-fljt Viutrri' ourital POTTSVILLE, PA _.SATURDAY , FEBRUARY 5, 1553 DPSINESS DEPARTMENT. • rr JAMES GILLINGHAM adeerti'w 4 proper-. -.... ty for safe in Mahantuvs street. • - • rjr EDWARD F. GAY, Cbief-Engineer, adrer ttses fora lot of Rail Road calls. ' . . rir THE POTOMAC, Copper Company; New York, advertises for Mawr!. nr JOEL KlsllElt, Adnuniqrator, offers the p e , otza t property of Jacob Bap?, arreawd, of Uni on Towashrp, tor sale. THE COUNTY Commissi.mers urge - the T a s-C.llectons to pay up—the Counts- Treasury is • empty., rirSH EKIFF NAGLE'adrertises several ird- I. dd.tonal Saks*, .. , . rl , " COL. J. I'.. HOBART will rit.tribete the fund* swinge from the vale of John If. Rath's pro the 24th Inst. , MACE WENTWORTH, Boston, wants nits: IRR'S PANTYGENIC LINIMENT is lin another column. A friend in Ph'ila mes usthat it is really araluable article lIILADELZIIIA ADYZETISC.IIENTS. ATERMAN& OSBOURN: N. E.,,Cot :end and Arch lamas, advertoie Groceries ie. GEOIIGE LIPPINCOTT tc CO., Na r; North Water • Street, otter Groceries, Arc , for rule. lee FRANCIS BACON it CO., have fitted up a Steam Derrick, at Spruce Street Wharf,'Sehuyl kill, for the unloading of Boats and Shipping Coal means of this Derrick the Boats can be di:char ged in about one-fourth of the usual tune.. It is -aid io he the most perfect tuachinPry of the hind in use. Three derricks are worked at ouce—the Coal i• tarried up and dis Charged in a car on a rail track—(there being three tracks of rail read, so that thte ears do not interfere)—as coon as loaded it +• ration a pair of Weighed, andtheuduchar• teed into vessel•, or elevated whines, either for shipping or 'retailing. All the nun-halo y iv worked by Steam'. See iiderteicruent. FRENCH a: co , Crown and CalloWhill Streets, advertise Plaster and Guano. rir THOMAS WHITE, 4'; South Ssn,ind advertises all kinds of Bonnets-tor the ladies Ca"' A McCAI'LLEY, No. SAilbi 4th = -. 4 and 141 Lombard Street , adrettroe•n all Lind. Tiiink , for ,ale IWHICAN SELLEIZ:-, 1 I': N Street, advert I, Fruit and:Conic-11104131W for ®' THE LltiJ OF Premiums (Meted To -th.• Boatmen running on air ..retm44ll:4ll Canal 444 here Leer awarded by thy, Company Th.• swar,l will be found- iu our Company dep.areJ of the dal - amity. •whreh erred last Nea44 , on, Very prudeutiv,•we TOE COUNTY OF PEN-N. *fiend handed us the Elll for the new Codaly of Penn, as repotted in the Legisl4- lure. Our.linuts will nut peimit us to_puti lish tt this week.. The:territiiry ernbra,ed the•new County is as follows: AV ACT ere c ti ng port of Srhuyll;ll to uhr v rnto a A r ep2rate county, to IT rallej Pell .SECTION 1. Be" ' It castled by the :•. , eD a te and Hou'e of Representative! at the Conamuntreialth of l'ennaytrania 'in General Arsembly met and it oi hereby enacted by the authority of the same ••All that portion of territory included in the towtoihip tit Pinegrove, henna too th of the Second rnoUtitcnn . and the towatthip. ut .I`South±ftudieitn, North Manhenn, texcludina, Mount Ea.! 4.NtineWlck, 'We'd Uruitawitti, We•it 'Venn, and the 'fiorougicol Pinegrore. the Borough of Sehily!kill , _Maven . , and the Borough of Orwigabitrg, and that i part o f Blythe and Schuplktll townshlrei lying comb of the Sharp mountain, !hall be and the ...me . hen-by declared to be•rreeted into a .te:parair cowl ty, ter be called Penn..' The law is to take effect on the first day of September, and Officer; to be elected al the following election. TM; County of Penn is to bear its proportionate share of the. ex penseiot erecting the New County Prison thiAlins House iS to remain the properly of of' both counties, and the Directors of the Poor are to be elected jointly by the two counties, and each County is to bear its pro portionate expense of the number of paupers furnished by each. These are the general dentures of the Bill of any importance. We learn from•flarrisburg that .there is a -strong probability Char the Bill will pass— there is so much-log-rolling in the Legisla ture, nod so many persons have tied them selves up by pledges given and promises_ made during thelast - election, that but little opposition has manilisted itself:so far. Ma ny of those-who were ac r tive against it last year appear to be quite lukewarm this season, particularly the politicians. A friend in the :rower end of the County informs us that the remark we made last week, that a majority, of the people in the lower end of the County were opposed to`the nerd County s i of Penn," incorrect. We ore nut dispused to iris-represent the people in the lower end of the County- 7 and therefort node& his reply. Our infoigiatton was idert led from the lower end, and therefore it is a question between themselves': .• Since the abOve was:in type,. we have re ceived the prueeedings of a Meeting held act Pmegruve, remonstrating against tlie_:new county of Penn, and particularly againr-iti • eluding Said Boron* in the new comity. They will be found tit another column. GENERAL MINING LAN% The remarks we made last_week n...ith re gard to the proposed General Mining Law, meets the appro bation of our citizens gener ally, and :al ---- C,l the Operators. as far as we can t-arn. • Several have called upon us and urge determined and united opposition to the ['leisure, as tar as Schttylkill county is concerned. INDIVIDUALS AND COR PORATIONS CANNOT EXIST TOGETI l- ER IN .Tll-£. SAME BUSINESS. They never have exiited together in the same com munity fur any length of time, and never will —they must all he corporations or all Judi: . viduals.• This has been demonstrated Schur hill &nutty, where fur the last twenty years individuals have been contending against corporations—arid now since they have been driven out, let 'them remain out._ The individual Operators filVe•lny'ested up wards of Two Million Dollars in fixtures, _deg., it the Collieries in this rounty=they can - and will .mine all the'Coal required from this Region. ••Many driheir establishments are - .otr.a more extended scale, mine more Coal.-and would put to the blush two-thirds of the • Coal • curporationv elsewhere.' Let corporators, stock-jobbers and speculators, these banes and curses td a regular Lusiiiess, flourish elsewhere if the people desire !hem —we want none cif them—all we des i re.. is to he let alone. There ought 16 be al least .one beacon light, one monument reived to show how far superior Individual Enterprise Is in the development aqd ..prosperity of regions where petty corporation!, generally governed by petty tyrants, du not exist: Q:7" MR. W. P. Curi.TER. de:rreis u% to state that the publication of the State Tem perance Paper-, "The Clarvstal,TOuntain," has her% delayed in conserfuence of a disap pointment in receiving the. type. It will ap pear about the Ithh of MIS timnth: The paper will,be issued at Harrisburg on air following terms : ° • - • The " COll - 15TAL FOCNTAIN" will be pub irshed (eumiliencing on the tstil of February. 1553,1 'ln 'a stitet of floe white' Imperial paper. with handsome Type, at the follow tag rate,: I ropy, e 1,00 20 Copies, $17,00 10 Copies, • 9,00 30 Copies, 24,00 15 Copies,' _ 13,00 - 50 Coptt4t, ' 40,00 Payments to be made 'immeiliatele alter the reception of the first r.umbet. Address, ost•Nid, . . \VM, P. COULTER, Editor " Chrystal Fountam," ilarrishing. ' Penna.. The ( Jet4y and Input's of Temperance at liatrtsburg, xr , tommetal the Paper. to the •uppurl of the 44:46 of Temperance thru% out the State. r" b rinEAT PETIT], 4—The pelitiun pre seated to fire Le,gislittrt.,4 New Jersey. in bear of the Maine Law, was _fourteen hun dred fed . long, and contained 7,0 ,0uf) .segus• RUM 7" : AAT E aeknowledg,e the rece'iptut 'MT Ikrunients, horn ..!tessrs. Tiatit; HeDdrielis,yamnier and Horn, 61 our State Legitlattire.- (U." WE tint! oui Paper is Garay 6rge enough yet—a number of ankles have teen id rowded our: staut_o,utstion, THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS, There appears to be a simultaneous effort waiting throughout the country against the Public Schools by'the Roman Gatholic clergy. Bishop O'Coartom, of Pittsburg, has allies- sed several letters io'rwvemor Bictert. in which be declares that the Public &fit-$( 4 System'of thii State dois not meet the-ap probation of the Catholics—and we learn that in the State of Michigan the contest for and against site Public Schools is exceeding ly W3lll:6—the Catholic BishOp of the State, it is staled, is at, the star of Government, and Priests are found in the lubbiei of the Legislature, urging 'Mew favorite measures in opposition to the Schools. Con this subject. the Pittsburg Gacerte holds the following truthful language: " Bishop O'Connor urges conscience as a plea. The Catholic cannot cooscientiously seed his child to a school in which his reli gion is not taught"; and a change is demant dedAis necessary ;to meet the conscientious scruples of the Catholic population. In this a fair plea, coinifig from such a source? Let us see. In all Catholic countries in which the Catholic religion is taught in the public schools, is there any provision made fu a separate education of Protestants ? Can a Protestant plead his conscrince for any privi lege in Catholic countries? • In Rome,. and iu most of the Catholic countries of Europe. a Protestant cannot worship God according to the dictates of his conscience, much less have his children educated as Protestants, at the public expense; and at this very moment, the Msdiais are 'sutfrring a cruel imprison ment for having conscientiously had a Bible in their possession, Those who do not regard the claims of conscience in others, urge their own claims on The same ticore with an .ill- grace. Protestants recognize Cully the right of Ca tholics to wurship ; God according to the ilic• tates of their own conscii , oces. - But they do this upon the ground that Religion is an in dividual affair, over which society should have nu control. - Catholics may .teach their children, at - home. whatever religion they 'choose; and .o mav•Protestauts hut let tlie idea once he •reciignizeil that society is to teach religion as a part of its systeth of edu cation, and the whole basis of a national re ligion, and a union of Chute!) and State, a , yielded. A gani.t- 211031[1g which can lead to mtch rif.:1111 tee set a lace of flint. The pevide of this equntry cannuttou scion or too firmly array themselves against this new and insidious effort to change our glo rious systetti of free schools tutu bur. eries of sectarianism and Catholicism." We also appeud'a reply to Pii,hup O'CoN. Noft't letters by thenry. Dr. JAeo,EIT'S, Or the We..iern Theylogical Setniaarv . , which we tind in the Pittsburg Gazette: • PlTTskirP..., Jan. ihshap Pit! tierp . a,. You.liave taken o.f'ca'stuu, -from a passing reference to y ourself, in a late article, to de liver to this Commonwealth a protest against - uUr Arneru'ain system ut popular education. Yuu will allow Inc to rein and )uU ul a pub lic call upon you, touch more gravely and directly affecting your,ell, which you have left unansfwered since brit March, even tho' ou stolid commuted, througli'you r organ In this City, tu,giye it'untice. The public had good reason to calculate that at leaSt you would not seek - to interfere with our popular Institutions, without first making u incoute.s tibly clear that yuu are not under oath of al legiance-to "the Pope, as a temporal sovereign. Since that time you have vat fa secret cowl cti of the Burnish Bishops at Baltimore, and have made a etsit . tu the Pope himself, to await his sanction, as we suppose, to those undivulged proceedings. Your profound si lence in regard to a charge which it so be hooved you to deny, it you could, inust br taken as a tacit eunces-ton of its truth. "Truth, hkr it torch, the mote • it,ok, 11.11 lite• •' - The hearing which this fact, of a fureigit allegiance. has upon the point.now at Issue, is neither'trivial nor Th.,. dues, i 0;. ueed, i , xplain to us your great a versiou to that - system ut public education which wu find here eatablished. We upeu to tour .7,111)(1 Children of this vicinity the COnillion sehoul, and you demand an uncommon one. You claim always some special legislation in, your favor, though you choose to talk of it as on; ly •• (you? rt . ;, , ht," are nut satisfied with this public provision, and choose to set up parochial schools, fur, a inure religmui educati o n, we are compelled to sustain theni without aid trOto the State. You very well know that no sectariau i,•11,:iol is switalued by the State, as such. Wlq should you claim ap exemption fur Humanists ag,ainst the spit . . It of our free list ? We complain of this—that you persist in a Jewish sepatatisnt —out allowing your people to send their children where they should mingle with out American children, and rect:tire the training that belongs to our American You prefer them to live•in Ignorance, and roam about the streets uneducated, rather than that they amalgamate with the rising generation of our own land. And this is all in keeping with that spirit of Jewish exclu ! siernt-ss,w Inch arrogate> to your owncliurch, thai it is the true and only church ill and to your - Roman Catholic people that soil are the chosen set-d -and that this laud of promise is of right yours. And su you are, in-effect. traming your children to look with suspicion and hatred upon our system of ucation—to become opposers of OUT laws, re. Geis against tie State, nod enennes ul our.iu -Isntitnuus. - If it be asked what training you promise to repay 'tor the State funds which you .I.le. wand? It is plainly a Roman Catholic trains tog—which recognizes the Pope, as eel divine right. the true and ouly suvereoso and head of the StateEwhich regards Protestant govt erninents as unauthorized, and Protestant laws as invaltd-wfiedi regards the Ride, whether to the school or to the family. as a pestiferous book, fit only to be burned, and Protestaniisinies a heresy, lit only to be ex• tirpated With the sword. And you ask to be sustained by thr State in such a system ie education. your system puts all the loads in the hands of the llishop;and demaudS that he and all .his clergy. be esenipt from civil jurisdiction. If you'deuy that you make such claims in this country, we adduce the boas. tetfzunery of your church, and show that this is what it claims wherever. q dares. Before such concessions are made ID these United Slates, it may be demanded that you show the very terms of the oath which every Rit. MIMI Bishop has sworn to the Pope. IVe very well understand thelight in which you view the system of popular education, as bearing upon the progress, of fbur own political religion in this land. Wesee daily, the effort which Jesuitism is making in Con• inental Europe to seize the portfolio of pule t instruction, suns to have all educational 'establishMents under Papal control. And we know very -well that this is what you atin at in our land. We cannot give up our free principles to promote sectarian legislation. least of 'all for such as are in league with a fureig,n political power, aad - which avowedly aim at our subjection to a rureign State. We are willing and anxious that Reemanists here may understand the true genius of free in stitutions, and may enjoy equal rights with all our citizens; but never . that they be re. cognized as - Romanists by the S:ate, and sus tained as such .by special grants, for their Po- littea9, religion. • It is plain to be understood what 'you re quire. 'Yodr letter is explicit to this isnot, that nothing will suffice you but a system of llointsh education. 'You expreqy' declare that all our educational institutions are equal ly an offeme to you; all in tine same sense sectarian,- as being MI t Roman ; all in the same 'crhegUry, and odious in Your eyes.-- - Dow then can we suit you ? By paying you a'tonta for tits denunciation of our free in- stitutions, and by patronizing tilts foreign Papal pulicv in our tnidsts? You plead Your Cinucieniel Would the couscieoce of any American`be respected a moment, if yi u had the . -- ower to control our legislation A'k In Naples, in Tuscany, in Rome Con science! The plea comes with ill-glace from those who trample upon conscience all over the world, where it squares nut with. their _pleasure: What is ih4 conscience of the l‘la diatand Guicciarthni to the Grand Puke, or to the Pope, or to yourself ? But only 'the conseteciee of the .Grand Duke is sacred and to be respected in such case,--that good sou of the Church, and next neighbor and near friend and ally of its Holiness. Will you allow your plea to be used on their behalf, and show. at Rome and Florence how base it is to , force Men to suljgctioo in religious things? Come and 'plead for the consctence .a man and wife separated, and doomed to the gloomy prisons of Tuscany, under the very eye of the Pope, fur their religious fault. gut it is undeniable that the grand aver siodol your church to our system of popu lar education is, let, That your religion op poses the diffuSion of knowledge among the masses.' This is capable 01 roust conclusive proof from official documents abroad; but we quote from your organ at home. " The Shepherd of the Valley," in a late article on popular education, holds thefullowing lan guage : —" This teaching erery one to read is hearing its fruit in our own days, here and ebewhere and a yen; unirlioh•sorne fruit it arti -pears to be." You spelcgitardedly on ,thi's point, as we might expect. You bay is not Isom a fear of real information - of'any kmd.that we apprehend this dander. Glad ly would we see trot Inowledge diffused." This we understand—the by " teal WO mation," sod s' ague knowledge," you mein RomausCatlic,lic intormatino, and so maim!. ate that GUM ratl sheik for your youth the knowledge that is here placid with in their MI6; you would Nita the high pri vilege for them ats even. the Jew is doing un der the Protestant Missionaries at the east. Bot another &tort of your aversion u se:' eondly, that your system oppcsesfree educa.; (ion. This tattle high band which Popery is . showing among the imbecile and craven governments of the European Continent—to claim the right of teaching and the control of all ederauonal institutions. Here on our borders, as you know, .the governmeht of New Grenada lately adopted a Constitution providing'for itself a system of popular edu cation, and Pope Pius IX. in his "elk:cotton" from the Sacred College, denounces the laws as utterly null and void. Here is the very express language in which hebegins the on slaught:—" Nor must we pass over in ai knee that by - the new Constitution of that Re public, among other things the right also of free education a defended." The document is worthy only of the middleages. Your system essentially denies us the right to educate our own children, no less than tours—and free education, independent of Rome, is its especial abhorrence. This po sition you have not yet thought it prudent to like among us; but New Grenada is near at band. Witness also in Sardinia the fa mous Siccudi laws provide, among other things, " the right of all classes to that ben efit of the schools and universities without regard to sect or party." AM this brings &mu -upoo that government sod people, the hottest culminations of the Vatican. But the head and from of offenduse in our Publi.: School System is the use of the Bible. Even in the smallest measure, it is too much I for your interests. It dangers your religion even with the noisy urchins who never hear the chapter read. The shadow of it is a spec tre:uf evil to your eyes. The same deadly batred'of this sacred book which shows it self in Rome, at this day, hunting even the Old Testament train the poor Jews of the Ghetto—the genie spirit which in'Florence, against the united outcry of the Protestant word, dooms husband and wife apart to glow ing cells, for reading the simple gospel—"i/ pure evongelso"—that foul spirit which at the Pope's demand has lately repealed the tolerant laws of the first Leopold in Tona -1 ny, and made heresy punishable with death, and which now arrests a man fui reading the 15t5 chapter o:' the Gospel by John, " I am the true vine," ace., the very same spirit is here, shunning and denouncing our most pre cious popular education, because it includes any opening of the Word of God! YOu con strue this in Tuscany into an offence against the State ! And howl The Bible is against the Romish church. Whatever is against the. Romish church, is against the Somish State—fur they are one! And by the same reasoning, you do, before the world. admit all. our allegation—that whatever, here, is fur the Runtish church is fur the Romish State!—and so is against the American State. Then ask no legislation fur Romanism. Hear the Freeman's Journal on the Public Schools, and you would think he was.speali jog of the foulest brothels oh New York :— "IVbatever, Roman Catholics, mustdo,nuly, is to get our own children out of this &Tout ing fire. At any cost, at any sacrifice, we must deliver the children over whom we have control, from those pits of destruction which, lie invitingly in their way under the name of public or district schools," Se. Let u. rather see this zeal expended in keeping the clitldtria out of real dens of iniquity.— &!enes of violence have occurred, as we learn, in some of the Public Schoolsol Pitts burg, which foreshadow the results of all this bitternew, it the power were in such Bands. Let me say again, that, though Romanism shows itself all round us, in such persecu ting acts against the rights of conscience, though it denies American freedom of wor ship wherever it rules, yet we throw our arms open to as many Romanist& as will come to us, and we cheerfully accord to them the religious liberty which they deny to our selves. But this is net enough. Our free institutions are detiouneed because they are tree. And you demand fur Romanists, as a sect,'What we grant to no sect In the land— special recognition and legislation. We have no laws against Rotmmism. We male' no dillerences nt „favor of ourselves. We note your discourse on the sacredness of a man's religion—the rights at conscience —the shame of being forced to act against it, even in receiving favors, and the sense of justice JO our land. Will you join in the pe titions that are now pouring Into our Ame rican Congress on the measure now before them, viz: to sECURE BY TREATY TO OUT Ci /ens, the rights of religious worship in Pa pal lands? your name as the Roman Ca tholic Bishop of Pittsburg would have great weight, I am sure, with Papal governments, and especially with the Pope. The moment Is opportune. Aud be assured, my dear sir, I have no motive in Miscommunication oth- er than the interest of trath_and freedom, and the honor of our Lord.. We ask you to join with us in making such an appeal where it belongs—on behalf of the poor, imprison ed, and doomed subjects of Runtish' govern ments abroad, and especially of that faithful sun of the church, who declareslhati he will eThrpate heresy from his doriunions, though he may gain the name of being the bloodiest tyrant in history. We know his relations to the Pope. And again, for the satisfaction of this community, we ask-.-Have you nut sworn a like fidelity to the Pope, and are you not under oath of allegiance to him as a tem poral ruler? Yours truly, M. W. JA c'.OIIII.JS. THE COAL TRADE FOR 1853 ansteavmstaleifiEl Ttte quautlly rent by Roll Road Oila week' is 17,-. 0:4, U 1 i o ns, varying 1411 little from the .apply sent 11.4 week. We hut.- no new feature to notice tit the truck Week. AmMar the •liipments Irom fort Richmond du ring the week, was • cargo of A uthrselTe Coal, tined for the or distant land of Gold—Australia It was steppe,' by Charles Miller Ar Co This, we believe, is the first cargo of our Anthracite shipped for that country. • The shipments front Port Richaioud are quite small The following is the quantity despatched for the hot three Weeks. REPORT OF SHIPMENTS From H.tehmood,lor three weelo,entling ort.,9otur, Ism 29, 11153: Sh Bk i n g Se Bt Dent matron. Ton. . 3 Button& vol. 47.12 1 Conn. & It I :1041 9 • N 111 , . North River ilSoutitern Pls. 43'24, I 1 11' BE *26 4 2U For the week, 0614 ".ressela for t.etoott, :114 For armor], fir,,S;t2 . Boman and vtrinity Include% everything gong Ea-rof Cap, Cod, to Mai , arhu,etta, New Hemp. %lure and Maine. Southern Ports includes ererything to the South• ern litotes and Wiest Indira, a. well as to all towns on Delaware River below COAL TRADE BY RAILROAD FOR 1853. Sent by Railroad for the week ending on Thum dtty Erining QM Port Carbon, P ousville, Haven, Port Clinton, i,at,o 0 605 07 10,557 00 0,188 111 713,040 15 :1,814 01 31,1422 0.41 17,029 03 175,935 03 o same period last year, 165,48.1 00 ,Increagemi fur RAIL ROADS The following t+ the quantity of Coal transported over the different Railroad. in Schuylkill County. tot :the week euding Thursday evening : WEE,. Toeat.. Molehill Sr S. H. It. R 7,217 04 26,902 IS Little Schuylkill R. R. 3,959 07 21,483 19 Mill Creek do 5,723.12 18,311 01 Mount Carbon do 795 19- 3,293 09 Schuylkill Valley do 1.117 07_ 4,489 13 Mt. Carbini Sr P . l Carbon ti,006 17 18.767 14 SUERITT'S SALES of REAL ESTATZ BY virtins of several writs of Fttlai Pam's, Lx- vain FaCtila and Yerrnrriont EiTkOrAl, issued ont of the Conrt of Common Pleas of Schuylkill County, and to me directed. there will be expose,' to Public Sale or Vendor., on SATURDAY, March rub, I STI, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, at the Pub , lie Marie of John C. Lemur, (EXchartge Hotel,) in ftie, borough of Poittvilte, Schuylkill County, the tollowtng destribed praperty, to wit : All that certain two ?dory frame dwellinhonse, situate in the town of Friederishum,in S chuylkill is,._— County, on the State road , s konlaining in 1 iiirs front on said State road, 24 y k eet, and In Jlij: depth 24 feet,. and the lot r piece of 1 ground and curtilage appurtenant toreidbuthlieg— us the estate of AUCrUSTIIS HEINTZ I . 1 • ALSO, all that certain lot of ground in. Wilson .S: Letau`suiddition to the borough of Tamaqua, in the county of SetinVlkill, situate on the 'east side of pine street, marked on the plan of sai additi on ,ji- to the borough of Tamaqua, as t No. 40. 1 si ti• - ier• froeting 20 feet on raid Pme rest, and 14 . 7 1 'extending back; or eastvra ~ of that width, 150 feet to Water tu deorth I,y tot tio. 47, east by W s reel, soeth by lot No. 45, and west by • street, with the improve ment t ' ing of a two story frame dwelling house, with frame kitchen attached — as the pro perty of CA ED FISHER. 7 ALSO, a I that certain lot or piece of ground,- situate in the borough* Pottsville, Schuylkill f1 .,_.. 1 cotmtv, bounded to front by Market street, ss s on the west b'y an alley, on the north by „, LL" lot of George li. Potts, and on the east by lot of John Doebly, containing in front on said Market street 80 fret, and in depth 200 feet, with the appurtenances, consisting of a two story frame • tion.e; and kitchen attached, and a frame stable—as the property of SAMUEL Al. MILLS: Seised, taken la Execution, and will be sold by , JAMES NAGLE, Sheriff' Sheriff's Mice, Polltiville, / Feb. 5, 1855. QV P11:11.1011. FIRE 13ItICK.—Caastantiv on bil hand and fur sale, tha follow lba deacrlptlon of Firs Druke: Ofdlaary Rhape, Large wady., Small tudgClaaP !pill, Bull bead, Arch nod /am, tafethalt Mall , any tranrdiaary Mu Anointing at abort oallee. - E. TAREILEi & lON March I. 1814. /lir . . , ~• „ . . . , . . . , - • - - • , sinew. m: fabscribcia line tbli'day issoclited milli thezu BTUS= S . Tatcs. mini will caw %it co l d TBaelnesa. a oder the Luna Ann as bemoan,./ W. FRANCIS BACON 6 CO. tailaaot • '• • N - . - W. Cornet of Welsh and Troalark., • , la, Fell T. tr..i. . ati • AtZIIZO LAWTON la oar Arent in Schuylkill County. (or the ftwitlOW and lalprieT ofdr Cool.— °like, Yardley'. Building. !lords' Addition, Toostian. • • es ... FRANCIS 13ACON. • WALTER LAWTON. ' STEM= S. PRICE. FFEANCIS EACON at Co.. having made extensive amonct•ments for belny, supplied with White r Red. and Grew ash Coal from the brat mines b. Schuylkill Cub,and basing peculiar adka alike* for shipping Coal to the N.:Fmk and Eastern consketa, respectfully .rol ic It a shore of the patronage of Mt er,. whether for fictoty, etes t eammi o r apply use. Orme, N. w: rotor rof Walnut and Front streets. Wharf. Spree meet Schuylkill. Philadelphia, February 1. 1E57. - :TS. NEW ADVERTI' NAVIGATION CO., AWARD OF FREMIFAM. T" prentioms offered to tinatme fur ilt4 i iatth, in the year 1851, have been an arded as fothigra, and will he paid to the captains of the reepect Icc boats at office of the Company. on the fifth inst. unless sails. factory •slJenve !shalt be presented to Ole 'President Of the Company lierore,that Jay to warrant a Neon. glaciation of said awards : Schuldiall Haven and Porit ear( io Nezo Yuri First prem i um of two hundred dullara, to the boar Ellwood Morn... Cap' Ahlrldr,e, tor 22 trip a; and a tonnage of .3352 1.5-20tha ten.. Strand premium, of one hundred and fi fty dollars. to awe boat IlailrunSJark,k.apt. Mullen. fur Id tripe, and a tonnage of 2612 it. 200. tuna. Third premium. of one hundred dol!ats, to the boat Shaattock. Capt. Gray. rot It trips, sad a tonnage of 1371 13-211t6a ton.. Fourth premium, o(seaeaty-Gre dui lam, to the boat T C. 7,alick.Capt. Saylor, tor I I trips, auJ a tonnage of '4:4 3-2taha lons. Fifth premium. of flay dollars, to the boat !faunal', Capt. Cook, fur 14 trips, aml a tonnage of 1.119 19 Saito torts. , Sixth premium. of twenty-litre dellrn , to the !mat Knuth Sillyman, Capt. Lune, fur 14 tripe, and a con nate of 2215: rit-20th. tom In consideration of 2.3 Dina and a tonnage of 35.51 10-2ttbs tone, carried by the boat Thontaa Cornelly. Capt.Cornelly. a donation ur honorarium of one hun dred and seventy-fire dollar-tot awarded - to Imo.— llad he run In accordance with the regulation", and made the utne number of trio mid carried the tante tonnage, he would bare been entitled to the Cost pre mium. to ronsideratii oof the making Oise trips to New York, and twelve trips to ritstea Island. with a ton- Avg. of 2189 940ths,a Jonathan $4 honorartom of nr ty dollars to awarded to the twat linen Gornun, Ca pt. Gorman. Srhetyllillllarreeand Part , a loof t o Phita,ro First wan= of ono hundred and fifty dollari the boat George nee, Ilurlie,s, for tlurly ■ine trips• end a tnnnage of {o:slo•Wthr. Seven of the nips were 'to Unbyy, one in Marcus-1100k. and the ibasainder to thila elplna. Second premium of One hundred dollars, In the Foil Col. C. Iturittinger, Captain *Priceslager, Cot tidily all trips, and a ',snow of 3745 07-2Ottis Third prertinito of entreaty-five dollars to the le,. Swallow. Captain Byerly, for i.venty one trips and a tontine of 2012 10-20111. Jona. Fourth premium of fiat dollars to the boat llama robot Pnrt Carbon. Captain By rose, for twenty trips, and a tonnage of 2151 !f-20ths tons, Fifth premium of twenty-rive dullsnr to scow boa! No, 544, tapiaill 51rDerioini, for n itotieen trip+, and a !nonage of 2993 17 Wthr tons. Port Clintan to Nry PoIL - Firat porminna of one hundrrd and fifty ,li.liat• to Inn boat Lyon . * RUhell,Captalv Men'get. rot and a tonnage of ta3l 12-alth. decond prrmium of one hundred dollars lotto.. boat John 13ohirn, Valor Campbell, for 17 trope, am' to or, ant rot 41141 thus. Third perotiono of reventy-fise dollars to the hoar Mary Henry. Captain Henry, 12 'No., and a tonnac of 1967 tons. Found premium or nay don., lo the bwil loon Horn, Captain Daley. for I 1 tripx, with n tonnage of 1679 15401 ts tuns. Post Chnion to Ptiadetpki flit pretninor of 4 , &MINI to the bat Welcome loin.. toga Sho.on , for '26 trips, ri" nd a till, 1311 of '1133 Inns. rtenamt prenttont of seventy five dollars In the boil emnbarloon, Capt Arne, fur . 25 trip!, ttild a twluage ot 'XS% tuna • Thin/ premium artily &hue to the .iehmer Gt prriment. Capt. firwel I, for-20 11 , 11. i, with a ton rilgr or 1997 tope. Py order n( the Slanager. F. rrtAt.Ev. ()Rice H01:1)11611 Company, reit. 5, 155 - .1 1 t. it PLASTER AND GUANO. DCIT grALITV AT I.IIWEr , T PRICE 811 V• from fait handsand Navy extra profile. The Stone MIT best land Placer It 11111,tlellited fi , bl have Selected milli KIC4 I Carr at tine Planter 14 tar llea• 80,. will w.trk this Itnittilla 'lt fat t. al el of our Select Laud Plaster. tate toot, ter tiltri•ot 11..wer than two bushel. t.l ordt o.itl Vtal,t4 t. hnve now Int vale 10.6011 extra qudidy orleCl Land Plast, s,nm - ¢.... 1 .rdshany LOOP bat Cdlclned rlddier, 11H1 Cdninn '• " Delittst 100 tairvvntyrw Thl.aFlirle Wt. Offer In'conilenrn m nu, C111d0171. , •, al equal Co any nnyortr.d, and fir sorrrior m Inn,. in M. market., I,'LOOtag.l of rin..uyrrlor GUatl.). far %al.. 01 the lowest market rat.... Also, r:11.C.,.. Gunn.), drrtle, Ground Ctia rroa I , kr., kr., r PHENCH fs I_ll, At thn Strain Plaster Mills. Junction York Aventt rrush , a,nd Calllw/tun St rrr ts, Phllmirlplll4 NI,. 5, 1t153. 6-3111 TRUNKS' TRUNKS ' ! D McCAITI.LA%•S Slatodartot v. No 16 Mouth 4th 1 - . Street. and No 111 Lombard • 5tt....1, (above sth Hirent,) Phil.t•lelphia. Tllltiii 1.1311 de/14,110,m/ Near, ) TRI,NKT4 r•CIIISO TIViLLIN.., $ AlW3y. On hand. 0 Pdatertal and l%orkmansbip . arralted. Feb. S. 1653 • 6-3 m, STRAW GOODS---SPRING 1953. 1•1 IE Subscriber is itr..nstred to sr hibit 10 Mer chants and Millinfts lop usual bratty it.ick of La dle.' and Misses' Straw and Silk Itonnuts, Siraw Trimmings. and Artificial Fl.wrers; Palm•lraf. ti ns ma and .very variety of SUMMER lIATS for anti.• Men ; %shirk (ur-E:trnt • Varirly and Bra.uty of 10.111 tit:Actor.% as writ a, unit - mud, clow• Nice... will round ti 101,111 ed TllOSlttlnl WHITE. ..Sll. 41 suoth nrrnnJ St., Philadelphia F 146.4. 155 h. PROCLAMATION. i gg il E P A , r B s:len he t of the Court. of Common Pica. of the County of rlebuyikill.MPenn•ylvanwin.l Jos rice of the pryers! tnutts or Quarter Sess,nlia Of the Peace, Oyer and Terminer sod General (blot ['mise ry, in said Con sty, the HMI So 1..10N F.TEIII and Fai•nuta el. NIAMEY, Judges.of . the of Quarter Sessions of the Peace, Oyer and Trrailln,. hod tie, mai llotol Del leer), b.( the trial of all capital 11111 t•I tt Cr offeticra in the cold Coo my of Schuylkill, by their pterepta to are directeddrave orderSti a Court of sod Terminer and General (i3Ol Delivery. aid Qvar tee Sessions of the Peace, to be !miller/ or Puns, Ille, on MONDAY', the 7th day of MAIICII neat, at 10 o'llnek, A. to Continue two la ecks, If nereasary Notice Is, therefore, hereby given to the Ciarlinor i the J Wier§ of the Peace, and rnnotableg of the .aid County of Schuylkill. that they ore, by rite said ore eerit•, commanded to be then and Ih..r«. at 10 in the forenoon of the Bald till their rolls, re cords. Inquisition., et 217111110.1111 and all rittlei re membrances, to do Moue things which in their several Wheel. appertain to be done; and all those Mai are hound by rPeOgIiISAIICeII, to prosecute against the prisoners that are nt thee .hall - be in the gaol of said County of Schuylkill, are to be then and There 1n inn scenic them... Oran he Just. god sure rile tonrsuissers/r.l J ANTS NAGLE, Sheriffs Office, Pottsville, February S.105:1. 0-0 N. 11.—The %Vitnesies and Jumpn who are •onr. - nrunedln attend eafd Court, are required to airend punctually. Inane of :mu-attendance ill.. law In Hitch canes made anu pruvidcd. will be rleldlrenforced.— , Tble mulct. ill published by order of the I:uurt ; rho., ,runcerneS, .111 gravern theru,elve• ay . :m.14141y. ' - LIST 01' LEITTEAS REMAINING In the Pmt nth, at rOtISVIIIR. Prllo sylvani3. February I. 1451 • A n.l.qmon The. Gibbs C M. NatureJ &hi; Ahnght Ch.a• I , Gerhardt M. Nagle Gan Dragon& MathletGlein Wm Nagle! & Win Beta Henry W' Grtto Lewis 2 Nlasnan Hitt le Thomas Greer Carl 2 telh,nahl M Bnller Tho. .array And ceponoriiie Bair F Carr Jacob I, I i'lionnel Derr II Grave James WDrirgeoll Huelt Bark Nscholas Ger.!) Jnbri elespiewens Michael Bitten II .I Gehring Jreßrien Mrs slop Barth MirLae! Hummel V rrelollmin I) do Blacker Joan Ileerniann Geo rratt JUL.'S .1 Bocrlance A Haddley Jos 2 Prier JaMee Bettie Henry Ilnlrmanri Belay Pninen Banele N Ilobbaner Wm Pram John Beck C Miss Norman II W Perk II If 10:1323 57,408 IV Bowen ti Mtn Book II Iteppeller Mr Cawley Wlllram Berner C Miss Rack Thrm. Colmar David hollowly A Repperd J 2 Citriston B napkin,. M shinßay Andy Cory Thomas Ileum Pat do Iteddington P chip Calory James Ilaertner Wm do Rayttaltt W T do Carrot Janh Jona. ll:iney Schwartz Jonah Conklin Thomas !ohne.). Ilenry ichramer Prtrr Clove John Jenn Clio* Snyder Jonas Colman Wm Jones I) dibleyThns Cornball James Jones John 3 Snyder Henry Corley John Jenk 'no J shipriwiet I. & W A 2 Colt, Mr . Raelln Joitoph Stock.lorph J Carl Sarah A Ritamiller & Antony Cambia Bridget Kiefer Lorentz Sibmelizer John Costingen Mr. Remoter Centre &bonne T ton*, 10;151 03 Carron Mains Knnigal Jno ■hipdchnrrrins Coo Corcoran M chiplEens Patrick du 144:MInns Cathbori Wm do Longen Ceo /Non 8 Miss Cartefield C do Leavy Andrew rilepheneor MA' Crean,' Theis do Loyd Samuel Smith M * D n Diehl Philip Laurel E Mrs Finlth Mary rhip Davis J Les Marra tctitmlt 8 do Dolton T Langton Ann Thema, Thos Doyen Thomas Lamy Mary Tolbert limes Drumheller anelLeavy E C shlpThoinsonlatnen Dollen Wm Lynch Patrick doTarr Hannah bass .Deane Patrick Linen,. Sn. driTalgrert E Mine OralsM ahitiMitton Wm Tobin Pat ship DatisThos"do MeriJith M Tell Chan do Defiall al', do Miller Eah To MITMO J do Delany A do Mallory Mariam !mite 21 Eagen William Moore Philip Icaae Elael Frederick Madden William Wright II W Eberli refer ship Mathews Jos Wright N T Eitingham B do Meek A Weber Jolic Egan M 2 do Moloney Mrs Watson J T Fos David Miller it nap Wand James For Peter Miller M E do Weidle M Mire Frire .W Miconeal E do WORM Farah Fleck F McDonald ilf Weinocker D Frank Aetna abipMcEbrottr Wm Walsh James , 'drip Feinstein I. du Niel:tern:olli al WiMarna T do Connno lames Matii,l4 Chao W boa M do Calaway Wm MetTennAit ebloWoran John do Geiger Isaac One cell additional will be charted for all advertis ed inters. Persons applying fur lerter• oo thin lie wit please say advertised. 121XEM 1. 1 1A0a.1.4i.f. 1108 E AND HAND !TAKER. so. 130 N. 13;11 SI. - PHILADELPHIA. mACHINE BELTING. Single, Doable or Hound, made of beet city Leather tanned expreioly for the perpose,stretched by the latest improved paten te4 11 arkinelY. Cemented and Waited in the arty beet Manner. warranted enlist to soy in are. Lase made with water-pa/of Cetera if &tired Large or •Itutll floor of the !mut:material. and work. nutoship snit at low pores. *Orden, any be left atE. RICIIWO Leather Store, No. WI North THIRD Street. Patiadelyhia. Sera , Lecruta. Leonia. Ptcgcs LEMMA. Jas. 13.1853. . - PERUVIAN GZIANO: rTfIR ltnderstsned beg to Inform the Farmers and / Dealers la tab State, that they Mee made ar— rangement with P. BARREDA t SlNT,Asents of the Pere elan Government, for the sithraire Ingtortatlon or PERUVIAN GUANO- tato the Cliy Alf Philadelphia. direb from Chlanka" islands. -Nessrs. BARRE DA & •BRO. will keep constantly on baad a large deperlt of Peruvian Hirano, sufficient to meet all the dentaarls of consumers, winch We will fen at the lowpit prime and In lots to suit purchasers. °LADINO k CHRISTIAN, Role Agents for the salts of Pera.bo Hamra la Polla.. No. 4d N. Wharves, and ir N. Water et, Jan 11,111/ 4-tha 1323 =I ANIMICW MOMTIMEW P. M 6-It - . PITIMILIO Betas r - 4V 1 4 .1. 0 :1",. " , 4 0 1d cil i tItreite 24 : h st a lt i o l 5lb ' di' s:ll:el:rut A zis of Jacob Itapp, deep...go ne t of Union Township. Pelna kill Una ate. and •txpoted to sale a (Qom, :—I " nom., II yoke of eleen.fitlin.gheep,,ifoge, Wagose.Caff Innl't llitygy. Sledges. Grain in the 'Mind by the aerel.llye. Oat., Buckle/teat, Patentee, and apple* by the- tfturb. el; all kind of.Ligebui"bytl.e Gallon. Cider by the Barrel; Cu Fafaillife.. 3 Stone., dedatead and red- Aloe*. 1 /tett of Blatt amino Tools. all kinds of Carpen ter Toole, and I Thiaahing Machine; thltly thousand feet of Lumber; inch and half:lath board', some PS del Boa rd.i.l 4 tbonsand :411Inittee. 4 Gime. and a •a net? of 'loose and gitetten Furniture and Fermin g Took, !au ith&Lltlatilk to mention here. Condition!. will be made known b the ntabeeriber nn Itir days of sales. JOELLIaITLIER. Adorer. Feb, 3.1 , 131. 6-21 4, $2O A DAY!! ROOK' AGENTII WAISTED, sell ilarwitita's ilistrerra nr Tint Ilsrrrito Ar•ers.just published and now r‘-ady rOff411•111- sets. This watt, erct I hvaluatite to. business men. elves t history or the settlement. general unlace or the soil ' and state of agricullit re. manufactures and population of every lowa in the United States, with valitahln statistical tables, new map °gibe United :quiet, Le , Ac An :t rent wanted fur this roomy. Apply lmmedi• stely R, IIOR ACC WCNTSVORTII. tSti Washington Arrest, Boston. Mast. 5,1553. 5-4 t ATTENTION ! 9 , 11 A r zt , lt 7enway. Po We Pantygenic Liniment, 1 which hap for Pn long a 1 IMP enjoyed an enviable reputation, in the 014 Wculd, for th• cure of Rheims lion., Cool. Frosted rear. l'lttlhlalns. Tooth exile. Butting, Apratnx, all local pain., fluid all affection, re• goiring Su external application, whether Inchlettt to man... !t0r..., can now be had ur Inv aohscrlber. Agent for Pon:v.llc. Price rt ceata to:t bottle. mum FIUNT AND CONTIMONARY• I) MUM:AM & SEILLERN, whulealile hranufartu ter* and Deniers in eussfettsonary of kinds, N.. 113 Notth Third at., helot, ilws, The attention of Dealer. is requested to an emstins. 'lon or Melt stock, whirls will he b. at kart equal to any In Iblarily. FuaLiu Fuvra of ail kind in 1161,011. N. 11.—iirilera by mail or othorwire promptly &Hen itril to. Feb. 5, 1e53 PUBLICATIONS. IHE LLLIISTRAVELD MAGAZINE OF ART, bi nirnaldy —Prue t!", rent. rare tiv Env ntr3ntrinont bas brra 11114 e to produce I - JtAv..,o, ut tntilaralleird wagulocrocir m zegatJless of roe. The editor. Mr 1%141E1.1.. h.. published a similar work In England;iifing theinist year, II oder the it ile of •• Illuqtaied Exhibitor and Magazine of Art." the of which his averaged cludh each number. Emooraged by the surges* whit h has attended this enterer Ise, he 0.. resolved ta, pre•ent to Lieu Arrieri ran public a magazine of .1111 higher pretensions— one, indeed. whtrli will prove lb. pictorial wonder of the age Hach ninriber will re n•ho of Amity-eight pages, royal ocraliii, pronto! on the finest paper.— The litimtrat lone will be introned to the tint artists of the world. Nit monthly 'Mils will OOP. a hand some vidilitio. " The work will be sir conducted as to embrace the greaten Variety of matter in li•yarmoisdeparinients. upon each of who Ir the highest lit•eacy , talent yell be ranidnyed. The following is a brief outline of the plan of the Mar:trine:— 1.. The Historical Drisment•nt wilr ebonnil With: picture:one representations of the most remarkable w Inch have occurred in this and other court trim.; accompanied With intrtening anecdotes and details from the pens ol the most eminent, writers of the day, This department %Ave.:ll4,m several splen• tint envacto/s, fle.tglief/ by the find artists of the writ lel. ell I in the highest style of modern art. ll.—The Mr.n and Women of the Age. This pattnient Mr ill row.d of heautifutly elecuted portrait. of the leading llialaCtelli fif the age. especrilly or timer whu tienr. on the stage of Imola airy as the isTirld's benefactor., Each portrait will be aCeOntna nleilly an Interesting biographical aketch. • wonders of Natural lh,ture, Botany. and nthe . C,eleners, will be developed In thaire engrav ther Ikasts, llirds,Fishen, Inserts, Forest Trees, Fine,•rs, fledlo42 teat and-rOSSII nod Iment, ike with rompa °ping dcaceiPtioh , IV —The triumphs of Architectural Art will tie displayed In e armisitely flinched representations of Cathedral., Churches. Palai en, anti other models - of n n.oent an 4 moth-fit Architectural An V. - The "wroks of the (treat Master., selected from the principal Galleries of Art in the world. In gen eral the portrait of the Master will be given, needfu -1 panted with a highly finished, engraved copy of his cArf &lir., V I.—The scientific portion. wilt te renJe4ml high ly raining by 'the lamiliar explanations, and the Winn, mm diagrams...ft hi. h will urn 011g/dist , each Blab. Deft. VII.-- Manufacture, —Thr prinr yal manufacturing fur.eraa•r in ipie wi n L. rutty rtptalncil by minute dcmit., 4nd nit abundance 1/I bea.i lll.—Machinery and Ibventi..ne will hatfrduu ntiun paid to them. and be derCribed by Itiiimerpui .ippropriale engravings. I - ‘Vork-Tahiti Department will contain a rich varie.ty of elegant and original patterns for cations kirolg of useful and ornamental work, with ample directions for copying them. —The Literary department, independently of the salines articles arConipanying the illostrationst, will compile original and interegting narraUves, cornet bnind by the most popular writers of the day, with numermis 111110141th:flit. lit iliklitton to the lOtinerott. and beautiful eugrin. Ines inenrpnrated in the letter pr•s•, each aurutor will emu uu four eplcinhut , urrat lop, and printed In a vegy •uperior Manner upon tuprrtine plate Ott r. every reattert the 113.e.73 tic . ° MAG•ZISS or Ant will be decidedly itUperior 10 any pictorial Ittlag name or the day. Trip nape'''. in. typography, the engraving. the literary artit ier t wdl far surpass its mt,rea.ttlti predere.apr pnLiiahrd tri England, upon It nigh euloglnntv hate b.en pronounced by rile whole public pre... Sit lii the•tottrably portion.. when completed, will Copp a c 111011 1• • which. fur 10- , • t rt t. t. nrtlrtn.t ltl y. rah" . and 1...at0 will defy thin in.tition. It will not only been detecting family honk, La a ornament fur the ttl3wlng-room hie, and 3 ple.t.ant coutpanlon tit It, Study. TErtms Latta year; ft) Club. of Ihr, or more g 2 If pail itratlvinee far Melee rrt,ttiths. It t, iii ha sent pollage free to ar.y pa WO the rizi.,n. Agents wanted In every town Own:hoot tne Itnl te.l ttlate•, Any person receiving the firer n.oriber.and canvas. sing with the tiante, will be retrain of securing a m large nun of enlist Ober.. \... Just conception tan he formed of the i.legance and beauty trithe work front merely reading a printed prospects,— The illustrations contanied in ea. b number will en tall a t mit. in drawing and engraving. of 11,500 ur 1113.00 b. All erimn.uni. Winn* relating to the work must be addre•sed to ALEXANDER MONTGOMERY. Publisher. JAn Insri TIIE ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE OF ART Now ready—Prue ti.", Cents • r lIF, fins number Of the ''lllustt.tted o I Art," the greatest monthly hlagaztee ever published. Contents of the JAnesty number Part I. • 11.1.11:4TRATIONS Interiosorthe English noose nitionin.ins. ref , " Portrait of Geoffrey Chant Pr. Rand Rings (Diagrams of.) The Bridge of Canterets to the Pyrenees Pt.ilatilitel Johnson resoling the ••y rail Wtke. field in GoLlinnth's r+ fats l' Portrait of Oliver Coltlstnitti, Steel Pen Manirfai'tory—o Engraving•, An Egeptian Fetish, ' relish Women, A F•ellah Dwelling, Rriither Altos listening to tile Song of the Btrdi n 1 PaLlint, to fore The Poet brings Peplum' ht. the raft—The Far mer boys Pegasus. 4 , Pegasus is yoked in t Cart—Pegasus OVertUrtt the Carl, Pegasus harnessed to the Coach—Maims being starved Into ttubjeetban, Pegasus yoked with trot -PP:l5ll* fly ing away to Ilraven, 4 The Doke of WeMoron slam na Quer,. V ictor at W imleor Castle. raiser 4 Distant View of Wollner Castle. in which the , Duke of Wellington Sled. 1 (tattle of Waterloo—Charge of Lnrd F. Somer. fn . !. Heavy Brigade. and total Rout of the French Cavalry, Portrait of the Duke of Wrilington, - Napoleon at Fontainebleau, after lot return from Elba, 5 The Doke of -Wellington lying in State seChel. lea If molts I, 5 The Funeral Car. at it appea red in tl'e Funeral Proeermon, 6 The Funeral Procession to St. Pauli Cathedral, . • - . • (large engraving.) t• fate GO The above Engravings are4lesigned . , and executed by the first ArtlAlta and engravers in 'the World, ac- companled With original and interesting descriptions of their subjects. . . =1 Illotory and Description of the English House of Commfina. fleolfroy Chaucer, Tto Curiosities of Antiquity; Nand Ring' The Bridge of Canterata, Account of Remarkable Dwarfs, Biography of Oliver Goldsmith. Steel gene and their bfanufalture, The Egyptian Fellaba, The Eccentric Student. The Died of Paradise and Brother Alfas; a Swe dish Legend, The Rough Home at Horne., near Hamburg. Retseh's Illustrations of Srbiller ; Pegasus ha Ila ram. _ Twenty-blur !loom within English Daily Paper, 46 Poetry and Palmeri, 18 Death and Public RUnetal of the Duke of Wel lington, 49 Earls succeeding member wits contain a great va riety of - highly Interesting original and Owlet tea mat ter m its various departments, rontributed by the most popular writers of the day. No efforts or ex pense wilt be spared to reader the wort to every re open worthy of its name, a Magazine of Art. and de. ridedly superior to any pictorial magazine ever pub itgbed In this or any other country. till of the Monthly portions. when completed will form a volume which, for Ip . orilltaatifY. and beauty, will defy competition. It will not only be an interesting' family book, but a rich ornament fur the ihawlngrount table, arida pleasant COUP pars ion in the study. h_L.._ TeitsB : Monthly Parta.4s mats. or $3 per annum, seat tarn taae Gee fnr 12 tobethe.on rerolpt of 03. Oat,' of tar, or more. Cletg roar, air Postatiatere, 02 per anal's,. ALEXANDER. Mt iIY'rI3OIIIERV. . itptuee Streit, Ne* York. And sold by all oookarneto• M===M THE HISTORY OF 'IOC PAINTERS OF ALL NATIONS. The parts will aneac on the Fire amt.) , Month ■t Ply cent. each.. Vac* 1., published this day, contains Albeit Dater, his Life, Portrait. and Specimens of his choicest picnics, tin of wrath as separate plates. Part H. will be ready Feb. Ist, and will consist 'al .Velasquei, his Life, rater/41 * *nd the choicest spec I lis of hie huaAtinsit moNitommtv, • 17 Spruce Street, New Von'. And sold by all Booknefism- Went Postage free for It Wallis on !Tr eta* of SO. Jan: 19, 1n33, • - GLIGASONOS _ PICTORIAL DRAWINU •OOM 'Completion, with tfntaiaeled title, deafly Omuta et the Bindery ofthe Sobecriber. Also, all kis& of. Fancy Binding. B.ll.od?Wit.. REAL ESTATE. RILL MUSS AT inervaTio BALE. Aosiniume raorEriv. emit. conwr 0, G eorge tag nigh Sum. ta tee Illoroage of Peels vlea,coestellag of a Lot of Gioalid. 60 trot **George alteet. by abotatt 150 tom RIO trtterrt. 9 D *bleb teen Is a large two alto. ry Wick Ilana•ovelt Ilakabod sail la load repair, and sir other Trust Boa. an, whit a wall of good water a" • posy. all a( which will be sold at a law prier. A l,B° . A IW""7 ' frame House, with basement atarr or " 41 . 11114 Lot of Ground, with an eseetiens Welt*, wain sad Pomp, on Rhodes. Alley, is the Borough of Pottsville. ALSO. A Don%le.*, two haws Dwelling Dodges, am, Low of Ground. on Bilnerimate St rest. ALSO. A Lot of Gneand on liallroea street, 29 Pei Croat oa BaUroad dtreet. by 103 Amite Logan'e Conn. with a Nose Diablo, awl ben,: la 'a etatna sad de sirable totaitlat.. ALSO. • Lot of (honed 32 by 103 feet in Norwe gian Addition to Pottsville. • all of which is ofered at to !glees tad vaaJ tarots. For (tinker pa niculars. e equine of ;0/MULL 11AilTZ. Real estate Agent, opposite the TIM!. Unit. Jas. :_ 4 ll. 1653. ORPRANS'COURT -RALE. 113 t I MUTANT to an order of th Orphan' Court of Schuylkill County, the Subecriber. Administrator. of the Estate of Solomon Seidle,late of Port Chalon. is the County of SchuylkilL deceased, will etlaule to sere by Public Viaduct. oa TIIESDA 1", the ttd day of Freiman , ne=t. at one o'clock In the attar noon. at the Public Hawse of George Kauffman, la the Borough hf Schuylkill flatten. ALL that certain two-story frame Dwelling Houle ant oar half Lot or piece of ground. alt- • sate In the Borough of Sehoylkill Ha ven. fa Use County of Schuylkill, bona- lit dad sad deathbed al follow*. to wit -- Beginning at a earner of a twenty feet wide Alleyore the North-mat of But Canal Street. Wane. along said • East Canal Street, in a Sontiseaat coarse, nee hundred feet. thence, I u a North-eau. course, Co feet, to Lot No. 27. now or lately owned by Wm. Eller, thence, along said Lot in a North-west coarse. 100 fen, in the aforesaid 20 feet w.de Alley, thence slang laid Alley. is a Mouth-west course. 60 feet, bathe plate of beginning. with the ap. pertenancts, tate the Estate of the said deceased: Attendance will be given and the conditions °reale made knows at the time and place of sale by lIIESTER CLYMER, tarter.' By ordir of the Lewis litcsra, -Clerk. Jan. 29.1493. 9-it VALUABLE WIN rort SALE. 1•11 B Subscriber offers for sale his Farm. Mollie I is Buffalo Township, Union Co.. Pa.. 15mtlee from Lewisburg, and 41 miles Ron. the mote of the Balti more*. Susquehanna Railroad. containing 145 acres: more or less ; 50 or 91) arms cleated, divided Into 9 well cultivated fields,l riteadOws. and S OZ.:WORDS of ebolca fruits ; the remainder well timbered. Good, substantial buildings sreerec- , • ted, conslaung of a two-story (rams Rona,. cooking House. Sfnint .• ill' • Log Barn, with a shed attached for - • matillog cattle, Wagon MUM etc.— There Is also erected a first-tate S a w ' Mot, on a never.failing iateam of water, with an whir site for Water Power. There are upon the Farm. inerhanatible . bedsOf Iron Ore. with an embankment in close pros imitY with the eller,. with water and an abundance of lime stone close at hand. where a furnace could be erected with comparatively small cost. TO pr. nuns wishing to en gage in the Iron Business. this property possesses fa cilities sot often met with. There a also upon the premise, gibed of granite, suaceptlbie of a beautiful polish, and unsurpassed in beauty, fur building pur poses. INEII O For" further particular', ■ddreas tbe aubecriber. at Buffalo X • Road,. Union Co.. Pa., or C. N. ZIE Learlaburt. Pa. JACOB ZIEBACII.• ButralO Township. Jan. °J. 1153 SHERIFF'S SALES. SHERIFF'S SALES of REAL ESTATE - E0 Y virtue of sundry' writs of Ferri Farids, Le pear/. new., and rendir Joni Exponat, homed out of the Court of Common Pleas of Schuylkill County, audio rue directed, there will be exposed to Public Sale or Veudue, on SATURDAY, Feb ruary gefth, f 853, at 10 o'clock it the forenoon, at the Pubic House of John C. Lessig, (Exchange Hotel,) in the Borough of Pottsville, County, the following described property, to wit ALL.that certain tot of ground situate in the Borough of Minerscille, Schuylkill County, boun ded in front by Sunbury Street. eastwardly by lot of John Tracer, northwurdly by Lewis Street, and westwardly by lot of Samuel Heffner, containing, in front un Sun. bury Street 30 feet, and In depth 200 feel, more or less, with the appurte nances. consisting of 'a two-story frame Store-house, with a three-story frame Dwell ing House attached, fronting on Sunbury Street. and also a double I story frame Dwelling House, fronting on Lewis Street—as the property of JO SEPH H. CHRIST and BENJAMIN D. CHRIST. COM ALSO, All that certain lot of ground situate in the Borough, of Minersville, Schuylkill County, bounded in front by North Street, on the nag by lot of Mrs. DeHaven, on the north by Carbon St., and on the WPM by lot ot James Snvadge, con taining in front feet, and in-depth MO feet, with the appurtenances, consisting of a two-story tinnto Dwelling Muse, with a basement story of stone, and a Mane Kitchen atur•lied—as the Estate ot REN BY PRIOR. ALSO, All thut certain lot or piece of ground sit uate in the town ot Treinont, ehuglkdl County, bounded northwardly by lot 221, eristward!v by Spring Street, soulhwardly by Ira 223 and we. 4. wardly by good Spring Creek, being lot No. 2'22, in Morris& Fisher's addition to the town of Tremont, containing 40 feet in froht, and 140 feet in depth, with the appurtenances, consisting ot a two:story, frame Dwelling BOW!' ALSO, All that certain lot or piece of ground situate in the town ot Tremont, Schuylkill Coun ty, hounded northwardly by tut No. 222,•south wardly by lot No. 221, eastwardly by Spring StreeLand westwardly by Good Spring Creek, being lot No. 223 in a: 51orris & Fisher's addition tosaid town as a of Tremont, containing in trout 40 feet, and in depth 140 tort, with. the appurtenances, con sisting ot a two-story frame Dwelling House—as the Estate ot ROPERT MORRIS and HOWELL FISHER. ALSO, All that certain lot or piece of ground situate in the I3orough ot Pottsville, Schuylkill County, bounded in front by Market Street, on the rear by a2O feet wide alley, on the east by lot of Or. George Halberstadt, and'ou the west bt lot of Joseph W. Bowen, containing 75 reel froni on said Market Street, and extending hack . l4o feet to said 20 feet wide alley, with• the appurtenances, con sisting of a three-story brick Dwelling llom4s and Hack-buildings, and a large stone Stable and Oar riagellowe—as the Estate of WILLIA6I A. NI CHOLS. Administrator of Frances 13. Nichols, de ceased. ALSO, All that certain tract or parcel land. situate in West Penn Township, Schuylkill Coun ty, bounded by lands of David Zimmerman, by oth• er lunds of Samuel K M. Kepner, containing three acres and ' , evenly perche., more or lens, being the sarniland r•onveyed by Daniel Miller and w:te to Samuel K. I.q. Kepner, by deed dated the 7th day of February, A D., 1.97,1, and recorded in Scbuyi• kill County, in Deed Book No. :Pi, page 342, with the appurtenances, comosting of a good and well built Saw Mill—as the property of SAMUEL K. M KEPNER. A LSO, All that certain lot or piece aground sit uate in the town of Donald , on. SohnrlloU County, hounded on tho ca.l by —, on the west by Clarlt's Alley, on the north by Z.-ettt Centre Street, and un the south by Pbd adelphta Street, and toeing marked in the R . R plot ot said town with the number I'2o. containing in front tiny feet, and in depth one hun dred and tiny lee!, with the appurtenances, consis ting of a two-story frame Dwelling House, a Sta ble, and a Well of good water near the door—as the property of CHARLES REII , 4EH L. ALSO, All that certain tract ur piece of land %ittiate in Porter township, Schuylkill County, ad joining lands of John Adam, Jacob Heberling and Hiram ,Kimmel, containing about 10. acres, with 'ho appurtenanees,,tonsisting of a one rind one-halt story . Log House and Um, Stable—ayihe Estate of SAMUEL RAMBERGER. ALSO, All that certain messuog,e, tenement and tract of land, situate in Porter Township. Schuyl• Gdl County, bounded and drc , otthed as tollows, to wit !—Lleginning in'a line of land, ot which this is a part, thence, by the came. north 15S percher to a stone, thence, by land of John Hand and others, south S9f degrees, east 14'.1 perches to a white oak•, thence, by lapd of John Hand, south 12} degrees, west 2-100 perches to a whnteunk, south 21 de grees, east 331 pe relies to a white oak, thence boot h 811 degrees, east 39 0-10 perches to stones, south 73 degrees, east 28 perches to a post, north t 2 de grees, east '24 perches to a post, and sough 771 de grees, east 25 perches to a poet. thence, by land of John Haut:, south 13 degrees, g‘ 11.• ••• went 21 perches to a post, theme, by land of John Hand, north degrees. went 181 perches to a pine, south 481 degrees, west 17 3-10 perches to a whim oak, and south 84 degrees, west 471 perches to a gum,thence, by land of Ley & Co., south 13 degrees, welt perches so a pine, and south SO degrees, west .171 9-10 perches to the place of beginning, containing 156 acres and 197 perches, strict measure, with the appurtenances, consisting of a I •i story atone Grist Mill, a Saw Mill, 1 frame House, 3 log Rouses, 1 9 1111 13 liE 'Barn, and out Stables, and one' Brush Block Fan tore—as the Estate of CASPER. ti.rERTER and Cu RISTIA N ILERTER. ALSO, All that certain lot or piece aground sit uate in the Borough of Port Carbon,Schuylkill , County, bounded on the north by lot of Michael Noland, on the south by lot of Seitzinger y Weth- erill. on the west by an alley, containing in Iron on Broad Street 26 feet, end in depth 95 feet, with the appurtenances, consisting of a two-story frame Dwelling House, and a frame Stable—as the Estate of SOLOMON BRETZ. Seized, taken n °sedition, and will be sold by JAMES NAGLE, Sheriff. Sheriff's Oilier, Pottsville, I January 29th, 113.53. • 5-5 f SEERIFT"S SALES of REAL ESTATE. BY virtue of sundry writs of Fieri Facia: and Levari Faaas, booted out of the Connor Com men Pleas of Schuylkill Co:;and to me directed, will ha exposed to Public Sale nr Vendue, on SAT URDAY, February 12th, 1853, at I , o'clock,itritie afternoon, at the Public lioth.e of Margaret Grasil, in the Borough of Orwigsburg, Schuylkill County, the following described Real Estate, to wit : All that certain tract of land situate in West Penn Township, Schuylkill County, adjoining lands et John Whetstone on the east, William Griefron the south, Benjamin Reinhardt on the west, and Gideon Whetstone on the north, containing 30 acres and 13 perches and allowance, be the same more or less, with the appurtenances, consisting of 2 one-, store Log Dwelling House, Wagon Shops, end t?. Log Stables—as the Estate of DANIEL LORAL( no 13 1I 17 , 22 ALSO, all that certain piece er parcel of land situate in %Vest Brunswick , Township, County, bounded by lands of Joceph L)eibert, Da vid Buyer, Daniel Ifummel and others, containing 10 acres and 02 perches, with the appurtenance , . consisting of a one-stog Log Dwelling Home, a . Log Stable, and an Ap e Orchard—as the Estate of AMERICA. PRICE. ALSO, All that certain tract of land situate in West Penn Township, Schuylkill County. adjoin, : : , ing lauds of Abraham B. Haldeman, Jacob Relts . bard. John Sacks and others, containing 22 acres, with the appurtenances, consisting of a one.stiry Log Dwelling House, a Frame Stable, Blacksmith Shop, and Wagoner Shop—as the estate ofJOHN FO SE. ALSO, All that certain lot oe ground situate, ly ing and being in the Borough of Schuylkill Haven, Schuylkill County, marltechn the town-plot No. 2, adjoining lots No. 1 and 3, and fronting on Dock Street, containing in front, on said street, 551 feet, and in depth, on lot No. I, 183 feet 6 inches on lot No. 3, 217 feet, it being part of the loi , of 2 acres and26o parches, which was sold by Benja min Christ, Jligh Sherif! of Schuylkill County, by deed poll, datedthe 26th July, A. D. 1819. to Geo. Mining, (sold as the Property of George Dreibel bles,) and,the said George 11 , 1 innig, together with EligabettPhis wife, by their deed, dated Aux. 27th, A. D., 1837, conveyed the Fame to Daniel Berge r, who, by deed dated the 29d day of Decew_iser, A . -D., Hal, conveyed the same to Vijah who, 5y deed dated the 10th d 3 ,Y of AeC°t ap°r ' 1846, conveyed the same to Daniel Dre , c ,1 7 1 1... m .l detsddated Febriutry 6 , 164 7, c°l: l .`„. , tow i st . to Elijah Werner, with talapilirt na . Home. With a lag of a twa- story . i•ar n attache.. and a Log 51*- one-story Frame will bb P c°l t . ,l,,ieeution. and will by sold be Seised, tit" JAMES NAGLE:, Sherd. SyritPs • Odnee, Pori. Tail , Jan 15,1053 1 • 3-54 MISCELLANEOUS. =='- T MAILS ri A P)IALL QUANTITY on band at th e Manofse tory, whleb will be promptly forwarded. Those in want of the ankh, wilt do well to Mend thei r or . dolt wag. U. C. I(AIUMLN, Art Elation", Rama, Centre St..) Pottsville, Jan. !9, 1833. f AO. LIPPINCOTT- WU. ?a art In. LDalinilo a sco V. • GEORGE LIPPINCOTT 4k CO. IaAVE constantly on hand a fall assortment, of TrAi. WINE'. Liocoas•nd CuirctAlis No. 17 hortb - Water li:remind No. 10 NOtth Detakate ATehue , Phi'ad r a• Jan. 29, 1937. - • 5-Iy ITEPORTMIT TQ DUNIIIIS AND COAL lIERCIIANTS. - . PDC Nabserlber beg. retperl(ulliy to inform Mi. pers and Coil Merchants Mat be has ronstsotir on hand and fount. a-large supply of Chains. of all alaak. from nub to I Mei, made from extra refined Iron, and suitable for slopes or mill purposes. which be will sell on ebry rea•oaable terms. • DANIEL PITARTUT, • ' rid. CO Swanson RI:: and Dock St., 1t53. 5 "lox• OW/ NO= CALL Mns. SAWYER - would rftspecintitti say. fp I. wk. iota is hay cit eiy.. that she toosods to newly triage her business °otitis , first of and llcce to wilt sell out bet wheat stock anti supplies, to It , date, at COAT, Cr Call at the first Brick Mors below the TtlnltY Church, Centre Stroet,.Pottss me. Tty us! Try Hatt , Don't deny as: Jett. IV, 1653, Philadelphia, W m AT . sl2 4 3l l A w a ry okr y b r eit t e . : Z Corner a.. offer for sale a large assortment or • TEAR, COFFEE.. 1 At the Lowest SUGAR, i I. moLtssis. i - SPICES, die., &r, J Thine commencing New Stores arc particularly In vited to call. fV , Attention given to Produce. Jan. 39. 1E33, • SWEETIUNG NEW. AA RA. U. C. SUPLEE, invites the attention or LYI Country Merchants and Dress Makers to bet un rivaled assortment of PAPER PATTEits,;,6rr full sized Ladies' Dresses, *Sleeves, Mantles, Tikignag, Mantillas, Capes, Aprons, Sacks, Ike , As. The Patterns are embroidered in various designs, prlntE4 and Dinged, showing ezzetly how the Dress will appear when made. Being In constant communication with the best honses of LUndon and Paris, and furiorhed . mmithly with eves, new design as sz'ora as it appears, the pub lic con always depend on this 014 Established House Air the most recherche novelties In diem ,"Alwav on band a toevaliful auortment (1111, DREbera CLOTHING; of the newest otyva and ma terials. - Medals were awarded her in 1E19,1650 and Mg. EP A set of His Patteins Will be sent to any one enclosing Three Dollars. MRs. 11. D. SUPLEE'S Children'A,Clothing & Pattern Emporium, 52 :South 4.1 let., Philadelphia. S-3m EM= DI. STROVSE, loparttr and Drain in Fine Wine*. Brandt,*, Ltynors and Europa% Produce, c ENTRF: St., Bettina,. I Betz to rat% the attention of llovl-leepen, Fagot.. /H. and the Public tu my extensive atizoriniont of PURE WINES AND miaow& of direct importa tion from the rower• and producers of Fiance. Gra man t, Ace. WINES: Jirsdriro —Choke Ohl "Etat India •' P.rte—'• Purr Oporto,•• •• Grape !wry " and Our. gaudy EITERRV, LISBON, MALAGA Clarets- - St. Julie, - chateaux Latour." Blue Iriart—.taut tautt . ,_erne. Ramo. Bordeaux Claarparae—•• Strut ling M ort " RHENISH WINES: llorblielmer, Rude.heiruer, Nierenoriner, Jobannesbergrr 1 , I r,ne.t ptalit ir - • and tile; In I'Mn of twelve bottles each. yostrr Trammer, J QM= Uuann?l. Durk and Pale; Ptaet. Cast i ilinn & 4'o Cognac, (hard, Demiy Sc ta., n. Setlnette, Mprean' Wild !:Gerry. 4:l:4.—Meder'e • Swan" "Imperial," Schiedam. , EEMBIO . EvrilAcTo—Jamnics i pirin. Kir,hentva,,r, Ab sytiltm, Lavenditr SUNDRIES Freon' Prunes. Olive 011,(Uontraux and Slarceliko Itardinee, Anchovies, Dutch Herring. riWili. Limbo, ger and Bap Sago Cheese, Imported Cigars. Java Cof fee. ,k.c.. Ace. The above are all warranted in their orieinal piiri ty, and for Bale in lota to salt 'mangers, at Ili. eat City Cash prices. All orderi by mad or oat,- wise will be promptly and fisttbrolly ett•Tded to. Pottpville, Jan. 22. 1E53 NEILDS' METALLIC PAINT TO - BUILDERS AND OWNERS OE PROPERTY. DEit:ON:4 desirous of using a purely Metallic rtre I and Weather Proof Paint, will nye NEILDS' in •ll its native purity.. cheaper and more dscred:c than any other before offered to the public. Thu anticle has undergone the carefUl Analysis of the trained Prof. James C. Booth, of the new...reify , 01 Penn iy 1. sante This Paint is peculiarly adapted to the palm ing of Pars, Boat. and Vessels of every description, possessing m h..irlf more body than any other paint yet introduced, and the quality of drying very hard. Dior* vary tog from brilliant Red to Black. CERTIFICATCR. P!illadelp.lin. Dr, I, 1,51 roe Proof Paint innate.a of such mates tab un in warrant the opinion itiat it cannot change under Me action of soy atmoapheric agents, and Unit, there fore it will retain its quality for any length of (Me Axatyst I 50 1 Peroxide of 11 I:1 . INZI MEI MEE nil. A nal)sii 'bows I. e4I I / 1 01. (ha Itsle ns beautiful color tun.l recwornond RA turns., ern- ploy went. . JAMES C. FICifiTII, Prof. of Chemistry applied to the arts,Univerct) n( Penney Ivania and Franklin Institute. West Chtsier, Pa_ Jan. 12, 1°32. I do hereby certify thatj have lived the Fire and Water Proof Paint of & Co.. and find it to es. cell anythine now in use for body, gloss and beauty 'of color. As such I recommend it to ail House Pain. ters ; and! .11 forthersay that. 1 believe a to be most durable and cheaper than any other paint yet Into, doted to the public. It is without grit—l, myself, ground some In oil. in my Paint Mill, and was Milt. prised to find It su'very tine, and In lifol for either Wood or iron. JOSS P. SAW4.I . NGS, House en., Sign Pa inti.r. Apply to SAM . L.R.NPILDS, Wilmington, r to CALEB PARKER, Pottivilte. Pa. 4 4-Gto Jan 22, lan'; IMPORTANT TO ROUSE-lIDEPERS ISTOVF.e. IRON WARE AND CUTLERY. lIOOVF.R would announce to his Customers in 0. the snrroundlng country, that he has jolt added In his large stock of isr,s e s a v arie ty of new rm, n „ of Conking. Parlor. filth r and /Is Proves. Ile has now the largest a nd Wen splendid stock or Pllnve• ever offered to this Re:ton before, which he guaran tees at the limey( Cltril prices. They will be sold f it rash only. Ile has- also a large assortment of Tln'd and Enameled Hollow Ware, ol all descriptions; a large assortment of Cutler,, Tin and Sheer-Iron Ware, Steve Plping.l'oal But kers, Wash Boilers Braes Ket tles Preserving Kettle., Frying ran., %%raffle Irons, roller Mille, ace,; a large assortment of Japan'd Ware Trays,S, , kind of Tin and Sheet-fro] work done to order. Tin Roofing and Ppolifing don at the shorter! notice. All. orders received will le promptly attended to. Cf.:SIRE ' , tree', four di. above! Market. Pottsville,Ort.22,lB32 TO THE LADIES TUNKiI respectfully announee• that she ha s lifljust returnetUroni New York with a lame as. lOrlillent , Of new an.l beautiful patterns for Cloaks, 1111110 a, Are.. Sr. Feeling runtiJent oh. ran give entire la, law lion to all who may patrunize her, she resperlfaillyialclts • roll. Resbienre CENTRE 141.,0pp1el to the Artleririn (louse. • Pottsville, Jan. 8, I tir.3. 2-1( PLIEREARIPS PLATFORM SCALES fr. fnr ti r e. :a a iro c ri b eT. ° :„7i:;'¢i n alc P r P Ol7c r a d le A s t .";ol are prepared to forakh any description of their make, capable of weighing from oz. to 500 tons. A cam• pie Or !stales ca. be seen at the York NW, E. YArtmer * lON. 14-ti April 3.1832 MEDICINAL. NIITTALL'S LYRIACIIM. T REE DIFFERENT PREPARNTioNs FOR TIM CURE OF THE THREE DIFFERENT RTN , E'ER or CONsEmpFlos. I !RAT STA OL. I SYMPTOII..—Coach, pain in the breast, aide, head, bark. Joints and INCIPIENT )10 i limbs; initamation, moron con and 1,-. -- 1 tickling In the throat, lever. dal.; I cult nail quick breathing, trite, I tor.ti• it difficiat, slight and fro/Ay. 14 1"1111.1.16.—Costiveness, spa IiECOND 3I•GC I modic cough, violent fever. night morning- and midday sweats. her tic flush in the face 'and checks " Inil " '1 burning heat t jn the palms of In hands and soles of the feet, caper 'oration easy. copious and •Iresk t==a TllllO araog. r tiVMPTOM.l.—Dialth(l3.llloli+h . I eit fever, cone). and tiler uin g , Tueucuus sweat., great and increasing de_ IWitty. frequent fainting titi,alight delitium&awelling of extremities. TO THE AFFLICTED. The appearance in THICE mrrier, of Nu tittles Sgrior.as is a rare era to Medicine. from as novelty and direct opposition to the old absurd awil ineowris lout ens battle sotto , while its SUCCESS, prepare( to this manner, each Bottle containing a different Preparation. in curing the different mare. which char. acterion Consumption. has established. the welcome truth of the curability of every lane of Pulmonary Comumption. Physicians approve of It because it is based upon - cor. rem Physiological and Pathological principles. The Public approve or it. because It is common tense, and because they know from sad experience that one preparation will not care the three stager. of Coo anuiption. The suffering, disappointed, and discour aged Invalid approve, of It becauee its principt.e hold oat a reasonable Hope, and when he Ilse, Pi in talfe Syrineetn, his hopes are realized. If he's lathe first Map of Consumption, and uses the FIRST BOTTLE, his expectoration, ditricillt and potato,. beroMes fret and easy, his cough goon ems well, the etireDell, tickling In hie threw, Inflanistion. pain in his breast, side, bead, back. joints. and limos are removed. If he is in the ger,ond siage, and Owe the second becomebottle, his expectoration, copious and blOody,Ssainneshis. h s w eeti fev e a r n l a ca re v r ee m b h i l m „ , .bbi is .d l b; . d o . rn a n h t e . r h s . healthy appearance. and at l e ngth n r : lis m app . er:,. bovrelS become regular. at heat ` I; the h palms to his cheek dleappeap• 1 7, b i '.19 l 74'3„ felt no longer , h o r., b lt a h t i a" re .es he ' reedv e e e rs . and is well. ''''''''' nage - and use* the third hot. at .. h .; • D a i i — ub - r a . gradually _ceases, bit weak bowels bec amor. bin cough end other bad symptoms disapbecampear feeble digestion becomes strong and VlC pious, his ernmach recovers US proper tone, and 'mem.* new. rich and nourishing blood, his strength recent. hie' wasted body Is clothed with flesh. his life I. Eased, and be is RESTORED TO HEALTH Etch bottle of XertelPs Syrracess base th e e p ee _ tome of the stage for which. it sa Intended, printed In front of the wrapper. whereby every Invalid know. leg his. nwromptome, can judge for himself _which bottle he requires; consequently, no mistake can occur in selecting the proper medicine. re Bee Pamphlet in po<session of the editor of this .paper; contaltitag Ds. Pifuitalre Pathology of Con gumption, Lectures on the Smuctury and Lees of the Human Lamm and Certificates of cure.. PrePArlld only by br. WIL.NLITTALL, Inven tor sad Proprietor. Pricer's* dollar per bottle. Prtattpal °dice, V 5 Iteter, li-treet, one door above Eighth, Philadelphia. Jan. 19, lea • 3.1 MEW COMITY OF rem At a Public Meeting of the citizens of Pine grove, held in the School House, on Tuesday evening. Ist February, 18.53,Ac0n Herne, Esq.. was appointed President; Charles Mc& .Iy, George Ellenhaum, Samuel Hoak, 'John Huber, Sr., henry Verntz and Dr. D. A. trtrick, Vice-Presidents; and Levi Huber, Esq., John Hoek, Secretaries. V. L. Conrad, John Huber, Jr., Jacob Peh rer. Peter Musser and Enoch Moore, were appointed a Committee to draft resolutions, sitting forth the views• of the. citizens of Pinegrove upon the proposed division of the County of Schuylkill, who reports the fol !diving, which were unanimously adopted: Witenras,:ltforts are again being made by some of out Representatives, to procure the passage of an Act of Assembly, authori zing the formation of a new County, to be called "Penn, " out of portions of the County of S chuylkill ; and whereas, we, the citizens of the Borough and Township of Pinegrove, regarding the said proposed divi sion of the County as inexpedient,-unneces sary and uncalled for, desire hereby, in pub. lie meeting assembled , to make known our disbpprobattotivf any and all e4orts to effect said purpose ; Therefore, Resolved. That while the formation of a new County, as proposed, 'would multiply County officers, and increase the County tax es, it would furnish no corresponding benefit or convenience in the citizens, which they do not now eojoy. , Resolved, That the manner of the propos ed division of the County, making: tilt new County of "Penn," to consist of thase town ships lying south of, Sharp Mountain, is op posed to the most formitable objections, in asmuch as it would include but a narrow district of from 4 to 10 Rites in width, nod from 40 to 30 miles in length—a district so greatly out of all geographical proportion, that the formation of a separate County out of it alohe, must necessarily result in disath vantage to many and convenience to few. Resolved, That the erection of a new Coun ty Prison was neeessary,independently of the removal of the Seal of Justice from Orwigs burg to Pottsville; and that, consequently, its erection there entails no expenses upon the citizens of the County which would not have been necessary, hied the removal not taken place. Resolved, That in consequence of the su perior facilities of reaching Pottsville from all parts of the County, a large majority of the citizens, even of that portion of the Coun ty intended to he embraced in the propo.ed MI EMI Market rates 3-2 m new County of " Penn," can more conveni ently attend the County, and transact busi ness at Pottsville than at Orwigsburg. Resolted,, That inasmuch as those who urge the 'division of the County, do so on the alleged ground of thereby separating the farming districts from the Coal region, we, the citizens of the Borough and Township of Pinegrove, that we are connected*with, and of right belong to, the Coal region ; that we are interested and engaged in the Coal trade; that those of us who are engaged in farm ing, are identified in interest withthose who are engaged in mining: that our occupations and business relations with the Coal trade necessarily require of us to attend the Court' of the Coal region at Pottsville: and that to cut us off locally from our business in the County of Schuylkill, in the manner propos ed, would compel us also to attend the Courts of the proposed , new Codrity of " Penn," thus subjecting us to additional -sod ECM inconvenience ; and we, therefore, protest against the attempt to separate us arhitrarily from the Coal region of Schuylkill, as detri mental to our interests, and as a violation, of our righis. Resolred, That, should the influence and efforts of a few office-seekers, and' other la tally interested individuals, be successful in inducing the Legislature of Pennsylvania to authorize a division of the County of Schuyl kill, contrary to our interests and, wishes, we, the rititens of the Borough and Toon• ship of Pt7leirrOre, do herein / niost farne,tly protest against being Included in the stud pro posed new County of "Penn," und.r o , iy and under all circuinstaneets. Revolved. That the Secretaries be author- M. tiTROUSE 43m ized to transmit copies of the foregoithl pro ceedings sod resolutions to our Representa tives in the Legislature, to be read before the Senate and Huuse; and that they . be pub lished to all the papers of the County. Resolved, That Dr.' D. A. Ulrick, Julio Huber, Jr., Samuil Haak and John Hock, be appointed a Committee to procure signatures to remonstrances against the division of the 42ounty, to be forwarded to the Legislaturci JOHN Iloce, LEVI Itmart, Secretaries. SHERIFF'S SALES. SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE route et smithy Writ. dl EZel Craig Ezrra. , and Ir,'lhittrona E e t qati,, t•e•he, out of the Court of Common Plea, of strthitylki. County. and to nit directed. wttl be exposed tit Pultlte Salt or Vendor, on SA TCI: IPA V. Feb, tzar} 19th, I `5. - t't, at 10 o'cloelit in the forenoon. nt the Pub he Horde ti Wthiam Matz. tu the Borough of Pott, vale, County atoretnikt, the tuttowin• describe Real E,tute, to wit . ALL that certaia hit or piece a ground. 'dn..: in the Borough ot Bo . theille, Count:, containing in front on ' FLOM titreel, twenty heel, ant In length or depth eighty loot. being 'a part of th lot marked in the general pian of •aid Borough WI:: the number ninety-two. and bounded nortlio.vei.ter ly by a part of ihe ratite lot No tid, belonging re .ipeetieely to Daniel F. GI klrilllre,Saninei M.. 10 1- and Nathaniel J. Mdi , , , outh-we,terly by .aid lair, Street and roinli-ea-truly and north-ea-telly by an other port of lot No. led, belonging to Wellingtot kltoe, Won the improvement:, von.eit fig of a !a., and one•liall story - Bridi Dwelling with ha.,ernent :tory of •tone and bort:, neatly tinedieil the property of DANIEL KLINE, and LOI . ISA E . KLINE. .1.;; Ina! certain kpt or pn,.• 01 vrouhd wale to On' town Llewen cn. Sehn . yl kIE Count Ittiuntled to input oy Battling street, on the wettt tt property at . !tiller Itiatr, on the "taut; try a .1 feet Wok ales, and on the eat by or • Jo.hott Stinpkapt, contantant in front 50 I tet, and 'a depth I:111 feet, wan the appurtenance., etio.o.tinc of a double I; ~tort frame Dwelling Bouse—as IL. property of MAMA P. ROWELS, Ira of Lew, E deceased ALtSO, All that certain lot or piece of around s i tuate in :he Borough of Pottsville, ziehuyikii County, bounded on the south 14 Sanderson Street on the north by part of sat:Pot reic.:enity sold to Da rid I tavies, on the went liflot os Tneopiov• Pugh connaming in front fO feet, antf' in depth - 22 feet with the appurtenances, consoding of a double I story frame Dwelling House—as the property t. PHILLIP EDWARDS. ALSO, All that certain lot or _piece of ground, situate in the Borough of Pottsville, 'Schity Iktll County, fronting on Market Street, and bromdei on the south by, an Alley, on the west by lot ieorge 11 Potts, on the east by lot of Samuel Mcy ers, containing it trent 15 feet. and in depth 21 feet, With the appnrtenanees, consisting df a 2.; story frame Dwelling House, with brk,entent story o stone; as the property of BERNARD MiIOVER.N. ALSO, All that certain lot or piece of ground, • 'mate in the Borough of Minersyille, Schuylkill County, bounded on the south by Railroad Street on the north by properly of Chas. W. Taylor, 01 the east by lot of John and on the We by lot of Richard Phillips, containing in depth 7: II feet, and in width .10 Met, with the applirtetmec4. consodint; of a two •ton• frame Carpenter Shop— an the property of JOSEPH U. RICHARD'S. ALSO, 7 AII that certain farm or tract of land, •it. time in Pinegrove Township, Schuylkill County, bounded by lands of John Snake, John and William Brei - detiliach, Samuel Sheets and Jacob Snoke, con tainiug 40 acres, more or less, with the appurte nances, consisting of a one and one-half story Log Dwelling House and a small Log Stalite—a4 the property of GEORGE BARR', Collier. ALSO, All that certain lot of ground, situate in Wilson & Levan..? addition to the 13orough ot Ta maqua, Schuylkill County, marked in the Van of -sod addition with No. 110, bounded on the east by River Street. on the north by lot of Benjamin Dart-, on the west by a3O feet wide street, and on the south by lot 01 George Sherry, being a part of the Baum tract, with the appurtenances, conseitmg of a double two story frame Dwelling llouse—as the Estate of DAVID 11.AUSLIZ. ALSO, All that certain lot of ground, situate in the Borough of Tort Carbon, Schuylkill Comity, bOunded in trent by Lawtontown Street, on the east by a Street. on the smith be int of Dennis Slattery, on the wen: by lot of Elitati Ilanner, containing in front feet, and m depth about i.t fret, with the appurtenances. iionsisting ilia I .tort' frnme.Dweli ing Douse, with basement nt the proper• gy of JOIN NIeLEE ALSO, All that vertainiot or piece of kituate in Swkil. Patterson S. Pott's addition to the town of Port Carbon-, Ea-t Noi weginu Toci r vnidop. Schuylkill COunty, lamuded in front by Coates northwar.ily by Street, eaqwurdiv by lot of Edwin Swift. westwardly by lot of Alsraharn Port, containing at front I;'2 feet, and in depth PitS feet, with tho - appurtenances, coniosting of a I; story frame Dwelling lloroe, with a bai,ment story ot *tone, and a trame Stahle—a‘ the property of JOI IN BRETZ. ALSO, All that certain lot of ground, marked with No. r ISt, stow.. in Wilson Leeana' addition to the Borough of Turnaqua, bounded on the no r th by a I A.) feet wlrle. Street, on the • south try Union Street, on the east by a 30 feet wide Street, and on the we-bby lot No. with the appurtenfuwes, constitute; of n one-titory Inane Owen.); ilou-e— -as the Estate of JOHN COLLINS. ALAit.l, All that certain lot or pro,: of L•roon situate in the Borough ot Pottstuile, Seiinylkill County, fronting on Market Street, and hounded on the weSI, by lot of George Fisher. on the north by lot of Francis Herring, on the east by, lot of John , C. Conrad. Esq.. containing in front 'l7 feet, and In depth 100 feet, with The appurtenances, consist- , mg of a two story frame Dwelling Ilou.e, with a wIMIC ha.iement. and a one story frame Shop—as the f;uate of JOHN HABIG. ALSO, All that lot, or piece of ground, situate in the Borough of Minersville, Schuylkill County, be ginning ginning az a point on Lewis Street fifty feet east- or the corner of Second Street ; thence Stiuthwardly and parallel with Second Street seventy fret; thence Eastwardly and parallel with Lewis Street thirty tees ; thence Northw{arally and parallcLarrith Second Street seventy-five feet; thence Westwardly and parallel with Lewis Street thirty Met; to the place 01 beginning, with the Buildings and Improvements, consisting of a two.atory frame Dwelling }louse, with a never-failing, spring or goal water in the cellar, and a frame Stable—as the property of AL. EXIE.ZA STROUP. ALSO, All that certain piece, or parcel of ground. situate on the NorthYlmesterly side of Market rlt met. in the Borough of Pottsville, Schuylkill County, commencing at the South-west corner of iot No. 37, extending along the line of said kit North- we"- ter , ly 17 feet. to the place oft inning, containing, lt; , in front, on Market :street, 17 I et, and in depth lOU l i ,feet, with the appurtenances, c nsistiug. of a -two. -story frame Dwelling Ifouse,orith a stone basement, and a on framh Sho ' 0 the property of MARX MARIO. Seized, taken in Execution a d, wi , .l Iv sold bi JAMES NA ' '. Sheriff. Sherdl's Office, Pottsville. January 'Zie 1 Ilifij. ) _ Votitgiript. By Telegraph and ,Yesterifiry's R. R. Tram FRIDAY 4 O'CLOCK, Y. M. Arrnir ar WASHiCGTON .--Captain Sehaumberg shot Mr. E. fdrmeily a lintel keeper, but now a clerk in the Cen. ' Ids Office. as he was about en tenng the Na--, liana' A' difficulty had existed hi--) tsfeen them about the settlem ent of a board bill, and,Fuller had posted the Captaiti.as 1 - 1 eoWard. liar, and swindler. - Mr. Farr believed tp be atonally wounded. Captain Selaumberg was arrested.. 'Considerable ex citpuent.prevailed among the friends of iy,th parties. . .." * SIINITURY & ERIE RAIL, ROAD.—The Ctiuneils of Philade tphia have passed an or &tame • agreeing Id subleribe to ,20,000 shores of the stock of the Company ag soon as' an! additional amount irobtained from other sources. This will insure the completion of the Road. PETITION; are pouting into Congress in favor of our Government securing; Reli s ___„ . giOus Liberty to Americani`in Catholic coun- tries abroad, ihe same as Catholics enjoy 111 . , this country. . LEGISLATIVE A number of Petitions have been presen t ted in the Legislature during the week, in tack), of the new County at Anthracite. Jan tiary 2S.—ln the &Tare Mr. ho. II EN rinicks presented a petition from citizens of Schuylkill county, for a law to enable lessees sot 'coal Mines to mortgage their interest therein. Ile also reported a supplemene;to the bill/ tre incorporate the village of Port Carbon,/ Schuylkill county, into a Borough ; and re latrve to the elections in the township of Nor wegian, in said County. • January 29.—1 n the House, Mr. 'Moue, reported'a hill erecting a new county out of parts 01 Schuylkill,,io be called Penn. ' February I.—ldthe House Mr. HART pre sented also d Remonstrance of the Mine Hill ..chuylkill Haven Rail Road Company, agihn o st chartering the Anthracite Rail Road Company; Remonstrance ot citizens,miners, labbrers and others, interested in Coal °per atiOns, against authorizing the construction . of the Anthracite Rail Road., - Mr. SrnoNii, a Remonstra'ice against in cort)oratiog the Anthracite Rail Road CQM• PalY' Mr. LEECH, Remonitrance from cilizeng of chuyl6dl counfyr against Incorporating the:Anthracite Rail Road Company. )Ir. llam,tErt, two Remonstrances, against incorporating the A o racite Rail Road - Com= pariy. Mr. llor,x, two of like import. Mr. STRITTIIEIV; t M. Remonstrance agamsP thelitworporation ul the Anthraciteßailßoad CoMpany. • This Remoastrave was read-hy Mr.liAm )lEn, m Me. German language. THE HON. &DIVARD EVERET, 110 W 7 Sccretary of State has been elected a United Stale,: Senator front Massachusetts, by the Wliigs: Mr. Everet will be the ablest matt - i'affAb Senate. . ISLAND Lkt.isLATITAE.—AII- Otile ' attempt has been made to gu into joint ba Hot for za United States Senator, but with. out • PlTect, the Locidocir in the Senate defeat: ing all action. AN ELECTION fur an Alderman took platle iti Boston, on Monday, in which- the whole city participated. The Whia data wa , elected by 191:2 majority. • ; ; DIFFICULTIES APEAD. Notwithstanding the iimnense majority with wick Gen. Franklin Pierce was elected PreMdent, the course of his administration is not 'any more destined "to run snuioth" than tha4 of •"true love." A cloud is already seen in the horizon. considerably bigger than a mail's hand. The various leaders 0! the va.. riots parties and cliques and brotherhoods of vhf great Democratic party" are each aux lousi to stamp his own. policy on the incom ing adnunistratiou. In,rnanv instances, they are the very antipodes of each other, and on ly coalesced upon an "unknown man" from the certainty that if they dtd not, their "oc eup.ition" was •gone." The muttering Lif the storm already begins to be heard. The policy of the dominant party is not settled yet an our foreign rela- • tions, and Mr. Pierce will find himself in the nudtt of the most discordant plans, and ; up on firmness and independenee - and deter mination to du as be thinks right, most Im portant results depend. The policy, with regard to Citha is'not yet settled.—The South wish not to meddle with, her present possessors, and prefer so wait un- • itt she comes of her own accord idto our con federacy. Young America cannot even, wait for the fruit to be rile, they would pluck it at once. The Democratic Review, the organ ~f the aggressive part of the party,.says bold • We repudiate for the Democratic party the doctrines alike of Mason, Cass and Un der Wood, andfch,sennfrom their• stale and worn out declarations shut Mt rioted Stat,s “ coiarnt to bare Cuba a colony of Spain any iongrr ; ur those other emry declarations hatiwe will not intejfere with it unless oth• e .pt•rsom attempt to gra , p or buy it, or mi tt i',l has achieved its own independence. 1 . 1 ii is the pith of the speeches in the Sett \ at i and Senators get warm over such los- politics, and call in• witnesses fo'partici pateitn their patriotic devotion to the inter ests and honor of the United States. We might as well say at once that' our pe . ople rrantl Cuba, and that our people trill hare it, and ;hat it is idle for politicians to name the case. in which they will girt their consent to its 'aequisitim4. • • • e 0,. , "The American people unlit Cuba—trant it noke—and will /care it by sonw means in Me coutie of a very Mort pertod If time. . They wank it, not to enslave or to plunder it, not to irripoverish the soil nor to degrade the in habitants, but to make it immensely more valuable in resources and to improve the condition of every man, woman, and child to • o We shall yet see whether Franklin Pierce and his advisers can resist the outside pres eureiot such a grasping and greedy policv , as thisi One of three courses must be taken: On all such topics of agnession and conquest. ;tin Pierce must' either decide with the Con= , ervative division of his party and offend the ui , ciples of Young America irrecoverably— or impel the nation on to aggression and alienbte the South—or choose a vacillating. interrnediate,oon•committal course, that will lose hitn the respect of the whole nation. Truly he has difficulties, ahead. Has he strength of judgement enough to select the right course, and then strength of charcater enough 'to bring his whole party with 'him on the surge ground ? We shall see. The course which Mr. Cass'has lately ta ken indicates the difficulties that lie before, mere; politicians. Mr. Cass is a worthy man —a man of considerable knowledge and more experience--but he is essentially a time-ser ver.• /le has an exceeding strong predilection for being in the majority. lie came out late ly very strongly in the Senate_against the im mediate or forcible possession of Cuba._, The Conservative portion of the party, Mason, &1 . e., 'thought they.had found an able coladju tor, and received Mr. Cass with many-smiles. But the Democratic Review and the tiliblt- tering papers generally called him all man ner of names, andalarmed the old gentlemaa • out of a year's growth. lie took the earliest npliortunity to show his friends of Young Arnerica that he was yet with them,: by a splurge upon the Monroe Doctrine. and by making . faces at Great Britain. Mr. Hale, ' in his usual severe manner, said t Iffit all such resolittions would ead in mere talk. It Would be "fifty four, -forty or fight," sad then eod fofty-nine, or even a lower figure. Mr. • (Pass ;has succeded in beautifyin g hitineff,su inuelf in the Clayton arid BuhvoiTresty con; troversy, that he will haVe to wait now Un til becan add the'force of his, consistency to • Member eleganciesatOexcellencies of'Fran k lin Pierce's Administration. The establish ment Of the Monroe doctrine, or ralhefits re creation, (for as Butler and Mason say,it wasi established for a partieular object and died off as soon as that object was obtained;) will be • diffinlilty enough for one administration- to manage. But, as Hale observed, we do not. expect to see our blustering rulers do any- _ thing against d'nation of the power of Great Britain, they will rail.at her for a time, and then content themselves with attackittg sonic • feebld power, and letting off the spode steam of their indignation upon liqr.gThe preser vation do steady, firm, conciliating, peace ful fOrei.g,n policy is one of the great " diffi culties ahead" in Mr. Pierce's path. • &it the subject of a caoinM is the rock which lies in his immediate course, and cm which he will first split. ft is expected by every' distinct clique Max each one shall be represented in his. cabinet; And the present indicaoons are that :thefHational Democrats will be either wholly overlooked or without • their portion of its honors. What a comment , upon SII consistency —whata stain npina all platforms—will it be, to see the Union and the Campromse men negletheit and the ad visersiol• Big new admintstration minle up of Ellnbincters,FrergoilDemocrats, rindSouth ern:Secessionists. 2 That class brought about .- hia noinination, and now will uniteto govet4es • him.-4-Hariford Courant. 444 polifiral.
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