cloud. Here you sat in deep meditation ; there you wandered .by the brook, or plundged into its yielding .bosoirt, ar hunted the retreating game. There you knelt, • and learned of God, in the .sights around, or listened breathlessly to the many voicesof nature: • But where shall we end in our description of the. delights of our early home. The re- Mmberanee of .it the follow us throtigh life. atfd oft* in the calmness of thought, will we live over again• the time there spent, and wish ourselves , children, nbt. Only in' knoWledge of the ways cif the world, lattin the Iltibonsclolis joys of that best of all per - - iods of life. •A• second link that. holds man to earth, is Ltlir home which he now ei3joys, the interests ; which are absorbed in his present situation: Its associations are the most tender, AS de- lights the most sweet'.' He has entered the busk. Scenes of life, and thrown off all, but the remembrance, and secret .influence of former 'years. His intercourse has become I more:extended, his knowl rs anon,' general N GENERAL pochm. f k otn the New YorkTrlbune.i • • LAMENT OF WINTER. BY DIRS. E. J. EMIRS. tEljoice ticabing. THE TIES OF HOME 11. <The Present Tie—AfanhoOcri Home , • . , .. , :,• ' . R , •-. ' ' i . . - \ , • _ .. 11 i 7 and more nainiiti. He has learned the world, its miminon-lustings,-its empty van ity, its _want of ;charity and truth, and in the, toils bif business, the vexations of profession al duties, and the disappointments attending all ,ernploymenti, he has `become sickened with it.„ It is a mere mart, wherein each one is tieing to underate his brother, and ruin him; a ntere political arena, -where each, in struggling for his own aggrandise- ment, or for the; mere delusive thing called fame, heSitates 'not to blast his neighbor's hopes and tame, if he has chanced to step before him. Here, all are designing, and he looks upon rnau, thus displayed, with dis- gust. It is then he can retire within his own lit tle fainily. Be he a husband: a tie stronger 'than life binds • him, a - golden cord twines around his very' heart—the partner of his bosom, the sharer of`lis existence, the day star of his earthly hop es , the centre of ,his earthly joys. :, When he is cast down by cares, and dispirited by disappointments, her soul melts to the same temperature.: She enters into all his• troubles by the channel which none other - than a wife's affections can open; she pours the true solacing- balm into his heart, and points to higher joys, in reserve. She, too, draws out his desires, in 'holier atpiratiods—lifts ;.,him from thoughts, and dark broodiugs on matelialobjects, to the enjoyment oethe spiritual found in her own unfathomable resources of devotion. If he be gay ancrjoyous her soul is lightsome too. As the untouched lute gives •forth a , sound, in unison with the note struck upon another, placed; near it, so do the vibrations of his own heart strings, make her's vocal. Thus the wife is the light, of . a man's home. The husband is the protector, the adviser, the constant Inver, the truest friend —the friend of, her life, and the object for which she leaves her early home, and binds herself a willing, joyful subject, by bands stronger than death, and only to be several by it. . I If around the table of this house, afar/121v has collected : if upon the Bible's " record" are written' the names of these precious pledges of fidelity and love, th tie is strength ened two-foldj That licire is s prized and ' longed for,,and; sought ; fon there, not only sits, in manly, Icive, the husband, or in ten-' der sunshine Of'affection, the wife, but there play and prattle the children r -loyely in,their I helplessness iall' dependence/ These fill up the domestic circle, and th e i thought of' la- ' boring fur thent, of seeing -them prosper in life, makes effort sweet and toil a pleasure. 1 The first-born is the steady boy, or the bright-eyed girl, , upon whOm rest the mu tual hopes of loving pare is ; nr it has ' grown up to fulfil those an loos wishings,. i and be the motion of their ' hearts and the pride' of all. The others, Igivenhy God's love, to be trained for him, are like stars around the board, the hearth and the altar.— Morning andAyght let these cluster round, and hear and ask of Jesus, and kneel in de vout love befare Him, while the father's er's voice falls,on their ears, as he - pleads that God who has made them one; on earth, may through Idis grace, grant a blessed re union aboye, a. Whole family in Heaven. ,Such is our picture of domestic bliss, but it is left unfinished. There are other de- lights such as 'those of younger years ex- 1 perience. They have not families, but com pose a part of these very dependencies, the 1 sons arid daughters. adults, but still at home 1 with parents.;, 'What are their Means of joy ? Ah ! to live for those parents ; to do all in their dowerto repay their kindness and sacrifice of self ; to hold up their age, to gladden their lives, and then to have them by your side to smile upon pat]. to encourage, to guide you still ! These are its ties, and be ii ours to make these joys perennial, 111. The Stronzest Tie—Our Final 1-lame. "Home, sWeet home !" gaily sings the school-boy, as he throws down his satchel in his father's house, and hastens to embrace' his parents. :" Home, sweet home !" cries the husband !as he is met by his wife arid merry children. " There is no plrice like home!" sighl the wanderer, as he casts his thoughts balk upon the happy fire-side he has left, and longs to rejoin those who en circle it. " Sweet home !" murmurs the hardy mariner,. as he mounts the riggging of his home-Ward bound vessels, and peers out. to catch' a glimpse of the welcome shore. Flow'his heart bounds, as he descries dimly the dark line of his native lank along the distant horizqp. So the wanderer on earth pants for the happy home On high ; so the traveller on Time's oceanlooks out anxiously towards the shore which Is to end his journey. " This world is not my home," •triumphantly breathes the t' hristian, as he views the evil that surrounds him, the wickednessof those .who make not God their choice. As he sees earthly hopes', perish—friends, one by one,, fail, and expectations disappointed—as he. becomes sickened by the deceitfuluess of those in ,Wrnho 'he has con fi ded, lie .almost. impatiently Waits for the time when he shall he free front all, these troubles, and be glad ly welcomed ,home, " where _the wicked. cease from trembling and the weary are at : rest." Appriaich the child of God under any circumstance+, and whisper to him a thought of heaven, and yOu awake a chord that thrills' back upon y,lur own soul with delight. If be be poor, this word assures him of a treas ure above, '.' Where moth loth not corrupt, nor thief break through and steal.", There, want and poverty are never known, but he will be filled .k . vith all his most ardent desires could wish nr his capacious power contain. Is he despised, and cast out by men, there he shall walk among the elite of the city ; there, hiceornPanions will be thoSe who have beenredeemed out of all nations. Is he af flicted, there! sorrow - and suffering are not known. ,J Do you address one in prosperous circum stances ; happy in the enjoyments Providence, has spread around him ; to him, also heaven is home. He is, as the child away froin the . parental roof,- who is, receiving; time after time, mementos of a fattier's affection.; and these, but make hitri love that father, and that home, the more. , Tell the young disci pie heaven is the reward of fidelity, and he boldly presses forward to win the prize.— Tell the aged soldier of the cross, burdened down by trials of four score years,of a heaven ly. rest, and be forgets his weariness—and re vices with joy unspeakable, Ask him who is calmly letivinglearthovhy death has no terrors, and :he replies, it takes roe borne, it is the pathWav to bliss; But why ithis longing desire'-; what is it that causes alto look so earnestly,,,so joYful ly forward, to, the time, when they shall be permitted' tokmter that place? It is because of its attrabtions, because it is' a place of rest, because it is a glorious place. All our most exalted'conceptions of glory and beauty , : are infiniteN exceeded by that which " eyFt bath net seen, nor ear heard; neither bath rt;t entered into ;the heart of man to conceive."' It is becatise of what it contains. There God resides,:lhe infinite, , omnipotenCholy God. . There is Christ, the Saviour. He .who meekly bore the griefs and sins of His people, now; ill glory and loveliness surroun ded. with Majesty. There dsvellS the Holy Spirit, Whose office here, is to convince, to restrain, to ,t)rnfort and support. There are angels and iaichangels,-and ' spirits of men made perfect:,mong them are, : 0 , hiour loved ones, such .;: as have Jett earth, hiforo us.— Their handsch so lately . clasped ours in I t friendship, - tinw.holds palms of victory, rime strike hatritt of gold. Their faces • which looked affection on us, now slow with the radiance, reflected from Him, ,who sitteth , upon the, throne. Their voices which pro nounsd our name, and rung upon our can, RE ADVERTISER., now unite in that "sevenfold chord of harp ing symphonies," that swells with rapture through heaven's eternal arches. There the throne' of God stands. all glittering with saphire, all radiant with the light of God head. These Ire a few of the attractions of that place. .But how can mortal tell of the Unut terable glory, the far rnore exceeding, the eiternal weight of gl ory? These to us are lovely, for we have known something of them, on earth; God's presence is felt here —Christ's intercession has produced its fruits here—the Holy Spirit's constraining influence is 'displayed here—heavenly 'visitants have watched around us here•—hork men have worshipped here—our friends have clustered heti—the theme of God has been accessible heie—and men' have approached its foot to worship Him. To See these which here, faith has kept in vie*, to look upon God, face to face—to walk with angels, to bow at the throne—to enjoy the glad fruition of what is here, prospective ;—that is what we look for; in heaven. Thus have we given a veri• few thoughts on ;home—childhood's—manhood's—and the Christian's final home. Around these, cling all our recollections 'of past happiness, our consciousness of present joys—and our hopes or future bliss. As we-can, with pleasure, look back, and recount early days, as we feel now the cairn delights of present home, so may we be able to enter finally the peac Oful, the g lorious. the eternal "home of the soul." Personal Shad), WHY I LEFT THE ANVIL. BY ELflit' BLRRIT I,sce it, yon would ask me what I have to sav , for myself for dropping the hammer end taking up the quill, as a member of your pro fession. I will be honest now, and' tell you the whole Crory. I was transported from the anvil to.the editor's chair, by the genius of maehiuere. Don't smile, friends, it is eve, so. I had stock] and looked for hours on- . . those thoughtless, iron intellects, those iron fingered, sober, supple automatons, as they. caught up a bale of cotton. and twirled it in the twinkling of an eve, into a whirlwind of whizzing shreds, and laid it at my feet in folds of snow white cloth, ready:for the use of our most voluptuous antipodes. They were wonderful thingS, those looMs and spindles; but they could not spin :thoughts: there was no attribute of, Divinity in them, and I admired them nothing mare. They were exceSsively curious, -but I could esti mat? the Wh le compass Of t i t hel: doing and destiny' in ti ger power ; so I ant away and left them sp nning—cotton. , 1 One day I: was turnintrmy aiivil. beneath 1 a hot iron, and busy With thenought, that i there was as much intellectual ilosophy in my hammer as many of the en,ery a-going Lin modern times, when 'a met unearthly screaming pierced my ears ; I stepped to the door, and there it was, the gre t Iron Horse! i Yes, he had come, looking for ll the world I like, the great Dragon we rea of in Scrip ture harnessed to half a livin world and just lauded on the earth, wl ere he. stood ' braying iri , surprise and indL i natiOn at the "base use'! to ‘Vhich he has been turned. I saw the - gigantic hexaped mode with ir pow er that made the earth tremble for, miles. I. saw the army of human heingr gliding with the velocity of the wind over. the iron track, and drove of cattle travelling, in their stables at the rate of twenty miles an hour toward their city slaughter-house. It was wonder-, ful. Tliallule busy bee winged machinery of the cotiori factory dwindled_ into insignifi cance before it. Monstrous beast of passage and of burden I it devoured the intervening distance and wedded the cities together! But for its tun:tate heat-and iron sinews, it was nothing but a beast, an enormous agw rega tiod.of—horse power. And I went back to The forge with unimpaired reverence for the intellectu'al philosophy of my haMmer. Passing along the 'street one afternoon I heard a noise in an old building, as of some one puffing a, pair of ;bellows. So without 1 more ado, I stepped in t and there, in a cor ner of the room,• I saw the chef-d'oeuvre of all the machinery that ever has been inYen ted since the birth of Tuba Cain. In its con struction it was as simple and unassuming as a cheese press. Ii went with a lever— with a lever, longer, stronger than tha: with which Archimides promised to lift the world. r " It is a printing press," said a boy stand ing by the ink trough, with a cueless turban of brown paper on his head. "A printing press !" I queried musingly to myself. "A printing press ? what do you print ?" I asked. "Print ?" said the boy, staring at me, doubt fully,, "why we print thoughts." "Print thoughts !" I slowly repeated after him ; and we stood looking for a moment at each other in mutual admiration; lie in the absence of an idea, and I in parsuit i Of one. But I looked at him the hardest, and he left another ink mark on his forehead, from a pathetic motion of his left hand, to mlicken his apprehension of his meaning. "Why, yes," he reiterated, in A tone of forced confidence, as if passing an idea, which, though having been-current for a hundred years„ right still be counter feit, for all he could show on the spot, "we print thoughts to be sure." "But my boy," I asked in honest soberness, "What are thoughts, and how can you get hold of them to print them ?" "Thoughts are what come out of people's minds," be replied.' "Get hold of them, indeed? Why minds ain't nothing you can get hold' of; nor thoughts either. All the minds that ever thought, and all the thoughts that minds eves made, wouldn't make arball as big ,as your fist. Minds, they say, are just like air ; you can't see them ; they don't make any noise, nor have any color ; they don't' Neigh anything. Bill • Deepcut, the sexton; says that a man weighs just as much when his mind hasgone out of him as he did before. No, sir. all the minds that ever.. lived wouldn't weigh' an ounce troy." " Then how do you print thoughts ?" I asked. "If minds are as thin a l sair hod thoughts minder still, and makl7) noise, and have no substance,' shade or, color, and are like the winds, intli'more than thewinds, are' anywhere in a Moment ; sometimes in heaven, and sometimes on earth and in the waters under the earth ; how can you oi hold of theml hOw can yob see them when caught, or show diem to oth&sl" . . Ezelttel's eyes 'grew, luminous with a new idea; / and pushing his fqk-roller Proudly across the. metallic page of die newspaper, he rePliell t "Thoughts work and walk in things what make, tracks; and we take 'hem tracks and stamp therk oh paper, or iron,' wood, stone or what not.—That is the way we print thoughts. Don't you understand. I The prts!srrian ret go'the lever, and looked I interrogatively at Ezekiel, beg,iming at the pith' on his stringless brogans, and follow ing up with his eye to the top of the boy's brown paper buff cap. Ezekiel comprehen ded‘the felicity of his, illustration, and wlping his heads on his tow* , apron, gradually as-• sumed an attitude of earnest exposition. I . gave hint encouraging wink, and so' he went mi.' I 4 Thoughts make tracks," be conaind impre,ssiiely, as if evolving anew. phrase off theidea q by repeating it slowly,. Seeing tice assented : to this proposition inqujringlv, he Stepped - to the type case,—With his ie fixed admcinishingly upon u's..• . 'iloughls make traclts," . he repeated, arranging .in his left band a score or two of metal “and with these here letters we can take the exact impression of ,every thought that ever went out of this ors hignan man t and Nve' can print it, too," giving the inked' forin I blow of triumph with his fist, "we 'can print it too, give us paper and.ink enough, tilLtlia • great round earth is blanketed around,with a coverlid of thoug hts ; ea - mitch like the i tem as two peas.", Etekiel seemed to an inch at every wird, and the bniwriy pr Matt Inokea first at him, and then at the press;! frith evident astonishment. "Talk about the mind's living foreipl.l",eielaitned the boy,ppinting patronizingly aithe'ground, lie if imuds Were lying there Aneapahle of im— mortality until ;the: printer reached it a help ing band, - "why the world is brimful of live, 'bright, ingustricles thoughts; which would', have been dead as a stone if it hadn't been for boyi lige me who hpve run the Ole: roller. Immortality, indeed !, why people's minds," lie continued, with his imagination slirribing into the profanely sublime, "peo ple's minds wouldn't be immortal if itwasn't for the yrinters---at any rate. in ,this . here ; planetary or c b ,in.oround.—,We • tire the ,crhle, , a n ps7hat manufac re' immortality for dead he subiolneM, Flapping the pressnian graciously on the. shoulder. The latteklook it as if dubbid a'knight of the legion tiftionbr.-? for the boy had put the mysteries of his pro- - fessioniq sublime apocalypse. "Give us one good, healthy mind," resumed,Eiekiel, " to think fv, uSTand we will furnish a ifozeir. worlds as big qs this with thoughts to Order:. Give us such man, and we will insure his, lice w ilLk e t y ' L im alive forever among , ' the living. lie can't die, no way you can fix it, when once we have touchid him with these here bits of inky pewter. ;,Vy, e .... s hke t die nor sleep.: We will keep ills mind at work 'on all the minds that gee on the earth, and on all t4e minds that shall come to lieu here as long its the world staods,!) " Ezekiel," I asked, in a subdued tone of reverence, "Will you pint my thoughts too ?" " Yes, that I ' he replied,,"if you will think same of the right kind." "Yea; that we will," echoed-the preismati.. • . And I went home and thought; and, tiekiel I ,las s printed my- thought-tracks" ever since. NO. 14 EVENING UPON THE OCEAN What a glorious scene is sunset upon' the Ocean} The clouds aie fringed with gold, and hana.like rich canopies flu- above in mid air—the last rays of the sun dance and spar kle gaily upon waters, tipping each tiny wavelet with a silvery sheen, and..a gorge ous blazeof light illumines the diStaui horizon as he proudly sinks to rest in thijewelled Chambers of the West. The winds, as if acted upOn by the, magical iefleence of the hour, die gently away, and the stars which before dared not show their •faceS, now steal one by one into. the heavens, to cheer the coming night—Luna ascends its her chariot' of glory. and takes her place aniong thefn as evening's smiling i/neen;--aiia a stillness, only broken, by the light dash of waves against the vessel's sides, reigrls around:— save where, afar off on the bltie waters, the' Albatross raises its weird-like cry; as it shakos the water from its downy pluniage. The tall ship, so lately driving before tiff breeze, so gallantly bounding over the billows and so ready to obey her helm, now lies an unmanageable mass—rising and falling with the swell--her taper spars bowing gracefully to the Spirit of the Calm--and sails - which so lately were strained 'to 'their ittmoi? to speed her course, now idly from the yards,. unemployed and useless.. The captain is be low, dreaming of his wife and little'ones— the helmsman has put his wheel hard down; and hangs listlessly upon eves are i half closed, and he s almost in the dream land. The officer of the deck having- noth• ling better to do, leans over the tafferel, and pictures to himself. Mines of gold and pre tious stones away down in the blue water, ;---only looking up occasionally to growl sur lily and taut ter sonic uucduth anathema upon , the calm. Jack is too lazy to sitig and top. suparsti: tious to whistle—so lie cyils himself away under the windlass or by the-heel of the ,bow sprit, to enjoy his evening pipe, "rturiltiate. upon old sprees, and devise new wars for speniling his money when he gets home.,-- , :f He buys Sally a new frock, to begin with, as gaudy and flaunting as the sunnset, ! he has' just witnessed,;—then, a new boim't, with several- fathoms tif bue . ribbon streaming from it—lie clasps a dozen strings Of glass beads avound net delicate neck.—Delicate?— Why, it is not so tawny as his own' and Jack i5-easily satisfied. llaying dresSed tip Sally to his heart's,:colitent, he next proCeeds to array his own beautiful person. A riei,y sin nit hat of dazzling whiteness, with a black . , e ribbon arountl it, the. ends fiangin.,,i4 charm ingly over his left ar, is-phfccdijauntilv On the side of his headt-,---a pant of white cluck trowsers.- senmshalencd by his skillful fingers with figures of hearts! . arrows,and herring-bone stiches..a world oo wide at the bottom, hut fittilig closely at he top, lie.•next puts on;-- , a shirt of-blue flannel en- • closes his chest, the collar layingbrciad upon his shoulders. Thus - eqbipPed fie lights his ciimr, offers Sally, his crook, and starts for the, theatre. This is the acme ot - Jafl's piness, so he lays and dreams away]—happy fellow.. The steward is the only ,personage about the decks who appears to be busy: Ire 'is ,bustling about with his dishes and his table clath-now talking hastily to the cook, and, anon 'diving down, into-the cabin to arrange matters there. .The steward in Jack's esti matioa, is a much . better man than . ,the captain—and it is really amusing to see thc politeness with which heactosts;hirn and of fers to 'draw water for him. But mind you; Jack knows what he is aboat- 7 he his an! eve to the manatohns—stray bits of cake or pie from the pantry'.-0, whose sec's{'. Of' s'Siff: ling is imicker than Jack's?‘—and whotut Jack knows how to cheat the ‘.9ld Man?" But ske ! a breeze is coming ! The mato has discovered it afar off on the rippling wa-, ter.—lond and joiously.he calls ! Up, Jack ! hoist tonSalls arid away. He is not lazy now —O, no; be is. "hcmldcoril found! " How his bray 4 heart leaps' as he, cries out those thrilling words. Sheet hcime to' gallant-sails! —the breeze freshens. Now view, the ibel lying pile cf canvass that. an hot:lr ago hung in festoorts from the creaking yar s. How . Iwell each sail doeS it's duty,—an what a. host of them there is! Look- at th frothing waves as the mighty ship dashes t em from' , her.bows. The ocean, birds, as s e cotnes gallantly,bearing down upon their whve rocked slumbers, start with a iy,iid' affright ed screaM. Soaring in circling sweeps around her' tall,bending spars, and then dart away into the- hick darkness, far to leeward. The 1,0 porpoise:, roused to an ecstacti-of delight by the wtily coMminion, , - leaps from his repose up into - the bright Moonlight, or shots aloft; the water's surface, marking his cotirse With a trail of tire. ' „ I !Mtn YET found pride in a nobl i r na; - ttfre..n:or humility in an unworthy , mind.— Of all; the trees, 1 observe that God bath . chosen the vine—a low plant, that creeps up the helpful wall; of all beasts, the so,fl auttpa-: tient lamb ; of all fowls, the mild add guile.' less dove. When God appeared toUases, it was not in the lOfty cedar, nor ihe sturdy _ oak, hor the sprE;ading abueh.—• A's ir he wo:ild, by these elections,'Chec. the conceited arrogance of man. Nothing pre cureth'love,like humility ; nothing hnt pride..—tFehhariz's Resarti: Ei.i3rfi.t.•--Tarents lutist give good exam ple and rexerent deportment in the face of their children. And all those instances of chaiity whfctr ustrally . endear 6ch other— sweetness of conversatihn,affability, frequent s admOnitiori—all si;aifications of lovevind tenderness, care and ivchfulness, must be expressed toward Children ; ,thSt . ,. they May. Took upon' their par'ents as their friends ;land. patrons,' their defence and sanctuary, iheir treastiie and theik guide.—[Bishop• _ • _ . , HANDSOME IS THAT lIANDSOME X' cultivated mind and Food heart will givo anintellccitlal'and_Hen beautiful expression to the face. The feautuie may, be irregular, and the colnpleiion bad, but if the, heart is gentle, and the tnind well storedoli Woman_ will be handsome; We have known Wcithen; who at first sight were, positiveiy_ Homely,: yet' who became very hOdsome. -- ;eveu fasei nating,upon farther dequaintanne. 'NEAULT ALL THE letters flotti.Batt,Fratt. eine, speak of the fearful prograta:a.gam bling at that placv.- !1 MS. Sr. STENVAIII) ill
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers