lICSINEE qt tintrs . '- lutirtint POTTSVILLE, PA Saturday Martiing, July S. H. BANNAIST. Editor and Proprisiori 0. LITTLE, Associate Editor. WUIG STATE TICEET 1.3 R. GOVERNOR : JAMES POLLOCK; or NornICMIMINLAND ; FOR CANAL cOMMIsSIONER GEORGE DARSJE, or Atitraulir; FOR . 917PRENIE COURT: vAsIEL fl. 93:TdELL, ur Mu/maxi-4y. DIIINOCIUkTieSTATE TICKET • • FOR 00V;RNOIV: WILMANI . InGLER, of C!eartield County FOrt CANAL COhIAILE•SIONEA HENRY S. MOTS, of Pike County. ,` FOIL SrPRENE JDOE : JEREMIAII S. BLACK, of Somerset Count- TRUE ZEINICCRATIC TICECT. 101 l tiortr.Noa, DAVID POTTS, or Chester. • cANAt, comusstongß, GEORGE R, RIDDLE, of Alleglicoy, VP REM R IrDat. • WM. M. STEPHENzati, of :11orcer • '1 AIIITEMPAN VONET. ' FAR GovI:RNOR, BEDS. RUSfI BRADFORD. of Beaver Comity. CANAL' COM - ZISSIONtIi. 131.001VIrLD M; SPICER, of Bucks County .TVDOIL TIE SCI'. CCU: COL'S T. rTIiOMAS H. BAIRD' of WuNn.nfirtou County Wt. ANGELE ON itt'3l-CATGOLICIS4I,,I 'Our "Slandsraua 5{1.5307.1 " • 'llere-is the article. alaided to !ant week, which'so excited :Ir. Amiele's ,, virtuous in dignation." It .was copieb !ion/ tie Cayuga (N. Y.) Ciaif, in reply : w;11 bo'seen, tc an article in the Frteman'a Journal (Bishop 10,ghes' organ), complimenting G o e., S e) , Mout tor his veto of the Pro z hlbitory Liquor in the New„York Lexislature; and bore thesignificant heading of "Brandy and Ca tholicism." We copied it at the time with. otit comment of day kind, commendatory ,or ,disapproving, fearing tt entirely to the good sense and intelligence Of the reader to treat It as he pleasLO, endorsing its semi. Anent!' or not. as he liked, and drawing his own conc)u4ionstherefrorpiput we do new pro. pose to append our own-opinion no the kub• ject, and if we can preeent the right sort of rer. , ons, to thereby influence the reader in favor of our way of thinking. First, .the article so ":-landerougle sets. tior'ed": - "VETO or THE. MAINE Licortt LAW,-rAV, honor to Governor Seymour for .;ampi:4; ;he prof 13Kaey of our preptulCS,ute - irt4lnt fun on the 1. , ./car Bilf els ti tlet.etryeti. 1 t 'WO'S ci , eeei‘ eti to rin and brought forth qt iniTtee. Thee 1 . 1:111111•F• Of the Governor, Which ha, hired it for il'ir veer: u, war. thy,of great prate "—IV,;i Von? ,Inl. Met Erremln'sr f ,,,l.'(il i i the.nrgen of iin , hop iroghes• We'cre no: - hurpri , e at it, hatred of PI otithltion, or the ven , m 01 lin expretPoort. cry .int,trumentaltty wtech teed, elevalr: the people from the depth. ••1 :rnor,arwe, and t. inure them intell4en:, manly, •und to meet a ittrOCIOUS oplo,thuit from trio OrKIIIIN 01 Reonanitm.- Our eanAo wliLuot ~ u tfer eruta• tilts/ ttvown: of 110 , Illttv front 'the blends: will see but. another rtqd , .tive = - Teetoess of their. rotate and the itottee and neee— nity of. the inf.u.,tne, %vans, deleat ha,.. , •beert eatse'or inuch rejoieung. I 15,itlIty 111)111 ,I11:11 source Will arcut:e the tneadh of ProY.l,mon more-deterintned eNertion,osoll rill'-t a ho-t who have not before felt very deeply 10:ere , ed. We have watt - lied the (•01;r1,.• of tats .••:Ittrolltx.: ,f.ptt-its Ili 411, COMM': ;1"..:011 SCSI rwv; uud indignunon. lire no! ti •.:\intive taer.eau, .en that fetal in .tindo , r , tooct, :rite huh c-torn nr atkpled ett:z . en y It wortlit, - ,', , 1;;t1i !.ax out conft. &nom and Irattunul regard. • But ml A tnertt , ttt, wit.) a lreernau—lovulg our !..,c/t/ntry Lad wl.oong well to every .intere,t—we eKeerate the hand .Wlonh lifts a Weapon to ,h,eld wrong torn the o•Yenten it , of a long p t -op:,' • there is no class in all our w do lund ‘vhielt w. tiliieNneedi4 the ble,!..sne, 01 n Prohtbn,.ry Law the - .lrish. 'Conong tho.eountry 71 , M1 -the 1 - Clio. 'linen end povert . Op- old world, thec,etaler 010 Oily nvvvatitin whiett will told a end thotaptlesly plinaze into tit , v; , .• 1,1 d, Tne hnin , ry of nor 11,../1-0.. Coln!. F0r t •••4•01,,..41 f detailol . .the el one, ot Clll' tor,•*;11 pop ttlllinii The dr.w.i fccoui ry.d • caoll flint , tun; omrking he - 4.1 tr,.ra 1i.41•,y tes , ,td, ‘ , 111,4 lao Cam- I,lr.rtittlit ta..tr A very .lA7', hl3- ,l' of our;%inic. of drunlzettne, .:•.rets'nere. The 4114111101i+ tho:lh ienr only pOtellt fhr,untoll trtiwcp• but a - 0111,Its; t•dpita . t. • Herec ontzreznte the ;t00t . .471101 - elr.l. I.lld the de-aratt.,:l. land re. en: It,. ct. In hortiku and bk‘ody ervneq. F, orn pro• Lfic wuret.s, a trind4l ,. nail mat mlhratcd Lord our to .tantrat the poke and dawn the !e-s are re.ts of IWCIFty, and hrep rie-h hltd more hg , :rmwa• red wrung• upon the •!:.;zen sch 9 10 7 .%, ihn: I a :thl:c Thu- llke aetieC erdtr,r , c1i0,p,..1 wok lila inn : denoraiizing aud des native elemeot4, co• Kited Jen.m of. et, a eI/::111 I y .forth the rpifirege-, <ll,gioci,g, t•eallnas, Kr , n4lll air trampling &um Oa. anc! rrn lay•paym:g citizen.. • Under rh !:111101.1$ Fie...lllood ?he 14 1 1 , ,?: r0t...e. , ?, In Ine eXerv,• sinntly are at wr r every (tie true America! , C l l zei th d a law lorh eh .01".1 d rut ti Eitrad drunkrtt . 4NlBll2P/117 'WOU d ruts thew, taco Itollio 111.;0.L1 anit gnat up o r, V.-t the N ao co trot the t.rrntni ,wl/ ii/0110and 10. - er halo-, ant 15;' 14",loa vv• , (2,,j Cu ara r,ceu..rtllSlC• Wr ilaVo n: 'Uztann, .:ig pe, jun' , •Linr!.rf vvataltry-bed-ri. .;tun, and veto:„y When:WV!' oontr.d It are thterumued to L ;,;:- .: ,; y ,.' ..' T - 7,1, : 1 ' 11 " !4'" se, * `i t-wr ' - - ' re a PP ratse ` tam-shop is a prr•litic,'lotitml of eiiiike:RM, HI! . 01'2_ 1411/ clas s and -of these 153,i 101 are (tiger, r.ittidy eta ! tarte'a to b 6 .:.2.:. for thore, :Lit. , '- -, I " , lent, but tarrum, tot u ,, f , 15 , ~.,d Ip. amt a,„1i.,,,,,,. Inch atholicr , , 7%.10.:..e principal stock In • • „! tra•tc. is Rum '. 'These arc the legally it- Our peor'e sp,n, s t te . 7i.:•.• ei , 41.i,gitt,07. t,p . plic.; ~, _ .. d ~...t ubli hirenic in ea t• , i. - ! !our Leitedripee t-r nu, mp,!; 4 ; tc, : !L.:. !Ile !;,A, `L' ' ' • ' .), no hiu , of the ef•intempersnee, or ' file ll,tl,, , ti:tut h,t, that in. niidtherless Rum-holes illicitly kept through. roesolre, vetoed 1.) , Ced.,' :"tev:l-11,•;4_,-euhr;dtr'cl trorh than the especially the (sal Region.Region.n. abet than at p:-;;Att :destre I.k .:rerun, "' he (-7u0 . °1 " ::te purp4tse de ...g.teci.,..„*lr• e;:,•;inticv 0,, noinm• ;Moreover,. reliable statisties show . t Ott • the , an.se:. f r ,c.,,. a j:11:1' r;t ! : t' Z . 1. -. 1.1,0 , 4 , 1:. T:/lt b•::id f 1071 5. CA tbnl I , lC)rtiVil,H, , ,WYr l'. !' , 1:1•., il ,„ti, RUlVl.l‘..il . t.p6 Lkt most our principal towns and ~e1, : 44,1tne ma•t N.,dur,b:e .4.1 ..,:, t:-hed o; our ,1,11• ellle S e lIITO . UgIIOUt the lt , ltritry, are kept; by -.lutions hrsarou-...i LI frel,l '.... ~ , -! 1..V7, ; h I oil ,lit • th e' r.ime ptc•pertion of foreigners. These, future , ".• , dte,l , It. -ttpitoc: ~,! 1,,..ht•1i,..' t t.tpi ..c• ‘:ttr.trd.truttic Gut ti . ,tu,,,,,1, , h., i;,-.tid •,:-, th , . RN ..!:n. Ft:), are the pLa,'es where the politics of the mid caluk. 1:.,t: rtron.s.or east. ,t; th. 1 Litt .o) oar rattlers ire, in .i great • measure, shaped up : taells g"trllt.el ~ .i ,li, ! : 0fh..1:,e 1,:. , 1A , R of this ~ outcry. TheV•Op'e base ,AVOril to rie• hitt that* God, wit believe that day, With •itroy a terrth'e ev;; : "r;1: , ; v. ki 1,;;.,..u1'. t 1 1 ,1 l o it , . , , ' it:- pernicious not)-Retitifilican 'influence, is ' insolent interpedi;ln F •.! ne-e9i. ,•••; : e, i;,,,,,, then : - . „ ' :, , ~•:. ; A m nion:, throu. ; f; t:,, ; r ilorl.l., '4lci dr.:7OMM' . 0 , mar•its more. flail 5v . 4 , 4 room, we would iM, . those they'dr;ll..• - ,« sere ,:ertatn Crime and pauper data we have Let the b1r1.:,, , r.! c Mt-. 1 . .1.•. Lo-t,..p, a' , •alii. , • gogtle, prie.t or else ..,. , ;I:,,! :Iro•-1 1.,e ~,iwnr.; ,at hand, 1,1 show 'that 'the greater part of march. Vetoes sa,i r••lo.elec- !",e , , r , • .:, the run- , Atop of the .7-.411 , —;:eh-;,llkt e, r .,.. ,•..., ;,, tad '. O ' • - I- idettness el the giStinty, and indeed of . opeeehes in a fa;hung r4.htif, fir;. 1 .-.; ~,,..,, 11,, run, tilt; country, i , cunlitied, considering the .Pro triffi.: front it,, tsie. ---• ! p - -. Tt i on or our native and alien population, The per ~..1: a-t a% , -,d, m, c. :. •. , ~ E.; to the titithfuln - e: au. I•:,•,tietv 01 t " 'he sane classes. But that will-he putt these comments. under 'thr;cpi enlovire c , iv . :` , ••BvIallY conceded . without proof at Ares. each .reader can judge ici - 1::' , :pell;• the tete erii----ta day's' attendacee at uur minimal the same prtiqleg,C. - l and nul t e-itstiugly ' 1 • 4 „. c•:.1•1 , or asingle viit to the ConntY Alm§ pounce them c . orro.!i. Thinl, id it :--A true-; I{ tt , e, 'wli I satisfy any one on that point..- ernor exercisiur . 1 , 0 'del ica ze ail '•,.1!‘0 i i iii•,.l,,, n . ',,', Ow, wha t bas the RomtM cathodic church . able a right as.the veto power,,: i n o n , 1 ,,, ei or her priests fur her, ever done Ili this Co. or. r..l , ew hire, to restrain this natural .pre appoint: . in emphatic vote of the. I,o l .;iiitttr..; go t:i,..- appoint - and I thwart a: ent ' o . tsj .‘ ,..,, 10 ,, , 0 di-p!,sition ot her people. to keep (frog-shops ant p05i t t 1i .. 1 ,6 1 ,„„.... of . I.6,lt:iiiii;, of tiro a'i'l drink whiskey ? Notliitig—emphatical- ... j.4ople of the - 5.nit , j .. : - and ' t h at ~: , o , , i iriyity ., 7 ly;:olliing. Here and there you find.e single r ! prie-4,-like Father 'Mathew or Father Ma-1 a perfect knoWle,l , :e ~f tht: q:c,•i.,a, t-t th;'. : : highest legal ttittuncit oi tla - 'i.lnitiv:;!..flitin. ginups, battling matifultv but single-baud, mg the c . onstiti'dioncti:f , . ; uf - o •11 •., a :cirr i and ed with the enemy ; but their 'eflurits ; corn , \ . with its,benkficial efFocts: attested by the Time., •pared with the IIIitIIPIISC influence, bo t h I, y \ tical experience ot• several . In; met/ i att. iv , es:ample and ; precept, of the large body of yk,i g hb oy i ßg. ,, thtei 7..• ; , liar,: ~,, t loft Ti 1,13 i, j oi ,., the Papal clergy to the contrary, are but as' a i • ,j• ,-,.t •- , • , 1 . such a coure..r 3 ncltirs%i a..L. I l illytkil. tit - C. 1, : : Ir lr . l t in the bucket. - Our readers have. not '• , A thefeadiiig. Rorium (..!atholt , k ,„. i „. r. c,f IL L I f:l2,tefell the attempt made ht the - TriSh Priest' O'Donriel, in Portland, 31e.,'10 throw 1:••.t\ coiintm, and the moutir-piwc or olio 01 tbc F •• ':',highest digultai'itof .t.hat church—eve re .• diseredir upon the salutary effect .of the Pro.: • 1 41ent, Linde these circumstance , , .it hi no !.h4 1 :llory•l ! aw in that place, not long since: '', 'wonder stimng,langtirop should he uSied: when he 'was flatly contradicted in a'pub '. .. ! • : - nothing short of it-eouid reacVtlie r.ZIA'. , iislii.d ' card. signed try several hundred of ' •'; :Vow, whist is the police of . the Roman I th. , b,st citizen, of the city, including the : , Cathol i c •Chuich on (IX T e rnp e r - fiace7 f l ues, 1 ;?layer; who was . elected, to opposition to „ ,2 2 1 . ti0n, as expressrd by the lives and actions :. l f I "......al It)tv: the autho r of the Law, and nth •!-.','::::-lier Priests and people! :,Ir.A vt4e h e 1,,-; ast l• t er: of die latterls opponents., . . ':: ' -lolly refers to ,Father :\latliew, a., n'uoled i t la conclusionras our article has inseam ;::{, instance of what Porit i , ha&dobe tor Ton , ! 'ply grown long on our hatids;--we have one - .'t,i ,:i n .-lierance. The materiel iE.„moq micut:unste. 1 rptcstion to at-lr,--how many Roman Catlin. .'or, it is a-reit:known fact„that tnechu:ch, 1 it-Priests are there in Pennsytvanta (and . 3„t••,) t e. sheh, ilot'ontV - :dtd-- - iim - --tecorid F'aiher ' there is a pretty lengthy fist or them), or : ,•1 : , ••:. '. .:-'",' Mathetv.'s eairts tit rt:i4lll stun=t her peo.l what conEkterable prOpOrtion of their pea 'l..it pie, but .t,; ; Aose, positively reluseti.liis request to em- 1 pie, who do not now favor the election of . :13:42lny.iti soy way bet . sacettlotal aU.hority i Bigler, repudiated Sy 'the Temperance .men 4i „toward that desirable end. Father Mathevi iof even his own political party :or how 'll:,(llhroughout his Temperance crusade, . en- inane Will lend their influence toward' the ti•••• , ,Ta• ge;d•the,enem' s y as an individual, ar4, not . 1 elecfbm of either of Te•othet three caodi• - •Ui, an officinlor eren.lc:•-mt•mber ot,the R..). i elates, who' lately tsta utfacturily avowed la- rian Cirtholic • Church. The guod he ellected, 1 their Temperance .py tleettous? Perhaps / :•i-.." • • - 4 , --- ,.2a:resci!ing thousimds;ft am the rattertes o.f i 'skin Angele will untr:alte to count- thern-,'• : ; I : kornniecines , .,, !A thetz:fore to be altri . :inted to ! we don't believe it . 1 ::,uld taketaany - figures . iil 'um as'anlizdividual,apa'rt from liis!cligMus 1 to record the number„ Ocetuncinally; if the ..., . • r',l -rencei,„ and By no Means to the Itomish -wh .le State caniessid, you may come ,i, ,-' v i, :botch . . •• across -itch a i ltty Member, but the Cull Ere ~ • .i:',.. .But th'ese is no beceeeity for cal•mg Felber feiv and tar littwevo,'and. our word for it. . ';'•. •t ••• : (- lisib;w from lii,..,::trai!e in Irdap.d 123'a-wit. 1,11 e.• are not much under-Priestly inflame& ,4. , . ,••• • ess (though he to not 4ead.yet, we are hap. Njw,_thvae are facts, sod Ikea, as evry. it,,,. 1 • 6 ' ',. , .y •''',/te . llXl 51: , Angele, by way a - cc:reit. body IMowe, are stubbervthingil. They are ••••,- tionj--‘a have plenty of t home, aye, at out very doorti. We could hardly expect tol find anything. In she public recOrds of the church, either foror against the single 'virtue of Temper ance, but we do expect ber'Priests and teach era to' het good examples and tb ekett a sale tary influence in this respect upon their geo -16, Nov, as far as 'we . are *uainted with thee/miter - Cr of the Ronian Ctholic press— and we haveaccess to almos t all all their pa pers in this country—we do not know a sin gle instance where Prohibition is advoca led; but on the rotitrisrS , , most, if notall, like the -Freemanl Journal, have openly taken ground against- . the leading Temperance inoremen te of the day, and esbilly against ron the Maine Law. -Is this not I n testi p,,,, mony thahe Roman Catholi as a body, or their Chine!' (for, the church is but the congregational name of the peoPle) is not fa vor:l4le to Temperance reform, and—since there can be but two sides to the question— must consequently foster drunkenness?— The press of any particular cl ass or party, political, religious, scientific or profession al, is naturally taken as the exponent of the sentiments of its immediate patrons and sup porters. We have Whig organs, and Dem•. oeratic organs, and Free Soil organs Sm.; and so - the various religious denominations, . Alelhodthl,'EPiscopal,,Piestryterian, Baptist, lcc., have; severaily, papers established to' explain and advocate their peculiar church_ doctrines before 'the . public ; and we have Legal and !der:teal journals, and Farmers', and Fasbioa pperiodicalsf.c.iirc.-all at winch arc supposed to speak by authority , for the associations to which they respectively be,- lode. and, thus ro reflect their Aggregate opinion on the prominent topics of the day. Judging.by the same rute..:he Roman Cath clic press is the written representative ot'the opinion, of that church; and if lien . ` s papers nue Diinously (and they are .untniettous,,so , tar as our observation extends) turn the cold shoulder upon the great TenitieranCe move ment of the day, and in matiy i ,cues openly oppose_ it, -what is. the nata'ral inference, as to the general sentiment of the church on that subject ? If tier people are in favor of this great reform, let us have_some practi cal, tangible evidence of ij, the bawds other people make known their views of this sub ject, or as they themselvei express their sen timents no .other topics ; but until thesis do, we r hall take it for granted, that, since they arAot with us, they are against us. ' But we have another strong point. The Pri6ts,' it is a well known fact, exercise al most, unlimited control ours their people.— Witness the effect of the injunction of the Nett in this place, on Sunday last, forbid dint; his dock to come into town on the 4th. They can make their people temperate, it tlit'y will. Who^does not Srementber the ,oilital tsrro ot Fattier Magiunisc in Potts ville, sorrM years ago? . Why, a drunken fikliman in his day, was hardly to he found. His flock were almost to a man teetotalers: and : , .t. Patrick's day and,other - snutlar txi east out. were celebrated, in additibn to the ordinary rhu \ reli ceremonies, by gr6d Tem perance par a des! Such, sober an orderly , - . , wile , were never before known i the He rr ~ •iout-it SeTtiwd like the dawn of That better day, :u lung cooling. We: refer IVin.Angele to any our of our older citizens, for a lull dc9.ri;aion of- that golden age of .7.chuylkill Ck,Uoty•---few who witnessed it ‘Ol ever tor. 7,r: IL 'Thin in,the full tide of., the success of the i qicrinient, much to the ''regtlet of the Catholic whole community , Protestant an (l, ! .r his own per pie loved hint de iy,, not v‘l4l-•ttio din; his severe discipline . ; and those wii.i differed 1 ith hinrm religious faith. res.: 'peco.d and ad! /lied his eminent virtues .as: a wan), Father Maginaiss was removed why, we will not pretend to say—and ;Was succeeded singly by two other Priests, who not only. , did nut use any vliort to keep their people sober and c'urlitheir intempeinie ap •pentet, but who were frequently ` drunk Aio,;/ie:/' fine of them was removed be. ,Wi-f• (.1 his outrageous conduct, in' a c:ton ken tit, toward a number of our tnost,yes , p.,!i:ible . citizens iipietly assembled at the clturh. Arid who is not conversant with the piece of scandal currently circulated thriqi : ;hout the County a yeai,or two ago, 0 1 ~:;e 'ti our'‘fast young men joining the Prie,e of R neighboring town in a spree, and su!it . ;,g his jolly Reverence ,to dancing, in hi_ ,tuAing soles, for the amusement of a &met!? and the worst part of the s.cale:al was that ".it *as but ioo true. No anywhere in'the county, so. tar as we smee the tlays of 'Father Magic'. ever done cnythihg toward Tern pera,:ce reform among his people : but on :C: ni ~,~. tf k ! ;11 f.rit .a•hl'lrrnc' i!it: C JUtrary tome of them have disgraced t!lt.rn-elvetilhd their profession. , and sane- I • _....,..... 4 . Li../77,0gCRET or THE CoNrr t" .r.e , .? dropk.linesss by the powerful mflul setoNAL. -01.1 f e., • t :bear own had example. The Ger. r e"k r -!.5 .' r•ltPrlvmumber die recent artist ot . h alai.: Piiest An- this plant , cot long since _re• Germ" Calt f ulic PrlcC , Rev.ereadi!l. Petit' Kr...eger in Cittemnpt, for an aasault witi, 1i..,v.v..! his inallgoant feelings toWard the :kr:Lot:Lair, by &elating it a 'Whig humbug. Hatrut - totonarnit a rape upon Catharine :lly - .. ... ers, a girl nsateea year..a old. during. he's '.;.:y permNo.who will take tlre trouble to} attendanee at t e conferstonal: The, deltas es ::.:u• ,he lately published list of Beer .. .> re , orne,i for license. in this Couoiy, al o.le ev 'dance is devalbped at a r,ubseroßt legal Inlesztgatten ate tot)tudeceut for PuEa am; fi: 4 ..1 that at leatt half the keepers are In , fl 1_7,t1i0:::::,.., ;Ind ab....ut ouc-fotirth Ger- ild'len ; but it=:"M 3 , Iranwhetta atate4, tti.tn_.,l 01 tVes':ll Retailers mthe Coal Re. that the ;tit had beau to attendoice a... sa. gho -ell liquor. 153 a 7 " ai u school in c...mnytton wilt , th.. -,..: bt.a,a;;e, vo , .nc•rcd np to .h: • ier p itfid rniarlvnt you tnago4u,-. h (wt•- w ou, 11ord.,,ik d f) r .!nr ~::t --, _. .....'...:,“ilii A./ at Mr. Angela's service ; ti he can Putlbetu together, and make it out that the Rtiman Catholics as, a body, clergy and are a Tesoperartee4diocattng or a PcmpeOinee practisiv people, he is welcome to db..so ; but if heyreserves any of his reputati# for m veracity so doing, we will give hinf,Sred it for more Jesuitical soplustry,tban vie al ready, believe he possesses. Other .renders nod the public generally, we are iacliqed io think, will notequarrel air "slanderous scissors" fur cutting anedr the real truth. that RUM AND 110MAISM are very closely allied.. " tituoay paws THE CARSON LEAGUE; I Nye Last week gave au • outline . ol i this League. We append' a speech frotnpli: Carson himself, pointing out more folls, the objects of the League, aiid• its heneficirty re sults when tried. Friends of Teniperttnee; in various sections of the -County thino of the subject. The time for decirlve a 4 ion has arrived. Prepare to put on your arrot for the contest. It is a glorious and a to h. wous cause, too! . ENFOCIN ! "4 111 e LIQVOIt t.tw . . p s i 11, great evil exists among u..--a terrible evad If a perpetual conflagration. who-e livid dimwit gash up .to hearth, cpainting hell on the s l y. ti t It is a fire in the first, in the second, ru the third. iii ev,,y wo rd and almost every, block, this treat meiropohs. Should every he in this. City, toI Ii utmost capacity of sound; ring a perpetual' demi, the mighty alarm would not be commOsu: ram with the magnitude ofthe evil to. whose taup.. pretsion We wooed summon you—the evil off In= temperance. .Ls there no cure for the - evil—n(4h re 7 anntbhator than can extinguish this mighty entitle iirattea? Must we piton our tents at the ba,*ot ttusburningineuntain, end from year to Vest' al lowitctortible eruptions toyed their fiery mimes over us, not daring so much as.to touch it lesOi we be atoned or thrust through with a, dart • need not be, Great es the twit is, if Can be !ph.: deed; the fiery vomit of this volcano midi fer. staunched ; the thountam before Zerubebei cat be made a p;ain. cell in question' growa out ; of the Traffic in Intosicattng Liquors—the sine Or it as a ,beverage. It is proposed .to suppress ithil Trete: It this Can be none, the evil will bo cored: Can this be dodo? It can. We ore for the Melee Law, and tor the entire auppretsiote of the license system which regulatc* - the pate of Intoxiinum;. Liquors axe ben"•erage. But such a laW b of tittle value unless it were Ss:retried. .Ifithel laws we now have were faithfully executed, Much' could be effected for the suppressioa of the Liquor; Trate:. Better and More cringent lawittprottiO. tnr • valueleea if they Were nolexecuted. , THE Canso% LEAGVS provides for the teen or the laws we now twee. limiting this tract.. The:same provisionwheceseery to secure the irxe.: cumin of these laws Will be required to eXeente., the Maine Law, or some sinmar law, when ' .we get it. Beglaninl with the executton of the 1 . 143 we now have mashing this ern, - we shall bare surt force . , all marshalled, and dircip:ined for Asa more. arduous task of executing more .stringent laws . wheat we get them. The Fntn power has Wrenched' itself in dbe' strong towers of number?, itionov and pa:Meal:tic-, lion.- The Carson . Leryie meets this enemy irt!his: awn for Is and fights bun with his own eticisen wenP pons. Its plan is to oppo,,e numbers to numbers. ition • ey to money. and political action to jt.ilitical action.. 11 aims to nial:r; a political unit of Temperinee. men, pledging them to vote for no man Who is [hot ' a thorough going Temperance man. Tilly , part; of I MS plan • will secure the right kind of legiglaticii/ton • this subject. It also arrays numbers such .as pan lonli epposingmumbers boldly in the Isitc.. It thiss ' awes its enemies by the chow of a large, well 'ter putted force. • Further - , it hrtiigt the money p.r.ver In bear/ in executing laws limiting the /Atom' Traffic. My note. liable to be asst ;set fit,the rate of 50 et!nts on SI 000, it raises a mud xc.hieli .expended, not in paying tor long windy speeches, but et taking, the steps necessary to mate the, othcCis, wliose proper business it as to imolai() puniqi all violator?! 01 laws rilint nig the Liquor Traffic: It expended. in the hiring cat nu odice the "empinyinen I.! of agent , who shall solicit notes; keep twist:A of 'ue count, hunt out wittie,.sef. of ea-es where the _nuor Laws ore violated, and , sin- up the proper cavil officer* to sue them tied bni g tltrnj to jui•ihte. But why.is such an or/Only:anon necessaryi at ail? Because it provides s,inieborty to du is' everybody'll butuile,s without it, wad what is Ole rybo'd}ibr buSinass is generally urn done-at Ncially when the bustne.a ts both unplea- ant and unprolitahle. l'..csides, the ,League Witt:ides llie needlul to meet contingent expen.cp, which /he State does not pay. - And this 1. very - mm.lllqm, for who goeth to a warMre at his owircharges t•i• • The efficacy of the Caron League, to •iipprip4 the Liquor Tiallic basis:en ainpl v •tried and protscd itself entirely suceesidill.' It has been tried eighteen Counties of the State. mad the Most gotti., tying reports from those. Counties are eonstahily pouring in upon us. The Cityand County of New York has 000.000,0hU of taxable property.- "hittly . bents fon - every ••?.lidba. oh ikis property in nrinaina:y n•.s•s-ed;to provide for the evils resulting trim, the tot -tic. :dr Carson is eonfalcut that if notes to iiie amount of 5.50,(.00,400 can be :;scored, liable to' a yearlyy_ assessment of tiny cents out etadi , making a yearly fund of $25,000) +his will be a sill s tieient• mini. together with the .influence or thoYie' -who contribute it, to secure the execution . of the 'dews We,linve touching the sale et, iiitexxatiag consideinliw of Mi.+ ,utu hall &teak.. :been raised. Our appeal now is 1., the. ea.zeiis 1)0 the City anal County of ..New Yoshio tinite,With iii s league, and give their , name, induence, power and money . for the suppression of a Iraqi, to,wh.e.e existence nil or nentiythll the the evils of inteolperance ore just;' cotrihatab.e. One upria?.. Temperance man eon shwa a thousand rititoseilef, - s, and two will put ten thowmnd to flight. This dr ganizetitin will give iinny to all the ranks oh Tech; perance men, inasmuch to it 16: not deAgned, conflict with any other Temperance organizattorn., but to comprehend ariq, blend; them all. It will prepare the way for the serining dr more at ringeill .and more perfect prOhibil(;ry • lases, by ~,inbl aut i ce, and giving . a oneness of dircetton to the whole Wield action -of Temperinre men, end trill diie theni-fir that great wort.—:he last to ti e , achieved in order to secure !be final triumph of the_-TeMperance Iletairm—the t , •xecut um or a cont. pete Proint.uory Law. - The Temperance, men Cr this City and County have Only thus to league their( ,ndueare their votes and their pecuniary j !lona. and Intempranoe's burning mon:train- will soon become an exttnct Sto.cano, and the creej grass of virtue and pro-p erity will root reread lie bright sheen 'over those fi elds blackened andi'detiot , • flied toriont!4 of 119 huruink • _ e church whichlirueger efficiatea, - .noir) that he • i s peruatendent of the echoul ; tliat• the giO went to confess to Ktocger; to the churcli, When he 1, , ,d her itiM a back roarn,:and took indecent liberties with her person under pre': teuce that he bad 'a right to do sq, ht virtue of his priestly (Alice e and•that he way prevetl , led from .accurnplislitug his horrid purp'ose only by the screams.and outcries of the tera. tied girl. No virtuous matt or,woinau Can read theurothful evidence ot the little girl, wide; out having their indignation aroused agatu4 the fiend who sought To Ciro', 'her rum. Al; ter hearing all the evidence the Canriltontal "Vather Krotfzer" over in the Film of .5'21104 . , for trial in the criminal courf. • 7 ht- 1111 t i. more Clipper, in conini;uling ui,ou the evii dence,/says.: 7 . It such hhhh that charged against thiS priest of Horne cad he perpetrated in the con I - . and r'acitn4, contiguous'io the church, in,; this PrMesitinf:' country in the nineteenth (Awry, what %yd.- risk must be the runtltrron 'irtt I.l , :ori!c is those et,tnitrtcs where 11 , 4 tut 1 .4 the prevailing, religion f In tuseblis nit Wt ask' the question, A merican hands and fa:her sire ,longei to I their wires daughters ti,risit'it ,. piste; ' where hy,,degress the grosse” pallutionc may-1 be revealed to them by a (dinning, lick.:4lthus . ;„ Prtcst? Should not 'Catholics theinselves arise and denotince this appendage in their i church as execrable, and wholly unwortqi 1 the consideration of hottest min anityirtuouit: women ?" 13,77 - A MATiLY SFEEtti. --The following the abstract of a speeeh by H. P. Dunbar,t Esq.. at a recent Nebraska finligtia:torinioet-i: ting, at r. , :anion, Ohio : • "HMI not come to mate a speec, / i, he watt` present to giv hts egontenative to the, meet- - ; ing and its obj..ets. He had been unwell all; day, and wan yet iodiiposed. His heirt and; tits soul wits tu the" movement. He Matt h , Loc.:Moe°, bitter and unrelenting. Why, rlth a piece of baud paper against him and, it would crack.. but in this•roatter he knew n'o patty. If as has been Mtitinated, the Demo. crane party was to be; a pro-slavery party, the sooner it ceased to. exist, the better. It was then-no longer Perna:ram. The sup porters of the Nebrasita bill in Cettg,ressfmna , the North were base mercenaries, bought ,With a price.. Their political graves are dug, their political dananatioo sealed. BefOre'God he never would atippat Stephen Arnold t *Diuglass or-eny of his Sort, though - endorsed •hy fifty thousand conventioos. He was op- . prised to the bill before its passage; opposed to at now, end opposed to those who endorsed it. He bad preached party nes and political orgarozition,••but he preached them -oo lon ger. We wanted no more national convert none. The people would find a men fur the fle e t Presidency without the aid of ti . oi7 yea-, , don. Pro-slavery ‘DitnuentitS end hunker Whigs might bold intuit theKwould. Their candidate ,would be whistled' &tern' the wind." Mr. D. continued 'his remarks for . few moments. T i tey were characterized throughout with eloquence Bad patriotism. ' X7' Metisidat Preacher,' SJ/qt.ies..—Ac. eordio;. to tiCereitilatiuns of the Methodtrt 411a4oiactozive. %'e - nriat cut away oar Church South, stogie meo are utile to Lis al- riorly tiearind predilectioni..so faros 'bey in lowed $l5O. married 's3oo, besides family feriae with a combined and vigorous effort and travelling espeuses tor children ander, to elect men 16 the. Lgistature who ara atm years of ago, $25; ova tem and plaigtd to eve their istusact sod tainting der risme $4O. Arms ter the iteet)ophohmolf of tit% the - ADD HEasE or THE Pelourrlserns. - 4 State Tessperanze Corivention. 'FELLOW 'itlEzzEws :4-The ',Temperance. i.7unvention;which met ht Harrisburg on the 7th ult., - was halted togethermoder the, fol lowing-resolution adopted he the State Tem perance Cotiventioct, on t he 27th of January last, tcswit S ' • 1 - "Should. the present Ljegeldattire refuse to pass a Probthitory Law,: With; Alr without referring its . tepee/ to a vote of the people, or should they pasi any; Bill Which would be tinacceptable to the (trends of Prohibitiou, then it shall be the duty of tbirState Central Centomittee - ,to call a State Convention, to meet in Harrisburg, 'Slime nine during the month of Itine,:to consist at delegates from the seyeml ; Senatorial • and, Representative Districts. in 'proportion to their representa tivesin the Legislature, and the State Ceti 'tral Committee, who' shall determme .thel propriety and exp ediency of nominating a State Ticket; to b e supported by the friends ' , of Prohibition." , Precisely this contingenty occurred. The "Legislature•refusellto pass n. Prohibluiry Law with or without referring its repeal I°l a vote of the•people." They refused to passj any Bill acceptable "to the friends of Prohi bition." All. that they attempted was a modification Of the liiense law, a i mmure. the placucal Milky of which is to be tested, but the inadequacy of which to removal the giant evil of the totra ffi c is not a matter of conjecture or dou t. - For more than one hundred and filly re p , the experiment has tc been tried in every . form which legislative wisdom could devise to render the • license system safe ; 'to make it a,source or revenue, and yet guard against the blighting. (koala -ling evils which follow toile train. How impotent and abortive these tdorti have proved, the history of the put sadly and con clusively . ehows: It would seem that wise I legislators and Stateimeo might easily .have eeen in the light of the past. the iaapractica- Witty of divorcing the legalized traffic in st* deut spirits. :Ha footnote was sending forth poisonous stream', they would regard it as an insult to their intelligence, it legislation should be asked by which the rills and .the rivulets should be divested 'of -their hurtful deadly power. If the Bobo° Upas -tree were seoditig - rorth its noxious exhalations. producing' disease here, and death there, they would regard it as, worse than trilling to top off its outer branches and nip in the bud . its poisOnous floWer, while its roots were permuted to remain firm and dourish ' iog. W.e are not forgetful of the Apostolic I trounction, "hot to speak evil of diguities," but there is no diviue precept lothiddiog •us ! to pray that 'our -rulers may. be . endoWed with more wisdom than they have sometimes evinced. With the Plessing-ed Heaven, sod the'cnnbiuecf,efforts of ;the; trieudS of Prohi hittoo,- we mean - that men shall beelectedto the twat. Legislature, who will put forth ' earnest: rind resolute ' efforts to purify the „reuntairC—men, who will exterp,ste the Bahuo 1 Upae, root-nod branch, and cast ii into'the fire.: The legalized traffie in ardent simile with the ten.thousaod appalling facts preys mg its cruerdevastatiou, is an iusult • to the' intelligence of the people. and ,a flagraul ' wrong upon ;their sacred, inalienable rights., It istime to f;ay with an inflexible detyrmi• elation, 'sir men will engage in this destruc tive traffic, d . they will stoop* to degrade their reason dad reap the wages Of iniquity, they shall no longer have the Law book as their pillow, for quiet their. consciences by, the opiate of e court license.". . It is readily conceded in regard to most imperidiu„, ,, social evils, that society has the right of self protection. It' is the right of SO. - fei V to proiect itself against burglaries, incendiaries, and midnight assassins. It is her right to 'protect hersetragatust dainteh meat, spoiled _ ptovisione, Unwholesome odors, short weights nod Measures and the storeage of gunpowder. Now, it the.prunthi coons sale of .thioxienting drinks is infinite ly more fatal to its peace and , happiness than a;l these combined: can there be a doubt that it is constitutionally right and just to restrain and suppress such a . traljic ?--- The Supreme Court of the United States has settled this quistioa definitely and lurever, ChielJusttee Taney says:—" 1 see nothing •in the Constitution-of 'the United State'il to preient any State from regurating nod res training the Liquor traffic, or from prolttlit: tag rt olto'elhtr, if it.thinks 'proper.". Mr. Justice 11111..eaid rays:—" A nuisance may be abated. .A state may in the exercise of that great nod compreherisive'police power, which is at the fouodat Ivo of , its prosperity. ' prD/6611111 , 1 safral ardent spirits." Mr. J . RII. Wee Comma- sates:—"if the' State has the power at restraint by licetiseto any extreme, the has the discretionary power to judge of its limit, and go the length of prohibiting it - altogether, it such be, its policy." This tes timouy, so plain, uriequivocal,•te all the re ply-we need to :make to thoie who insist that .a Prohibitory 143 w is uncon4titutional. The •becessitifot such a la At may be speedily And energetically proved, by !he' records of :our courts, by-the throngs of inebrjates con- rhoed in our - Prieune, by the burdensome taxes i , to feed and clothe the victirts of , tuteroper ,auce, by the teats of orphans and the • while le:widows ,madr such by this fell destroyer. • ; ':TAis great moral and social reform which it is our obiect to secure, is not an unknown and untried experiment. It is, in several of the States, a fired fact, vindicating itself by itiw holeSurne and beneficent influence„pour i ing a tideot blessings upon thousands of fain ' dies, and ptotecltog the young, the• inexpe [ rienced and the exteised,..from the grins and Suerres•which the rapacity of avarice would spread in thetr.way. The Mayor of Augur ia, Maine, sirmoutha alter the enactment ula Pnitittoto y Law. said : "The -Police Were uivally called out vue hundred oleos 1 a year; siuce this:noun/tem of the taw they. I lot re not been nall4. opt once ! Prolesior i Stonelniakee the tollretriag...siatentent : "la 4 lar4ng town pf Maine, 0t5.2,400 Mt:table I iota ts,lithere were eighteen dranieltops. All i but blur were voluotathy -closed, ot-the pas t Sage of the law. : These continued open uu-, ;II the mngietraey tatting band upon theM,, eetzed all,thealopiors, and poured it upon the grsund. They were now without the traliic sadtlisir pauper tax, which the sear peevious waSieleven hundradollais, was re -"nticed to :ire t hundred. The mhabliants Met : , they - h• id by tine uperatioct cleared 4s/t t hunted - dollars, abd they resolved to add at: hutlud. to their schtiol limd,• and , reserve two hundred to prosecute unscru ' pulous men who should feloniously attempt to fasten upou'iloon the evils from Which they had juSt estoprd." ' ' • It has beep estimated that by a thorough application of the law to -the single city tit 'Portland, its - honored birth-place, it will Save Ito its Own tahabt:ants annually Three hue il,.rd and twenty-eight thousand dollors:• This large sum,: wur,,e than wasted, would furnish house-rentatsll . lo each for 1000 lam • ,airs, give to 'each of these lainthea (Fire cords fil 'wood, Eye barrels cif (lony-, titftl SSO wort I a aniiilig. at 4 then have a surplus Sufi - (Jew to build tiny if welitog houses at 864 - 11 : each, five' meeting lemsee at $.2,00u, end twenty school' houses-at $lOO •ea. - 7.11, 'apprcr pnate SI:.?„0011 for instruction in its temples of religion and science, The Rev. Mr. liati ly of Portland says : " One hundred dulls ,!s wall aeciariplish more for the moral improve:- relent of the poor - than a 111011Clifld could, dur iti:',; tiw.eriett of tileolitil." It has been said, Iflat mons liquoras now used in Maine than li,liire the law was marled. , Boston liquor dea!ers make a eery dial-relit representation. Om , of thiii . elai,,, its reply :1;1 to their trade ip Liquor in Maine, said.: ." We used .to, Havre three loatid.red vustoiners trona Maine, who each traded with us from live hundred to threeta I iimand dollars per year ; but. -now," said he, e all -Maine is not worth 'wow." . , . . ': In Massachuseits and Vernnont; the. same grtleral virecisll4ve fe,afited twin tiler:33p pression of the liquor traffic.''. A uumber of the common Cottueil of Springfield asse Ned_ that a thtioniii lona thirty per'cua-of Mimes, suet, as dtAtilisilarceny, distufbaucteof the peace, &e',-.had been AILW of the fruits of -', their Prottihrtory Law.: (lout AmesaValks ee states /bat "crime his been lessenedthree. fourths, and pauperism in a corresponding 1 ,• ratio" in those places where the law has been folly- executed: In Vermont two Mu. Mori jails have been tenantless Under the De 1, sign influence of .a Prohibitory, Law, and have been'adyertised to rent. . . ~. s r how, it le tor the Proms: in our greaten(' noble rommenwealthio decide whether we shall be participants of like blessing, or .re main under the dynasty and curse oeruni-- , whether, our youth shall be protected, or fall victims to the , fell destroyer—Whether our : pcipt UM !hall beiome more burdensome of be reduced one-half to two-thirds—whether our prisons shall' be crowded ur crimper'. i tively emply-e-wilether our fifteen thousand 1- groa r shopeaad lager bear saloons shill con tinue to send forita a tide of poverty, misery and death, or be shutup—whether parents ;shall ace their- food hopes blasted or realized —Wlither poverty or plenty. dorhestic broils Or Contented quiet: fierce passions or genial tempers, cursing - or blessing. sorrow or joy. weal or woe, shat) be in the ascendent. .1t ts . We3say for the peopk , in their maieetz, iMii might to decide these momentous iesues.— . It they say, tbatttruns and, rain" shall be perptousked, so it'rvill be. Bat ;will they thus say 7 Ten titocutaud 'Wes - from bill and dale, front cities and towns. from - the waffles and the mountain tops, gtve fin ear. poetic response, tuil NO:: • - '-'' How, then, shall the needful refdrin' be &nained ? This queattou -is of vest wad, vital imeurteisee.. The: answer, however, is brief • -. ut. , impartant refOTM of the age The friendsOf let:aperture carioca. in truth and nim bi. b#:siliarged wtth 'precipifetiag this subject bite pallties. They. have anlionalv uni t e moily endeavined to avoid this issue. Bpi the cOlittie persisted in' by the last Legs istiture in !spite ed entreaty and reipectldl remonstrange, has left them no other alters native. !ultras-a small favor. assuredly, ' that we asked, that a - moderate, jodiciotts Prohibituryflaw should be passed, and the great question of its repeal should be sub. mined to a ribpular vote- If this most "'as' onable preposition had been :weeded to, this conventicle Would not have been eallisf, and no steps iii*ld have been taken:. to siteet a temperneetrcket. ..But the majority klt our rePreberatinfes refused this small boon.— They choie tit, do as thee have done before, to disregaid-the known wishes of their con atituents,l4.-perpetuate th-e liqtior traffeer ' They have acted their pleasure. It 'ire our pleasure to elect true men, faithful' men, who will case more fur principle thatOirefe. ;more for tbe4eople than this favor - and pat. , tonage of zriimsetlers. The work-before us . i . s plain, anii;by concert and energy may .easi.v be Alviiinplished. .It is nut our ; object tutelect W:lafga, or Democrats, or-Natives, men or. sound ternOrance principlei to Whatever pdlitical party they may belong. We counsellihr friends'. therefore, in those localities whfrie a Dermerat ot known! fideli ... . , ry, to the nridetples of ternperanae is most likely to tette:Red, to give him their united , and vigor*. support. So in regar to ilsy Whigs, orti.einbers of the American .., We are qaffSfied with any class. of en whatever Mai be, their party predilections, who williffedge themselves to sustain abd carry throtighla Prohibitory Law. , A word in:, to the popular vote pro- Tided for by the last Legislature. to be ton. ' stdeied as ,thii;prayer of the voters Of this communwialth, relative to a Prohibitory Li. quor Law.l' ''Jt is not our business to dis cuss the wit ditm of this enactment. Suffice it to say, it lie!, on the statute book of the State, and reOres a'response at our' hands. The Convention after much diecussion and mature delibilattoil resolved to urge upon the frunds'ol,Prohibitien, to vote upon the question presented by the Legislature. They say it shatltat'Peonsidered the prayer of the voters re teutitterti a Prohibitory Law.", : This recommendatinn may seem to be It conflict with the tictitin of the State Temperance i Convention. id; anuary last But a-change I of .. eircumitentes justi fi es and requires a. change to airy lactics when no principle is involved. ;There cannot be the slightest doubt that ilerge majority . ' can be secured, against the; liquor traffic, if the friends .of .Prohibition`, ate united, resolute and uotiriog. We can shown nAiorttY of Me thous.and at least in otiejavos if the thing is entered upon with o:aleterminatiou so succeed.— With such reinli, - we may eafely anticipate the speedy ttinmph of our cause. We ear nestly impylieour !needs in every part of the-State la gird on the temperance' armor. and put forth:their best efforts to. secure the lull ttiumplio our principles. It we suffer diversity er, views to- divide our strength and cripple our k endeavors; i f - b y any means our opponents ahohld have - , majority of' votes, it would be tietti prjiclaimed an received as a pop ular verdic t nat nur course, and 'ne ex plimation - or protest we cduld make would remove the!thiriression from.the public. Mind. We must vote;-; then, or endanger . and; seri ously uthsei t i the important interests with winch we tireentrosted. With a vote such as we are-able . ,to cast, a, Prohibitory Law will not long tie delnytil. , We earnestly ap. peal to men VI all classes, conditions, and creed 4, to Itiailits a helping hand. ' The en emy wliotn*eassail, is alike the enemy of all.. Ile tnekks at widowe' sighs, - and or phare's tearrt, Tram the poor, tramples Upon the weak,and4laye his infatuated victims on every stele.., W-herever fie goes, devasta tion and , rui'oAark his path. He is arrayed against God, and goodness. and. no efforts should be spated to drive him from the hab itations andvOlks of men. Then a song of jubilee shall gomp, and proclamation shall be made that ,:piih and righteousness ,and peace havei tiitimphed Dyer error, wrung, and strife. 1 1 r'ELI SLIFER. President. j "4 . l l l l . F.:f. w i ' . l " 4i n s. _ t E Ilarrisluq4une 7111, 155.1. 1)0(101 4 0 ON Tp k BTU Nl'. yoar awielwly:hy trill ye Le rough nine 4 The Philaoiiiihia Der+rats held a rrieet lug to ludetieo*.nee square uu 'the 40t.— Senator DOllO4 was among the speakers.— We cull a '44'2 : choice silei!iniens (rum; his citation • , , Alltiding, to pie threat of •th!" allied ,for- rte," as he tryirighttitll l y termed-411 thole , who diiapproOot his Nebraska that it'.wou Ovate dangerous sectional lett ings betweed:life North and South, he said : Washnlig4 had warned his country . - m'en against? a3f unscrupulous demagogues who would stiteitP sectional hatred and strife. There was na•rat patriot hf the revolution who had ever - recommended or `advocated such fraternai 4kvoid." • That's rich, to. come front one win; stands at the head &iiir,front of the present agita tion, and wlitihas so appropriately been called the mOd4n Arnold of America. • - , Again, spealcmg of religious liberty,: he A col:tut/en: he deterpitnation to invade these sacred. rights had brought about the Americadßev- Mutton . , and civil:rand religious liberty . had been estsblislied - Jiv the struggle. The peo ple having acchruplished this great object adopted a.'Cuaitittition, thus securing the rights for whichlhey .had battled. All, the speaker said,Were sworn ,to .support that Constantin, %and it was a violation of the instrument to ptOscrihe any religious test for office. There teas a secret organization. to do this, and he itioiced that they.call them selves "L'uoW-I`4loliitts," hit . they kgOty not what they do, thiey know not, the.ohhcaticins they * ewe to theToostitution, to the laws, or to their.fellow:Men. (At this potatlbere was const.derable dis• tut tepee in the oowd=several persons 'es pressed their disiipprobation of. the speakee z t remarks ;•theis*ere Cries of " Let him' go t.tu in his owniivay !" " Toro him out !" Sic.] " The speako'.desirgil to say,.a few words to.the disaffedteiroilthe meeting, hut could tot . cugago th'elt:hlTention. The Democratic party, he said, '{vas the ermstitutioniNpasty, .and all should go for the Constitution al .it is, fugitive slayiyilaw 'included, All should go against rcligous tests for office—against all teats but iholut the ConStitution requires, Thry should go„tor the freedom of the peo plc in all the Si tes and Territories;; old; or new: •We are ti:pw ready to go to the polls. Suppose we arioeaten once, did not some Of your lOreta*rs die in the minority-3'' True, they !du; but they were Mr. Douglas Would have to *. blee4 and die" for his countri; a ' -good many times, before the•peoPle wtttl ;tbelieve he had any manta! relationship, Wki . ,',,suelt a tespeetable class, 111 pow_NoTiiim: "IVhere ; have , ;,Y6i h-en ast*l Mrg. As Mr, :kw* in dot door: "A prem. tillierteek,yeoir liOyne ; I'm gurefitgo..Lt.lve . Mydnight OettlA wit! no) Slune'dn lo_tt,Stiol) —tor arnog PO IVherta hart, yo,o'..fmtni —I ask' ago ' Say. be, "dee soU know." ' "A pram ,- igni:o . tivour listin in '4. And ... your; c hat if muddied o 'e r ; Your noe = - Pad you can Pidareety rear h I lie door.. ; How came ;TO 0,-you naer,Oy 'man. Say', Mr. :•_lnoli-' , -how came you go 7 " "My deare,t Urittie-(kuil Imihe'r rue, . You've tienigl tete .guy that Jag'}koucv • • 'Thlon'i know', h . ,* I met the.boye, And how I inrd.A. my maiden' speech ; I doiCt know Winti n wtet all about, ' Or wllethertti , ir6 a growl or sereeelt. I don't knoW it '6,Wrts pop we drank, Or whe,,key,llitkpr beer or rum, I don't knoW 1i0.W,1 broke my no.e; • Or how 1 na',..ipted bum." ,- • "I..ce it tllt•-y'ridernel man !" Cried Mr.!. r. 4,14, excited quite; - "You've joined tb men who nothing know, . MO votive t* s sh tticet4r4 th o rn to-night, 4101, 11l rorizie you, if you'll tell: Why they 'do !hen( in reeret r.) , ' Sly. Mr. Snote—iirhat do you do 1" " , Why, Mra.':*oh—.l do not know !" f costu.sfo:inviO•or nig. MINR RS' JOURNAL. I Excutunp: TO COLD SPRUNG 'A large and' merry party Resembled at an eßrly boor at the Pmegoae Dep-it, it route tor the Cold spring, to Spetui the natal day of American Independence. I,'•'4 were all Rarely housed in the hizurious curs of 414 Dauphin and Susquehanna Railroad, winding Out way through wild and beau. taut scenery whieb onutinually called forth excle• mations of delight from our party. ' Arrived at our 'destination, we were cordially welcomed by Col; Morris and Mr. Jones, the gee- tlemaaly occupants of the Mansion Muse, which wss thrown open foilthe occasion, and everything in their power deue•lO make our Piellie pleasant. The hours ware girieti to mirth and gayety. Some took a plunge in ihicsfar.tareed Gold Spring baths, others found exeindeesermse in the bowling sto loon, while those tebb preferred the quiet shady nook sheltered by 661 shade trees, were also grit- Mad. Many were jibe groups scattered here and thsre;.-it taw phoseOtomis congenial spirits, and retiring from the epise or. the Mirthful, enjoyed these whispered Stoat that come from the lips pi laved ones. • , - 'At the good old _feshioned hour of 12, the bell 'Marooned us to &oiler not only to "a feast of teas art sad flow of *OW) but to a mat, where the "inner man" wire strengthened and the heart re. freaked by social PeAreerse sod kindly words. Alter enjoying thb*aple callition we Were eglin antlered each puny Pik/wins 'heroism Inclination: But the. Spring...4o . 4 beautiful Spring which , has enjoyed halt a cantuty's raptitstioo for its stedicantl properties wets the wawa of aunietton. Thus we spentthkbours until, the etudes Of s mug were gatbineg' amend whirtom the guilt whiatle of the Iron ROW ill, dams, i note ofereptuntitm (et our . - ' j'''• -• - - - I-' ; ' :' •-' - Alter ideming ear U; _Me Vllloline VW* Ileum wile bad lukied as ITlOCh.wrAbs ellje.ruent of the day: and regreitmelhat thitleleoweakeloou. kited tO diffitie around thelikeial:chnle no lunch o f joy,shot{ td bop " Micheletti; Ihnil,tleati bade them , . ten. ~' I l ii.! I' , We can n ot forbear 11112 a pallet , fatOrting our Osaka to the orientate:Q(6e Pic NM :fed the gen drama ot the Committee, fqr their''su eisarful ef- Gsrts in causing pa to spend' so pleaisan 'a 4th of Roy. I .: LADY. .SCRAPS of A SP)I t R I ER RA . Dir. ' — , , . Foox con nue' vote: ciattlESpllltiENT. . Trawls-tic at Ireilniad Spr —Fitit ithistitsfons. of Niagara—Hams of liaterett r -Nospontion Ittiets.tr,-Misteral . Spttn4 , —The,liVearlitoot— Dipirt liole—Mattect Bloodit.Ron—Lew vitoa—Motattatn Viets rupezti,ron; Itrtdge— Votenstotra—Brrie4'.. M ouotantr-Villastsout Attempt to Peril* it—Fillt Emirtrtrel Church --Ta.ca rem I.dion 4 —Boilanir Spring.,--- Si-hfosvier's—Chippoira—irundy's,,Latte—iirrh too at the Faita—Lose-neavf drt i ttet l ,4.c.,4o. r ..: , . . took. ..ts44. DogsJOLltliati:—Those traveller* who see the sights as they travel by Wasp, end who consider I one full dayamply sufficient to do a large city or some turnouts locality, will dank when they have accomplished the round narrated in my last - fetter, that they hero seen' !Chignon Truly,. they have I seen the billed's, beard the Trier, drank a bottle of champagne at the hotel, and thus far fiilfilled the requirements of fashiOn—but how fin{ do they know vi that calm grandeur that Fmrioniide • tinw are and pervades the whole-being - of !him ',who looks upon it in the right mind antwithi pure feel iags. There is a giant faeciaptioe artiund the great cetera - et—a mighty spell fur; me, and have not ,yet.forgonen.how upon my fipt visit; I ,set { loWn smai the beak at noon Mid with eager eyes • drank in the gorgeous view, till the shades Of evening warned use that des day was done. •: 1 There are in the "vtemity of the Fitils of Niag ara many places of interest Iceenectedi with I L W river, and others of historical, and national import/ lance sufficient to render the ; spot clasile ground, end (*Buffet enough to well I repay fit lengthened volt. , I ~ Two miles below the Fillip is the' Suspension I Bridge a fine work. but a mere shadow of: what it was Intended to be, owing I to softie 'intimater. standing between parties cot:teemed, when the af fair was left unfinished. Near ibis bridge it the ' Mineral Spring, where the water gushes pp through I a rocky tfastn, and is etroogig impregnated. with sulphur. A small Grecian temple is !!ortt over 'ii I • Following the course 01 the' river, ere, come to a I place where the river bends at almost ; a right an., 1 Vii7lpoci hi l. M gr ......1.1--yeoirrildy , l4l7lX to a: the bottom of Whirlpool., enormously h gli Y bankt•land .VirW r the wonder. The river whir a with a Nark, atil t len tido, cud nothing MCC minting hanheen known •to escape its retentleas jaws. Things paSaing over the Fans generally make their appearance here, and dead bodies have'aMeles been "found in this spot, victims of the cataract. Many persons con sider this equal to the, famou Maelstrom, on the toast of Norway. • 1 Just. below the , Whirlpool, lwe co me! upon the Devil's Hole, a deep black looking spoi,:whern the river moves slowly /Aloes between :oVerhanging precipices, shut ouffreim - thei light of day by the dense foliage whieh•enelote it. This spot ha much t of historic inlersist;a4 rig the , 2.11e1110 of a frightfiit massacre. hi 1761, 4 party; i; , .l' Knell+ were. passing on this Mad from Schasaet's to Fort Niagara, where they ,dere waylaid hyl!a force ni French and English. So semirigidill seaki the' phut that only two escaped to fell [the talc. mine man cot his bridle loose irchu the 'lndian'a' hands, and putting spurs to his animal, es aped amid a shower (.I ' . of halls; and , the other, a rummer hog, who, frightened almost tb death, pupped off' ',the awful precipice, when his drum stratsceuslif in an over . hanging tree and held him fast' At dusk he 'care fully let himself down, and utnwlatit I Wong the I loot of the hank, gained the fot. A shrill stream i i here crosses the road;wbich 1 om the 'm re aisac ut that day which reddened its w ters, lusisitice been known as the Bloody ann. 1 Keeping the road for three miles: farther, we result the village' of Lewiston, The 'read vemds for. the whole distance from ;be Falls/. along the brink of the precipice, which 'wall* up' the N tap era Rivera There is no doubt ;that the' Falls 'once Were at Lewiston, and that this gorge of seven. miles in length has beefs binned by the receding of their waters. TMa view i. suataincd 'tiy the fact that the appearance ut the Falls boa very materi ally altered within this remembrance of :Jenny per sons now living, The village lies at itto foot of the mountain, and the view front, {he top, (*fore you descend, is iinsurpOsCil by anything Which the tourist on this route ran find. Tue winkling river, 'tire unbroken forests, towns,l torts mid villages, with the blue expanse of hake Ontario! spresding, away to the horizon, with th highlands of To-, j ( route, over forty mites dirt, form a !picture of grandeur and elegance. '• 1 1 • • Hero may. be found the grimiest Suspension Brid,re in the world, the work bin (ew,lgtailemen residing in the vicinity.' Titirtural advantagert of the ground are.very great fo such a *or k, being higis and almost perpendicular. It is suPported by ten cables, five on a sidd, running over "towers of cut stone, anchored seven feet Sato the Solid rock. . . _ Eueh cable is formed of tWo hundred and strands of wire, running parallel and bound into one by another wire panning round them. ' The span is one d iactusand and forty feet between the tower, althdrigh the bridge itael 7 A .mueh longer, running rig the tower on each ,side, the nature of the cliffs having made this pr.tiattettble;; that is to say, the towers stand out some distance Irons the ends of the bridge, whieh, as t were hangs. be tween them. The width of the •oad-way is twenty feet. It was tested, when completed, b y as many loaded gravel ears as could 'Amid upon it—beneath which tremendous weight, no Spring or impression could be detected. AI the other end of bridge ie the 13rinsit•vil Inge of. Queenatown, where some of the hardest fighting . re of the lest war occurred: Ilelis situated Brock's Moniiment, though in a very shattered con dition,the victinfoi petty malice. Some one of those Who had been expelled from Canad,s for par ticipation in the political.trouble,of 183SIncineeived the ideit of hintiving up this monument,' lie suc ceeded in placing a quantity of powder to the low er part! with a Mow match attached and !red tice,d it to its present condition'. This at of petty % andal• ism ext-lied the indignation of both nations, and measures were taken to have it I rebuili l i but they have ea yet not been carried into , eiTect. !. . '.. Lewiiton was the plaiie whe the Mithawk In diana ik-ttled when removed fro the State of N. York. and is rather remarkable a being the site of the first Episcopal Church of the West. The .church' edift.e was a log• hut, ad the bell being hung ooieeross-bar, in the tro t h . of a tree, and ran* , 4 a rope attached to it. I: • Near, this village to the Indiani.ettletnent of the Tuscaroras, nutter ti lion among the visitors to Ni agara Falls. , thus far we have heel) ,spr Falls. ,! Above them are! to bo I Mares lof interest—the Boiling' roes, the scene of the far-fame, steamer Caroline, and the battle fi add Jointly's Lane,—spots: whe against fearful odds, purthaseil great advantage's, and for-hims'et We might pen a volume with ea Mc grounds, and while away mat the, recital of stirring incidents , with, did space allow. But we °award.' Iliti.Falls of : , :Ziagara hijre hetia fur many years a fashionable resort, and as suchsee :wen subject to the absurdities of fashionable °Uses, tit, ugh per !l bao... enjoying greater exemption from. Such peas than either Newporti or. ,liaratriga—ihMugh aeon here the tourist sees muiib to annoy and disgust For one we must be allowed tel rare lour voice against the fashionable style of dinner and evening ccellinue. worn only-fieritio49 it isj falkluoliable, , We eanrot whom that modesty which will irl.• PCw a lady's bosom far below the line td .liiiiiipin decency (rather a kerd , one, hiiwever.i.lo &tine now-a-devsi, and hare to the public view ;ell the charms of nature, yet would blush and starnmer tit .the mere mention of a I,T tr jgr , ak:itv or a . nab.' tact. Such things we admire tis iiiiii4i e. most men; tint there is a place for al4 thingicattii sure the area lot the esposiire,6l female oliartn• iiti not at the dinner table or saloon:. Bit let uSfitiish our ftlflPflltOX on the lair tea, lest wel ho expo-td to a 'sis•oldinc,e'lintil to' Mal Which ,fiiriner - allintadver• slims in !ushion laid to open. to.I 'Flue l efore take vont final view of the Falls of tgiagara, and turn your face.with tine towards the Lake. . 1 Yours, &c.( -1:. C. F. • I Iltel. ors Oy.efiEn. *COIt.F.V.:PONONT!i , '... • 1 1 .i ' . THINGS IN Prt ,i iI.ARELP/ri A'. . • Pititsirli.riitA,ll3. ll i'l, iSS4 . . FIttEND rintiNAN,:—Pechapa th're will gef,to re gard me asdroublesume. ;It sO,givee l rnit hint,nnd I shall cease to rend ;bee f my lilisty epistles. A thought lust occurred tonne, and. d;ctinclieledto spread it out on paper. The ilunighlrs Shoot these. "Know - Nothings," as they . nre_+elled. l Cala thee, give say information about therui? Tlit.re isioutile, stlfdig very curious in regard to them. I heard lire. yous to our Municipal F:lectiou that they number ed some thirteen thousand in theleity and qoutity of Philadelphia. I doubt whethe4 it is !so, but one thing is sure, there were I great litany' voters 'on on, , ide that the uninitiated could not account for. I suppose itu4e must have been the '•lsnow:Notti ings.' There is a great stir about th,em 'An igir city, and a great many bitter things :laid tigairist them. Well, it is curious, these ineii, whoever they are, say nothing in reply. Theirl silence Is ; very significant and omMiers. • Whereltherraeeti -vary hew sed.oo I:00W. ; They never , rniblikli the place or plat Vir of their meetings r ! They: Nye no special organ in the city, and thelinost rd. the peo ple "know nothing" skint them, litii thee got say light, friend Batman ! ~ Speak but, I t pray', thee, if thee has anything to ray, . Sonit: repreitsittis4in an a rowdy, impriricipled set of men, conitim'ing:to sirtiverilour republican principles and (usenet,. I I car.'t think that these represemati as ate 'true. lit. is °a good rule, "by their fruits. ye shall titiciw them." Now, candor does require it to bp said; that in the selection of candidate's where electicins have taken place under their ausbices, they; haVe bruited forward intelligent, respeciabf , reliable men. The men they have supported gave had a better reputationiti the communit market than their op ponents. This has been a iennire of i their . movements. For this reason, a. great i many 'shy that the hard things said about them must be mi true. Well, we shall see pow thp thing wilt end. My belief is, from present 'appearences,! Ina( they are going to scatter •to the windi the aldpolitical prties, Whig and Democratic. Itlooke so,-at any rate. Wherever they strike, the blow ii felt. I Al-: most ever) , local election is carried by theta. ',Just the other day at Noriolki Virginia, they sWePt everything betoie them. Stnee then, • prtrtsniouth on the - opposite side of the river, hes gone'the tame way. The New York. Ilirahi, the whirr dal,l pre- dieted that the "Know Nothings? , wit violet the next President. I don't think much of t Ilp.old, but Bennet has some sluesednest lad di,: run:writ. Does thee think there is any trutl in Ins bugger. lion? • Can thee inform thy reader* what are he precise principles ot the "Know ,Nothings?" dtra'they anything more than these, to wit : That 'Americans shalt rule America—that men of Memo i 'hirth.sheil be protected in all the rights and privileges of; citi ' senship, but shall not hold bake? II have an ";rdesr 1 that this is shout all they are aithingaL feat is, I don't know that there is anything very rr f prib eo . Bible intheir views. I have thought of it in this light : Suppose-Richard Vinz,lbelate.ittontinee Of the Democratic party fur Mayor, should 'reprove to 1 London. They might let him danee, at fro iesord [ once to have done, with Queen Victoria, bet he could not be elected as i constable, it hethould try ever st mech. It , wonld be the same !Juno/MD, the muttain all the -Cities of I:ltrettny/r Now, if such's op ss Rtchsrd could not get electerktoo lowan:a m England or Ireland or, Gentutny,:is It yrotcripuoit for the "KnoviNothutge . to say, we are Ong to Dave oaly'our natisre'horn 'chines in - ante M this °mitt! T & bis is the thou that 134 oocurrsd to my nun& ' Thee will l 'judge Whither these is any tome in it. Let me beg thee to ray it word about these men, tf this usdesstsnds to tit sal. Sin primps thesis se-.lgsmUot as 'beim:sit' put Otto psopts. IL so; 449' 1141 /0 ;L Witt not trouble times this topic sprits. by Flint -! . , t - ~ • ,ists ' , s ~ DR.N I TER'S REJOINDER. , ISO,- ItANitiot :-14 hive reed the "Reply' of the 'resident i4dftceir,'.' mid "When the% haee•read this communication, they probably* . I knots some of the mummy, - pr:Tertian of the nostrum which they call "into/meets eivieg." • - i It the "Resident Editors' will read what is con- Mined is No/ 853 J, 00040173. of a gram**, the author of which.iii Peter Bullion, they will !earn bow to correct the following sentence, which I find.in theitine NO. of the County Moog Journal: •iair.Stgennin ismarked upon the advantage to pupil and whiter et using a regnialreertesot works on the gramMlM4 01 different languages ; and coin. irienteon the pie its of Brillion,', series," . There is nnoth r error, 'in the same sentence,. :which I. will no now point out. Thine Who I . 'dwell in glass he' should not throw stones- . .. I have uever pretessed to he a , warm friend of the. County .ehoel Journal. Since I made the prolix to it my ( influence in its supper!, I have given one dollar and fifty cents for what numbers 1 have teaseled. ;It is not a great sum, I know, but consider tt has not been long since I made the promise. I shall use he p onoun I, whenever it suits my Couvemeoce:; and I shall beg no man's pardon or co doing. t bike Whetter than I do the ait.rial we, which este Mimi used es a substitute.- ' I ji.inly, 102, the County Institute was held at Tamaqua. One of the aliesident , Editors," who was thert to' the 'County, did not take : interest . enough in it th glee us his presence. When 1 was requested to become President of the lusiltute, my mode vtv led Me to!reedminend Elias Schneider . of Pottsville, as is suitable person for that peke.--; Though he remind* me of the snake in the table, which the man had compassion on, and warmed into lite, yet I cannot say that I am sorry 1 reeves meaded him fo that caw; for lam not dead yet, and I do not :hint: that his bites arc mortal.: With the proceedings of the Institute at Unique, I *anent well pleased. I felt that I had lost MY' Iliac and my intmey: As the next' meeting was to be held at St. Clair, I secretly resolved that. it I had the power and 'the influence to prevent a tail. . Me, tt should he'done. Accordingly a - short time before the meeting, I wrote a commuuteatitm - whieli was, published in the Ilfiners'„Joi!real., This had the deleted erect, IA respectable number of teach-. erns were present, some of whom told me that they bed thought little or nothing of the meeting . 01 the Institute, until they read that communication. I also engaged men to lecture, Sce. I knew, at , the .time that what .l was doing did not 'beloini to the mike of Vice PreSident. As neither the Presi dent, nor the - Executive Committee, took interest enough in the:kneeling to perform toe duties which belonged go vich odive: I tett willing to incur what ever eeniions the enaMsbera of the institute . should see fit to bestoW upOji me, for stepping out of the boutidiries of 'My erne.: Did they censure me for what 1 had done'''. No.' So -veil pleased were they that they, pass e d alresolutton of thanks. They , had had a goOd meeting, and they were pleased and happy. And this hippy feelin g Me Prestdeut had when we met at Isinienwille. Per when I entered the Ilan, lie said, "I art' glad to see the strong men come out," and Ile !hook me cordially by the hand. After the meeting was opened, we ascertained that the members of the Executive Committee ~were not present. 'The (President then appointed It. Christ, A. K. Browne and-J.. Dickinson, who went out. Soon one of them came back and requested an addition to their number, when myself and Mr. Burnett were appointed. . In the Committee room the question Was asked, "whoa Chairmans of th e Committee . "' I said Mr. Christ,isrhairtrian by appointment. Ile re plied, 'I supp4s4e I int until another - is uppointed." The other inernbercit the Committee insisted that I should be Chuirmatelland as-lime iiii re.poti:qhij ities. Not expecting v seen au office, I had no: pre pared' myself tor it.: it was therefore, with great reluctance that I consented to Le Chairman.of the Executive Coimnittee. As the members of the Institute is•cre.svaiting fora report iron' the Corn mitre, I yielded, and soon made a report in part: I labored hard to fulfill the duties of my tidied.' .1 did the best I lemild under the iVrcinnstatiees.— From the inimites no one woulif,:nraw the infer, enee that I was the acting Cliairain of the Exec- • utive Committee. The Minutes are carrINII y and cautiously worded. ;. No Chairman made a report either in part or in fulls And whose name 'is plut•ed first as Chum - rein oft the Executive C o mm ittee ? A. K. Browns., This I ant inclined to think leas the doings of the B,lcrieary. Whether the' Presi dent mace any suggdstions as.to the minutes, I urn not able to sayl I thought, during the meeting, that there was a tacit understanding between .the President and thi , i... , ..4.eretary that the "strong" man Must be kept down', or his strength might prave , a detriment to their designs. At Port Certien; the President made u "sugges , lion that the Minutes shifted not be published in fall. This idi knvir, for 1 heard ii. I did tint then know that?, it tgas the sayings and doings of the "strong " men, that were to be expunged. z+ny logs and doings of "strong" men are utter annoying and therefore "100 tinimportunt" to acme persons to appear in priht. Me. Angeles WO Mt. Barnett, 1 think, were fairly reported. And' I dot not doub r t that they Until: so too. ,: [lad I liven as 'fairly reported.] should have been sat ofieid., l Equal-handed lustier to all is what I like to see. Thought, resting on truth as a ful crum, is the compound lever which moses,the world. I wish!tinC 'world to have the benefit of some. of my thoughts. No mercenary views prompted me to see!: the office cut County Seperiatendent. A desire to en large my sphere of aetivity and usefulness, was the moving power.' A fair compensation' wus, there. fore, all I , desired. Having no family to support, my eircumstatices are such that I can work he lean than Some men and Still live. .. • . . . . And is my name td —be erased from the bstsil membership of the Institute?" 1 have read that Columbus, alter ha hEtd dise.vered the New Wor'd was first honored, and then abused and shainotilly treated Great Men Me often treated thus. The •'llesidetn Editor.," ure determined to make a great matt of tue 14 treating itne as other great men have been treated. .1-do nut a•lr the "Resident t'ditors" to publish the letter I wrote, in the School .1671 r-ital. !never riled any one to putifisn iiiirtien I wrote it I did not dream that it lever.wonid Sa publi•icil.— And I 40 not Lnow ulty Provident:cm" ordes`ed cir; euitti•lonees that it altUuld I.;e publishes). .Perhapii it Was tharl might receive one "r , /oterome vice." Do yort,..dles'ident Editors," say thst lam ineurah:e It t+ certain that on compound mixture of inferjerlieus a nd elzdanil nous administered as "wholesonte advice" c all ettect a cure. ' Wm. E. POItTER- • SI Char, .fienct 28ik, rd l. • • Allmg fritntitir DEPARTMENT.. PRICES OF STOCKS Of Coal and Trtupportitum Compantes in and run ning front the Anthradtte Coal Fie4:4ol Penniyl van i a i , . ,* (rted Tty,.thi for the canue lorin; I,telovi •;the imati very' many Springi—Sehlos isi bunimq of the ietdn of ';Cfhfpriewa ereon gen. Scott, for hiK, country. r undying fume.- -e. on:thew etas 1, an hour with 4.ontier i I there. Mugu li,:• =yin' •' i Rending - . Mine Hill& Schirylkili Haven, blouut Carbon, ; Mount Carbonto Pori Carbon, Milt Creek . , tA.chityll;ill t'allet'c • : Lorberry Ceerk:! SettuylkOlNuvi - gallon' do d 6 . Preferred, Union Canal, 1 ', do do Preleired, ' jjelovare& Hudson (oal & Trans portation (70?!...! RAIL 11.1)AD A. COAL. CO':A. L.ittfeSeltuylkilltool %V. It. It. Co , 50 62 ;65 Lehigh Coat.& Liartgo.ticin Co. 50 : 6t •' tilt . Hazleton Coal Co., ' 50 ', , .{ , Ruck Mountain Coal co., `dl Pennsylvania Coal &it it. Co.. . 101) 14 14 I C " i I)aitrihin Coal ..- k. Hi Co.,_ 100 40 144 I.ylzeni Volley CUM &It. R.11,.0., - f,O fteaveiMeadoai , iConla - ,R., R,Go , 0 77;: 34 COAL COMPANIES , • Fow.4. Improvement qo., ' so ' I 1 North A merwan Coal 'Co. 1 . 25 9 ;:)15 Delaware Coal fi!o„ t 50 ' AIItiCELLANI;OIIS. 1 • - I • Miners' flank, , . 50 n 5 , 60 t • Farmers' Bunk, t t ' no r,t) 1 52' POttgViHe Gal , C 4 , ' ..,0 •30 ; 15' Pottaville I%'ater : I ,t 4, ,!, - .25 25 1 f't; IBM VENTILVYINO RAILWAY CARS; The ClevelaMl fferail gives the following description of Dr..;Geo. - F. Foote's railway car ventilator,! which has been adopted•by the Chicago and RoCk Island Railway Com pany "On the lop of the'car. at the centre, are ..placed sheet iroh brinnets, one on each side, so arranged as M reeeivp the air when the cars are runomg iu eiihir direction, deflect ing it downwards through the air chambers, placed within and en each side of the car into a box or tank suspended beneath the floor, from which ittis'condueted by air tubes opening up 'into . the car through g rates in Several places along the aisle, thence : out I again through Openings in the top. The tank „is Of sUflictent depth to hold a barrel br nt4l? of water, allowing a tree pas• sage of air '.above it. , confliction with this water are iiipesleading to a small rotary pump cto the truck frame which is driven by a belt passing around;the axle at the:Car 'wheel, then 1 back againto the tank and air chambers, (where by asimple — or- . rangement of diffusers the water in its pas. sage is. i,catiered mina fine spray falling utto the tank to be used 'again. Wilen the ears are in motion the air rushes in with great force, passing throUgh the spray Of water. which washes ; down all smoke, einderS or other impurities, the} air, coming up into 'the car as pure as summer atmosphere after a shower, and very flinch cooled.. The writer is changed, daily; when; the roads are doily.. The amount of air received is easily regrila ted by a valve in each. air chamber. The. air in the cars ivaa gratefullypleasant, and entirely free from. everything offensive. The current from thO'opentags in the floor td the openings above was go strong as to uplift hats against the roof j.wh4never the_ cars were in rapid motion. I . , . , In the winter,' instead of water, a stove is placed in the ,tank below the floor, which heats the air m its passage, thereby ventila ting and warming all parts of the car alike, and that too without the loss of any seatsro make room for i a stqye. 'The • bonnets ad. Mining the air from the top are then cciv ered with wire 'genre, which receives and condeases the smoke after the manner of Sir Humphrey lifary's safety lamp; The in vention was tested last winter, and found to work well. The cyst of fitting up an Old ear with the Ventilator and Heater is abdut IWO ; of a new; car Q 7 Courtin IVoisat...--on Wednesday lest the Connecticut !House of Rrptesenia• dyes, by a vote or 116 to 78 (31 not voting') passed a resolution ni amend the State etall. *citation 110 U to allow negroes to vote pa the saute terms is white men. Also (106 to 80) en amendment to prohibit any perann tram voting who cannot read. These ptco. posed amendments were then ordered to be continued to the *esti Ltglalitillfer sad pttb• . Pitt,* wit the ttirt . , -- d F. ..I RAIL. ROADS CA #.sl' I+l :.o I nO CA N A Lti _NE LOW PitIOE to atic and take, intik ev erybody: "we only spent our sentiments when we MY that our Gentlemen crletfils who visit Phihidel. Rhn. will be han4t.virtly treatFil, And can be ttA wionili, fatted too uteachles4 suit Of 'Clothe*, pt a veep reasenahl e t iricr , Jty cat)tug nt the cetehrntecl , olse•price Clothing'. Roux Qt LIPPINipTT 0., .South:West, corner PO Fourth and Iddyket etplebt. ' HOLLOWA 1"S, PI LLS.' ,+A mong all Sc :idle. .meduntmenta of thu day,Alieiname,r whictil the common ear to riau. , ..ea s vio would not meiotic ilolloway's Pills; celebrated both. hufe and rope, for their, wonderful .citiut e 'propert A sounddrserimiuntion has tau Ola us that their reipu. triton ii not , epheineral, but aisdlid, substant,al one: bawd upon a keg and tmful Zexituence , amomr.the intellfgent, the refitted, and t* disr.:ermng. They are tube Met with in every it,brtion of the elethyed Globe. and in every spot-their virtues are allW.led to With grateful enthworatun, that well endorFes their capacity and virtues. The are nut ilietriy drAiittea for a .rpeetal comp:runt, blit..rare der.nratifes and cure, by removing from the system eiemeuts sem, thus operating in an etraordusary manner, in most all dr , ordert; to 1.0413 human nutuni is subject.-;—N. T'rue...Natio4al Litviocra4. For sale by Johol.l. Browri,.Cientens J. C' HugheN :Pottsville ; .4. J. Fry, Taininiun • ' Dr. J. Kel ar Bunin )<linertwi e. MCLEAN'S VQLCANIC OIL LINIMENT,- -J-. K. Burris, Druggist, at Minersviite, we Irilru, has obtained.a supply - Alike! ftoin the proprietor, in Louts: - • The Volcanic Or/ Larizinen't is trills a CSLELIitd- TED medicine,landlias done mote • alleviate hu man suffering tliskat*' reinedif ever discovered:— One' or two appllctitions will - They's the most roc' were Pain, Brut,vedr Spraiien • • TWO Lades W . 211 cure ile foulest' Ulcer or Sore, and will Leal the Inced severe Burn or Salk' without a sear. • EVEIM,F - 1 - 41t,f , ;410u1d have a supply constanly • on hand•to be used'iti tune of -Peed. • .TO MINERS, - wof king in coal Mines, we sly to - you delay not utitil you have obtained a supply .—you "will gave, a great deal olsufferingerni mon ey by iususe._ For HORSES, it: is the only purr remedy for larnenesey brutieri, Cuts, i,crateiics, old lore, Try'li and you wiiilbe convinced. I. Er See adveitii .,, ement in another volutnn. Also folt rule by lolin G. Bretkin, Pottsville; Jtio. Stanton, Glenn Carbon; L. Sierner; Llewellyki ; Daniel J. Lewis - 41r Carr( Allan Allan IVlcLetin, -Forrestville; Millers Store, mint, Colliery. --- -----,------------,—_— .... • '7 POTTSVILLIS-111.4.11.1i.ET5. COEOCUCTED .WE:taiLl' b , ' pp FO# THE, JOURNAL; Wheat Flour. bbl 010 001 I/ea:retie!Kilne rt! d. 64 'h.S Rye do, do. :5 be ,do ', do depa Viebeat,bo,bel - '2ed I u 4- 4 , p ,,,,,, vni , dd 1 ..50 Rye, do ~ ~ 100 . 140 1 ,40 - tee - iv', Corm, do. _, - 80 Suttkr lY oat', do * . 56 k. 4 .14011,1dere„ . Potlonei. du- ' VD i Howe. - Ir/lnStlay Vle t td • 2 x,51 11.0, , ,t0e : Clover -do •'.3 50 -Plastfir, GENW.RAL NOTICES. 4313 D,FELL0.WwCEMETH.Y.—Yorsour rous putt:4.llog builal 100 in ho-thia.Til los4' Lrnictry, will apply to kniiisx.PorT. at tdriron Fctarec Town nail 'Joni( J. Jorims, Nfnen villo itccet ;or Joliya 4. C. : 1 1Airriii,'Centie - ; • Wit - LOST '••.& FOUND. • ; L L UST. i•ve'Ong. betweenAti• Itenderson'a Awl* atisl largo OVAL TOI'A - 2 MU:AMT. PIN. The timltir wttt be suitably ts ve:lntild Ey tracing k at Me. lisiS slerodeta store s ., • r, • • '-•.1illy 8,185 i • . - 50.nt F A . p A r l , : l A t it h A i t rv o ' s o e age. of -kid Vilflri.trq.loit. k itlAtultays - v.oi fur any vaforowtion - of hi. wart th4l he Baty btltA V FN.I, No. Fran Plow.te.plo3 Joly if• . it 1 FOR SALE. & ff.(YLM fin 24 (4! . IWCI-4:C1) . tuaildttig,npienlte t o Siff , er Tqface. t If. exptfdei ty lifted - up ter" . olliceft, rind 11 reftpuftft -be reeled to good 11•1,41118 terviuout4tilternis. • ,f 2; , • - , c.1 • I,OIt,ILIGYT IN Di to Kati ' A.ll D i l):11; —A kirt. , 1114 vet* coofveuseni roftuf , 1,111 cttice'or playe 4•1 :11.y 6116, 1•, itil gu} . 41111 pasta tuoillitaftt ie at, I:. 11ArAtliti, ,t• juintug isufy be f. rat 3111.001.9. 6 .Ifluxual ()duce. . Jun.: 10,1034 ME= •I ' CIL leOkt. hil,1111•-r,i1n esktbt .1. tier', Wr4t 1ict:14.41 ri.41,!, wltt to saki autnl+Lyaiy.jtc atiatf u lie at 1.! wt .richey Ili' , ' • • Li:i,LtiT Ni 4 173:•1 • • 1.3-tt 12131 . 1. It EN T. —Tle tee tirsi44. otll4 t sill." Ran i ' V ~el's (Mire Ittfildrzig" corpet 'yf 2d an.l MAi...iiii !,orp..• Ste. . • , . '—• ), )larch 11,1.154 , . t; ' 11.1.1 C _ • LET.—A lu yt story roost) and Lt,kiar uu 2d tittret, near bittrittegiait, it lur stori 3 SZIIIIC il,A111:1 tKilltllv tit.iti it tt tit" " lt, C. GitLti`t, Lewitt if Erect, rottsville. -Fett"2s, 0.54 . • Wit :1;104 1.,. EASE:. —i'll a gi...4.,44!f1ant. A icAilll'ili 1" Tiati oil 'val 1...n.f, known :t;ito...•/..,thy Trai.t.': toln4te in Fratley Tont It illy, eicrillylkill County. t..il of tremimt. , Irtie viv Lotti , ,a4;ri of Vim. Mkne Hit . Vim. to Misidie - Cret.ii,--iionealnA about Yep at e , ..1 is Ilea , . ifir Mtn...red. tint Well atLipt!:ll for no t•II,F I ,; dIVe Ope'rallloll. seo./ :II I,IIOOIIC I:k.a AA/ VIM; 11:11.:C been prOVed- :11.4 :•,/.I,llli WI I. Of ii:,-I,llt , - 1141.11. , . ty. 'For iiinlirrinfoonati,,l. appii J,, , • jtiliN n.lNsi..t. , i.. i . ' ~rl.llt;s4tl.ll (1,1,4 Elt , i . . . , , lott..ville; , . . ' Nino , miber 5,1t , f,3, , .': ' 45 it , - . : I • ... . .. flu" SALE.—.I.:IOI . I:• a lot on re•ntre...itrPct, Nn 4 1, n. ii, J. iNyttik , ;:ad,ittoo to Coti.villb., raid to, rolls hour relltre 111 .rtallr.utilgtiort, is bbil rules otr the . ttotitti by tor or r., 1 . lour,lt, t••••• 4 ,',••tt the i,oitti by n; 2.) ri.,.ri free Lot II•1111:. and parWil Lire tuutitirr or Ito. zrtb.irtber at boa irrug eloin, I lull re; St rriet , Pott4- 011 e• 'lll.ls,put able ttilr w 1111,.. Et en. • •i . )(1111's 14.1 C. MARTIN, ,- • A grlil for (hi. 01. her. Auctist 10, I«5'; - "J';',.tf flßE.'lrali 'typo lES LOTS?. kr building tifti in Ow itr tithe otaglinf laid nut fin the Werritvood: CAtatr r arktl.llY offs vvit Ins eidie. ki k ply " REnleiEL. Agent . for . Ihe-cnvners, - a t naive' n i)ra Pottsville Alai , 3.114.5 i - ; 8:3()0 tußlivA,,D irnmnii , ,,,,,n,r3 of ithayiktll von }jay tar above red wautf . or abd tr , V{CtlrklelOr ryT4On „por,(BBs who fatally ma bt.,l 111W4 A$ KEA ;1,18 tlir, 13.wouga of Pattaville; 101 l lb. 1 71 111 0 1 Jun. In,t Ctnntlltgrionetek vple,Sikly . • VTION.—AII re":6n.e. Vatalr.4 ltAyttinglo4 uEvil 0 0 tr.y account; a; I It -pak• no^u!ot4e of h.:, coo.i, tracing. - • :AVM. 111. &OLE. Mt. L l'olf•hlic July 5,_19:.1 . _ 1\ ISSOLIU.TION :OF 'PA ic)r NERSit II". - rtid vsr!hershilb hi eciohlre ehif fog between ishatv, trading Illtlder the firm' I . S. tin/1 W. Itlichenottio. in 0114 f-Bnioughrhf Pottne ' sene dlsehlithi nosio:tl coo. sent on On of :11.iy 13A. The acconnte the kite fir naoJll boiCtlled by Jaujb rihsw; a h., eAtst.. tine.es Übe bus 'a. iness, on bts owo an - count, at the gam , ' alaqd. . LOT WAINWRIGHT,. I i J01y.15.11354 50 21i, 29j 50 , it 50 12 .50 j 100 ' 109 'lO9l krOTICE TO 13011WPOL DIREeTOI4S.---3 1116 y thr i eve dijir.til 1.3 , y the ;Directors tor earii! rt ' llinol DL It Ice are rirkniirrn o, l'o/aid IC , C" , mti4 rzliperinte lent. by. th;' ,4 lirm ' , tinnily in Anglort,'an"; Asdniai 1 1 port of Itle.l clotol I hit: the year entlitie, °Otte Err Itlon-dny nt !nue. of Lt iitrt , ut richilyll4ll C.. linty not 113v-1 . .d Brant 'F. ,, ,;lt ,, rsild reporl.FAioty' Icttirr or 0:1 - ir tvC;se.to .1. tz. GW I : l i nty euperintl•mdept, at trier.:, 103,1 - ; . - ,y lug rrerlv by 3p . pl 811:1I, July B,r XTericz. —Not tri., tit tp•rrtly that . pre :41-7 In of echilyl'd kill, !Mend In apply 114 1111 Urgirtfltu re of rurio• . st , d 1131113 it 1111 aril .el,Slirri t frir bf ill reaffng.lN.l:apltill tlOrk of 113litf Kink from Two; Ifundredlloll.ind to .1n inlolllar o,t Hundred Thousand dgllaru. UY °MY , ' or the troani.:.l „t cif As; (JO:HER, r361.1cr. o..tt::, S. J~:ly 118 SI 04 . 111V14.-lot c.;lit lir tell pyro thr a ppl ies , Will wilt be ma* in the next LeOtoluntehf sylVanta lot a Charlet . ..lot' 3 Zia i tank. 10 b e 'rifted in lir Hafoiigh of I...itivsike,With atn ," 4 l o r Fifty ThouOtiot Uullar i. wtlt the ineteem-' Ins at to fb,r Hundred Thotriand iditlints,uud of re rr Ining .11,1t , reat - 0114 to be. called..ftte Poitsvlllo-Liethe,4 June 2i, 12.2.1 DIIIBOI.IITHIN OP PARTNERSIP,. The vartneratOO H ber , tninitt etti.{ting between the umlmittnerl, untlir ihn •tirnt 11E11.Pitilt - tt. Pllbv,v q dp,opica Ity co , hvent Ott the 48th day of 'The hooks anti itCoolitita of ita fir nt have been placed in the hanctit of S. D. Eay .tO Whom 211 pt . 1300 . r iodf . l.lL Ware iciplealcd to pay. I P. . • Minertiville,Aune.2loB;tl t IVOTICE.r-Flin cont( riberi Ite'acny give notice . Tirthat application wt 9 be'madt 14 the nest I,i•gi3- lattittof Pennsylvania for a Clollct of a Illnk or Discount, Deposit in . J 1;poe, to locatrd in the Borough of - Tani:ulna rt 1.010(01 , o. be ci lied the tithrarite.ttAnk of Tin , niot. w capital of 'nap TiroritolPolbal. s.sk: fitCHAND viii, 4 HOWL/IND JUI.IPA, Jew. II cm Dell XII, • RAP gliT It ATCI.4Ig• VC, DnwALDIIIY, ;4 • .YF.TCe BOWMAN, Tartiviiia,Oune 24,1.44 It I viita :dux ear ie.A. e N sv, . la it, Co., O. E. CON. 'l , t/ ,, C Mir LeI.W,L -MUT. ,-' -I•llll,lEtehia. tille V, test 3 • A Opeciol Meeting of diecorn , -pm, at the (Mite of the lonalt4tly. on Tu ESDA the it at .1.4 of Jit:y ne it , 11 - o'clock, for pugppir of fret iiioq spun an lorrease of the - Copilot t4tot -for,the trjitteactiolt boat other Lit:ne/4 J• I,lg.ltly, COW, 14.1 - ore them, . a the thipti ot Manigero. Jon* 11, 16.51 - - . illt.i...lol. l lTiOlit Ore: PA partiserfaiy be? ,i , f"re ri,elOm brim Pen WII• ham J.-Martz, Jaw, Ay. rot anklitWiTh tiro, this day. mune nt, th.Sl, datofved by umm a l - ' WM. ). blAttrz, .1 W. extou.:Lt. •JusEIPII El~Tl{llif Y. • • , 15 Crt A . r . A 1 14. 1 11 0 1 , 7 T r i . f. A V i O n PAMICK .14117 Ala V, late .1' the Borough of Pane_ rifle. deceased, have been granted 40 the srbecri. be, ; /mike is hereby given,to .11 Arsons Indebted to said ritate, to mal t :. payment. arolito thosn having eater's against the same, tb fiteionf thent to the mob scrthet'f9r settleineot, • y 11, ' . JOON T. dIIOINCEt, Adm'r. June 17, 1851 • .. , 2t-tit _ . ••• Letters(' .Test.mentary upon the Estate of (Jorge g r i! , heotecraedi have been tamed to the! ristiserlbeori by the Reps , ter of Wiltrr, for the City, and Count, of prila.3l3 persona indebted - CO Wahl Estate, will make payment,ind tboje hsvfog, elaMis present them to tkklia 4'l MECK • 351 11. et.,rriiiii.tdeivbis• ; tigooGr; firL:swEß6 • • • .1 mtnerss•anc• Juni 11. lint µ 2 1 . f it rt O .PA'RTNIEI.B2III,V, NOTIPIEC..—Wri t e is `thereby given that E have shied day /eine 6th, associated wfth me N. EDGAR 1114,11Aftp..Er.q to the practice *mow. vibrch, in all tie carbon bran. etwis,tvlit hereafter be conducted linger., the firm of & ittelfAlWS. Office, Centre Street, iteetioor to S. L. Mat Stole. Pottsville. JNO.rP. NEVILLE. 2t.tf , • . _ .5 - June 13, ISSI 41101.1 i! IJOTtrIV... •The subsirloOt woaiirocreor poor, J.N btu trt.o.s• and the, poblte gene ,a lly, that he Is EdPared gran - Vogt to attend to the meaeoring of rissterlot. Indite llstionry. Mirk elOoof.f, fatting. and other ammo* .helonstas to {fending* of all Mods. Also. to rontraet for -tbe flonstruttion and Siertliaotall lands ofliolldlittn• e mir . mfiderale " _„ ifespeetfittly. 'JOU* H. J./011M. rze.Tbankto rfO r past (sem. rhe onterapted - rionldsollelt cottlottalton of MO t aintgi 1. H. J . • adv. 1 1 41111 : _ V 111.1 y • • U 2u At } vp EOM DM NOTICES. Ell BM J ellip t7-m• BEM It. A. ittar.oi: JOL Mire, •004 NT.. . BENJ. T;', lit im Alio', 4 )4, 'IS I,IID. Bj.ni I. 1it.,11 5 Om =I WANT.ED. IVO TEACiIERS—WANTE6 and four FEMALE TEACIIER4, to t demote of Min-rettiflo, Rrllnytkill Count). ft KNAMMSIATION fur Male attivlicants etutt In the Atone artioul'llau+o;oll MONDAY 1051, at 10 Welock la the mOtraiat. :An Ibr Female aottlkante will be held 9111., 'on TV EADAI . A ugoit 1.1. 1a,51., at n . • Iw 4 , mornin g . rt o pptjr,oly and .1 11 NA.Ac- K July 9, 1651 A t V {II 1:11 T ptte D a I Itt• W l t tL: mot good yerriences. '/Ct.ply to LEVI ARNOLD, ?T.); July - 8, ISM • • ANTED.—Pralire to bale Otto': o. blahalto!. ShAmok sow )..,„,, Itt.g lotto. • Apply to P. W. t, Joh.. 1.4.1554 _ ... . I ' i ` t i nexus WANTED.--14, e?„,,,d . . ~ ,i , .J . V.l4..:4queAtA ano Cool eputpax!l are ime. , ~,,,i,, , t • iy, etiquo) tug liii:eig. TO gi.od, lac ail) h.. H. ih.ri ~, einpluitsctit, the highest' H. ay.. owl it, tnril,:., osudatiood, V. tit iir given. 1'ayn....0. I, lati, ' c.lit—no !golf*. °filen. — thr t'iith{::ii , .) ; hot Ili I• toetehonn tin,. . . 1 1I :g . ..7 lie I.nirihany's Railroad, no Iv loch do lly I . ii:, H , dt. Tra trio are litily IU1.11111:, atoms cl?llit•nu-t,i 4.,...: to the ilillsea, ‘‘llicir ale iiitti.,teii In an r..... 1 , ,,1 ~ br althy Country. . , EidEL riellooll.l 4 are eniabli6l. I. si.; ,„1 . ~ ye continued Le re, for the eilorai into,' . gi„...j„ 0. 01 the 51mi-re al.d I:%orknirn. ; Apply to.) iil,i.. l ` WAIN, Nitiot g Lttsittetr, at the Otto.e, itailh LI ,;, Mltiro. - LLLWIAII.ri hirißKiot . ' .. Ilogi rarer aitdti it tH ri:.....:1•41.1 r. Poi lair ille, Tamaqua, Mauch (41,1.4, r.,1 , ,,, , „ „ 1L,. 1 „ 'ven and - Minti#.% the h‘shro a hli.n.ie coy} . / ?dutch IS. 15.54 • 1 ' 11,1( I i BUSINESS CA.RW. . . . . - 4 4 EA 1; l'.: S7A 2' is: A Gilt:ltiC V Ani Li km. J.IVII:VA11 4 .1111./.—Thv underbid.. d rt•pe, 11. : , , Ibl,” I{l.ll rttalritltni• and lbe pnt,lic#,,,ncral;), j',.,1, , wilt continue 14,•Auctil pivatpily 10 ,•,, , ,i , 1,,,„,,i., 4 ,_ twated to h IA c;:. i to; aucli a.. the{ I Purctia.e dud aa:c• us lirdi 1...t.tr, .: . • I„*.n,lcctvin mf lien 11,, I Couvrlnni..l•,z. a- ' i' L ' , Ati;u,,tine,tinnit• and .CC01.11.1.1, • , 1 - yerirealng and 4.4•llTrai A gen , P, i • 1 / I/Itit I. ill (...eJlifl . Nimet, oppoiii , 'II. '1.;%; I, ii,; . , ma MP Et. 11%107, 1 Potla% ilk., April 15, 1...,54'', 15-I. s i Q luTII: %V. it3kNk,:it,, Vriotit4l , ,% AT ti. 6) I,7allut•%a%lni,Ziilinytlidia I.'nunty, el', t IttL,Litzt rill) t '1 Ilron EuLtra Latrirrr,, r t Praith - Ipl``, doila 1% tlxit . , ' d. 11. Itedeoi 4. A'11 , .. Cl.111111:1,1141 St:. N. , 1,,','4, ' JAAJT• ICCassrantd., Eaq., PIM,* tile, P„, I 0 id , . Ea WA - f,,n,,, Lag., VII illidmapntt , Pa. Aldan 4, 15.4 . • ~ ' 113 n it. witiGtur.s ovivivic.,;. al 1'o•4 J.I •e' duo te Lel w ILa roit; litnce •tiottry PI at , io - tf au .1 7t09 P. Vii. • ( 11,14:r1 • I,•ti'. 11/• D. /1...1.K1D.4(.00., 141111:1:Et.):si j • 2,1/11/,et 14•1 V ULM'S ilia/Ye prvv.i red , o) operate w the ulJlt ASII,/4L1.01) 14111 4114.3 on rf•Usuhatile.lerms: . • ; 3 EDMONDA, 1•401- 4 1r.: - A.:±011. Oir.:4llSit,- IVI. - eher of the rtano,.rir;:in or Nleneleon tutietl. Any tonanunirat Inn 'add fervid 10 14 I , CI lief, at it , s teildeltte, Ittio.r. 141' r writ he punctia...ny.aterniren ro, 1 " - r. ' 2 4, 1613 5'2-14 ,1 .i . N LLEN 1V1311113:1;:,.;qiit%'1:-V0it 44.1 I, riNE.EIt; tvill ef.l.lll.kk• I , Itiovines4 14 t<litift. ,dr. Eanits..l )1 . Farber • It..vii.c 1.,.... , n10rt o . f s :41ir l'Apill. Noir% smi Oink,. c.r isa, i11. 1 1 , 1,111.1.1t1 (Of Ille pujeutt 01 i IN priiir-Slbii. .1.1 iun kit e'. Lir srlitAllliailvii la I.lerolit . 101151.4 .i. lii , 4 %.4! I ri,.R. • • tp,tVi:l,l,Fli.ilf.i: ai..l Al 1.1:", t VIIER tktil ; edi.1.1... il.r n, ,r. .41,1 vt - IL.tg ..I I(r..ii 1.•.;,,, .7.; tiv”. ~,,, I.q r...1r, vrl;il V.sillsl , l, 7 t i.111.1 . 1 110 I I •,0.1,' •, I ' 1)1114.0, btrrt I, thtfli tt . .4 , 1b aylv /ti,J “%vlaiht r 19. v,zo. • •j 47-111 ... . •• - COAL.: •. , . . r • iii•:A'lT V , Ti.o)i i'11.1.; 41. 11.2 It4t , 5e..1.1.i1 . : ' - -LI lit,.. flier In .i. Ntilimany., PIJIIt, filllilillii. :1111. li, 111.. 1,. ;1 IL w itobts ttiiVt Itir i'cliiii)Rial.l4.olll wh. re I' - ' , nn.! i 1.." 5,,,. 1,...144:, , N1111 I lion WI";!,,, . . r. Ili 15,h54 lilt ES \i..l/otl 4 . ;, [ ,l 1,, "i A NTH It ALI 31111 Di 1 tirr tcy, I Ilse L/11 I.elolgit, r. atol Ito.tritOtint ft ‘Viii{ 1,1,4411 t.• 1.. - timid 'll , tf....0 Ili, 11,11 i 1•4'.1, tc.Fll ) . t •k n.it. :Le to 1e10.,0. kr...+l, ; i! tlitt . 1 'l7 It' - ti "t;1. P. II ii .%1 ``U.Li./ktt.T...iii.li.billi . .--LL I VII 4 , 1,/ it 11,1) ip.viirg 11../11Oril tile ,lito,; k,Tiiil r..,.11',, 1., 4..: , ./.t I. 1111:111,.. 14)'t nf•tCl.ited SV all 41115 . V. ;IA . 4:. .1111r..,.M.1.,,,Ar1N Itp,vu..l, 15,..,...,,i 1.e..,0i. I't , F . :4,114,1.1 MY Hill. 111 1..L.1i1:1 A 1.4/1::',111t.l) Vt.., LI 4:: .1.1.1.1. t diet. IA t 111.4 3 ...`,.a. ''. atm H, port nictifOor“:. 1 t.bl'. tD ril.Dt:trilit,l 4 . •. ] . . • ~5,.., ) ,,i.1. ii. rkPi 1 r • .1. , . %%11.1.1.5 1 1.. Al 11l A 104.01 )4 , 11.\ IW,'l MIA., lo{, ' I . . .1 in 't ..., 1'..\1 :, i '... ii L. 4 J . EN V ELII Y Sr.- 7 eft V .I.%AT 1141 NI aind eft i ,tiptiritte .1()N 1.14.1(.1": • lU, , v), cl In.! Pi - 4,l+`L! trf i V I , %V/ LI, VIA', tor Cuh~"Aunt nth N., altilv. ct J k.l.t.ii Wats tt t.. 1 tiio lid 01 el 3L .t.• the hk, PO; V 1,, \OE .V ft .NT is tiaal T1Vit.1.«1.1,. 3 • e•y pt la J. 4 . u 1.1.111•1 Z', two .1“01, atm , % , e. U. ;Alto :sl,' ltaVlc, Pi‘t vioe. ,Nlay 1.1451 Li ILt Eli A5l? I.I.4ITELiv 1V.13ii.. -j. 0 1 :re l't:iti,To,:i tio•ttleo.ll.: , . , •*(lB,‘ , UP", I .. , q , /, til'il..i.NJl.liiit ittlig. , ,l'ma, FiLl, and huntr Klkittl ..1 ,- . . WA!. 11144.11 , 1 , 1 i T.1.k. , 11.ii lIIP ill?, W4ttl;,Opllkvitiv Mitf({l:lC.l ., . A.P.., A!. 4 . Ivsl ' 17•:1 • •. . FANCY rice Port FA.IIO, ,111 g t.a.,e4,"•l'3 , der %I:eight:l,l.llle It 111 P." %Ad tom, ht M 11111.00, r•, , Sign 4.1 the Rig io, 41151rne11.• Ai.. t - 3loty 6. PISA pi N. 13 A smouT N ENT 'of o I:at Iti anq I ibgrr Itlno. nt • 11' I S:En of Mg ,;(11, MAT 1.111 • lE..f C , TILL. A 111 . '.D .4.111 t uni;..lll loft : VrT, Le verb,la,t recriVrct, at rtiv; i.c . 1 11 judgo )otl-1.0 , •••, at II • Al.. ti Alf \•I: , igit dr.the tvBl,b;'oppi,..fic A:411,10; I. - .17 a -1 AND VA ttLytiquot 1101(10 - , Vatte,, Verititur I,k •qan riot fArt.tt.'S hg Cr tltte rot t” prll 15.'L IS t: • H A , } r i i I of /I' ILI., • R P ; .; . 1.: " ..., A; 41 , 111 I% • , N . P.',CICL. A C:Ft .4 . 1,1 111 "111); - , 6 : 1 1.1(1.. 1.:4 ,1 , Am! j • iNI , ; - 3.1 PA N tit srtin, vtry dti • . R. I'. • April • • • •3. t'-•f IMIZEI=I Nititied Getit 113 vier here tea tre'lhr;~ - the hiiie fll lhe•e elielit 0.4 -k ! • low (Meet, with. the iiiimiran , e y tie . t ou,e arai Cry- tn.." 4 it. C. if. ti April . . ‘VATCIIIr.!4, INATCHES...-k i vel'y t!fr , mid iiblerwd 1V:41.1,4 , iiltabin 101 :%/iii , r%. 1:11LIIN'Ar" I>rr April IS, OLD ANT/ 1411.1."1+at Meyer Wit lie+ o(4 e maßc—tech at, r t ,to.vt., Joiniotn'et. 80b,19- ym'g, , I 'oo to • T ' s , f i e vOr• nagtkay timr-lurepeel-{• - 311WIllfadted to periorot a'ottrately Of PIC hatigo!,. Illvn rt, eag. Apnl . ' . ,•15tf r" ibovlCti, Cbileli.".l:—A warranted c10..k1e., 'l,_, cheap .i. 1 4 , .11ur- .onto 3 tha y 4 hltkli US lflYl:,t '. . 3 di)ll4l4`. ft. C. Ili fIP.EN, I'...ntie 131ret.1. , Aintl L. '5l. • 154 • 2 I • •. - . • Ilf.i"Nit. 11•VAIUM AN,II r mit: “ v pji},4 , , ,t %,.. . i I , I very tine Zisaortnient of flitted Wilk"; .../kvisi t ti,,' of rea A, tt ' , Caftlol4, Pi!. %1e . }... 111figA, SAII. and Ol.i. 1.1.1 relit's, FOrk4, Knlvev„ Cake itaoketl, t , r a tdiliii It , rivr,A, 1t0i,...51.c.,,d.c., , , the all {der t. 46Inlitv.1 i. 41.... trt.ilt ii nn two ;111.0. 4 of iil'Plif And 1,11.4..1A - 11e; -- F.,r ti aie etteap r alr . '. „ i . , it C. iftltr,r,N • ri„ (.Toone rito•oli 1,-It .I'l =%EI PITILADEp"HIA. I . . , Afrerll,tentent.c let rep ih tp,- 'n‘ . tazi, tire elt,:rgl.l fifty per earl. 041..tyv too a.6;ertisanm rates. PLATINA POIY1S! 'LIGHTNING RODS, MANUFACTURED AND - SOLDBY NIPALLISTER & BROTHER;4 OPTICIANS, 48 - CHESNUT- STREET (At the old Stand, established in 179(1. Our Plant+ are ail tipp , al with colid Platina &ELI quo*: ou , roun ,.. printrd dirq , cti,,na amosupapjaearh p,irjf ;prima, Si 00, sl'2s, $1 VA, j 2. 00, $3 Mill 00, per paid! , :arcortlinis to thalumility of Plstiui. By remitting Siz 'cents in Basta* -Stamps, in addition to any of tho abol prices, a point can be safely sent hy.mail , any put of the United States. ;tlsy G. 1t551 • 1,5•;1nt-' = , • • M..COLLINS CO, _succ.„,.., to WA '!. M. COLLINSI PAPER. WM/1011SE NO. 15 MINOR STREET, kIkiNTING Aia.; e iv 4 igrus .1 4'74,7TER, • 1 1 PASTEBOARD:I AND CARD PAVED no l gtilOLECiAC tet.LEX• IX ‘TRAWBo OINDRI4` aoAßnd, • TRUNK immtpm, '.l eNvetorr. PAYER.tce.,*4 rr , ALIO. Acents fur rale of Itosto.,PA ( At and Postor Gorses for Cars.. Catts.rtstoribustrb , rind heavy michinesy geoerolly Ma 9. 6 , 1 14 'enclicr ir--: ,iIAaII3EST Ctn/EDI of the dont . qoallty, MO from the best outsets, son be htd talularly every %Volpe edit and rtsturday at , F. NOVLE'd New veseobia and proviodon etand., Atitraotoogn et..l ii•tt letlY Vi leil II , U 1 I MEM ECM Prr.cIVAL 10-to •
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