The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, December 23, 1854, Image 3

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    o illintris' journal.
P.OTTSVILLE, PA.
iiiiIIB.DAY. DECEMBER 83. 18154.
;sr .Iq.NE/I5• JOUR SAL has a larger
e S.rclation than any other Newspaperpubiithed is. ,
Ycrthern Penneylcania. It circulate/ 'among the
Iron and Busincee men, not only in this n.d
the C. 9 l,lliilie*, but in all our Pities; and it
c'eo eirentatee /aryl /y among the mosses ix Schuyl
kill. Coilidy, which render. it one of the &wet raht..
able Adrertieing nterlinine in the ensme , y. Ant fem
Papers hare so many eapita/itta enrolled on their
,nbecriptinn h at,. °
AGENTS poi noisums :awn. •,
'MAID J. LEWIS, Mt. CHETHeI :
Isaac F. Davis, Axhiand: •
InEnl:Rics L A CDERIIRES. Tamaqua: -
T notrso N A. (10n9ftrY,'Tremont:
Voi.sit IL PALMEn. corner Third and Chestnut
Strerts,
E. IV. CAnn, South, d'street,Thiladalphia:..
CHAEL & Co., South' td street.,Philadelphia: •
Wtriarin .k Josts. N. E corner Third and Race'
streets,
Philadelphia
C. F. NORTON, Coal Merchant, 52i Walnut
Philadelphia:' •
VoLNEt• PAtacri, Tribune Building, N. Xork:
CRAXE Jr. CO.. 102 Nassau Etreet, New York: .
S. M. PLIEEEFOILL, 119 Nassau street. N. York:
ticllett aScakt.t., Appleton's Buildings,Broad
way, New York:
CHARLES 11. HERBARD. 71 Pine St., New York:
V. B. PALIIER, COUR street. Boston:
S. M. Parrs:mt., State street. Boston:
Who are authorized to reciere subscriptions. ad
vertisements, ac., for the Miners' Journal. and re
ceipt for the blame.
' A NEW IMLITELE OF THE MINERS' JOURNAL.
THE TIME TO SUBSCRIBE.
With the approaching new year (Isifi) will begin
the Thirty-first VoluMe of the MIN JOURNAL
Newspaper. Persons wishing to subscribe will
please send in their names immediately.
Since the disastrous fire of the 10th of Oeto
ter nit., by which almost everything in the several
departments—Nemspaper, Job Office and Book
Bindery were destroyed; the entire establishment
has been re-built and re-furnished. The Jot rscAt
is again printed by steam on a new Power Press,
and in a complete suit of new type, Ac. In typo
graphical appearance it will now compare favora
bly with any publication throughout the country.
The character and general course of the Jonit
'AL are widely known already, and, therefore,
need no special exposition now. It, will continue
to advocate the great principles Of
SOCIAL AND POLITICAL REFORM,
Temperance, American Republicanism, (inehading
ithe right of civil and religiou_s_liberty in its tar
' bestand truest sense,) Ac. 'As the acknowledged
ORGANt OP THE ANTHRACITE COAL TRADE,
No labor or expense will be spared to collect and
disseminate reliable information, pertaining do the
interests of the, business„ and and advantageous to.
those engaged in it.. • With an eye single to the
legitimate conduct of the Trade, and ever anxi , •
to promote its true objects, speculation and Raja
sultant mischiefs, whether cloaked by high ulna
sanction or schemed by private individuals, will
• I.c exposed and denounced with :an unsparing
hand.
While keeping our reader; ph.qed in the gen
etal movements of the Sttte. and Nation, and in
;Ilti news of the whole world; particular 'attention
sal be paid to our Local Departtnent— , aiming to
wake our columns an exponential map of our 'own
Borough and County. •
In .;liort, the Jona...cii shall be (so fur as close
Attao6.4l and hard labor can make it,) . '
• Model Newspaper,
t welcome Saturday visitor in every Family
cir
tudit,persaLle to the Coal Trade at home and
il•road, and a faithful chronieler'of. the times—
, dnestic and foreign ; social, political and re-
„Q flats. . !
TER 51S :—One copy, rer annum; payable in ad- ,
ranee, $2,00; if not paid within Six months, $2.25:
4 ,
Ind if notpaidmithin the year, • $2 50 •
Three copies to one address, in advance, ' 5 00
Seven • , 4 6 I. 10 00
Fifteen, ” . ••• •• •• „.. ,‘ 20 00
(Mb subscriptions must invariably be raid in
.
3.lvance. and sent to one address. • , '
!lergymen and Sig...l Teachers supplied with
he .101: ItNAL at $1 per annum in advance.
• ;
..:-& - As the JuL'ITNAL has a larger circulation
tiian any other paper published in Northern Penn,l
-ivania, and-embraces more capitalists and busi- i
.:.5.! , men on its list than .any other,published to
:he State, out of the cities. it may he classed as
qua! of ,the very best advertisling mediums.—Ad-.
Ives', BENJ. 'IIANNAN,
• Poit•lritie, Sehoy/kin Co., Pa.
BUSINESS DEPARTMEBT
TILE Tavern Stand in Pinegrowe, now kept by
ft. Philip Koons, is offi!recl for sale. See partie
nlars in the advertisement.
FOR ALL kinds 'of Iron and Hardware we re
!, the•rearler to Frank tott'ig Centre Street, op
'site Market. See his advertisement fora list of
shot his establishment afford,
TILE New York Tribune hears the - well earned
-eputation of being one of the best paprrs in the
United Lutes. Those.interesteil will please ec
amine its prospectus unilCr the proper head.
IIANNAN has et large collection of books •of
tray vhrieiy of style and character, especially
Fumble for lloli,lay presents. for 01,1 and . young ;
—ail of which are offered at mem:outdating pri
lie has scyeral magnificent volumes, such as''
1 - ,rnora Gallery, the Repribikqin court, &c., to
•Ilnp..e of. • Itesidep dime, he has al,o an assort
u,cre of varietio, un-nameable—things, old and
s,eful and ornamental—:where any and er
r,r) carte may be gratified. Call and examine—it
, 0.5:... , :n0thing to look at them.
Or " RE-OIti;ANIZATION in • Berks," in the
,-;.•atside•colunin on the first page, is from the
,Reading Journal, whose credit was acciden
tally omitted.
AVE ARE indebted to Thos.. M. Price
E;41., for the President, for an excurAon Ticket,
,a the occasion Of opening the Sunbury
Erie Rail Road, from Milton to Williamsport,
on Monday last. A large number of guests,
we observe by the published reports, partici
pated in this interesting ceremony, and the
affair throughout was a sea,,onjof the highest
con,garttulation among the friendn of this great
,aterprise. •
[PREPARED FOR THE MINERS' JOURNAL]
' THE COAL TRADE,
And its Intimate Connection with the Commerce
of the Country.
As itxong efforts are now making to abolish the
dies on foreign Coal,it may nut be detailed oh
nsive to- state farts, and call the attention of the
to the pueititti of the Coal trade ai the
p•csent time, and its bearing apilahlluence on the
,intnercial and naval marine of
.our country.
To the "Anthracite Coal trade of Pennsylvania' ,
of cutuparatiiei ititie consequence -whether
retained or ale/IL-be/1. It now holds a
„win that cauuut. be //liaken. The trade has
.:rained a magnitude and standing that will be
. L.: 'ugh tly . iunuetwed it foreign Coat is included
- the :fee bill: But do' our neighbors of Mary
...a, tiginia and North Carolina stand in this
:.sdion: A lair, candid„and impartial exaniina
, n will r prove that they do:not, hut that they will
inie the sutierers, it the scheme of the free
ad is to cripple and ultimately deidroy the indus.
of our country is countenanced 'by Congress.,
Inc "Penns) Ivania Anthracite". is admitted by
t.,l;,,,dogists of both America and . Europe, (and
• , tt:chirt:(l by them) to diem- trom all other Coals
:the ft/Hewing part:ettlars
Ist. It is more compact ii its zstractitre, and a
of.being Acireil in a given
que. • ,
It t., Inure safe, as being n dr-.apheri.red
al it cannot tale fire •I,,,ntaneotOy.
I. It contains rare carl,,,n than. any-known
al, anal at a eennquenu will' generate more
I. It make, t
W in smoke, which giyes it n deci
d preference for doine6tic purplises,.ttnd
emi
ntlp tits it for steam ve,rl; •piiticularly
sr Acumen,'
England does not prodifeo an article in Any
n , .ttinuregtil to it and therefore cannot he a
l , ' , r,azi.l it I. now sent to New. Brunswick fur
(where Picton or Sidney Coal sell
I , r true half the price paid tor
,Anthractte
ci :l:rel, to all tlio English provincl:, in Aineri , a.
to the West Indian, Ea.t India.: and Australia, to
'he' West Indies, the'"acilie, China, d .
.Italy an
r , en London; and in foreign places it coin
-I:.antis a higher price that English Coal. s
The Coals ..f Maryland, Vir iuiaand North Car
tite_tßiturnin'ous; of excellent quality and ad
z•rahly ;hired to 'purposes sufficient' to give full
mi.b.y.m6nt to all their workings, with a certainty
,ylan.inereased demand, if the present ditties are
, !.. , .nuued. lint England produces the same kind
and in a foreign market comes in corupe
with and can undersell them. and in the
llemi'lestltet can reitatkdiheir growth if not de.
rtroy them, if Coal be * admitted duty-free.
s ach is the condition of the Coal producing
on the Atlantic at this time. The. attempt
take the duty otf of Foreign Coal has been re
pevvtly made by those whose interests are ham
toAmeriean industry and enterprise, and in
. .
'cry instance the Anthracite producers and deal
t 7. have been he'd up b. the public n extortioners,
na•ping monopolist.. Ac., tc. The advance in
%e price of Coal during the. present. season has
cn seized Oti With avidity nod again the "hue
tr . -11 cry!: is raieed against them, whilm.it is noto
rious that every article of neceNsity has advanced
ti a greeter prriportion than Coal, and Senators
-ad niemliers in our own Congress are asking. for
increase. of / pay to enable them to live; but
th all the adiance on Arnerieon cicif;the inhali.
:'oath of London at this time pay more for their
Get than the citizens of Boston for their
Anthracite, and full one third mere than the eiti
tea,,f New York for the same article.
. With a view of showing the importance of the
Coal inote'm a tednmervial point, the subjoined
given; it includes only the Aothra
'ite t1 ., a1 trade of Pennsylvania and the account
made ep from the records of the companies and
wham engaged in the trade and may be relied on
ofsctal • •
The amountoftbeFortign srasfeiiitakiti front thittl
"Iteport of the Committee of Coninieree and Nark
gation for the fiscal year,:etsfing :Tune , 30, 1,553.7
The aggregate atnunnt of Anthracite • -
Coal sent from the Mines Pounkiira
nia in the year ending ;December 31, •
4853, (tbe account being - made - up to
that date to cotnparewith the report of a I
tbo Committee of Commerce and Nevi- I
pah), made uto Juno 1633,) was
-3,193,1.51M0; 'of this eledunt there wao
consumed on the lines of the Canals and •
Railroads, andjat the Shipping Pointe
at tido water 1,2,00,00 - wits, leaving to • tell
be sent in vessels to distant ports, 3,94
of the aggregate amount of 5,1115,181
tons, the heading Railroad carried 1,-
'562,24S tuns; the resiainder was trans 7. I
ported on the Canals, 'and gives for that,
mode of conveyance, i • 3,612,9031
The average tonage of:the v'esselrearryint - Coal'
I from the shipping ports !to distant places r ie - 450
tons, and each vessel 'gives employment t..-4 men
and one buy; the time employed in carrying the
cargo to its place of destination and returning,l
has been atecrtaiucti to 'average 20 days,. which
giyes IS trips in the year; so, that each will carry
2700 tons in that time, and it required mfire than
1470 vesse:s, 5016 limn, and 1479 hOys eungtantly
employed in this part of the trade, and 't
of 221,85ittons.
The nunther of Barges employed on the Canal
wan 4600; averaging s 7, tone, each employing 2
men, 1 bop and 2 horses, which gives 9200 men,
4600 buy, ' gat
and an aggregate of 400,200 tells em-'
• ployed in
Canal transportntion.
From This it is allow tat the Anthracite Coal
trade in 18.52, gave full 'and regular employment
to 15,110 men, 6,079 boys and 6,079 . Vestels and
Bargee, with an aggregate of 622,080 registered,
enrolled and licensed tonunage.
From the Report of 'the Committee on Com
merce and Navigation, it is shown that in tile
year ending June 30, 1853, there was cleared
from all- the ports .of the United States ai
fidlows:
American vessels 10;001—tontge, 2,766,769;
with crews of men, 145,254; and boys, 1,635. For-1
eign vessels, 11,680-tonnage, 2,298,790, with crews
of men 120,754 and tieys 1,560; making a greed
total of 21,681 vessels with a tonnage amounting .te
6,065,579 tons,
and 266,008 men and 3,095 boys
as crews. , - 1
From the report made by. the Committee Lt ip
impossible to ascertain the number of vessels arid
also the men and boys permanently engaged.
it required one entire year for a vessel to make a
trip,lhen the extract above given.might show the
actual number of vessels, men and boys constant
ly employed; but as trips are frequent, each time
the vessels clear, the vessels and crews are multi
plied, and therefore the only thing to bale a com
parison on, is the tons actually shipped, or the
regular:registered tonnage employed; for should
every trip be added that -Coal carrying vessels
make, it would increase the coasting vessels and
crews . lB times, and the Canal Barges and crews the
saine,and give a result as follows';
• espi. aors a
2-4,622, 129,468 26,622
82,600, .165,600 86,800
Vessels,
Bargee,
Total, '107,422 29 5,088 . - 113,422
But as the Vessels and Barges employed in the
Coal trade make their tripe in a shorter ,time than
those engaged in . tbe•lforeign trade,. t this course
would he unjust. Therefore It is deemed
to be the moat fair as well as just mode of draw.-
ing a comparison, to give the toms clea'red, which
was as follows:
Total amount of tonnage cleared' from the fol
lowing ports to
. Foreign countries in American
and Forelgu Teasels in j the year ending June 30,
1853:
From •boston,
New YOrk, 2 -
" Philadelphia, ;
" llitltitnore, -
" Savanna, - -
" Charleston, -
" Mabile, -
" New Orleans, -
The total amount of tons cleared - froth all the,
ports in the United States during the same, period I
was ; in American. vessels, 3,776,789 tons-'—in For
eign vessels, 2,298,7901 tons—makirik a grand to
tal
of 6,065,5.70 tons. :
The total amount ofAnthracite Coal cleared to
distant poitito front the ports at tide water during!
the year ending December 31, 1853 was 3,995,151
tons: if to this is added the amount transported'
on the Canals, 3,612,903 tons', it gives an ag
gregate of 7,608,054 Mils carried by. water.
• From the above statement it is shown, that the
clearances of Anthracite Coal from the tide water
ports 8 1one 7 .exceed by
. 820,202 tons the entire
clearances in American and Foreign vessels from
the eight principal ports abovemamed,and 218,362
tons more than'the total clearane'ss from all theports
in the United States in AmeriCan vessels. If to
the clearances be added the internal or Canal
clearances it will give an excess of 1,542,475. bins
over all the clearance: , from the United States in
American and Foreign hottoMS combined. ,
In tits clearances to Foreign'! countries is inclu
ded 79,510 tons of America:4oon/, which of right
should he pliteed4o the credit of the Coal Trade.
. But ..enough, has been shown to satisfy all who
hare, the interest of Ainerica at heart. that a trade
like this should not be sacrificed to'gratify the cu
pidity of foreigners.
The Minimum amount of Bituminous produced
is not included in the above statement; if it was,,
the ' , amount would he nearly if not quite doubled;
The questibm.,then may be fairly) asked, will
Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina and other
Bituminous producing States look tantely .nu and
'see their interests prostaied, withmit raising a
voice to avert 4? I CLITUS.
NEW.YO)4C
[POW( 0111 t. OWN C6ROESPONDENT.]
Anecdote Li Martin ratt Boras-LPotitica/
conimitttion—On the fence—Knaic-.Nothingisra ,
—The Temperance Question—Mt, Prospects—;
• Will it be subl—lleelectirrie of Senator Siteartli
—Leetare of Thomas 11. fientoa—llarti limes
011101/4 the Theatres=llaritian arid his Arabbiogr
raphy—lts financial ieinits to Ore. Author—Ta
the Publish. r—European Sell—iiNeiespriper lirit
b4.l/111.-`--17qbkle to Advertising—lts effects as
Birok—Nes eitsi Hall—New Post-OjfieeL-Busk!
Failures—Central Bank—Peeps into its Inside!
—Management—The Ladies and the Fashions.' I
Saw Yong.; Dee,: 19, 1854.
Br. Ar t. JOraNAL:—Two gentlemen once laid a!
wager, the substance of which was as to , whether ;
- or note, direct answer could be obtained from the!
Mon. Martin Van Bdren, the hero of pon-commit-!
talism,:on.any subject whateYer.. The bet made.
—on one fine, clear morning one' of the parties
meeting the illustrious es-President, remarked,!
"the sun shines very brightly this morning, Mr.;
Van Duren." "Well," replies his companion
"sunshine is a matter that admits of discussion,7
nevertheless —" t'Dold on, hold- on," says; his
questioner, "you hate said enough,"—and foith
with paid his stakes.
Now the position of our politician*, one Madan, ,
of the great parties of by-gone years,in fact of
by-gone parties we may say, is exceedingly
simi
lar to that of Mr. Van Buren, quoted above; they
are most uncomfortably on the fence, and most;
obtusely n'on-committal. From scarce, a single ;
prominent man can you obtain a direct answer /Is
to his platform and political whereabouts. They!
are weighing carefully the probabilities 'on either
side—pondering profoundly on the chances of the t
foreignvote on the one "tide, while the all-subiln-1
ing. invincible and overwhelming hydra of Knows;
Nothinglstn stares them in the face from the other.;
They may well hike heed of the infant giant, who
bids fair, like Athlete of old, to strangle another;
serpent. It is the swift though silent and unseen
progress of the .mysteriods party, everywhere
' , present and triumphant, and at the 'same time ev.!
erywhere still and unknown. which bits swept the' ;
land with a political whirlwind, surpassing far;t
aught that our annals can thus far.revcal—a'j
, 1
whirlwindthat threatens to blow "Sam" into tivzq
White House. in as surely as wintry blastsl
lash, up the oceans waves..
In
In bur own Stiste 4 the Temperance ticket has.;
been everywhere issMeessful. and now nahls, beside
the gubernatorial chair, a strong majority ie the'
• Legislatbre. There' is some fearti however, 'that i
the agitations which will be put in motion tu re-'
s elect Seward to the United States Senate, may be:
the means of staving off the Liqu'or qtrstion` for
this session at least, as the votes of the Rum men
may Le needed, and Thurlow Weed gt• r o., of the-
State government, may sacrifice the 13'11 to buy:
Totes for their candidate--a sop tof Cerberus.J
INun. 1 - frronft ! • •
• ,
Apropos of; polities—Thomas IL Bet ton deliv 7 ;
ers his lecture on "The physical' geography of one.
1. country beyond the Rocky Mountains, and its•
adaptation to a Pacific Railway," this evening in
the hew Operailouso, before the Mercantile Libra
ry Association. 'An l immense attendance is anti
! cipated,as public curiosity to see a man i•o•identi
{ tied with the history of the country, is leery great,
, and his audiences have_iiecn very large' in other
; cities where he has appeared before the people.
In matters of - the:town we have rug little that
is new to offer. Our . theatres and placeit of amuse
ment are in full blast;.though: we are informed
that the receipts are not as good as they might be.
[lard times is affecting their prosperity. •
The last new gossip of the i•ily is Barnum's Au.
tobiugraphy. As in matter of course all read it,
1 even though they may diilike the Man. Ile is si,
, identified• with the grand science, and has become
sit notorious. that Barnum rind success have grown,
I') he almost synonymous terms, that the • publin
. ettribsity is fully aroused . lo read and know the
whv • atid wherefore of his eventful life. Eventful,
truly, it has been—through every grade uf life—
though in all svc,eari see the ruling passion peer
ing fora( whenever en opportunity, however triv
ial, hasipresented
In a finuncial•wa', it trill be by no means, the
•least of his successful speculations, as by the
terms of his publisher, he receives fifty-two cents
on each copy sold, and its sales 'will be enormous.
In fact, we must confess that we can scarcely isee
where the publisher's profit is to coin from, when
he pays . Mi. Barnum, fifty-two cents, brings out
•i the book, does and furnishes everything and re
ceives but about a'dollar, as the retail priee.is one
dollar and a quarter. Ilia gains most be,llemeo
pathic.'.
In connection with this...subject we cannot omit •
telling a good joke, in a few words.
,„No sooner
had Mr. Redfield Made his arrangements with
Mr. Barnum. than he dispatches his agent to Eu- •
rope to negotiate sales in foreign capitals. When
on his arrival abroad he finds all the
_principal
publishers supplied.settle months previous by the
author himself. The sell is evident.
The press generally, have received the work on ;
favorably, deprecating its influence on the younger
portion of the community as. evil: one journal
criticising, goes so fir as to say that the chief end
and aim of its author, seems to have-been obtain ;
inienoney frrim the public on false pretences.
In the page+ of hi. work lie pays a merited
tribute to the benefits of advertising ' and expli
citly refers all his' own ruelFeis wholly to that,
source, lie says that "many sly they are tun poor
ti. advertise, lint the truth is they are too poor not
to adiertise:' ' •
our City Councils are tipsily engaged discussing
plans for new public buildings, espeeiallY, a now.
City to replace the old, ono deetroyed, by fire
f last Winter. Our courts and many of our publi
offices are now Scattered in engine houses and pri-
vato edifices. Of - eoltrie'shisi si'etintrant of sueli
magnitude isrori•the ear Pet, there la no Itemt
amount of wire pu ll ing and lug , rolling mu' ng
nibs° who feed at thii public Crib, to get their:tit:i
gen' into:the pie. , -II
• Another ligitntexl question is the erect on oriphe
lower end of the park, df ciof
flee, worthy„lin its style and magnitude of the gm
pito city. 'l'hi`project will undoubtedly ho itar
ried out, as the went of, such an edifice hu 107.
been felt, and a s length been taken - op byithe
i t
general govern eat. , il
Since ray lark, another of our banking insiir
tions has failed 7 thegentral 7 -and three more 11 re
been recommended , by , the Committee of , • itlie
Clearing House to wind t p; we would mension
the names, but we have 11 em in confidence
,4ind
1
our months are sealed. S me idea of the elegan
cies of some of thtse institutions may be (untied,
when I tell you th t the Central has been !paying.
for adme time past, five and six thousandidollars
per month hire for specie to deposit in "thq Orr
ing:House, for o day or Po at a time, and diet t eir
expense •account of last year, actually Orefrun
their profit aeeOunt some fifteen thousand Hollers.
We ha( I hoped in this letter to have giYero the
ladies a t inch of the fashions; but as neat it i ek
will be h !Way week, W
we will try and ind to
1
them a little on this totally • interesting ibmiline .
-topic. ,1
I '.l
f
is
~A,I~I
. ------.----,—. , I
_ l l
iseirowr.fr. or far P.s.riicr.Thri 7...i1. Y.
Trilmite,la few mouths since, contained 4 se
ries of Controversial papers on the power of
the Popito dissolve the tics between! a sov
ereign a d his subjects. Some Catholiellwri
ters, onlhat occasion, made strong ;efforts to
maintain that no such power is vested jai the
'Pope. Fe find, however; the revers assert
ed in the Cirilta Cattolica a magazine hub
lished at Rome, under the direct censureiand
,control of the. Papacy, and speaking thiusWith
; official *action. , That periodical, in its iham
her of tlie sth of Augvst, 1854, suppor4 the
. opinionTof a theological publicist, maintain
ing „"that excommunication by the Cliiirch
'has as. sin unavoidable result the dissolution
of the tie of subjection and of the oath Cif fi
delity"--(cue la scommunica porta secoSisso
fall° tfi scioglimento dal vincolo di sutichliin=
.e, giurgmento di fidclta.j According. to !,'this,
of a Pope should lay his ban upon the criiv
-ernment of the United States, Catholic Ilsub
jects, of that, Goveritment would beecomeOpso
l•
. facto, absolved from all fidelity thereto. p,
The Cit'iUa Catiolica claims to be the pure
and incontestable expression * of Papal *mu
and ideas, while on every page, in everytiline,
it wages .unremitting war against any] and
every manifestation of intellectual or civil las.
• erty, the rights of the people, and political
emancipation. In the view of this periodical;
' all these things are offsprings of Protestant
ism, immorality and heathenism, and iheir
fathelf is the devil himself. Li:
In another number, the, Cirilta Cateptica
rebukes very emphatically a Catholic *fork
published at Florence in 1851,.whose afiony
mous author. sought to .prove that the ROinan_
Catholic religiOn is not incompatible with the
broadest liberty. The poor author is trated
as a heresiarch, a demagogue, a son of satan.
It seems•from this 'that at Rome the Papal
sijstem is regarded by its authorized expoun-.
4'ns as altogether opposed to freedom, though
elsewhere a different opirdoit 'is' set foith.—
Will the JournalFrecman's itnform us Whelh
er. the ; Cirilta CattOlica.is rikht or wropg 'in
his respect:
i
I I •
I jrie " PARINO ROBBERY BY MFASEi OF Ono
aorousi. The Augusta, Georgia, ConstitUtiou
. ijlist of Saturday says : ...
II "We have read and, beard of many 14ring
• 4Mberies, but we think none of thenti, will"
oven. bear a comparison to one whichi took
. place on the Georgia'Railroad cars on Friday
Morning; between Camac and' Berzeliaa As
lie learn, Col. J. W. M. Berrien, of home,
and a Bortion of his family, were in thej cars,
firi their way to this city. He had a Marge
amount of money about his person. Ire was
ideated on the, back. seat, his daughtet- and
mother, a younr , ' lady, a relative, were On the
meat in front, and his son; an intellimetit. lad
Of twelve or thirteen .ifearsiof age, and * ser
'4ant, occupied the third rat. Betweep the
• two points; above designated, the lamp] near
the Colonel was extinguished. His son took
autiee of it, but thought it was done hy-the
!Conductor or sonic one connected with the
train. • Shortly after a stranger took hi'S seat
lay Colonel Berrien, and after some conkersa
tion, succeeded in administering to hinOhlor
oform until he became insensible. Bei then
i cut.the buttons off his overcoat, extracted
'front his side pocket a package oftibills '
amounting to lice thousand one hundr'd and
sixty,dollars. Sot oontent with this, h took
~ front the pantaloons pocket the Colonelfs wal
let, containing, about one ;thousand dollhrs.
L "Had he kiMwn that in the oilier pill:et of
the pantaloons there was a package contain
ing, 53000, he might have taken that idso.—
The Money stolen was mostly 'South Cdrolina
hills.' In the large.packag,e there werl,'twen
ty.fime hundred dollar bills . and some tfifties.
'11 ( 1..Tplo last evening, COL Berrien 4as la-.
boring under the effects of the chlorofoim ad
ministered, and was confined . in" his bed all
day. As soon as he is able, he will publish a
list of the bills stolen, and he request us to
tate that he will, pay a handsome reway•il ,for
-,..
t 0 recotery of the money, or the detealion of
thl bold rpbber."
- 500355, TONS
1,384,u08 , ,
151,685 '
1 1.1359 e,
- 61,527
131,172
- 143,685
638,820
MB=
. :
, ‘ ,. 0 1
aAir THE-SUSPENSION B RIDGE Al: tiGARA
FALLS.—The gigantic work, by Oa the
heaviest railroad trains are to be coViveyed.
over the gulf of the Niagara River beteiwthe
Falls, is to be finished by the first of Jinuary
nest.. The following dimensions furnihied by
the architect, Mr. J. A. Rost.r.cn, will give
'our readers an idea of the magnituae and
strength' of this incomparable bridge.:) .
Length or distance from centre of I
the towers, • ' fiet 822
Height of. the towers above the i
• rocks on the New York side, -• q‘ 8f
.Height on the Canada 'side, • ` hi
Height on the railroad track, i' fit
Height of the track above the .
water,
Number of wire -cables,
Diameter of cables, .
Nutriber of strands of No. 9 wire in
each cable, . . li 3,650
Total power of the cables, - - " tons-112,400
Weight of the entire . bridge, ".1 750
, 1
Weight of the bridge and of the l!
heaviest, load that can be put 'ii
"upon it, " ii 1,250
Greatest weight which the 'eabless ii
and supports can bear, ~
efirAXOTHER SECRET ORDER 80470:N.-
The order of "United Sons of America" is
now organizing in every ward of the 'city.—
This order we believe, is regularly elijniered
by i?roper authorities, : similar to the Masonic
institution. It dates back to 1828, ',having
been consolidated with the "Sous of Liberty,"
in Cincinnati. Ohio. Its object is rep6rted to
he both patriotic and benevolent. , In :politics
thi,s "order" , is said to be in favor of the prin
ciples advocated by the National Nativi Amer
ican party, which .assembled in old Ipdepen
dence Hall, at Philadelphia, in 1845, ird join
their brothers in the South in keepinpout all
other ism.s from their ranks inn nntiodal point
of view. One camp of the "order" hilt; been
instituted in Boston some six years. %ye hear
that they , have now camps in'the tirstisecond
and third wards, and members enougl4to hold
the balance of power O. a plurality -election.
None but "true blue" Americans canket into
this secret political order, as it, is said ?nett
hers proposed are well looked afler.4Boston
7'ran.rcripf. •
• Der Is MR. FILLNI011: A Kt.zow Nr;xtittro?
—The Washington correspondent orthe N.
Y. Evening Post, in a letter dated 114,ember
oth, says :—`, All the AdministratiOnliDCmo
crats pmfess to , hope is;that Fillmore 'May be
the''candidate of the new party,' I 14! is not
an administration or a Prefirastamanilbut the
election of a Union compromise Whio Would
save their feelings. They might main expe
riencC some exaltation in hig triumph',! , ' They
do not. want Houston, and Cass' is nooa name
to conjure by. " Besides, Cass' Knoll! Noth
ingi m is not so well established is ;that of
Fill ore. who is said, by a gentlenOn' who'
knows, to have lately disclosed that fet-in a
ratho startling manner, viz: by steptiing up
on 'lle platform of 'a public meetingraising
his arms, and silently making the, myoeons
signs which ri
ich attest a connection witfi l lhe fra
ternity. My informant, who is licquainted
with an eye-witness of that remarkalde dem
mistration, says the effect was elecirical.—
Cheer uplin Cheer saluted the Ei-Prtsidint,
who was fain to retire front the starni of sal-.
utation which his own hands had rai4d." _
iIierBOOTS AND SHOES MADE BY
NEity.—A foreign correspondent °film Bos
ton Traveler, says a patent his Jieeii. taken
out in - England for making boots . an# shoes
by machinery.. So favorable are the pros
peett that a public company has advanced
R 25,000 to erect the neze.ssary ruachiery, bjc
the river side, at Pimlico, and the forth of
the invention has been estimated at millions
of money.' It will undersell and ruinl,he vast
quantities of very indifferent articles4ow pro
duml,,chiefly from Northamptonshirt and it .
is stated it will furnish 17,000 pair s per diem
of stoutly finished boots or shoes.
ritir As ANCi&T L.Aw.---,-4Among
the alieicitt tiermans some two tbousaiid rears
a.o, there was a tribe or nation:called the
gievians; who would not suffer •witte to he
brought into their territory, because; sold they,
it enervates the mind and unfits the body for
exercise or labor. Yet these then were clas
sed among barbarians by the Remaq.
lIM
bitiOtirok
sip now Ad . hlit in Peoria, lectiuk - relaang Ida
rich Araeircan, who wrote telliademoiselhi de
°fillet opera, a tender elder& onAhe s
back of a bank note. The lady t.Tatleil.liad
sent a verbal reply, with the apology that kbe
w. 3 entirely out of ? note-Palier, and woul4l+B
thankful tp U. l'Americsa 16 send hor s qpir - i
or two of his.
1/61"RMIAta virtually is ;inaccessible. : 1110
power or tMWers can enter and remain oiler
tee-bound ' , and snow-covered territory. 'She
says to thir:atorld:--"Come with a small foVee,
and I will:cierwhelm you •, come with a /4rge
one, and Ott will overwhelm yourselvesr
Charles th:e i XII. and Napoleon both 'expe
rienced this; truth.
THE COAL TRAM
=t7
The quiatity aent by Railroad this week 28,-
231 16 io4S) Total 71,569 16 against 89,560 00
,tons to sarkM;period last year. ..
From the best information we can glean, aikout
75,000 tonl'i Of Coat hare been frozen upoq the
differentl es oF Canal leading to market.- :The
Delawareknoltaritan.Canal was open the bolgin
ning of tt c Week, so' we were informed, but pre
some that be cUld weather closed it up
what nuilb l ar 'of Boats were enabled to iamb
their placiiuf destination we have not leirnCd.
.. „
Here act; two more communications on EOAL
Ilocksrtifts6-4e forthwith introduce the writers I
, i i
to speak forthemselres: . i:
...
ls' PIENTIVILLE, Dec. 16TH, 144. '
MESSRS.Ay EDITORS :-1-Tun paper of the 214 inst.
.containedAta article over the signatare of David
Euen, in inswer, to ours of the 18th ult., athimpt-
Wg to sheer why "coal huckstering" was a tweet
s evil lit Phi:rid:ldlle, and making false accu
sations avitell as false statements. t
His "niot, than active mind" ,supposed either
kir Pontius:der or "Tonawanda" io be the akthor
of "Justiftli'; and acting upon the supposition,
Rakes a Public; statement to that ;effect. WO feel
i due to OW persons accused, to exonerate them
ulle
f om titi-ctiat•ge ; anti state that they In4l no
k owledge , !of ' the article ,before it appearld in
.1
P i
in gai t" n ai.'regi l
A the price of Coal at.this place,
compareelith late price three miles above, and at
V r alley Fitge. David says "figures wont liej' but
We are catty to say they, do in this case—flr en
closed 1 send you a letter from Mr. llighley* (at
Valley Ffte) showing that at the time of which
David spOiks, they charged $6 25'per, ton 'gross
weight. for stovir,Coal delivered throughottt the
town; ; which is equivalent to $5 58' nett swtsight.
Our retailers at the same time were charging
$5 60 po. ton; nett weight delivered,—malting a
differenc6if 2.lcents per ton, instead of 65 ;',',cents
es. David finites. The difference of freight between
.the placckis ten cents' sad not fifteen centi, and
our retaftere are charged five cents per ton ishar
rage, which is not charged at Valley Forge4--ma
king the !difference of cost five cents per ton.!' The
place Dupe miles above, of which he .peaky, is a
placc.doing buts small usiness; two or three boat
loads Of Mal laid in the beginning of the Reason
when pritdts were low, may have sufficed to eappty
the demand for a length of time after the - Prices
had very; pinch advanced ; it is therefore efident
. that the dialers here could not be governed, by the
place allkded to. ,
Beforeclositig he intimates that he was willing '
to pay . llio retailer? price, until their profitilmada 1
the henifest part of the 1011. Now Davidittien
- aer any. cgier‘man 'knows this to be. a false estate=
went; for'our profits can easily be ascertained to
range frost fifty to seventy-five cents per toil.
In CoilF,lneion we, would say that the appella
tions, "Satellites," "royal mandates," "are,"
~1.c., coming from the source they do, prove. arm
less • but we do hope that if David, or any of his
coadjatott, are river induced to write again tor the
public[Aka, they will have more regard foritruth.
insinln.
.
; l •;:i
•
i N r ALLICIf Foaae; Dec. Ilth, 1854.
and Egg Coal at the yard, on I Bth
ir last, for $.5 7.5 gross weig4t; for
l a fifty cents in the immediate ileigh-
JOart SHAILPLEB4 for
JACOB HIGIILEY.)
tage, .
•
141i3StOVe
day of 0,00b4
hauli!g f6r t<•
$5 ; ' , 75:F0a1,
'0 150:Nay
$6 23
PfIOEXIXVILLE, Dec. 11th 1854
• 3irssitit. Eurrons :—I perceive in the ginerel
Jmfrnalls:jf the 2dj inst., an article purporting to I
come fne,in David Euen, of this place, wherein
some perfsona 'allsion is made to me. Wly le
has songitt to nsel. e
ns a channel through; which
„
to conviy,lis sill. effusions, I kdow not. I have
not written, or sni a single word which could be
tortureoy the oi l st desikulng, as disapProving ,
of the eCtirse pursued by hlid, or any othor per
son - whAr:May eho4 to embark in the cont busi
los. Ibivid, may' .peddle Pills or Coal ;to his
heart's intent, I shall not -seek to interfere .in
the vortition; far be it from me to indulge In one
reflectitAti against his course in this restkct, or
those wki are profited by it.
I sought on controversy with him about like bu
sine?i,.#l4 db not wish him-to assign ,me is posi
:ion ndqrse to the interest of those who oder to
purcha.sizwhcre they can be supplied at theeheapi
est rate:, .-.. /.
Whilft a controversy of this kind with those
... ,
sy of tins awo.
engagedSilhe Coal business, would be looked
upon tiOegit mate and proper, prompted by. ma
tires 541 M-est from me, I am free to admit it
would appear' meddlesome and uncalled for. Therss
fore .thrte ars not the shadow of a provitteation
for !egging me into the subject. If it wits done
to pleas e an other,' or gratify a spec of malice, I
may brie take occasion to remind -hlsOn the'
words 53.1:amither, that it's "too common it prac
tice of Lpsersofts to find fault with their neighbors,
supposing that they rise in consequence ..n pro
portiot4s they detract from others." , I !believe
the miff works adversely. ;').
1 i
The Mimaiks relative to 4 . Tonawanda;" -were
gratuit4its, and out of place: I do not, design
-herC tAqiiitke his defence; but will say th4t so far,
as my•ftycollection serve's, this writer ("Tonawan,
da"), **deli° reference to David Euen ; . tbe only
thing siClistive to outsider* in that controversy,
was a kind of aortic made upon a saialll sipad,
whereiti,..thd. writer, I presume, suspected some'
of perfprming a scavenger's duty to hilt oppo-
uent, being merely a random shot to get a:view of
1 the fluttering. And where a person is observed to
wriggki or squirm, the inference is that se may
yet be pnarting , under some rebuke. It must be
gratifying to "Tonanda" that the number is
very liineted—proba6ty about-one. 5
Daviii.pretends 4 give use some advici too,
in
regard to businese-swilkit not be time enpugh to
interpc,t,te, his kind: siffices in this respect, when,
asked k , .. And in the meantime he can attend to`
his owii!iwitli more leisure. •
In riatling his production I saw some ipreten.
Bien ttilfriendship—trusting to find sincerity, II
was constrained to call upon him, judgig that'
he misfit hive published under excitem ent, and
when (VrnklY-and in the spirit of friendihip in.
formed of his error in reference to myself, he,
would 40 . . m 9 the justice and himself the,eiedit of
making; a correction. , Some apology he tben
made, 'bet I wee informed that hardly': had I
turnedliontl him before he reiterated hiti former
positiok saying• he had only my word, 4c.; not
sufflidently frank, to be honorable in this affair,
fearine•it might perhaps displease another, and
mar' diejrOduction—spoiling its effect, - yen of t
which,lsVobibly. was written-for another occasion, i
and man necessarily apply here or much precious i
materi‘l ,wofild be lost. i
If stych a 'course is an riddance of friendship,l
therheKve me from all such. This is the man who'
j seeks got to play the Guerrilla behind ; oft, no!
I.sock not then, to interfere in this controversy
1 betweeti:DMrid and the "Meguls,". or "Robbers"
more p:Olitely styled; but leave them to fight their
own battles. - . • 1
David, of old, was a. mall mar, but achieved
great ifvents; and when this mighty vihtory oft
the consPlete t amnihilittion of the great ldoguls"
and "R01:4307r in the Coal business, hereabouts,
shall Ave% n accomplished, we shall Have an- •
other (fame to place, beside his of old, and pass!
tr
them doivu y pairs for the admiration of genera- 1
tions ye! to •ome. .
I Mai nu desire to pursue a controvenly where
"self'',? . is m a de so prothinent, espociallyi when I I
feel I stn combatting some musty records of the
past; lot bygones be by-goner---I trust Dam not
one ofzibe cJass who holds resentment by the year.
Whereser Ilam remiss in my official duties, I seek!
I
no exern"'ption from criticism, and shall flndesivor .
to perf.4m My duty tS the public in a manner Sat
isfactoty, soles to avoid complaint or reflections,.
and incdoing so only do what duty requirrs of Me.l
I haise norinelination. whatever, to step out of
the paih to encounter a "Don Quixote," much less
his pliable and passive tool, "Sancho Finn," or
any other ono in a nowspapertournament.
Yours, dim, 'T. D. AORGAN.
,M , '',Weliave no report of Freights frdm Rich
mond this Week,
~ _ _____lP,--__l_ •
inflhe 10
7,360
Report of Shipments.
Frorchi.ne,t- tw the week ending Satii)day, Da
cember3l4.6, 1' 4, ' • :
Ls=
Irg ; p ,• • • . , Tons
3 8 .
C Bmtn a i n vltt 3 ,21
rri • N. Y0rk3,318
Vorih
i 8 i 0 12 j ionthem River
Voris
•
"41; 3 1 1 36 9;12 i For the week 9.500
Total i*oiels forlireek, 16 -,Total far season.o69
Last year, 44,3
•
Phllogt £ Reading Hall'road fer 1154.45.
Qoaailty of Coal sent by Philadelphia and Reading
Railroad the the meek ending Thursday evening hut:
WEVE. ?Ont.
10,633 12 ')23,461 10
1.021 o'2 '; 1136 12
0.961 10 i 20,133 00
910 12 ; 3,331 12
0,054.3 00 114,084 02
Port CorboU,
Pottsrli
Srbaylit tp Ifsrrn
Autturct: .
Port ;
nithr , ‘44.1c,
Wjl s4r,
Rateit of 'kali and iraneportailoa on
I, - I Railroad,
s I I Front Prom,l From I Prow
, i Mt. Cirhon. 8. Haws. rt. rlintoo. Auburn,
To Ric moue, V: 2 $2 :1') tl TO 1 $1 is
To Philad'aii -2 15 . 210 1 1.60 , • 186_
Ati 1t14r..
ill Comity Itaillroads-1a344
The toilov iing Is the qnsotityl'Of Coal transperted over
the dlthitli Railroads In rlehoylklll dOculty,ft.xr the week
eadinkho Thunechly evening hurt: ' .
Vine IRO ett , l S. ,Ilirco R. R., 10=1 10 ritna,oto 11
Mill Crll4, I, 0.0 10 ,478,0631$
Mi. Cortim . 2.321 07 'INUIT 12
&buylilll olko• " 4.t.18 Pt 7033,367 13
Ht. Lbrbon R Pt. Cartcn I 9,440 0:3 $
.10=913 V.,'
404116111 . •• 5,934 14 •;444,124 (43
Valoia Canal n. R. Coal Trasupollatfon
"Amouitlintlivpotte4 during tbo =nib Of October, .165.1 i
! ataxia -20741.
Union Penal - 11,305 at ; 4352 13
Switztri: ' 3,319 19 51,101 19
MUMWilla
INIE
29,211 16 ' 1 71,369 16
20,316 M, ; 89,600 00
MI
ME
mattoolmui •-•--
NE. Subieriber
s . -- " -- " --- xraN • D 4J
elotottnelodeotwat rs4soi
se es and Kau Tesx's .presents; Also, an b
Amos Plsoe-r•erlaltleaZ be sold at *goat bergeto, 111.
B,IINNAN'S •
Book tad Musk Store.
tisesimber laa
E:=
ICEiLife of P. , 1
by . iiitiortt Witti pia -
'oe Llfi at Grotto.
Hans.
Ruth Hall: a pout ed:le Ws
eyfen.' sala I kt
Dec SO. • •
by 3. Parton, vri* Mnotra-
of. the Prts2llMbi ls l4m.
aia'r and Mafia/try inn
TOYS! TOY- I! TOYS!!!' .
• ..11 1 newivai.
HE' SubsCaerl • announce:L . to - his
Mende and the e ee that Debug remored his
• Otnifertionery blisktnent to the rear Mod of his
lot whereto knitted kept. on Railroad etre*. , where he
his a lanceea rtmebt of tin and other toys• of shv i ,,p,
.Swiss and V tench mannthettire, embracing all the Latest
patterns, ail of which will be said tunienally law.' ll e
also keeps a rhoto assortment of amspethaery. all of
sti lett will be sold eery eheip. . JACOB 1;(1)01EL
' December 23,
1354 , ,
___—
o•2t
____ •
PUBLIC ROUTE FOR: SALE.
T HE large, eonv, nient and. eninforta.
..
r
ble Had in PitillgTOYO b, now kept; by Philip
Pitons, is hereby shad Yot , i
The building is 40 by 60 occupying a conspicuous.
Potitits In The town; it six moss ou th elirst door,
I.n on tbi secon and Ilse on the third. The
Kitthen is proelded ith every isecessiry consent
me ibr such anestadrua, The ' Stahling will
aceominodste sixty horses. • 4
sold along From one acre of ground Ally, will. be snld along to
snit the purchaser. I •i
If this property ts, not 'of by the 10th of Jain
ary next, it win then. be ibr e f
l Apply to
.p '. .
.ettat imnraT.
Pi roc,,SdiuyiliK aunty:
•
Deceaster 184
. . ,
' : PUBLIC:BALE..':, '
R at
LL B SOLDPublic Sale, en
W I TUESDATi the 18 Ii day of January next, at 10
o'clock la the tbreneem , at the dwelling house of John 'I
Thomat i re Crown= n'a), 11 the tnenahlp of Plnegraye,
teltuyl I county, thaw-fourths of a yatuable ?arm, cote
tainiag 79 acres, situate in the townships cf Pinegrote,
and Wayne, in the minty of nchaylkill. three miles
811 4 or Pitlegrore with 'Dwelling and *ar t ; also •
et : piling Spri ng of, Water. (the other Iburth will
be sold In connection with the atens, by order of the' Or
phans Court, at the same time. See Orphan? Court No
flee.) being the progerty of Thomas Mobutu, deceased,
and John Thomas. Alae, i l a large quant.4 of Stock,
Ilbwksatith Tools
JO , *e. • - ! .
.! - . NATI AN WASLgt) ',k,,,,4„,:,
tt,A RAH ' WILLIA3OI4 j •
December LI, 1e54, - iair.
ORPHANS' COURT SAILS.
PURSUANT to itn - order of 'the 'Or
phans' Court 44 the' County of Schuylkill, In the
menwealth of Pesinsylirania the subscriber: admin
istratiare. the estate of THOMAS MORGAN, late of the
Borough of Tamaqua. In lhe 'amity of Stithylkill. de
' erased, will expose to sale 7 t, public , endue on MONDAY,
the 21st day of January us at 10 o'clock hi 'the fore
noon, at the publiehouse of Michael Ikard.Di the Dor
' epoch of.Tamoqua. in,the COunty of Schuylkill aforesaid.
- All that certain utudivid•xl half pail of a two story diet
ling hones, and lot of grand situate in the, Borough of
Tamaqua, in the County of Schuylkill, and State of Penn
sylvania, to Witt—bounckd , Railroad street, on the
west, by a public street on he north, by a priblic alley on
• the east; and by lot No. 561 on the mouth. containing .in
front 60Iiiet. and in depth po feet, andliaziract in Baum's
addition to Tautaqui,-No. b 7.! Said premises:am tbriner
li kept as a tavern. late t i lM. estate of mid, deceased.—
Terms and conditionsma: known at the time and place
of Ode by! , (UNE', Adet'r.-
By order Of the Orphans' urt,
Jinni ruts; Clerk.
December 23, 1&54 50.3 t •
ORPHANS' COURT SALE:
TOURSUANT I toI Order of the , Or
j_ phins' Court of the county. of Schuylkill. In the
. commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the sabseriber,tl =Alan I
child
o fu t h e
, cou n t y
r n of:• pe r son
T f em E
S b eu p aY A nißk Y ll , llwe t Rites, o f
will
l a 111; ° f
": Pa rchnd e to a y w not; Ja n ef
sale
il
January "bwi next, y: Llewellyn,
ai
I mino r
en
11 t te nh l
0
o'clock In the forenoon. at the dwelling house of John
Thomas, (late.Cresernan's).; In the township of Pinegroio,
'ln the county of Schuylkill aforesaid— ,
All that certain undivided one-fonrtb - part of a Fenn
and tract of Lind: situate:in the townships of Phoegrcrie ,
and Wayne, in the county of Schuylkill. find ststo of
Pennsylvania. botinded by lands of Connid,ttelchard. of
AaAdam. Henry. and George IL Cressman,4now Daniel
nd Henry Saylor, by laud now or late of Peter Kre
er k Co- containing In t to. whole. 79 aitee and 102
porches, with the eppurtenaoces. consisting of;a two sto
ry log Dwelling House, 14rn. Spring House, and other
out-buildings. the, eatatoqf said, minor. Ternis and con
ditions UMW known at the time and place of We. by
HARRIET WAtiLKY.Oi/ordion
By order of the Orphans' court.
' ! JOSIICA10011:8, Clerk. •
• December 23. I 5.,54 I
GENERAL ISTATENIENT
n F the Affairs pf'tlie Corporation of
N.„,..1 the Borough of Pottsville, May sth, 1554, inclusive:
Dr. ,
To Patterson Load. $3,00U 60
Interest from lalth of April, 1841, '2,319 bu
" Misers Rank Loan, I 3.000 Ou
Outstanding Orders, ' ;3,999 21
--412,348 71
By Balance due from Iler . .ry Geise on '
Duplicate for 1849—J udgrnent, $1,013 2.6
Sundry debts due.by individuals, 1,1041 07
..
Bills receivable.! , 113 1 . 9
Gas Gitupsny, . I ;. ntl 14
Samuel Sißynum. Treasurer of Loan& • 513 b 2 ..
Balance' due t,y Wellington Kline. on . .
•
Dupll , ate Mr 1s5:1, 1 _ 7:1) 25
' Balance, 1
. . .
Balance due by the Corporation of the Borough
of Pottsville, May tltk, 15,i4,, f , $5,7:13 Gil
Amount of Duplicate for 15.53, gn,563 65
Amount of Orders issued' from May
18th, 1851, to 3lay.sth, 1554, lucks-
sive, ..
. : . 14.0 3 4
, ..
Amount of Dupllrate for 1854. $15,93$ :1
Ammint of Orders 'gaped; from slay
16th. 1854, to December 19th, 1854, ,
Mcluairr, • ~- .; , ' 6,245 D 7
..4:: • s' '
j• 14A1IVEL lIMLTZ, Clerk.
Orders isalled.for 1853:
$9,147 12
1,933 01
1,751 08
443:
594 91
:02.93
114,093 42
.
i .- • 1 Arruit
I
Recapitulation
Streets, '
Sundry accounts,
Lamp and Watch, , I
Fire Apparatus,
Interest on Loans, 1 1
Btirial.Ground. ; • 1
---
1 1 1
1 —
We hereby cettify- ttutt,' from an exatnination.ot the
foregoing
"n. we end the
correct. ;
1.
1 JAS. IL Slit:Ann.ll, dictators.
.... } 4.
1 WNI. SILLYMAN, ! '
.
Pottsville Ikieeruber trt, 18.51 . .50-3 t
THE NEW YORK TRI : UNE.
DAILY, - - $6; 6ESII.WIiEKLY. $1; it' E EKLY, -- V;
Always in Advance.,; ,
HE We i fkly l'ribtise commences its
T,[ XI Vth atonal - volume with the month of Septet.
ber—counmencee it with a circulation (115,C00) larger than
was ever better accorded to any general newspaper what
ever.' This elm:dation has been gradually and laborious
ly attained by concentrating upon. The niburar the best
efforts of many l editorsand correepondents, and by a
greater liberality! of outlay In each department, than was
probably sorer before risked on any Journal. It has been
attained, not by militia smoothly in the current of Opin
ion, before the wi nd, nd, and basking in the smiles of major
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Progress, as abode all partizan ezigeneisei all temporary
Interests. all momentary litigious of popularity and suc
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and of the equal and Mallenable Bights of the Human
Rare. irrespective of Eh: pr Creed or Color, have from time
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combined to form a character which It wilt endeavor to
maintain, and whim its position among Journals which
we feel that it will be henceforth a enemas not to Impair.
The leading ideas to which The Trier/we Is devoted may
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er is essentially Night —riot Slone fat irbite'ilnimicans, or
AngloSazins, o reelltialte even—not for one Race to
determine' whe ther they will or will not bold another
Rare in abjectdagel—lint for every Ram and Nation ,
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rightfully absolute in the broad domain of Opinion. and
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chise ". Oants,l or the pectesary right of the legally In-
dicated ' majorityl to interdict in the sphere of Action, ail
practices which it deems demoralizing, therefore preindi
chi to the comition sea; ; 9, Bassrimmts, , or the wisdoin
and policy of employing the resources and credit of the
community toircomplieh wits of general and moque&
tioned utility to which individual menus are inadequate,
or whleh, thong eminently conducive to the public gold.
do not promise to reimburse by their direct inconie. the
outlay itemized Pr their construction; 4. Ismsnust Dr.-
vnormevr:as the corzeimuoneof a true and benignant
National Policy, contains the naturalization of a new and
valuable art or period of the soil as moo important than
the acquisition (if • fresh province or island. and equally
within the apballl of National concern and National ef
trt ; 5. Pitca. sap vital condition of true: Progness, to he
cherished by the most anxious. assiduous Study to yonder
Tr i
as readily as a am prone to require redrew her every
wrong, and ne e rtobe '
surrendered except at the call of
endangered Li y. Etzeh are the chief landmarks by
which The directs Its course, - •
Out a small 'rtiou of The Tribune Is allotted to what
is currently dis nguished as light reading : but Rerkirs
of New Books o decided Interest. with chol ce extracts il
lustrating their uality, are freely given, "bile the gnat
body of our pa cis devoted to a lucid and careful digest
of the News of e thy, with Editorial comments there
on. We have reliable Correspondents ineseh quarter of
. theglobe, and lie nearly all the principal tithe of &rope
and America, and their letters will aid our readers to a
clearer understanding of the causes which are now grad
ually converting the Old World into one gigantic arena
for the death-straggle of deal interests, motions and an-
Mous.
The Tribune nuntains reliable mods Of the Markets.
OnrCattle Market reports alone are worth *tore than the
poke of the PIM' to time who ate awed in raising and
welling Cattle. L
No.PaPor iondviliff SO great an expense as our Weekly
and need-Weekly could be afforded at the price of thew
sheets except lit connection with a Daily. nor could our
Daily be sustained at Its price withonC the aid of our
Country editiong. large as our circulation W r it would
involve as In ruinous loss but for the receipts for Adm.-
thing. We better, that to The Trib ens Ls realised the
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leg the events sit, the day which has been Cr ran be com
bined with estivate cheap es ; and In that Pdth we re
en:amend it to the Pm: rabic regard of the trading public.
We offer no lams subscribers, tempt none to take
it by gambling te of winning farms Or mansions in
is lottery , ' to w Leh tickets ate furnished to its patrouk;
employ no trarelling agents to Importune people into
taking it, and waste trine of our men in donning our
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limns or, ins DAILY nuirst:
Single copy, one year, - , • -
. I Clube---setne pet-e.
T4lntS or fat 11=11 ?Em*
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Throe coOes, one year, - . - - ano
Tenone year, • • • • r • S.OO
Ten eopleklake year, - • - - • 12 00
Twenty copies, to OW address, 210 00
And any Luger number at the rate of $1 per annum:-
At the= the op clubi,. wit =mot direct Mellow' to
. .
each . .
llubscriptiond may annmencest anytime. Payment in
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ment. . •
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ter 1.1 maned should he made acquainted with Its contents
and kap a deerriptiati Cot the bills.
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write .letter in as few lewd' as pleible, Intim the ma.
ney and write the name of the subwritscr, with the Post
office, County, land State, and direct the letter to .
.131111LGT tt" Illeatarn, Tribune Moe, New Tort
sus rumewricur mimic ,
'Persons residing , * 'points ',We tags. arrive oftener
than once a Week are requested to elionbis the Semi.
Weekly. We raped It as the cheapest paler, all things
pmeickied, published In the United Stab* •
. inns:
Single wet ow year,
• Floe copides.,
• POSSUM cm Tor 11111111!.44
The weave , olj the Dui Tribune tar ow dear la $ll
The postage ou the Weekly Tribune for tine yeti is Re
The onstage an the Soint•Weekly Axone year .
Payable quarterly r ad* at * tare stiletto the
pager is teceired. 0
• TrannictOct, San lOrk.
- Decambei?."4, Wit
EN ,ADVIRTIVANTS '
i ii HI 81C I — l - 300, VOLUIRESOIFJUVEM LIS I'
11 "__,...,_ tilliThr N itt feit Stair tiS Hnil li" thir... . ' ' Re lr 11 " siallaa 7 ° . 1 !
widest , -tr, Jae* teem foe awe tan -,
SW Slimed Owatotaf to
te cosa md ase. 6 Il i w r. "- irit ---- a:4O sate.s. -- FT --- m ; I Mi r -=‘,..olltm4mt.N6 ALF:6l,TeiltionaßOEimaariv...di
caroler.
-December 1.3 d, SU -4 1 / 1.......,
. I **P ° O a r insg . bila = i a ma. tbs attestion i tuetted e we
I-- - ' --.
- - : tr a - ,.;;; ---'„ -.. ..ii - Earansik I w oo trill be sold at as law oleic as Omar trots pato
- - - - - --"...
' ' - ol i uitita binoSociestes. The cateetibar %WV In*
THE LIFE OF .MARTIN ILUltHautt,'. American and had* &lotto"
The Gamma Schwalm. -.ton Thad Society. It. a gaserial frniduld el
. hasp fin on. for sal* at. 11.11AIMAN'S
=._._____________
iLN Fifty Pictnres, from Designs by hor.hattwa„, Book stud &Oita? at" prThe thermometer at Johnsburgi Vt.,
I Glatav Iconic. ter width 6 added i aid& et the _ N o w i . .-- r „..--------1----:--
and Progreso; of the liehrmation in oniony. ow : —3"
volume, large Sets Deautihdly bead In onasead ma ..,i_ Dertsta If .70n In= mille t res. I
tin, gUt. $150: In rich!teetrocco., panelled sides, 00; or, , "..e.'lCear's FM there le nog --4.. .. ,
twoonto antique. extra. IA DI . SuriTs o tYPn of Minbalf - ench as VII cat} dlatha . •
'7II,OtALLERY, oh Wednesday, was dolmto36°below tiro?
This amaiticent volume la a perfect fur- busts of the At.t.Y.Nrs MaLLEIIIf. We base -a Am •
lEnglish editi,,ti. and la' beyond doubt tte, smog splendid - Yluirr Gum waPoranlY 113, the Purls** -4 n„ _ that 1&_ .1,00.._,11
'velum published for the man. The sinning drawings Inii no* !,'your pictures. Came 'WA LWT , a nd im.
, from which the artistic snowing' of the ' original Ir" in,,„9„ he da y
.f......* ~ A 'lf AILEN S GAL.
cm made, created a 'Milt 011111111ii0G1 at .unnich a f ew ••• ----,—.- ...--e-- - ' niter-•- - - - -" -
team so; they found no many and Web ardent Wm!. Mar: twitwr of ttiat , end ilniff• 30111 4.
sees. that it was resolved to publish them, I
together with • l'. *Menlo, December 9. 1851, I 4.544,
i a Iliography of Lurnmo M. Geiser, the author, has en-1 ---
endeatored to portray f Limn welt ea he can: not coo
-1 mating Imperfections Inseparable from human mittens,
bet which, in the case of Lumen. were ,canwei,gtied a
1 thousand times by hi.t trines: at the motet ime he seeks
t° give a carrot idea of the immense amount of pia/meet
Penammome, isultistry ^ and labor by which the t r eat Re
former gained genii It and t o t hie country the praise
of having steed deem in the stimulate. the mental
advancement or mankind-
The publisher, th, ridime. proents this volume to the
American public, with, the h o p e that they wales:lit at
same enema-Agra:teat With which it has been balled both
in England and Getania, where edition efter edition
, hat' • it called flu In rapid inweetaion. A list of the En
.
-
ings is appended. that the reader may form some
tua i r pti ou of how truthfully the life of Luther has been
presented in fifty ;Actives. 1 ,
;101IN W. MOORE, Oublisher.
I • l lisi Moat wort, Philadelphia.
1 December 21 VW 1: • ,' 60.21 _
—PAIIIIIIT:FERN.
Barnuni,,writteu
THE FARM JOU - OR 1833,
Edited by J. L. I:llxHatton, I
, . SSISI'ED by a corps of i the 'best
Practical Fanners In Pennsylvania. The Fifth
'plume of the Feria Jeursol will canummuse January 1,
1855. Each number {will contain Thirty-two or more
quper Royal Octavo pages. printed on superior paper. With
...sr type, and will be filled with the beat Arica/tore(
Era ding, original and , selected, that min .he produced.
The Editor and his assistants are determined to render
•is the most Practical Agricultural Work extend, and
I utterly discard all theories not attested by prurtiro(
perience. They have obtained the aid of; many of the
best farmers In Pennsrlvania. New Jersey, Delaware and
laryland, who will Wive their experience through its
I- - S
P•! ' ,
ILLUSTRATIONS.—Eaeh number will ro 'ntain several
engravings of Impror'ed Stock, New Agricultural Instils
ments, Choice Fruits. kr. .:
- TERMS—(I NV OUSELS IN szvesc4).
Single copy, •.$1 00 I Twenty copi - $l4 00
Five ^ • 14 00 Slaty '' ,' -40 0 0
Ten " • - ' I 7 50 5/0 . ts; i, ' ' 250 00
The Journalwlll brevafter, In every catie;be discontin
ued at thewnd of the Periml paid fm,unleas the into:rip
Hon be previously natewed. ' ' F
. PREMIUMS.—The evicts= attendant upon our offer of
premiums last year. Induces us to offer the following pro
miums for Volume 5:; .
1. One Hands*: Defiers will herald to the person who
Wilt procure us the largest number of subscribers In any
county In the United 'States, before the Ist of April next.
tt- Sercoli - Jere Naars to the person whir will procure
tut the second largest list as above.
3. Fifty Dollars to the person who will procure us the
third largest list as above.
4. Tiernfo-)lre Doltais to the person wha will moritre
us thejourth largest list as above.
5. Tea Dollars to the person who will procure 115 k, the
Soh largest Bat as abOrp.
CLURS.—Any penmen sending us Ten - :sitbseribers, at
our Club rates, will he entitled to receive one copy gratis.
or one copy of eithrr:of the following 'weeks, viz: Unita
on the Rose, finenon's Treatise online!' Cass. Fiefflin's
Treatise on Mitch Cilia, Waring's Elements of Agricul
ture, Norton's Elements of Agrieultnre,:.Vouatt 'on the
I
Any prison sending us Twenty subscribers. at our Clot,
rates, will. be, entitled to receive two copies of the Farm
Journal, or one copy tif any of the following Works..yis:
Horticulturist for 1e55. Johnson's Agricultural Chemis
try. Johnson's Elements of Agrieultnrai Chemistry and
Geology. Dr. Dadcl's Modern Horse Metter, Yottedt on the
liorse. Youatt on Cattle, l'oustt's Shepherd's Own Book,
Thomas' American knelt Guitarist, Downing's Friiits of
America. Elliott's Fruit Growers' Guido, Feesenderes
Complete Farmer and Gardener. , I
FURTHER INDUCEMENTS.—We have, just made se. h
4-angel:am:as with James Vice, JR:. publisher of the Hera..
`eulturiat, _which enables us to furnish otie copy of that ,I AIR.. H - Cr , Inis betlt ap
eliwant work and one copy of the Varna Journal for Two ! . H. 1 '' : • "
Dollars and Fifty Cents. and two copies! of the liorticul- ' -c-- pointed ! Agebt.....for this ctunty4 La the - sale of
twist anti tw oo' the Farm Journal for kour Delius, aud I "FISK'S PA'L'EST xairsi,uo , BURIAL CAOS."
larger number , at the latter rates.
specimen ifumbere sent to all•post-paid a l mi . Wet (One.— whiet supereede all other kinds In lose.l Being perfieetly
airtight. it obviates the necessity of Mary burials. and
MooeY on all' a o lvolt BAnks. mailed in the Pregenec or a ' 1
also preserve. the tidy form Immediate duompositlen
postmaster, at our risk. . i re particularly suitable for transPerting the eserty
All orders addressed to the subseribers. will be prompt- • ' from One place - vo enother. The rue 11l revered:, with .a
ly attended to ', 1 - J. 31. 3IEREDITH A 7), I 'thick glass. with metal top. which ran be removed atany
lteit Chest , . r It. time. and the fan. of-the eorpse , seen by its friends or re
. December '23, les-11, ': - 30-2 t - inures, We might etre you hundo.da bf - eertineates. to
I 't — -- -- -.`- "-- -------
''
rinhoratebur statement: is t the adtantro , mithe 311.
.
AVOICI ALL QUAC KE RY , r l . cir ' • - 9 " w i ..-
. f al tr. oin has over the M ooden; but tine folio ng will
AND TAKE SIEDICIN ES I'l4:Patti:l/ BY A ' isuffies": ',-
, .
ltegnliir Pliraiclan liilitt.
REM ELIV for each diSease, and
.4.. ill pain cured.4.42oughs,Code,Coniumption, Croup.
Whooping-Cough. : I
i i • ' LlverComplaint.Dysnepsia -
Indlitestbin, Sour Steartarh '.,:iert•fu
la. and all Skin Eruptions, Fever' irel .ague,
MMus Fever, ChOera, Cholera 31orbtoi., Dysentery. •
Bowel! Affections, Piles, Sore and Weak ;Eyes, Itheuma
tisni, Heirt Inamtse, Palpitation. Neuralgia. Kid:
ney and Bladder Affections. Dropsy. Felt
lug of the Womb, and Female( „
. Complaints.
. •' •
Dr. J. S. Rose's celebrated flintily Rola:Mei are the: re
sult of thirty years'practice in Philadelphia. Ilia pre
' seriptlons are fur each oempleint.and have been' well
teste' and approved by hundred's, of •Phcsiciums, , and
1 thousands of patients. 4 . , I ,
Is r. 1.1. S. Rose cliMph Syrup or Erpetforanl.—This Syr ,
up. hiving stood the test of many years' experience, as a
remedy for irritation or intimation of the; Lungs. Thrust
or Bronchia. is acknowledged by all to he to remedy end
, nent ly superior to all other known compounds i used for
`, the relief and radiCal cure of Coughs,- Colds,: Asthma,
ConsumpUan and ill Lung Diseases.. Price 50 lents
and $l. ,
. Dr. J. S. Roses Whooping Cough Syrup—This prepa
ration always relieves, and prevents the whooping rough
from running into other diseases; suchai intlam4tion of
.the Lunge, Dropsy in the Chest, and .CorieumptiO. It
gives instantfellef. and frequently cams in one wrelt;-
I'riee 50 cents. : '. i i
Dr. J... BOW S 6rocip Stifsp.—Childneri are also liable
to Croup. which dangerous complaint yields immediately
to Ds. J. S. Itoex's vista FAILING Comp lireP. Price 25
mats - .:
Pr. J. S. Rote's Pain Curer eureeell. pain: Internal or
external. It may be relied on for curing; and giving al.
most instant relief! to Cholera 31orbtfs:Cholle, and all
pans In the Strimarh or Dowels, Rhettmstism from Cold,
Sire Throat, Paine la the Limbs, Bark or Sidi, Chilblains,
Sprains and Bruises , . Sato to all ages. Piicel2%.. 25 and
50 mns. • . ; ,
Dr. Ibises Alteratire or. Mond Purifier, for Serefels,
Old Eruptions, and; all diseases arising from an impure
state of the blood—price $l. •
Dr. Rose's „ittcrotire or Pireily Pills; for Liver' com
plaints, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Soar Skns& Aaell Cos
tivenemi-25 cents. , i. ..
Dr. Rose's Golden Pills, for falling of the Womb, Ye
male Weakness, Debility and P.eLtration-L-, 50 cents.
Dr. Roses fistate Pills, a ralnable remedy for female
complaints. Superior to Hooper's crus:,—'4s cents.
Itr. Rose's Dyspeptic Compound, a sure cure for hys•
pepsh-50 cents. 1 .
- Pr. Rose's hbuic Risture, for Chills, Fevers, and gener
al Debility. . A never-failing remedy-50 'rents. -
Dr. Rotes Cbmpowid Erleacl of Buda, for all diseases
of the Kidneys and Bladder, and for Dronsy--50 cents. ,_
Dr. Rose's Nerroasthrdial, for-all nervous conditions
of the system, Neuralgia, Heart Disease, Palpitation, ite.,
te.-50 cents. L' , I gi .„,-''
•
Dr. Rest's Pile Ointment-50 cents*
.! • and niter
Ointments-25 cent,. .
_, .
Dr. Rose's Elixir bf Opi leld—supretoc to all other forms
of Opium--2.5 mute. . :
1 ,
All whose constitutions are Impaired by disease, or
weak by nature, shintid read DI. .1. ti. Roses 3,tEDICAL
AMU= (which contains a description ail the diseases of
our climate and the mode of treatment.); It can be had
without charge of all the druggists in ; Philadelphia and
JENKINS A HARTSHORNE, corner of Second and Ohl.
nit struts, and -by B. BAINAN, Agent far Schnylkill
County. • . . ~..
' December A 1854
1E23
Se. 00
-Sa 00
5 oo
.11 C.O
MISCELLANEOUS:
- -
DRY GOODS & GROCERY STORE.
I PARKIN, at the old stand of Fry
it, at Marts, respectfully announces Wits ptddie that
he Ws purebaesd the stock of the atm business item at
their old stand, and having wide considerable, additions
thereto by mint quit purclusea ac by solicits a
share of pal:l4lo°page.
In order to ~Itaroona kw .a choke Selection of Tooda,
adtable for thaActirran trade, J. P. has determined to
sell his present stoe r k of Spring and Bosomsr pods at a
very low figure, . I :'
Aug. lb, .194 t;!. 1 , , ! ' W.tf
CARD.
IWOULD inost respectfully invite the
taxes of .Pottatille and vicinity to call and see my
exterudveassortnient of Toys and Tancy,Artletes. These
pods have been Wetted expressly for the coming Holt
days. and tre ths champed b 2 he had An town.. Persona
wishing to purchase goods In my Heal will do iron by
calling on me befogs goingelsewhere.Alt i t l fall sseort
mentor gngar Toys and Candles of ' in btu
two, which will be mold cheaper than over.
Please tall at the etiolate& andretatt confecthmery of
• I JOHN 11.1t11R,
Centre Atm,' adjoining arrrtpuee Book Rion ,
December It. 1a..0
• PUBLIC SALE.:
WILL BE!SOIi0 ATON
)orii Pane Sale, at SWATARA 1 , 1111-'
Mah eix miles m.st of Irinegroveryl-
I unty, on Thursday, the 4th day of January, 1955,
the following property, via:—Four teams of Mules, ern
barnevs and samos, eta draught .Hperes, tiro carriage
Hones, the milch Cows and Young: Cattle, Hogs and
Shoat*. Carriages .; Wagons, Carte, Coal Boxer, Farming
Utensils. Blaelcsailth and Wbeelwrghti Tools, Bar Iron,
seasoned Lumber,! Spokes, Felloes, Azlee, ae- Together
with a variety of other articles, too numerous to mention.
Sale to commenee at 10 o'clock on .said day, when at
tendanco will be given and terms made known by
ECKERT, 0 IN LFORD .It. CO.
41a3t
ELEGANT .PRESENTATION BOOKS.
. .
For the IleLiege.
• th _ Tag Subscriber has now an hind et low
t# pricers a huge nad splendid angelment of,
A ausuilocaustrat 4 4. ll 44 Jammile Books,
'Fancy articles,. de, 4,
is ~ suitable for the
approaching holidays. . , , ; .. ,
• Annuals -torll SISS . - i '
I , Flllificts of Memory, ilinniinarions anti 10 engravings,
hi Tho Cabinet Anntud, di engravings, '; . . ..
II Prierelahlp's Offering, 8 engravings,
Snow Flake. 8 engravings, , ; ; ' .
Atiortirm's Gift; a engravings,
"..
The Gem Annual, 8 engravings,- •- 1 0 . ' '
Grsna bf Beauty, 9 engravings, and re. ce illustrations,
. 4v,,.. twenty Gallery. Stn., 13 Meselinta. i • ;
The Dfadom Mo.. I:engravings;.. ', • • •
The Gof M Book Gems, 8 engem M i
gr. -,„, 1..
Amaranth, or Token of Remembrance, tine engraving..
• , 'Keepsake of Friendship,. ' The Ladies' liftenth,
iTelren of Friendship, . - -The Golden GM,
• Magnolia. ' : 1' = - ..rhip Leers Gift,:
'
• Casket. . k . 1 Chitnn, :,
Garland. I ~
, ,* Splendidly IllnatysOrd Weiler, Richly
- ' Bound I • ~
il ;
ambhis of the New Teaseled pro deans, unfolded, by
r • -by Rev. Wrn. B. Stevens, elegantly illustrated.;
Bead's Female-Poets of America. illustrated. '
, Goodrich's Gem Book of Billfish Poetry, illustrated,
Maranlev's Days of Ancient Brine IlinstratcrL • .
.The White yet), a Bridal OM, illusinded, ', l , , .
..
Tupper's Proverbial Phiimpby. illcudrated. , ;
Jerusalem and its Vicinity; by Rev. iTerfateribeimer. i 4
1 L .-Imitated. . -- - •
.
Rho Bete in the Cloud. Marinated,. . ! : .
The Holy' liningelists.lo elegant engravings. : • :
Penis of Art, 30 elegant engravings, 1 ; ' -
-The l'a,publk.an Court—The Levees of President Wash
- ington, with lOsuperb illnstratkoi, , , ..•
1. 7, 80 mes of American Authors, illustrated. • ,
, l'be.Vernon Clattery. 6T' in. engravings, ,
Ornaments of Memory, Z line engravings,
ilictorial Lit. of Christ, illestrated, I • '
1 . TallW illustrated f
I i •101.15plilkeTairPirterilkLitraitii, • ' ,• . . .
! 1 Mutt Keemake, 30 colored plates, •
... , • -
'1 Fhtkspeare's Heroines...Wl engraving;
Mrs, Jamieson's Chanseteristies of Wanton, 23 engravings,
' I
Mire Bkrieklard:. Queen. of England, 30 'nearing.,
,1 Chlerra and Other itsgdobs: Illustrated. - '
1; Herren end Its Scriptural Emblems, illnet,sisd.. ' •
'', The Book of the Heart, illostrefed,
.1, . •-•
Romance of Nature, colored plans. ' • '
, . The WklarWide World. Illustrated.
• Standar4 Poets, Eleipaietiy Illitetrated
4 . and Boissid:t
"INIP.ORTANT NOTICE." I ' POOCII4Oit lOf .10b a Kea* 11 engraving; '. ...
- Geese Redlnatletnai: ' • . : Poetical Worked Henry Kirke White, 10 ettgraTinga,
. A GNEW '.& CO., 196 CheSSllt stitet, ! Mccr ' ll i'il'h 3 "i'xlieL " •DiraT •• ;
Edith - 31aris,Poetleal Works. 0 engtrings,.. ' •
11.. fiIIILAD4PHIA.• tispecthilli Want the eiti• i e mp bor . ., p& a ti ca l W or ,m entral in gg ,
sensor Potterille and vicinity, that they Imes taadetheir • R ,,,,,, , , W 0r e,,,03 •
. int ek T i n „ • •
Greer /RIG Reductions in Prime for Jizris.Cleaks, ShOttly . 4
Raccgdi a. W ge.., by NM 1110,1,0/4 12 engravings,
Ms and Orem CAmds.
' . CLOAK AND SLLIWL DEPARTILOT- :. ' , Byron's Works, wrionsiedltkria.lll 'winded, ,
This depart/neer tantalite ow of the richest' and nod , - Shaleptants cartons editions, ilinidelted, •• - •
extend*. assertMenb of the kind ;ever, offered In this Bur Works, rationseditions, illustrated, . ,
city, taken Dual the very richest styles of Pane end . Longfellow, . ,Tapper,. .. ".: Moors,
London imporations. " '
~ . I • .' Milton. ' ..- Cowper, ,'; ' . Walks,
Freda. Geld berricred, Bay Skit Plaid Livafigouf Ikriarei Landon, . -Ott, , Scott,
Aliaide.—Tiles goods have hew greatly reduced, and an I: 'Sbroncrey, ' i... Southey. i.' :' ; ;
Owed, •
offered to buyers :as real bargain& i i -• ; 1 Campbell's liperimats Of the British poets, ,' 7
SILKS AND BUSS GOODS OgiAli, Men,' ' kloore4 Ulla Rani& i. - • • , •
Plaid. Stripe, limeade and plain- Silks —e lam aud it , Rovion's Ferrate Poets of Great Britain,
iseutifttl stork, ciassprbdag. new ilia , . fishkinable styles--; altoo . o CHIdo narol'as
rerli eittap. , ; , • . Reed's Lady of the Lake, Illustrated, do., lee:, .
~_ .. ,
bre pleas riehVadiment and actin Mad', Lupin& ii•=' • ; . • Alen. : : '1 ' , •
done% and Otainerna, at 20 per cent. lelowlcapetation,, . -Standard Mlseelleneons Hooke In greet variety,
root prim hen 0234 to gl 20., _ . 1.. rand); and Pocket lOUs and Yews Ikon; In nen
• 'ilea. ~.)Itenlne. •k o .fteeneen.. - aratenigdatever,liaasi., ..<. style of Isading, • - ... ±
.ituRIN. 1101147, Stobedderhe. pbbnia, GIW* AC •., Ladlre'Vahli. '• ?erf Itilice.l work Rohn
use annonass ails Mode from the country an 4/12 i ..... Writing Dens, ' rode Motielnt Card Cu.,
Intrterd toe:tend ass eatt— we hal anatrad Oaths ••, , Pen Knives.' : '--: . Otdd Pans. • , Ivory 'refute, Sc.
sad tin dy ke of our goods to awed be . .: :i .' All of which viriba sold at astretaily kir prima at
, I .
i ,
I ' -; 1 iAON ,11 Cd.. ,
on a te ,„, ce o rt ,b r iv i g :. !A : ; - .
Dec !
tiobt ,.
r , 0,..b:., . t.h .r th . p . s : Hosul . R. Slarill N i rrat.
I 1 Decamber le. 1254 .
pkviober 18, 1F44
HOLIDAY PRESENTS , ' .
'• At the Town Hell Chhth Store.
. THE Anbscribers arojust receiving a
, and chnieo.enDer lion of FANCY'
,WARES, enttable for Christmas and t
New tear e g its, finch la China ?lotto Cup and Saucers,
different styles; Efeneva tan Wass and _China (Magna Bob.
lbw; China and Ikthetnian Wan Val--different
Card Baitety Mitch Bac* Paper WilAtah red Slut',
Tog fflgares, An, re a.
The above. geode Were purchased at 'the his l,
Auction Pairs, and we lie therefore enabled to sell Mena
cheap. We have fie nstantly co; hand thole or parts of -
Gehl Bend Ilona Dinner, Damn and rhea aet.c .
lemer•Stme China do do! ' do'
Chamber Mk efirPreid Oyler and pefies,
Ware Intre gulf denrtptionr; • ' , "
Lookinzniasneu 044d1 sizes, Maas, ltrittania and Bras.
Lampe, Hanftt Lamps for halls. stones end entries; temp
and bias (Hobos. always on nand. Aiky goods In our line
'tot on band when called tor, will Le procured at duvet
notice. All ngsli,purchmed at our eitabilihment will ha
safely piked, and delivered within the borough. bee of
charge. MliithlSON A TIiDER, Tottik,Hatl.
Deecinber in, 1854 4BU '
ttiSen)
fetti_LAttiLi'l
INDIA RUBBER OVER-COATS. OA.,
At Greatly Reduced Prkeel
• •
gitlE.Subseriber has receiir(;(l froril the
• •
ilanufseturrrs. a kg, of 'lndia Ribber Orerevatu
tiver•Alla. Le-ccins„ Chaadharao Corers, Le:. Le.
All of which will be sold about 0:1 per tent. cheaper. 1
than uhuart• priors, wholesalo and retail. flood Ciotti as
low asst 50; Overalls. V 2 So• Leggius. 75; and papa
$1; together with a variety of other India; ftubberotooda •
such as Ihilkte and Gentlemen:a riandala, Ladiese• anC,
ciaattemca'i Olores, driving and working ialoses, Le., at
• ii.IBANNAN's
Chrtip Eisar. n,ld VariigiS26rt.' 1
454 • !,
I),;n:utFer 9.1554
• PHONOCRAPHIC . INSTITUTE;
• Port Carbon, Itebnylklll Co. :
T'THY do so many 14,rn I.PhOnogia•
phy? Ileasuse it is - the seuslist.nioest, and most
desirable argnisition that ever they saw. Phonographic
writing . Is to the other what the Telegraph Is to the mail.
This been proved by thousands Who pow use lt: M
eans, epee learnt it canisof f 2 fixpitten. ' A specimen will
be sent to the address of any. One on- appktattion for the
same.
Mr. Sarni gives four lowa a and . the inittrurtion book
for ;I. tbnntgb the mail. or In dines whim conronlent.
N. 11.:—Four lessons will enable any on to reed and
writ ,, ; nototArtift with ease.' -. 1 J. NiCL'L
Srptararr. ..'''l . l, 153.54 ... i 38. , bin, •.
' COACH MAKINC4
THE Subsieriter, being . about ta'intro
e
duos Steam Power and otherwise:enlarge
4PyL• e bdlltics of his already -extensive Er
' tabllsbment. invitee the attention ;of the
pulacto his manufaitute of Ikerenee, Wagons-and Ve
hid,. of every description.
Having every department of the Coarlemaking bust
' nes, at hand. employing only the best ;workmen, and
. using tie best materiala, dealers may be Mire of securing
satisfactory work.
Vehicles of every style and finish Milld4 to ceder. Re
pairs neatly and substantially done , On*Tl tram abroad
promptly attended to. , .
Sis-Shop, Morris' Addition. Centrelitrest, nearly oppe.
cite the York Store. Pottssille. -
. tygogfili
3Larch lit; ISS3 • -
PAINTING . , GLAZING i. PAPERING.
• Ramolemile
JW. BOWEN haling removed his
• ...hop to tap dciors abiive the Amerfran Houle. Cen.
tee Street, and taken into 'partnership his 'brethent"thi
subscribers announce to the public that they are prepared
to execute all orders in, their linel with the greatest de
spatch' and on the most reasonable tame • They emptily
good workmen and their customers may, therefore, be
pureed mat lefaCtory jobs • -
- They. also; beg leave to rail attention lib their splendid
Sesortment,of Paperatangings. Window-abodes. Ac..
every Variety of style and quallty. to snit the
. taste and pocket of purchasers, and- which they offer at
the leered City prices.
• • W. BOWES t itin/Tlll.ltS.
• 2 doorgabove American Reese, Centre Pt.
Pottsville. April 17.
•' '• WiPISING I TON, Al t a sth.
Graai:l3,l4—Wa 'witneaa.4ll. tlia of ycV orna
mental -Pearl} "Metallic lturtal Caaak'l ueod to convey
the,paaalns of the late lien. tJohtt C. Calhoun tolbo Con
gres,iounl Catnekry, which intinrrssed na with the belief
that it la the beat article known to us for t,ranaporthag
the dead to their peal trittlng Taxer. I . . .
with respee. ae stillierlbe ourselvel..lyaimg. rte..' •
(Sinler.Ll Henry Clay.' bold,: Ca.,. Dan. Webster, Wm.
R. ingo Jeff. Da -1 M. Berrien. J ti. Mn.ait D. D.
Atrhinmn.. A. C. Green, .Wm. P. Manguin, Henry Dodge;
D. S. Dickinson. ';
t.4inilaitiittiintiniAls Might he added Without tnuriber.
Apply to '?' IL 0 ItEtitiA MI.
- rnitre #rret.4mnter of Citon.
Potts ilia. t), , ,•, mber 9, 1)+51 i Okillol .
COAL TRADE PORTRAIT, CALLERY
• 1 . NO. 11.°Ncier, Ready.
,
TICE untleTsigued .hatc been appOinted .
the publl.4lng Agent furs aeries of Portraits of db. !.
nished characters identified with the Mat' Anthrs
ate Coal Ttado of Dennsylvarda. ti, allied) your attention •
Is respectfully halted. It Ile intended in iltgln. one num
ber annually, until some four or more :dull hater, appear. .
eit. The settee commence with a intimsitieent . * ;
- Fell-/enotth 41:tetrad of Jfihn Teel*, aquiir,, ,
The mach eneemeo and able Presldentof th e Deeding ,
e ; ltailrosd. •It has been engray.4 on Keel, In the best style.
tet StipUle. Use and Meizottuto:byJohni.tiartoinAtertire,
Who, it is now generale admitted, steeds in the [mat
eauk of -his pn - ,Lesion. Sir. Sartain PrOcceded upon the
execution of this particular. work with the express Object
and determination of achleVing* the t 9 phis nitro of his
'genius and-talent; *and the publisher... has ankndingly,
lull a liberal advance upon his ordinary prier..; for be;
I:embarked In the publication With the paramouht object
l'of laying beftire the Trade a series of Portraits that would
evorr.entond, to every particular, with Its moral Maisano,
!and stupendous contmerciail yaine, no,- hes than threnni
hneht heal Ries of the subjects themielves. The ;detain is
• !fOrtrteen Inches la vridth by eighteen and a half in length,
and appears upon *material of the finesetasture end Tsai
: lily.. The publisher has also had prepared. at-conkiderable
expense, an original model fora liiunejwhith li directly
significant and distinctive of the objects eorkemplated in
the Portraits. It le camel in food. in nutiltve style. by
' km!. tL.itk'e. of Paris, an artist of genius and celebrity.
It exhitits, at the base. a Locotootie odengine. and Train
' of Cod-Cars as mewing from a tunnel; upon the Ades.
me represented wo lofts. pine tree,. at chameteristie of
. the Coal Itevio as well is of the Coal Vetratation: while
on the toplit a Vista of beautiful scrolftwOrk, is the full.
lanath F•inii•rof,a Miner, to his subterraneoeur apparel.
and with his customary lamp, reposing, upon his pick.—
The figure to somo ten ruches in height4.has bets careful
ly nuelellid, and reflects - no-little credit apon the talents
of the distinguished-lA*l.st. . .
~
The whets work, it may thereffee be innenisell, will
trove a highly attractive and gratifying ornament to the
Drawilir-itoords or Countingdlotues, of those late:tided In
the Trite. or the landed estates ofttiCoal Realm, for
whom, indeed, it has been almost wh y designed. - It
will, serve, Mainol" it, to sat forth the form Ind Castrates of
the moist prominent of those- renuutkable men. who, by
their sagacity, energy. end enlarged, liberal. and mare
- hensive spirit have converted barren 'Pates luta exhaust
hes unawares -richer than. Pietas' mines".—who have
originated &trade which, .subjecting all nature to our
use and .pleasure," In its-social and commercial upect
mw.t, in a few years more. till our •twtiole boundless con
' - tinerit" with its saint and economic importanke—if, in.
• deed, it ham not shoddy done so. Title magnificent Poe .
" trait* will then attain slevoliar=e priceless value: and
'lt therefore becomes. the more - desirable that the work
should be proceeded with, ere they shall have bion called
- from their earthly tenements. and faded from amongst us
folveer.. 1 ' ' • i - ,
' I , Prices - of the Pidere, iadodtng least.
A Single Copy, with the accompanyingyrame in Gilt, •
Ornaments, rich platseghsw. etc., - i . • :' ', '. boo
I Do. with the same Prams colored lolbbck-wilmst; ,
T. etc. ea.. < . 1 . 25
-Da. With I% Inch bead. gilt and s4Solledosertent„ ' -
(very neat and tech effect), I . i.. ;.t *1• le,
Do. with plain }6l
gilt Prune, 2nebea horde, ete4 10
'Do. with' amp of 1 MOIL brad. gilt and lacquered.. 7
Thu prieont the Portrait , lteelt, without thelratoe,ls
PITO Dollars. 1 will be pleased to (orient- cotes* by
pus motheredse, to any part of the errantry. 1 And aa a
limited number only has been published, those dolmas.
of the best iiimnstiont willisettotdite the expediency of an
early order. Address • 1 11. BASTNAIS,
. *- Bider Matti/ Journal, Peattnik,tftt.
' December lti. IRAS , ' . I . 494 f
, 50-tt
t
B 7 won* oak
--Mia--ADISLVTnfI7-n7/lETS.,
Wheat Flour 754-Rye' da, $6 50 pot
bbl,—Cora $4
,06 &L.-tints—Witold;
Red, $2 13---Whilt, $2 12Bye, $1:22-
-Corn 90 ces.--Ostec "eta._ per bushel.
strived
116r an arato d l at it e l s o r r . 6th, , o er a o r a Vi er-d7u g e, t !V n rii. n ss. wi o th t
almost c°4 are
Bditorial and contrihoutaa, • : na l r i la tt er ;. •
lived varieties are nnaviaidably cro o f
FIRE.- r flowattl& Co. 4 s Express agents
inform us that, on laving Philadelphia Yes
terday morning, the huge brick building, at
the carrier of 12th and Chesnut streets, *CCU
pied by Barvin and Buck as a Grocety estah•
lishment; was in, tl i ames, and that t several
.houses adjoining had also caught.
• liiir ComtesstoTAL.—Nothing cif much
general public interest has occurred this week.
To most of our reac . ers the topic of ;greatest
importance, yet starr this session, ltas been
.Repeal epeal of the d yon Coal. Gen. Wal
bridge of NeW York introduced the sttbject,—
He is mistaken in many of his assertions, par
ticularly in relation to the connection between
the duties on, and the prices of; the article.—
Fur inltalee. we have now at hand the data
to show that the pricesrule highest when the
duties are lowest. ,-, We shall treat this subject
at some length -shortly. i ; •
Know Nothingis n still occupies a promi
nent position iu thel discussions among the
members,
EMI
.
Ser b eißASD Lonnuells.soxs.—T.e Grand
Lodge of Masons, fur the State of Pehnsylvii
nia - held their annual election on 60' d
at :heir hall. in Phila. The result was as fol.
lows :—R. W. G. M 1 James Hutchinson ; R.
W. I). G. M., Pete Williamson; 8.1 G. W.,
41: fir Mitchell; J. G. W., H. M. Philips; G.
T.,-Thomas E. Baxter; G. S.. W. 11 .1 Adam
s. Trusters or the qirard .Bequest.Samuel
11, Perkins, (leo. I . .llaswell, Peter William.
son, Anthony' Boni.. onville, Geo. P. Little.
Trusters of a.. it Loan.—P. B. Roward,
David Jayne, Wm 1 English, Henri Sitnon,
William Badger.
- -
le-Ertscorst. iienvxcr et'
The Rev. Mr. •Wasfiburn, Rector (4 Trinity
Church, Pottsville, preached in Shamokin on
Suirday morning hst, (10th.} This is the
first service of this Episcopal ClMrch ever
held in that • place Other dello:nitrations
b ave been laboring }.here fur some years, with
the most happy results, and me are gratified
to see the Episcopal Church unfurling its ban
ner, and preparing for future usefulness in
the coal region
Mr. Washburn's
preparatory Step to,
Episcopal parish and
Sunbury Gazelle.
.1
Arai. DAVID
is in Liaisville.
Ik' PRESIDENT
birth -day on the 29
e THE popul.,
ding to the - returns
Legislature of that
Adt- Sts - k: the
York Central-'ltai
charged nine hind
Ultr" A lam T Mt- h
that hundreds of
material, are being
linited.States. •
sEir• MANY of the citizens of Writ Chester
purpose moving toj Michigan next 'spring:—
rho?. intend settling in and near a village
called Battle Creek.
,Q 'MIKE WA the notoriouS member
of Congress from ,New. York eityilins been
defeated in his district by a majority of inv.
enty-five 7 —a triumph of decency.
ter A CANDID iI.EPI.Y.— (4
.16 that clean but- "
ter?" asked a grocer of a boy who hid brought
a quantity to market. "I should think it ought
to be," replied thti boy, "for alarm and Sal
were more than taro hours pickinkf the hairs
and motes out cf it last night."
‘,.
KNow .soTfttsGs Is "Tlik OLD Cots-
TRY."—The Freeman's Journal (Roman Cath.
olic), gives prominence to a Liverphol corres
pondent who gravely. asserts that the Know
Nothing. movement in'America. originated iu
an Orange Lodge, 'there. •
I •
THE Catholics of Milford, Conn., re
fused to obey the commands of their priest.
The priest threatened to excommunicate them
if they attended the lecture of Dr. ileheity, a
Meagher-men. They' felt indignaitt and at
tended the lecture. •
Xjtr• TRUE IlaremEss.—Talk tiliput the en- '
joyment of wealth l —it never Was :and never
can be enjoyed. An abundance is a heap of
misery. A man who owns a small house, a
small farm, a small wife, a big dog, a good
cow, two or three fat pigs, and three child,en, •
ought to be well satisfied.
lar Go INC BACK.—One of 'the remarkable
facts of the times is that which relittes to the
nntisually large reittru of emigrantit to the old
World. It is estimated that'betwein the first
of May . and the fifteenth of November, the
total number who ',departed from New York
•was fifteen thousand.
• • .MISCELLANEOUS,
TINT laike astort- '
• P mesa of splendid firth:unary. £c. from the numbs.
tortes ofJulm Aanol Ai 00... Harrison *ad . . , pert _
All Mom who wan l . line heathery. Mil at C. BAR
LiirS Book and Varie y Mom. • .
January 21, lai.t , , • ; 34f
CLIAUSAGE.CUTTERS AND . STUF-
Are.—Just received. a was lot of liinsj'aWarranted
Sausage Cutters and iatußera Also:. patent bon &tit
Cutters, which will be sold cheap by
BRIGHT.
• • iron and hardware ! Iter:haat, CentreSt. Pottsville.
• Noreruber Id. 11354 !
; 4.5.2 m
.
ItEVOLVERP.-41ltit *received a lot
of Colt' s Patent Allen's lire and six barreled it..
vo vers. -Also, Single end Amble Barreled Pistols, whkh
will be sold chimp at I OEO. FOUGHT'S, '
Miramar. and Clattery Store,
Centre &Met, Pottselthe.
4.1.2 m
October Vt. IVA
AND CURTAIN PAPER
1 1 7 - Store. %hell Street, grit boost. shove C.ntre
Ftreet, Pottsville. Paps , llsaaings at city prink. Alt
order for %via paperin g promptly stieentedssitls neatness
and dospat , b by ram etd workmen.
T. OCONNOtt
N.B.—Am;s'beught In large and small piantltiee
Pottsville, November 11, 1&4 ? ii 7mr
CREAT SAVINC TO MERCHANTS.
. Soap delivered without Ripens*.
iatD. SCHOENER Respe c tfully an
e nouns tile pubic thitt,he haiconstantly on
nd till, Soap and Candles of his own nientifuture, at
his Factory In Puttetrille, whkdt be will ?warrant to be
equal to any avid hens or elteswhene r and At 'ewer prigs
than an be paretranwi at any other estalliehment.
The highest ash prices petit for Tallow, it his Factory,
Norwegian street, Pottsville. • ?
.
November 25,1853 1 - .18-tf •
SPLENDID BIBLES FOR PRESENTS.
Iftia t c! M in lTA - El s, egan yt tl) t r ii
ehiP4 HAD Moroaio and Embossed.
200 Pocket Bibles, Pain Idecoce° and EmbdmilL
*IMAM, Eptacopal, Pittman and. Preabttorian Prayer
Books. richly boring lo Ellk Velvet, or Morocco Maria,
with eiarrpm ohm. Let various plata rayks.'
Hymn Broke, of all kinds, for sale. Tory damp, at
B. BANPAYS
, • Book andAtarione7 s_
ntoro.
' December 9.185 -
•
YOUNG 11.0101E8'IIENUNARY,
Alt Orwrigsburst delbitylkUl qranty, Ps.
Institiition is now open for the
reaertios of boarder; the boarding bouse—a irpadoua
ounedt ecamittent lailclUstg—israpaisstoodad I, Use ludas
sig
The situation le retied and Ilealtkfat * number et
law will be limit ed. scrum of study embreeel the Wilkie Itetbionatlee,
Natural Selo:ices, *select and Modern Liftisses, Draw.
aht, plata moll fancy Yiselleasark . Vocal mast lastruana
t Music.
TIIIINIB.—Fot board, Pad tuition, Pt q tee, ( 11
'Pilule
10. Madura.: extra
I &wee for languages, Drawing ea
t;;=M;=;ZZil
Yartiar Intbanatlao say is *bawl tit' adamant
• MRB. B. CHAN 4.1;11,, Ortetstsbarg, Pa
Natetalrvi 18,1834: Lit t
• CUBA. NAB FALLEN,
s• bade tba Pdsraf lists asst; Caps.
WE would Aids Swat esspaitfay us=
eta tbs !attention of_ tbo cifizent of
s Pottsville sod country In general; to
oar IsrpfilNd *putt usorsuoirt of an WO
of getib to nir Its* that we Faye now isioteedi sat sat
In daily receipt comprised of Hate, Cara /um £ 4 -
tientleaten'a Illailloteutin Hale, 'Ways on hand, er
guide to order of an latest Atka Otte* Calm. Koast k
Hat Ehangbalet—tn thort, amyl/dud ttf time list and
%-would also twits tbs eest alder sttintlos of the Ir
are to oar astottntent of t, watch b*" ben loblatt
with Vat we thane bursa stocks.* ibt tointrye—
Nothing sbaCto Ittt undone on our *I. to M uo illa
teettou. Call god pis to a trial, nest dose to
-U.YEZIAL I OD.
N. B.—A kit saeortment of' auffslottebes vu bseskst
rims to eon ta• times.
No,einner
MINI
W..
=I
visit to - Shamokin was a
the establishmint of an
d church edificel them.—
EE2
1 Y t~'
a LE 0 wrx, the Peologibt
11:ItCE reached uii,fiftieth
,h- tilt.
tion Arkausi, ncepr
recently laid 11efore the
state, is 247,112 , souls.
,st of December, the New
road Company
.have dis.
mem •
the London News, says
ons. of rags, mid similar
sent from Live4ool to the
!May 1:6