. , ~- • ' . . . . ... . . . . 1 . . . . ;'• r; ' • . , ,f ' .. . • i • 1 TE . ft 31S , I' * ,- 1 •.i.l. ~ ,: j l. • • '.. , F THE MINERS' JOURNAL. 1 t t • ' ,', • . ..... • . . 1 . . . •—. ! . . .' , _ . . . • . SINGLE SEBSCIIII'TION 1 • • • ' 1 . . . ..,...„, . . ,; , . • •' I rf . i . , 11.1.ARS" per 811111.1111. Kt ab. , ), ID MdrlAllee.-42 Witt" • . .. • 4 . ,- • %,' r ' r ' i . • • , , ! ..,Nsitb4a six months -- and .= 50 if not paid within • , . . , , • , 1 • • • • • ) . -. . ~ 1 . ... . -t , , ! . . I - . 11...1 -1 \ [1 .. lit . .. ... . .. _ _, _.,.. ....r. :. ., , i .: . tool:middies., in advance, . $.5 ( 00 • ' , ,J , l -.. . i „ !' - ,'. ;• I ,r -".'.... . . - j I 'l( .7 1' '. . - l :'1 N_A-L ~...... do" no "' do •./000 1 • ,_ do •do -- .do Zi) 'OO , , ', bsc.l;tlens must be Invariably paid in admit*. ' - to ono adhea. . -,. ' , 3 :e. \ 0 • .... s Mil To e..illlttEES AP) OTIIETIS: . • _.. , {7l : CA:;.."i,:yriL Le fur:3 l 4lA to Carriers and others at • • - •• . . . ' • ) copliv. cash ou . :r,ry, . . ' i . , • . 1 ‘',l4, . i , ' , nen sad SAW .Thazio rs suppl.mi with the Jot's- . . . ' . , (.-'?--.-, . , ' v 1 VI la sdcaoce. . - , .... ....44 . . . -Ott . , • • -.-- ' -," -, - C . THE LAW OF Nswsrarzna. . • . „ . , • , , . ---- -- . . - - e'd; -:. :. - • ORAL .A ATERTIRER .... • . . __,..t.j;:xj .1% , 8 . . . - : , , , : . . . - -. . s.-rilsoe order. the diso - intlituance of their news- , the publisher zany continue. to scup the= suatilj -et are paid.• -!-- :- "i• I...,kribeto neglect or ramie to. take their amps- 1 M the ekes to which they are directed. they see ! • s ;11 , 1ble until they bare settled the hills and or- Pen discontinued. I ly , :ritra realm to other places , without Inform-' • - tea;' ober . and the newspapers are F 'fit ut to the for- 1 . .=-_-.--- ll -etkt. they am held reepor.Sible. ; '''"' ; r hero decided that refusing to take newel:a. ; VOL . XXXI•• 5 -.. ~..i 1 h; Ace, or remorins and leaving them tin- • -4. 1 _li phya facia evidenoe of intentional fraud. _.......- . . , • , . .::. n—sul>.. r TRAVELING. ~.. time, 25 ; --- -- -- I '' : 00 . silver- 1 SUNDAY E.xcußsios TRATRAINS. ( ;: :- s-- •:, 14 - 23,CE. 1 11". , ltt l ZWEeealii 1 00 - ! PHILADhLPRIA AND !WADING RAILROAD: 1,• , , ,,i:1- . :. ' 73. I ( )N AND AFTER, SUNDAY, JUNE 10 il. 601. 15: , 2, and on every to noiiing4undiy, until Par i -• •I'• - •! 1., 00 - ther notice. an Express Excursion . . :.Passenger Train will i ; I 00 ', leave P h iladelphia at 71i' A. M. and return _ from P t DO t, vine at 4P. M., same dap—stopping at all Way Routifs on tl DO the Line, and at the following stations at the hours stated: 'DOWN . TRAZN. '• • t' )0 ' CP ThAIN. , I is Stations.. . i l l i lt I Stati ons, 1 Time' 1 P.M. ?rr,",r, i! I - I Leaves Pottsville 4.00 ! 6 ..1 • c.. Passes Mt. Carbon 4.07 .. . S. Raven . 4.15 I sr .- Reading 5.21 I " l'Otetown 6.404 : " Plidenissille 6. 2 6 oI $2OOO Arrives at Philad'a 7.3 - I RATES OF ADVERTISINC. . iu,-..f: 1'; liar. tel '.tuts ter one insertbon—sube i,,os „l.'s, rent,. ovh. .:1 lines. one time, 25 ',.,. melt insertions. 1'2 , 4 cents 'tack. All silver .,,,-.: line.. for sh •,rt rt'ri , ul R. Ch3Mred as a squdre. 0 ,. roe. I TIMEX . SIX. - Tway.., lilies. 84 , i 871; $1 50 $2 25 sOO 1 0i 150 '2 00 350 ' 500 oc Fit iIIi:JIL3 COL - NILO en 1.L11.X.410: OP TIN' Lind. 11/31, 125 .'2 IN . 300 . klUAres.- .` 0.) 3 505 500 '8 00 12 00 p 4/1 tres, 0 . - tti • A 501 ° : 6 ..q , lO 00 15 00 tter i. ~ . :, r...,.; :,0 -,. . [ kIN 1 5 00 2 .5 00 ~ ;,,.,, ~. ~ i ,,, .vz i ; • lit no' 25 00 / 34) 00 ,thala lf. 00 25 1$) ; :VI tat 45" 00 6 0 00 .r,i,,, ,, N,t1,5. il v arh—sr:4btpanleiil with an tlsement. 5 4 1 rent. orb. ' n i,.,,,,At Iwf.dr .)farrla,tes and Deaths . , 10 cents i A v ., f „. i r „.,,,,ion.--subli.e went insertions. 5 cents 1 - - Ni:, ; sr,..n.l4 o,re .co lin l'ett MP a llite In adi - ertlsinr - i. i ntc and others adrirli.intr, by the year with:- ges m t 3:3 I 3 s tarlin.t rutri4tis anent not exceedinir.'2 ~, .. io 10, 0 , trill be t chargel. including subscrip ' S $l6 00 , ,lb,.'a , nnunt of one quarter column with rc:i- and 6mle,ript inn.. ~, 1 ,,, ,„ ~,,,c. at the rates designated above. drertts , :ven: Net in larzat typo than usual will be „..„,1 :, , pr .•eat. I..ivatie on these pricers. All cuts 'I. , elt.trg•-•1 the Name ax letter prows. ,- Trttlle Alverthemetxts rweiveti from • AdTertisi-ag ~r, , i i.roai. e xcept at '2.i per cent. advance on these . ii-,!:•. , by '4...0.11 avveindnt with the publisher. r - 7,1:e• L:! , , 11111. each. the:tills accumpanied with no _", ~ , !....i, l vut tvtires iv, eliaree. ,‘, ,„.,... y ueete/th,,, I .I . VI rel I .6 , 11 .4 tharacter and ; a tc.l , 4lai purp,es, gill be charted 25 cents for any lin .. . under 10: Over 10 lines, 4 cents per line meet Inzic. not of a general Or public' cilar e—,..tt at 4 cents per line Tor earl] insertion. ~:;'lute ralculatinns we will state that lines • ira , t—le4 Hurst 3 harf‘olutnn,—and h ^ linef words indite a column-147G a half m y—trot 7:1 , ; a quarter •rolumn. All odd lines over rharzed at the rate of 4 centv'per'llne. vdi advertisers must 'confirm their ativertisinG to .sh bowlegs. AL:el:ies far others. sale of Real Es t, s qnt included in bUsiness advertivenenta. . PIANOS & MUSIC. WORLD'S FAIR PREMIUMS.' Fti THREE pram: M KIM» bare been ritev . 'warded to the very elegant and superior ..iano Fortes exhibited by the subFeribers at the. Crystal Palace. In making the ,oneuneentent. they would take this opportunity ;urn their thanks to their numerous friends for the u .ive and liberal patronage heretofore extended to and :fissure them that no pains gill be spared to ~a tic tiathiring reputatibu already attained. In to RIM the greatly increased demand for their in; have added largely tt , their manufactur which they trust will enable them. in fu to pr mptly meet every demand. on hand an assminient of very superior '.l)elode -4. every• style. and at low- prises. tiItOVESTEEN` 505 Broadway, New York, • • • (Adjoining St. Nicholas lintel,) B.—Premiums were awarded by the American In to their Pianos, fire years in succession. zu.t . 31-6 m ' PIANOS AND MELODEONS. . .IIF. SUBSCRIBER will.sell Davin k Co. • s and Fisher's Piano's. from less than the manufacturers' prices. He will Nleyer't Pianos to he• what they are reprePen- His instruments are wlected by a competent per ac r., 7A r t i9 tope , and quality. atult-ange in prie;, from Other with or without the AuHatt Attach- , lovor has mceived the hhatost premium at tht Lon rv-<tal Palace Exhitition for his Pianos, Ut competi sith all the manufacturers of Europe and America. M ELODEONS. nhart's Patent—which he will also gudrantie. rang ;: prto. for dwellings. from 5.15 t 01.12.51 for church .mt 575 fo Sas,. Melodeons delivered in Schuylkill at city C. 1,11 PRICES, thus saving to the purchaser, freitt and risk, which is an important conside- .•ril Melodeons. of superior tone, on hand—price D. DANNAN. . Musk Dealer and loent for the sale of Pianos and 31eloticons. 21— MUSIC PUBLISHING HOUSE. . -.,, t i" var , LEE d: WALK ER. ,Queressors to GEORGE ""'fisf WiLLIG. No. ISti Ch(qmut street. under the -----"' Utah House. Philadelphia. are constantly t l‘hin e the latest )lusic. from the most popular .Au • in the United StAt.4. in a style that,will rie with i, issued at any other house, either in. this country -c h - rse also the pleasure to aunoUnce to the public tjl• it stock of Sheet Music on hand, consist!, of the complete assortuwut .be found in the they are constantly adding to their Atock all the published In New Ynrk. Boston. &c. rV also publish several Instruction Books, which are nrrAl use thrnu, , ,hout the country. A V tine aPortment i;f the best tnanufarturent . 1 . -,rk and 11!;ston. at the lowest cheap prices. ' MUSICAL INSTIIC ' rzen , •ral assortment of , :luitals, Violins. Banjoes, violin. Guitar and 'Harp Strinps, ':,sr Italian qualities, all of which — will ho furnish , h.• touhlir and the trade at the lowest tato*. punctually attended to. - & Walker's :Music and Publications can be at H. HANNAN'S Itook and 'Musk Store, Potts. Ft.h. 4. IS:$ HARDWARE. .OiSAGE CUTTERS. AND r•-••eivm.. fin° lot of .liinz."y'a Warranted iz.• Oketers :Ind StuiTers. patent _lron ]lox •wiii,a will be sold champ Lr 111:1611T LERctr, Inn an , ,l BardWare'Merchantc Centro St.. Patseille. ltr, 1-t f ON COMMISSION WARE HOUSE, ENTRE STREET, Pottsville.— suLsrAinirc are preparrd to furnish ,the Trade - ..,lst's and iiperat ,, r4 . at iqiiiadelphia prices. (freight rt.tail, best A111 , 6(1111 lkrr Iron..man :u-.• i at Potts‘ ille. and Itarranted of superior quality. T rails suitable for mines.' and Cable Chairei I.hrd at shf•rt notice direct from the importer. E. VAIIDLEY k SON. . .47-tf OSENDALE HY DRAULIC CEMENT: N EXCELLENT ARTICLE FOR 1,4 i .; Cisterns. Vaults. Spria..7,-hi)ues and Cellars'. r keeping dampness from , yet and exposed walls.— sale 1,7 145:3 •t' r , . 's , t'IIARRES SHEPARD SMITH, suee.;.‘slr to the late Arm of LEVI SMITH A: SON ' Cr.eher of Front and Wißea Streets, (opposite. th *And) Railroad. Phllatie 1551 .E.April 15. '54 15-Iyl 34- _ . FILES AND RASPS. ° esr Street File Works, Phflede The sub -14-• scriber is 31,11 graeturitn: 87;.01 , r,i1e and Radii. Files ~er, &script:on. and 'Win been praetl ;. en1.717..1th the business more than thiriviearr,eau rAnte, hiz work at the lowest prices.. 1 kit ufa•l :Iron aud Mechanics can hare their ON Filer, 3nd . tuade r tri _Wu , . at half the nridnal cost. ' - .1% ft SMITII. 61 17m street, (le , t..een 1'.3e.• & Vine and 2.nd & 34.) hi1a.1011.41 is 4 January 1, • 4-3113 NOTICE. lIE Sl:BSCittllEit hereby .gives :Ur that he has apridnted Mr. 6 DIRGE Nlenhant. Agent for the Fale of The Pat r and Gate :. 4 pring."-in this region. J. S. GRAY. • !E ST - MICIMIER.`..( are prepared to execute orders for • menti , med SprincF. They are decidedly the er sacred to the public. being remarkable and durability. For tale. wholesale and re , at BRIGHT d LERCH'S Iron and Hardware Store. Centre Street. opinnitA Miners' Thank. Pottsville. , - ARDWARE AND IRON DEPOT. Tifti - sug,ol7 MU, haring tnlkt , arrang lA, at hi, nor placti of bui+inchst . P . anti irith'a now tl-terrnin . ation of furnish . - in all such goods as thii business of the 11: 1 4on may require...at their lowest market value, its the inspection of the Public. 1 shall .be always .. , 11 and have on hand a full stock of !:Or iron, ' ' Chopping, Axes, i';us Iron, i ( 7041:filw,cla - , 'ast St,,cl, . , Tra-e chrilns. 'int iron, ' Nails and Spikes, - Hope. Tackle 8f...4.5. . '!...llows.Anvils and l'fres.•&c.. I, ara and Iron Depot, CE.sinr. STrakT, thrrit dr,ors Nlarket, East Side. . r 1 1 c 54 CLEMENS I iHEISLER'S HARDWAItr. AND IltoN STol:l',.Centee 4,.teeet, a few. 'd , x)rs above Market (East tidel have (vagrantly on' hand a full assort ment of ',. s leois,l Axles and Spring,. li: , g-Nt 'tertals, ' !Table Cutlery,* - /.l4sc s Tools. i Pocket Cutlery, 41.4.! Rasps . . • • .Carpenter's Tool's. 7. Sp'. k,,t and Bra d s, iliritania Ware, lbe- and Platrono tif_‘.2lca,; Allen'. IterelverP!, int filled Iron,. . !Rifle LlarruiN 1 • v.I Sheet •• ;Table and Tea Spbons, • '''..., and Blister ' Steel.i Kraal and k:natneled Net !':ate and Sheet Zinc. l • 004 ' ''p -n and C'heet Wass.' Pans. Boiler I.' Tea Kettles, , : x i ihr; G.A. ' 111,avy Railroad Traces, .1... i:l d.....r1r0g0n, : Eettr, , A4.l Iron and Spike!, . --- in Ind Virt•u lac Saw.' Double And Single Guns, n...,i ct ,- .pisere, Cleavers; Double and Sin^le Pistols. IA KAi,.•s. 1:• , hot and Game Raga, ~. snl rb•ps,' ' 'Powder Flasks. - ~ ,-,1 T,•,;" , ' 1 poe-der and .Sho.t. I% Kl , !lpi .-- I Wat, , r Proof Percussion • ''' Pri! and 'Brass Wire.' Cabs, t . t T ri:ncliqz.s, 'Rifle 31riontings. %.• -I `o - rll.ors would respoottullj intite tht , attention cs. p ub liC:z...ners.ll3. to th... above, And - other articles of i' , e tr, nunv•nots to mention, as they are .dttor -I—•.il A: low as any concern out of I'htladelphla. .r...: N,t r, Issa. , am,: BRIGHT 4, LERCH'S NEW IlAllbWAltE ITVItE 'Lyon doors he I,„r nett' Irutcl.and mar!} nppnslte the Mf.• nee' Rank. Pot.twrille. where will be found 'an cartllent ap.ortutent of If AHD/fART : F 11 0 ,4 Fiflt..Trlyg. iVrtro. Assnrtntent of fine Loeka, - ' Table Cutlery, . „ 'Pocket Cutlery, gynnna. !Anvils and VP•es. Astortment of fine Out*, !Sheet Trnn Crudblea: Wire. Tin Plate, • • • • Biriag iitsitleS t !Sad trees. I Pats and BOii, l / 1 It:toting. rtaltrreel Tram*, . • Powder and Shot. ". Crtauun,;., 11, 0. , • ,, Too , ls. , "L'• . , To,li, 9 114 Paint. fr-,n .1.41 htut. 1 1•I 1 q-i,krt. Al Il”1 and, Nans .1 f ro 'r ' ~ ag \11 .: , r1.14, . rl ' N l .. I:1 tilt, t`i la) ti,„.„ .... 1 B . ,rify h .)-- eit: tu A ~._ ' 1 i ~. ---. . 1" Thomas Ridgway, --"" --- Jahn ii,'Drown, ! Amnon Davis ' i John Jay Smith, D. Danner, : Frederick Stein, 1 Robert Palma% ' .GeorgA Taber, PL: tb MBING SHOP. . 51.11 I Joseph Tea Ctr. .. 1 i ' Thomas P. James, ! . 4 k . r e M. NEWNA3I, Beatty's . ROA 1 1 Joseph T. Miley. ,John ft. Latimer, 'Wharton Lewis, John it. Mack. (11 0 Norwegian Street, Pottsville, Penna. has mi l i # Wets containing table of rates anti: explanations, i , ,aalp 4,. . ,,,,, : ,,, i0 0 t...nu to um. rui4te for th , e warm: 20 i zok etan i tl , y zi o ock ci ha Tim ad a supply of all aim ht Land Pipe. Moo ; form of application and further information can be had at Tuba. Shower &ilia Urinate i the &Bee. ton to t -^ ri. by lin to his Indlri4Ota rapsettyould hopoi ; Hose, Double and tingle . Acting. Pumps and Water Clos 1 . THOMAS RIDGWAY, ?resident, i. a cotu rr..k. slit y a their roods, shirt atter). eta: Alen. ell kiwis 'of Cocks frn• Irate! Mtli itf{nl ', : Jenr4 F. JAW/S. ActUarY.' . . .-' - 4 " Ibl..it ojemmodattng priers, 1 111 drain i Drams ()II Cups and Globesto minrine s. AIM hide of Cor , i erw. The subscriber ie agent for the onore Company In : olled support. I per Work and Pltfmhing do In r.i leant manner at tichnyikill County, slid trill 4444 Insurance* and give t , ..t ftilic, f kalerg ~ ii,,,, WOW l' c li, i the shortest notice. . '. • ' j441 r7 1 6, icqWer• Old /MR) ltrtd. I N.8.--aisq paid for old azu Loot I 141 osmium* , Information en the sutdect. • IL DAMIAN. 7 1 - I 4, , I Pattsvine, Octet's? 26, Imo. e.fr. . , I Aped. DRS?.' , MIT 111. allilli Leaves Phitiera 7.30 l'imes - Pbceni :cynic+ 8.31 " Pottstown 8.5* " !tending 0.24 K. Iloven 10.43 , •' Mt. Carbon 1 10.5'2 Arrivesat Pottsville 1 11.00 i ' • VALES." ' .„.. Po. Me Round Trip. up and dnum, in N. I Cars: Fruna PhiLld'a to Phoe i ixv ilk aud back mine day, p4O . • - " Pottstown. • " " .1 75 " " Reading, ,t 4i '2 50 , ". ' S. Ilaven. lit. Carbon k Pottsville, 400 "• ReoxlinT to Pottsville and bark +ante day. 150 I 4-4-xo ltacra.ze carried with these. Trains. - AM Tickets " must be purchased before entering the Cara , . 14sy 20. 155.2.. • - PASSENGER TRAINS. alcfr - ;: - 0 - 4i oFt . d . l( ll :E dl OF p l ai ' l liE d PHILADELPHIA en FLOM PIIIZADELL'IIIA T,) PuTrIiVILL On and after May 17, 1552..; there will be two Passenger Trains daily, (Sundays exaved), between PhiladiAphia.t !trading and Pottsville. I The Ex ..‘e Express Train leases I'hlladPl (11 . at 7! s i' o'clock, A. M: The % .1 "; A r ci aln ilY ies ex e 'ee es p i t ' S ot u tT I talc daily, Sundays excepted. at o'clock, A. 5 1- • _ AFT EltNix IN LINE. The Way Train leaven Philadelphia daily. oxivpt Sun- 1 , rdixya. nt :1 1 ...1 o'clock. P. M. The Express Train leaves ~ Pottsville daily. exc..pt, SundnyF. at 3!4 o'clock, P. M. I • ltuUltS GP PASSING READING.. • For Philadelphia. at 9 o'clock 10 minutes, A. 51.. and 4 -o'clock 51 minutes, P. M. For Pottsville, at 9 o'clock 34 minutes .4. M.. and 6 o'clock. I'. M. Iljth Trains atop at all the Stations along the Line.. i f FARES; •181)ct.ass cats. 2n masa CAlltit. Reading to PhiladelphLs. I $1 75- $1 45 heading to Pottsville. - ' 1 05 . 8.5 Philadelphia to . Pottsville, ; 275 1.25 Depot In Pottarille. corner of Union and Railroad lsta.:; 'rear of American lions, Passengera cannot enter the cart unless provided with a ticket. - Fifty - pundit of Baggage will be allowed to each paasen ger In thss.-lines, and psssengers are expressly prohibited frOtn taking anything as Baggage but their own wearing apparel. which will be at the risk of its owner. By order of the Board of Managers. S. BRADFORD. Seeretary. *.a.tf • t -June 5,1552 RAILROAD ROUTE, Pottsville &Heading to Harrisburg, A Lancaster, &c.riC IIE LOCAL TRAfN, established on the Readlerßallroad to complete the Connexions wit the Dauphin and Sasquehanna and Cutawissu. Rail , roods— DOW:MAI:DS. Mare% ih. , tltallle 10'A. M. Leaves Reading 2.45 P. M. Auburn 10,40" " .4 abut?, 4.30 " Arrives Reading 12:15 noon '. Arrives Pottsrille 5.15 " Thmugh this Local Train.and the liegviar Trains of the lteadire;; Railroad. Ana rtN..the terminus of the D , 114- : phi?* lt Susquehanna Railroad. is' reached with facility from all points of the Valley of the Schuylkill, and by that road a daily communication. both ways, is mnintain ed excepted t with Harrisburg. Lancaster. Cham bersburg.. lialtimnre. and nil Joints in that direction. PASSEND:F.Rs OZTWEEN POTT.V/I.LR AND HARRISBURG. tC. Leave Pot tßville 3.3(1P. 31. Arrive llarrislonrg .7AO 31 Harrivltins 1.15 A. 31. .‘ l'ettsville 11.50 A. 31 P4.SLY7ERS IitTRWEN REAPING AND lIARRISEVRG, LC, Leave Reading 2.45 P. M. Arrive Harrisburg 7.40 P. M. Harrisburg 7.15 A. M. Iteadirig 12.1 L A Pas.senger Car runs with the Freight Train..leaving Auburn at 6.10 A. 31.. and returning thereat 7.10. P. M., connelzting with Harrisburg about noun. and with the regular morning and evening trains of the Reading hall road. I These Trains:tins on iteadinz Railroad time, which is ; Ten dfinntes faster than that of the Pennsylvania Itaik road, ur Harrisburg time. ELLWOOD MORRIS, Eng. ,f Sept. Dauphin S stt.i9ueh , Enint R. R. l NOtE.—.tc this Company advertise on the Clcsh girt only. it Is requested that this advertisement will not be copied by any paper unless aecompanied by the money. IN ADVANCE:And that all old advertisements now superse ded be diseontinn,d. o E. M. January 20.11555 ggma, ' TRANSPORTATION. ADAM'S & Co.''S EXPRESS. pOTI'SVILLE T OHARRISBURG.. This line connects daily with all their great !South ern and Western Routes. fly arrangement their place pr business in Pottsville will be at the office of Howard Ar. 0.). Those having articles for transmission by said line, will call upon C. B. COTTER. Adiun's & Co.'s Agent, at said Office. S. S. 'WILLIAMS. Superintendent. ipril 22. 19:A , 16-U. _ • _ PHILAD'A. I READING RAIL ROAD. RITES OF FREIGHT UN NIERCILINDIZE. s (r AND AFTER NOVEMBER Ist, Ic5L until further Urltiee, the following Hates of Freight will be charged per 100 pounds: Dry Good,. Confectionery, Fi.oks: earPrt - t ;,,,) 15 in mi.. Ci•zarc. Frosb 31Pat. Fish. Glass. Sri . Anvils. limn. Butter. Popper. F.z.gs. Ear- . i hen ware e.rindstones iir. , series [temp - llams. llatdwsre. 111de. 11 , 41,1 w-ware, 21'. , II Leather. NiachirCer,y.tlystersollsis.. I . kr.. - I Ale. ltecr. f'ot ton, CotT,. e lira in , !tar Iron.) Lead. Molasses Nails. Spikes Illeo. Snit.. li J l'rovi.d,,ns ' Striar. Whil , key, kr,. . Brooms. Fire Bricks. Gukto. )1111 Stnnes.) Pitch and Tar. Salt, crap Iron, Timber I. II:, and Lumber. 4,.. " Bricks. Coke. C,.rd Wood. Clay, Gravel, ) /se, Iran ire. Limestone, Manure, i'l l i I, 12 Iron. Plaster. Slate, Sr., Flour. per barrel stet. iI ISfel PHILA (IFFICE of the l'hilada. &'.tt. K. Co., Asvust 4,1854. • be rates of Frelzht and . Tolls on Coal transported by Ibis Corati.tuy. will be ais follows.. until furthernotlee: .--- , To It h-hrourid. ' ' 225 220 M a. 'Philadelphia. ~ 214 210 t 195 - Inclined Plane, - 215 i Ino i 195 •• Nie..town, . • 215 I.'lo t 195 " Ciermantown R. It.' I 215 210 t 195 ." Fall,. lif Schuylkill. 215 :10 ' 195 i‘• 7ilannyulik. 215 210 t 195 1 " ii;rln,i! Mills. I ...''.lo 195 i 180 • .. , ,ushellockPri aid Ply- .. mouth Ilaiirpad. laio I 195 ' 180 I:,190 1 1 Itamh . r,'s and l'6l Lb' and • I i• ' I • .Inn, r.', i . 195 190 t 1/I0 175 Narrista sr . anr Brldizepor . t. 195 190 t lao 1:5 " Port lioune4y, 195 1 190 i 150 f - 175 l'ailey Forge, 190 t .165 1 ;75 175 " Phoinlitrlllg. 150 175 I 165 I 165 ....! . " Itoyer's Yord, ,• ISO 175 I 100 lull t"' Puttatown, i . 175 I. 170 I 10 0 Ino " Douclassill.., 175 170 100 160 " Birdsboro' 105 160 I 150 150 " Reading, 155 150 I 140 140 " Between Reading and , . Mohravlllo,. 155 1 150 I 140 I 140 ." 3khrevllle. 155 150 i 140 140 ,' " hamburg,i; 155 150 1 I " firialgaburg. ' 155 150 I By order of tha Board of Managers Ann. 12, 1_,t5.1 MISCELLANEOUS. FRANK POTT, 2S-tr CAS-FITTINC, PLUMBING &C. t~IITIId,DOWNING, BURNT OUT kJ on the loth hate re-opened - an establishment. for the shore business, In Filrer Terrnee where they will he thankful for orders. and pmtniee 'prompt attention and natisfactr•ry work. PottAvlll , .. f Ictober 'LI. 1654 43•tf VALENTINES! VALENTINES!! 1 TUST,RECEIVED, a largc,supply of, VChoice Valentines. embracing a great variety of new i and elegant styles. Alen, Valentine Writers and -Fancy 1 Envelopes. For sale, wholesale and retail. at B. BAN NAN'S , __. _, 1::!,:t 2 ___.-________, Bcok and 'Stationery Store I I Jan 13 BLANK NOTES AND DRAFTS. New Style. at Low Pricey. i PLANK Notes and Drafts, and ? also, I j Notes payable at-the )liners' and Faingers'illanks, I printed In nett and beautiful styles. verY cheap. j • ~ Knirrared Draftg. printed on unalterable raper: at 37% : rents per hundred. For sale at BA NN:A N'lil, • JIM. 27, Piss 4- Briol: and Statinn.iy .Vori ' - - - - - ------- - - ' - - NIEDIC'D FUR CHEST PROTECTOR., Sir Asti' , Cooper, Dart., Inventor. ~ THE Protector is simply a Chemical ly prepared Fur, lined with talk and padded. which, suspended (rout the neck. corers the Cheat, forming a certain and safe shield against those- fearful lifstssoses. Core- i gumption, Bronchitis, Coughs, and other affections of the Lungs. Assorted sizes. manufactured by Harcourt, Brad- ley . Co., and for sale by B. BANN .4,N, ; .Jan. 1:1: 1854 2.- Sole Agen! far Nlas ilanpfaclureri. __ JAMESES H. UDE I Y 11ESPEC'FFULLYINFOKINIS HIS; thatfriends and the public, House and Sign Painting. and- Paper Hanging t . Business. in Norwegian street, lint house from Cci/tre, and opposite Mortimer's lintel. ' By at tendanee to his lisineas, and reasonable tharges.l he trusts to receive what he avili endeavor to deservo—a I liberal share of enstom December 30,185; I WILL TEACH YOU TO MRCP: THE BOWELS OF THE EARTH, filICI) BRING OCT FROM' THE CATEMNS OF M PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING, BY - BENJAMIN BAN] POTTSVILLE, SCHITYLKILIAOUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA. 3IORNING LINE It.' I'V = 'A & READING RAILROAD. :24-1 1. 7 7 f, •kr. ' OM 8. BRADFORD, SeNrretary :t2-tf STOVES & TIN WARE SOLOMON HOOVER;.' WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER YN Stores, Tin ware, Hollow ware, &ma ware, Wit tania ware, Cutlery, Lc.. Thankful 'for past pat ronage, he hopes, by strict attentionin business, ~. to merit a continuance of the rarer of bia old custatm•rs and the public In general. He bat; just added to his already large stock of the above mulled articles. a vanity o(Cooking, Parlor and Otlice Stores, or the latest and must approied styles: Also, a variety of; n0u5...161d Furiaturr ouch as Tinned and Enamelled .IGillers, Than ed and Iron Tea 'Kettlet, Brass Kettles, Itrittahnia Ware, Japanned Ware, Frying and Roasting Pants, Lad Irons, dr- de. Also. continually on hand a large assortment of Tin war4, &c. Tie has now the largest and best itiock of his line ever offer ell in tichttylkill Cennty, to which he - in-_ eitet the attention of the polite lit general..:-As ho feels contblent that he can suit them both in price,; and quali ty. • :They would therefore do well to call aud'iliambie his stock before purchasing. elsewhere. N; B.—goofing. spouting and Jobbing protaptly atten- . ded !to. Also, old Moved repaired, or odd plates. tire-brick', .grates. same.';can be had for repairing the same.'; stores, and tali et•aar old iron taken in exchange for tiew. SOLOMON I . . . "." 191gUgt 26. 1553, Copper and Sii) - ; fe iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii MI ur:tilttik; It. STICIITEIi annotitmes. to' his nunterouslitkt friends. and the. 'all?. that be has engaged In the ;above men. tinned bu.siness and on such an extensive plan, ' l "Pa that he Is enabled to self his goods at prices - which (=not be surpassed in ehioimmr. briny other similar establishment in the 'county. store is In Centre Street, s few doors south of the pl4ee'where;be wad formerly etmaited. with I). L. Esterly, ih, the Hard wan, business. . - . AMontz the many articles to his store, tie tsiii,only ramie mention of the following: Slovm with pipe. Copperware. Copper Kettles, of all sizta; Biwa Kettles, Japan-ware, Tin-ware, of every de scription, Ifollow-ware Tin by the Pox; Hooting Tin theFflos; Japan Tin, by the quantity or Ityi',the pound; Sheet iron, by the. quantity or otterwlso; Russia Sheet iron by the hundred or by the pound. Also ' "ii new Pat ent; Waterewoler, which is one of the mosf usefulitn proietnents of the day, expedially for fatnillea .during' hot weather, and. in short, all other articles b4inaging to a complete establishment of the kind. for work hi his line. xi:Leh u Tin-robing, ,Sptint ingi &e.,: as also mending, will be attended to, promptly at the;shartest notice. . 147ir Tut highest market price will he pa4 . tor old Pew. ter and Lead, or goods Wen In exchange. • GEO. .32-4 Vottsvine... Aucm4 12. 184.1 1 MINERS' LIFE INSURANCE AND TRUST COMPANY. POTTSVI LLB, PA. CAPITAL 8100,000-C H A R'l' ER perpetual. • Ibis Company, chartered by the Legislatßie of Penn ay4ania, with a capital of One Ilundred Thousand Doi tart, is now fully organized. and has commenced busi ness. the Company is prepared to receive woad' and other property in Trust.tand allow interest on all_monies de= posited in trust, at the rate of five per centper annum; principal and interest payable on demand. • • 1?or ratei, of Premium on Life Insurance, seethe printed Tables supplied at-the office of the Company, Centre Stri.tet, Pottsville. three doors wrath of the Eichange 110- tel 2 JACOB lIUNTZING ER; eresident. ,Jolts IL Adau, Seery and Treasurer. 'April 1, 18.'el. THE POTTSVILLE MUTUAL AND JOINT STOCK LIFE INSURANCI.2.(IO3IPA7 4 .:I(. JtiFFICE CENTRE STREET, next N,l/door above Green's Jewelry' ShTe. CAPITAL SIOO.hON—CIIARTP.t: PERPETCAL. This Company. recently chartered :by the Legislature of Pennsylvania. is fully organised. The Company is prepared to effect insuname uponlives and to receive and execute truids, and to all4-W . Interest on monies' received at the rate of five per eent.per annum. unless otherwise agreed upon. Principal and Inter-eat pay able on demand. ; Capital and assets safely invested iu Itorids and Mort gaites and other gbod seruritie.: Annual dividend of the profits will he made payable In mill, or appropriate,' to the payment of preitilums. For rates of Premiums on Life Insurance, sire printed 'Miles, supplied-at the Company's offier,• NATHAN EVAN q' F : . f • SOLOMON FOSTEIt, rice Preft. It. T. TAYLOR, kcrthiry and Treasurer. *ept.16..1554. • 37-tf ANTHRACITE INSURANCE CO. CHAR'rER-PERPETUAL-Granteti I by State of Pennsylvania. Authorized Capital $400.000. Office. No. hit. Walnut Street. between Thinlband Fourth Stivits, Philadelphia. rhis Company. with a cash Capital paid - in. combined with the Mutual principle in their Marine and Inland Department, secures to the a.ssured ample indemnity. with participation in the profits. and without liability for lossei. The Company will issue Pelicles at the *ma rates of embracing Narint, Fire and halgild Risks. DMICTOP.B : Ortudwig, Joseph Mniwell. John E. Addicks, • Harry Conrad. D: llammk.lt. Samuel Ci.stner. 1' D. LUTHER,' i'resident. , Wm. C. Luowtd, rice Prai , kht. R st. F. In:vs, '.sccretory. • Tyr - PETER D. LUTHEB,Ints been appo'lhted Agent for the above Company in Schuylkill Couutyl , to whom per sons desiring Insurance can apply. !April 8, 1814 Dr. D. Luther. Lewis AudeUried, I'eter Sieger. George F. Tyler. Samuel It. Iluthertnel, Davis Masan, STATE MUTUAL INSURANCE Co. VOURTii ANNUAL STATEMENT May 15.1554. Assets, May Ist. 155:1,' Caoh premiums and interest web ied the past year, mutual depart- . ;meat. . Bills Receivable in same, Cash Premiums, Stock Impartuit. ~~_ ;` • ; E 515,887 26 tosses, expenses, commissions, re- • tlnsurance,•mutual department, 101,504 53 •' stock 27.031 PA ASSETS: . , • • clouds, mortgages, stock and other I gOOll securities, 17:1,13@ 7: Bills receivable, 16,7,009 86 Gash on hand and in hands of 1 agents, For Fire or Inland Iprurance, apply to • . , , I JNO. T. 8110ENER, Agent July 15. 1.515 i. .i: 2F4y 30 42.tf FIRE INSURANCEi. , I I AAMERS': UNION INSURANCE i Company.-OFFICE, A thens, Bradford too n ty, Pene srbrania.. CAPITAL, V 00,900. 11, Insures against loss by Fire, Rotuma, Steles and other Vlli id' fig/J.3loodg, WaTes and Iderehandize,WAL BREAK; ERS. ENGINES, and other Machinery, on as favorable terms as any similar Institution. r i Loins promptly adju s t e d and paid. , i. pIItECTORIit Ilion. Borate Williston, Athens, ~ • Francis Tyler, - ,. George A. Perkins, . 1 J. T. D. 11yer.,.. C. C.N.N. Shipman, . " . C. F. Welles, Jr., I J. E. Cantield, I lion. John Laporte, Towanda, i Gen. Bradley Wakeman, Lareysille, i Geo. N. llellenback. Wilkeebarre, .'...-. I 3lichaelf.Slyiert, Laporte, Pa.. , ! I OFFICERS: t, I .lion. RORACE WILLISTON. President • I , C. F. Wsu.sa, Jr., Vice President A: Treasurer. J. 4.. C.VifIELD, &c'y. t Refer in Pottsville to Ron. C. W. Begins, I - F. W. Hughes, i , Sept. 2, 1853 2W) 190 190 190 190 190 190 IRO i NI • INDENITY ..; • THE FRANKLIN Fire Inseirance Co. i .of Philadelphia. Mien, No. 163% Chesnut street, Myer Fifth btaeot.. ' . BISECTORS. I , Charles N. Randier,: George W., Richards', Thomas dart, ' Mordecai D. Lewis, 'Tobias Wagner, . ' Adolphe ts Boric, '. i . Mamucl Grant, •' ' David S. rown, Jacob P. Smith, - ' Morris Thiitem tn I Continue to make Insurance, permanent' or limited on every description of property, in town and country, at rates as low as are consistent with secitritY: • i The Company have reserved a large Contingent Fund, Yr, bleb with their Capital and Prentinau;'aafely invested, afford ample protection to the iusured. 1 ! The assets of the Company oh January lit, 1648, as pub. fished, agreeably to an Act of Assembly, were as follows. ys: • I .llortgagea, $800,5.4 6.; tocks, • I Real Latate, - 106,346 90 Cash, ke.,il ", . • ,E1,21R),097 67 1 Temporary Loans, ...', 125,11:9 00 i MUM , their incorporation, a period of Sighteen years, they have paid upwards of one million heir hundred thous and dol/arr, losses by fire, thereby atforditig evidence of the advantages of insurance, as well as the ability and disposition to meet with promptness, all liabilities. • i ' Cita RCES N, DANCE Elt,.Presiden L, 1 CBSSLES G. BANCKEIL, Secretary. The subscriber has been appointed agent for the above. thuntioned institution, and is now prepared to make in Sumner:, on every description of properw . at the lowest rites. . ANDR,KI% ItLF,SEL. Agent. Pottsville, Jan. 11, 1861. :;' ' '.1...tf MEI LIFE INSURANCE'''. THE GIRARD LIFE INstrßANet, Annuity and Trust Company of Philadelphia. Of fice, No. 133 Chesnut 'treat, the First door East of the Custom Home. _ • CAPITAL. S3OO,OOO—CHARTER PERPETUAI.: Continue to make Insurances on lives on the, mos6:favor able terms.. ' The Capital being paid up and invested.. together with large and eonstantiy increasing reserved fund, offers a' perfect security to the insured. 1 The premiums may be paid yearly, halt-yearly or ntmr terly. The Company add a Bone periodically:6o the insuran ores trr life. The first Bonus, appropriated, in December, 1a44, and the second Donna in December, 1849. amount to an addition of $ - .261 50 to every $l,OOO insured under the oldest policies, making $1,262 60 whirl will be paid when 16 shell brooms a claim, instead of $l.OOO oliginally hum , : the next oldest amount to $1,217 60; the next in age fo 0.212 50 for every $1,000; the others irk the same pro- Portion according to the amount and eWe of standing, which additions Make an average of misi than fa per melt: upon the premiums paid, without inerealing the an imal premium. l..;se old stand. Centre street. above .Market, Pottsville. Penna. NEW TIN WANE. INSURANCE, $101,c48 ti 2 2i.a41 - t 4 40,252 0.1 170.669 ;Ai 19,5,55:58 ~~a~rxe~ee~a Win. It:: !Oren& Esq., Gen. Ji 31. Bickel, J: F. WIIIT.NEF, Agent. Next door to Miners' Bank. Pottsville. 3rely. ict:caucrJo SATURDAY MORNING, IIUAR - 10, 1855. SHERIFF'S REAL - - SHERIFF'S SALES of EA ESTATE. Y virtue of a iit:rit of:i.Venditicini Ex wins issued out of Courtif Common Pleas of uyikill county, to inmYlrected, tb re will be exposed to public sale or outcry, On .13 THURSDAY:, MA RPM L. 1545. • - At 11 o'clock' in the forenoon, at 'the inibllc 'house of MI CHAEL BEARD, in thee. borough or - Tamacput. in the, county of Schuylkill, thelollowing . hod real estate, , to wit: • . •-. ~,... : vitAll that certainflot or piece if zroun s d situate In the borough of TOMemua. Schuylkill Co...hounded on the north by Woad street. lon the east by lot of / Henry Kepner, on the With bylpri g Alley. and on the west by Hunter stioet, c,Mtaining 1 width 25 feet. and in depth 150 feet, with the appurte noes , consisting oil a three story brick • Dwellling , lio with a large store tusc i l room on the first Door. ~ • Also, All that c&talti lot ai o r ilece of ground, sit uate, in the boroligh of T er . ' Schuylkill C- I ,,, ._ qua, settuyi . Co.. _hounded on tlei!orth by Orwigsburg street, on• the east by lot of J. Rob Obi, on the; ., tith by property of the Little SchuYilail MO:ration, Ila ud & Coal Compa ny, and on •the 4 west b=lot of S. I , 4 rnta. containing in width 40 fret. and in depthf, t, 150 with the appurte nances: as the property 'o' FIiEDEEICK Y. K LB and JOSEPH W. KoLll. ~ n Alan, 41 that certain lot or i ipiece of routi • sit uate in the borpt ,uth of Tamariva. . h . ylkUl Co., bounded on. theolorth by the Wabas Railroad, on the east by lot of „itenry it Kolb; on the south by Roie street. and on the {rest by lot :f Dr. David Hunter. containing in width 18 1 4 feet, and 1 depth 150 feet, with the appurtenanek, constkting of a twostory frame Dwell ing House. with a twasethent story f stone: as the pro party of JOSEPH W. 101:11. Seized and taken iu Epscution, a will be sold by JANIE NAGLE, Shrrif. Sheriff's Ofilec, Pottsrfliel ) Febinary 3, 11155 ' .6'' ___. f .1 will be .SLE NAGLE, 5.1 t SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE. Virtue of a*eit of i i:evoet Facias. 1:,/ Issued out of the Cohn of Comihon Pleas of Schuyi kill County. to me dincted. there will be exposed to phb lic sale or outcry, on SATURDAY, he lith day of Feb ruary, A. D., 185,5, at 10: It O'clock in Ithe forenoon, at the public house of ABRAHAM TRQU'rVAN. at Sa-rament< In ilubley township. (fiirtnerly Lo er Mahantongo), in the county of Schuylkill the Colima ng described real en- • tate: All that certain tract OF land situ to In Lower Mahan tango township, county. of Schuylkill. and state of Penn sylvania:, bounded and 'described as follows: Beginning retat a gum tree, thefice by land Of Paid Brand, north eighty-two'degrees. east one hundred and filly-se yen perches to a : poet:thence by land of John Hu ber north ten degrees, we'd fifty-fivel perches to a stone, north eighty degrees east; one hundred and eighty perch es to a stone. north fief degrees west twelve perches to a stone, north eightkilye degr7 east one hundred and sixty perches to a, Slone. then vt by land of Petor I Klinger north seven teetyldegrees w t, nineteen and five , tenths perches to a birth. north thirteen degrees West, seventy' perches to a pita; north eight degrees west three and four-tenth perches ten stone: thence by Which Iteckley I (now or lately Peter Klinger) north' eighty-three degrees! 'wen two hundreitand thirty perches to a chestnut; thence by vacant land west MO, ,n perches to a stone, isonth - sey-1 enty degroes west one hfindnd and Ittarty-one perches to an oak, south five degrees west forty-eight perches to a stone. south seventy-five'degrees we;t , seventy-tyro perch es to a stone, west fifty-Otte perches a stone, thence by land of 4. C. KettLemen,' south eight degrees east, ono hundred and forty-two perches to the place of beginning. containing four hundred acres andi allowance of six per, cent. 1 Seized and taken in eXecutiou as ttes property of GEO. EIS litalf, and to be:Sold by JA3IES 1 4 1.10 LE. Sheri,: 'Sheriff's Office. Pottsvillo , • • January ~7. IKIS. j . pa7c..elj ' •I 1 11361 NEW BO TO SINCINC CI. THE Subseriliti. will THE SHAwg, • - NEW CA !MENA SACIt. OLD CARMINA SACRA ' BOSTON ACADEMIS C Together with all other Paste Book ' • ';;64ort i pßsoi Pottsville. December 0 IFe4 LIFE OF CHRIST—ILLUSTRATED. fHE Life of , phrist, lby Fleetwood, Tanis' edition, beautiful steel lates. • - $3 75 ite of Christ, Ifogan Thompson s edition.l4 il lustrations. in Imitation Turkey, only - 4Ou or, in Turkey. super is.ktra. 5 00 Life of Christ, Moss' edittan, imitation Morocco, only 275 VERT 1:11EAV. A. large larloty of splendidly IllustAted iVoris, In vari ous steles of bindings. ',Per sale at ' •lt. FIANNA:vs - Cheap Book and Stationery Store. November IS, 1554 . 45- BLANK ACCOUNIt BOOKS. HE subscriber manufactures& keeps constantly on baMI, a full an complete assortment of LEDGERS. N.• JOURNALA. . DAY DOOKS, • 'IN.:VOICE S TILL I1001i.54: PAY ROLLS & TIME BOOKS, And every other variet l Vl and style Blank Books. Account Books for ,Merchants, flanks. Public °diem &c.. with or wittiout printed headings. ruled, to any pat tern, and bound in a.lhiperlor manner. for sale at very low prices. at I •B. ISANNAN'S • , , • Boon.and Stationery Store. 0-Magazines. NeWtpaliers and , Books of all kinds bound in any style. . Jan. 6.'55 MEDI AL WORKS. JUST RECEIVED and for, sale at the Bookstore of the sibscriber, at fess than the publish er's lowest cash prices- - Wood A Bache's Urinal States Dispensatory, new edition, Dunglison's Human Physiology, 1.)v015., Thompson k Smith's Domestic Medicine, Dunglisou's TherapeuHcs, 2 vols., 8•To., 'Smith's Operative .:urgl•ry, Bvo plates. Horner's„Special Anatoluy and Hi tolqry, 2 vols., Dewees on etildren, Oolombat on Diseases at' Females: Lawrence ou the Eye. Wood's Practice of Megeine. 2 rill ~ Druit's Modern Surgeuy;, Miller's Principles of Siligery, Carpenter's . fluman PhyMology, • Dunslison's Medical Dictionary. Pancoast's Wistar's AiiittomS, 2 cos. noeper's Medical Dictlenary„ k:berle's Practice, by Meelellap. Rimed on Venereal DiSiases. Turner's Chemistry, Liston'h Elements of Surgery, Bto., Meigs' Trestlee op ObstOtrices, tivd r , - • l'barmacopala of the Vhited States, All Medical Books Oat on han i ti, obtained to onier at the pubilshing-prices i -at . • • B. HANNAN'S January 6,1855. ••• Wholesa and Retail Booksko ; 11- 1 y $358,318 70 OW IS THE TIMETrUBTSORIBr. New Vel;n4ei of ilk 'Magazines . . Monthly Mining 3lizgapne, ihortli British Review, .ilarperrs . Monthly lilegesine.illayes Medical Journal, Putu.sm 5 d0..d0 INledi4nl Examiner, Illustrated Magazine of Art, London Lancet. ' Ecclectie Magazine. ' : llankin's Abstract. Ondey's Lady's 1b0k; .: 7 .` 81111 'a Journal. Graham's Magazine,. :'. iThe Horticulturist, Knickerbocker, :-!- /Merry's Museum, Littell's Living Age;'Bickel:es Household Words, .Arthur's Home idegatine; ' Yankee .Notions, Blackwood's Magazines ' . ITh pson's Counterfeit He- Edinburgh Qnar . HMO*, ore,, London Quarterly Review, illick ell's Counterfeit Dense- Westminster Qart. ReView, t toe Ballon's Monthly. ''‘:', Abbo Ve New Monthly, New York Journal, 'l.i Ma hers' Journal. Together with alLother Magi - sal es accessible either in teas country or in Euttpe. , WEEKEY NEWS AYERS. Gleason's Pictorial Piper, N. i . Weekly Tribune, Ping of our Union:,,../,, • do do Herald, Saturday Evening POtt, do ' Duteapian, Literary Museum, .. , i, Uncle Sem Home Journal. 2 • Yankee Privateer, .. Mena& Atnerlean, N. N. V. Picayune, ' Arthur's 'Home Gazlette,• I N. Y. Pick, London Mining Jotirmil, •Do dier Newspaper, London Illustrated sews, m+ 3lystery. • The Know Nothing;; •1 Pictorial Pick, Brother Jonathan, 4 - '''. Th True Flag, American Banner; :4 1 And all other acceiSible repute le papers published in our cities, at i.•' ,„ D. HANNA N'S D0e.30. 1‘454 '51.. .-.• /4.• 17114 Stationer.v Moro. , COAL TRADePORTRAIT GALLERY No. * Illow 101sidy. THE undersigned haS been appointed the publishing Agent fora kirks of Portraits of ale t nguished charactersAlentifled with the great Anthra ,eite Coal Trades'? Pennsylvania, th which your attention Is respectfully invited; 'lt Is intended to hone one num ber annually, until seine four or More shall have appear ed. The series commence with amagniticent FA/Wavle Periessit of John 2r, Esquire The much esteemed tilrid able President of the Reading Railroad; It has been:engraved oe Steel, in the best style of Stipple, Line and Wan:Moto, lat,lphn &slain, Esquire, who, It is now .genetidly admitted, stands In the front 1. rank of his protegee,. 3lr. Sari n, proreederk upon the . execution of this partleidar work with the express object 1 and determination ot achieving the ne plus ultra of his l a genius and talent; , suul the pu lisher has accordingly paid a liberal advandS upon his ordinary prices: for he era barked in the putßimtion wit the paramount object' of laying, before the Tiede a series ,of Portraits that would correspond, In every I,Strtlenler, with its moral influence Yana stupendous commercial value. no less than the emi nent qualities of the Silbjects themselves. The picture Is fourteen melee in width by eighteen and a half in length. and appears upon a material of theAnest texture and qual ity. The publisher hag &leo had prepared, at considerable expense, an original edodel for a Prune, whicittle directly significant and distindtive of the &sleets contemplated in the Portraits. It is corned In wood, in massive Style ny Sons, Ea Wee, of Ihriii, an artist of genius and celebrity. It exhibits, at the bate; a Locometive-Engine and Train of Coat Cars, Imemerging from a timnel; upon the !Side's, are reprbeented two le;fty pine t as characteristle of 1 , the Coal Region as seta] as of the l Vegetation; while lon the top in a vista Of .beautlful roll-work, is the full- I length 1',9 lir e of a Auer, In , his subterraneons apparel, end with hidcustomary lamp, replesdne, upon his pick.— The figure is some ten -Inches in lieight, has been easeful ly medalled, and rett.W;bi no little upon the talents J of the distinguished Srtist. 1 The whole work, IS: may , th be surmised, will' I Maim a highly attraettie and gr g ratifying ornament to the' Drawing-Rooms or Cain ting6llotues of those interested in I the Trade, or the landed estates of the Coal Region, for whom, Indeed, it bas teen almos wholly designed. It' will servo, mwmier,'hi set forth the form and features of 1 the most prominent ; 1 1 . those remarkable men, who, by . their . sagacity, energy; Ind enlarged, liberal, and compre hensive spirit have ,converted barren wastes into exhaled- 1„," tr,,we ees oriehee, than Pintos' miner—who have originated 3 trade, wkiich, **subjecting all nature to our I use and pleasure," let Its social and commercial aspect must, in a file years glore, All our " whole boundless con tinent" with its tafbe end econo le-importance—lt in deed, It has not already done so. These magnificent Por traits will therrattairea Micelle* value: led it therefore .beroraes :the more desirable that tits work should be proceeded With, ere theyyy shall birches:ln called from their earthly togenipnts. au faded,frons amongst us forever. y Prices of the:Adore, i meting ',M-eme. A Single Copy, wittithe arcompa Pig Inane In (lilt • ' Ornaments, rich plAtaglass. std, ' RA Do. with the same Ffittne colored In blink-walnut, etc., etc • _, Do, with 1;4 4 - lode beid, gilt and scroliodcorneret. Oen- mat and rielfillect)... I - IS Do. with plain gilt Pronto ', 234 lunbas wide, eta.. 10' Do. with... Trams; of fdiseh bead.'idit and lacquered, 7 The mice of the Pojetralt Itself,' without the Irtante, IS r i lx, Five Dußois , ' I will be pleased forward roping, by ex pees or otherwise, tolUsy part of country. And lAA limited number only Nis been Wished, those desirous of the hest naprearione will parcel e the expediency of an earls order. Add risk ' ' .11. DANIVAN. Digo. Mien Tottnid, Mace, it. , Deestaher lA. litbt D.' : ' : - OM' $51,583 25 45,157 87 . . rvrArcs meTAL.3 T ALL NATUDE .14i:om wipivi anti I I'D . TOiDtra HAND S AND stranct - sr , AND PLEASURE.—Dr; johison. ....•: i t , • pottrg. ,ALES. WINEEIL - r , - li l a is ox:! thei lessons all said, AntlT slt s, and new painted sled; Thijhe ice; all the Tillage is there, • , Thlupon it, I really declare! • ' • •2 , • notice! now dear mother, don't fret If g tbrongh I could scarcely get wet,- Fete I keep, to Skate near to the shore, Thar, father says,. a full stage coach • ma care if Zuy . ears should get froze, Ao4 bites the ends of big Bagels and , , Oiahe harder in spite of the storm, Angled exercise soon get them wiirm. IN i le window, leer mother, and ilee, .11 i backwards a fine figure three, AnOthe ice like the lightning I flee— '', winter! cold winter for me! Melte • r hoe - onsclentiously, how far the. of ficilFs of Popery (the quotaticins be lesi*lbtedly authentic) go to promote _ gesplity, in the most ordinary world- IV stay nothing of religion. t f ~PIST THERY OF TEMPT. -..4rg Gazette is engaged in a use fulzing exposition of the dangerous erroo Papacy,l,as developed m the ' , JOG/L., a paper published' under thasof the Rorstan Catholic Bishop of that The C olic, of week before T lastherculean, effort: to defend Ho rn:it the sever and well sustained ehigleparture from the teachings - of rein well as the Principles of com tnop in regard; to Thef I, In; a pre viorr, the Ga tte says the editor of the , : had sit mptesi a defence Of ,• / 9 , itt in which he the to reconcile Lig,' Christ and the Apostles, and to shoe latter had resorted to amphib (slog signal failure has not deterred bi l nempting the defence of Rome's greaty in morals, in regard to Theft. In Once he giv es a Protestant deft iiitireft, that o Dr. Dick, as follows : ~ "'which the precept ' forbids, is 'the iglin to ourselves, by our own act, that whi4w belongs to another,' ridi col. it." ' re says this' is a ;Very good defini tionad to the purpose. There is no doal meaning, no equivocation, no hal. It gcTs direct to its purpose. ogee the Ca holie definition of steal ingollowing definition is given by the .Calm one Of ;the smaller catechism:! f 1 1 : I .., 4—What does the seventh corn enniorbid ? 1 4-" All Vs atisi taking uway or keep i nycongs to others, and all manner of chef buying or selling, or any other raltying ourineighbors.' ' . ' 1r triumphUntly adds that Catholic , ,t h e fitter and more clear ideas of ,thesf theft" than Protestant theologi calt K.; Well, let us examine this boas :led in, and se if the cloven foot of ',Jes's not seen peeping out of an an "swged for t i e minds of children.— "'AI taking away," '&c. Who is to d 7 cids "unjust,' and what is not? The priesurse, who in his turn is obliged ,to abe dogmas and the standard an ithot the church, among whom St. Al .phoLiguori stand!". pre-eminent. 'This 'authe editor If the Catholic ;acknowl - edgillows : • "iv necessary, without further corn ftstplanatio ~to place 'the' masterly de6 Iclplion 'us Liguori by the side of t , thetd meagre definition of the cele brie. John Dick, D. D. It 'will be :foul as equatto the object to be de ::fino o ver tie whole ground. 'Theft 'is ii ! an tirdast taking away of what bel' another, the owner being unreason b ing r 'n , i , to arrive s at what Liguori means _byeand unjust taking away," "the owing unreasonably. unwilling," we mupret him by himself. How much -! cal steal froin her husband, without co der the sin of an; "Onjust taking ~'. awf..iguclrisays she may,give away the "ti part of his annual intome or profit, esie.gh the husband be unreasonably unf' How I much may a servant, or anii employed by another, steal or put loii his ; master or employer,' without coiader 'the tneaning of the definition of • atilt taking nway?" Liguori explains ' thiilows: ; , hts do note sin, if their masters re -. fug support Or just wages, WHEN THEY TAtRET COMPENSATION, so 1O13&, at least, ' as"ire no; other means of getting it, and ~ nciis taken than ought to be, and no actor other 'serious inconvenience is, , fee ' I •-.-, pi whom Unist'they go to know how Inky can secretly take, or steal, without Si( the priest ,or spiritual director, He ,-ill(nscienee lieeper of every good Catho he is to then above reason, revelation •-, sniience---helstands in the place of God, : de* what is 'sin, and forgiving sin! ,- Bear Llagain:: I ± • bi who ,desire to be, erfeCt in the way of must sub it themselves, to a learned • cps, WHOM HEY O BEY AN Gon. He fits is saf from rendering ;a reason fiats actions. ' The Lord does hot permit , 1 “ cf. .wor to ' f err ” • y Catholic ss obliged to choose a Con -4r Director.] Doctor Wisemansays: k the Catholic Church no tine is erer al -4o trust hiinel f. •?he sovereign Pontiff f l ied to stibmfthimirelf to the direction of ' ir in whatever concerns his own soul."'— ~ Peman: i fi•efitce to Exercises of St: its Loyola: ! i suppose a thief goes to a Priest who is jolly corrupted by the abominable teach- If Rome, and he tells his penitent not to liar to make restitution. Has !the latter source but tO submit? Rome has pro ; Sfor this by also. Baaertibaum, as Areted by Li kaey are 'not to be condemned ~w ho says: lu ovho go : tine Doctor ' confessor) .to another, until ad one favorable to their wishes. Their lion . is to follow a probable opinion!" :is thus seen that the "Mystery of Iniqui lis made prevision .for all.auses, and to of any latitude of construction, and the ide says it "c ould quote from Liguori, a I Ition of 'tows o much ,a son can (steal from , Fier, a poor Oen • from one in - moderate otinstances, , and numerous other cases, liOtut coming tinder the condemnation of an `IOW taking aay," but our sp r ee will not I Pit. Is it no painful to re fi eet that the [ =4 , 'gen of Cath lic parents have a catechism i' a d in their hands which throws suspicion lonbt upon the sinfulness of 'stealing at 1 ery thresh() dof their knowledge of right ng? ; A we piss up to riper years we the door , to in and crime opened wider ewider, until Itre start back aghast at the pi gulf of iniquity revealed. I 1 ~; KS. SEIES. trnish to Clas- IiLLECTION, ; at TPry low !MOS, at B. BANNASS awl Stationery Store. 4!- la ; westruto DISHES, kei '*" is very' seldom that I find, among ger. tits, one who knows how to wash dishes, and kink servants would . oftener understand if 14e who employ them understciod how to h them.' I , , certainly might to know something about or I began When I was so short that I had stand on a little chair in order to reaelfas min as a'coon.sized dining table. - Like l a ,children, I was fond of doing what grown ,children; did, snit 'though r presume, was a at hindranCe, I was encouraged to think 1 is a great help. For, some reaSon.Which I not explain; it does not seem 'to have the :tEt deleterions effect upon my, hands that hoes 'upon many; and tf you think it is be. . pse I' only wash glass and Chin's and silver, h are mistaken, for , I arn quite as familiar. h pots and kettles, and chopping trays and, I r ad bowlifas,with the more debcate.wares. l id this is the process:—,ln clearing the ts-, scrape all the plates as clean as postal - As; , d pile the the lastest, at , the; bottom sad , pomestic. set them in regular rank and file around the borders of the sink or table. Pat the knives and forks in a mug Or pitcher,; with the water just up to the handles. Arrangdthe cups and saucers near the dish-tub, with the spoons and all silver articles in! a tray tegether. Place the wooden and tin; dishes by themselVes.— Have two wooden dish tubs, Painted on the outside, but not op the inside. Some people use milk pans or bread trays for' washing dishes;;but this is decidedly filthy. The dish tub should be used for no' other than its ap propriate purpose, and there should be one for washing the dishes and one for rinsing them.- Son.e people fill the dish-tub With water when they begin, andcool 4to the possibility of hold ing their hands in it ,, so beforie they are half through it is covered with al coat of grease, and, unfit to wash's pig's trough. It Is better to - take a little water at first, and make a good,sttcis,. and keep adding as it cools, both hot water and soap. Wash the spoons and silver articles, of all kinds, and glass, before anything else is put into the water, and wipe them : on a towel which is never used for anything else.; Next in order come the covers,and such earthen articles as are Comparatively clean. Then the knives, which should have iseen previously wiped out of the water in whit ls they were first immersed. Then plates, and Meat and vegetable dishes. By this time an entire new tracer is needed. for tin and iron vessels, and especially wooden ones need a water as clean as for silver. I hate seen—yes,: I : have actrially seen those, : who called themselves goad housekeepers, who never , washed; iron dishes tit.-all. The meat was boiled, and baked; and fried, and broiled. in the same articles, week after week! I have heard ladies tell.-top, how' particular they were in washing dishes, and when I came to.assist than., they were. so far from being nice that they were not even clean— and the towel uPoa whicht-hey wished me to wipe spoons, and cups and,; saucers, was so stiff: I could scarcely bend It. Every towel should—be thoroughly washed in •suds and scalded after being once used, and the dish tutii should go through the; samel , process:— Ahd I have Washed, dishes after this fashion ; weeks and monthd and years, without a trace ; of the "menial labors" upon my' hands. ; All the articles in the castor, and the salt ' cellars, should be washed; and filled anew once a week. And where oil lamps are used, they should be thoroughly cleansed as often ; as once a month; else . the 'oil fOrms a glue upon,the inside and upon the wick that.pre vents a clear light. . Some housewives, too, Intake bread in the same; tray monthd and years, without wash ing • and I have ,even seen - the bread tray used constantly fdr a dish-tub. Milk-pans and cream-pots, and everything: in which milk is set, should be thoroughly scalded every mor ning and nothing but milk should ever soil their bright faces. Tea-pots And Coffee-pots! should be rinsed in clear hot water and dried, every using. I know of ladies 'who are so nice that they have -I all silver in dailY use and tin rubbed with whiting every day. Bill think once a week is if-they are wrished • nicely every meal. Some ruli it with deft deer-skin l after washing, and thii; keeps it very bright. I have a great:aversion to scounng knives, and never touch hrick-dust if I can help it ; but if their brightness depends on me, I pre-. fer to rub them three times a day rather than once, for it is leds labor, and they last longer. The nicest article for Washing windows is deer-skin, as no particles come off to adhere to the glass and! make it look as if washed with feathers.: There is no need of . anything larger. han a hand-basin for washing Window,s, The great splashins , mach in the exercise of , 'their art* is entirely useless and is, moreover, very deleterious When t he water is permit ted to run down in great quantities upon the glass, it dissolves the putty and soon loosens the panes front their setting, and also stains j. the glass. Twti pieces of; nice wash leather and 'a bowl of seas are all that are necessary. Wipe the glad first with the wet cloth or leather, and aft er it has become dry, with the clean cloth, and it will look clear, and far, more so than if rinsed in a• dozen pails of water. \.l There are many good thousekeepers in the land, and there l are yet many who are not : and I have seep kitchensjarid pantries ameng, those wham yob are accustomed to .consider heathen, that would put toshame many kitch ens and pantries among Christian women ; and those who : only look on may,•sometime's. -be better judges and critics than those who are performtng I—Am. Agriculturist.' I eldr MORAL , COURAGE rs: EVERY DAY LIVE. -Have the courage to discharge a debt while I , you have money in your ;pocket. ). • Have the courage to do without that whichi , you do not re illy need, j however much You may covet it. 1 ''' !-* • Have the courage to speak to a friend in a "seedy" coat, even though you are in compa ny with a richlone, and rtehlyattired. Have the cdurage to own you are poor, and thus disarm poverty id' its sharpest sting. Have• the courage to make a will, and a just one. 1 ' I Have the courage to tell is.. man why you will not lend him your money. Have the courage to Obey your Maker, at the risk of being ridiculed by man. . , Have the courage to wear thick boots in' winter; and iiisist upon your wife and daught er doing the same. --+, • ' I Have the bourne to prefer comfort and propriety to till things. , • Have the courage to acknowledge yourig norance rather than seek credit for knowledge under false_Oetences. • :Have the courage to provide an entertain ment for your friends within your means— not beyond. I • ' . Have the courage to eat mid drink sparing ly-, and thus dupe the doctor. i - - . . par How 4o Rs A Sos .- 1..i Set him the example in the use of intoxicating - drinks. 2. Let hito have his own way—the "largest liberty," so fascinating to the imagination of "Young America." 3. Allow him the free use of money, #ith out any restraining sense of responsibility to parent or guardian. 4. Suffer liim to wander where he pleases on'the Sabbath, and to, spend his evenings from home. i 5. Give him the freest access to wicked companions,lwho make a mod Of all that is 4, good; and Fiindemn all autborit -. 6, Furnish him with no hi aim in life, and no steady employmeie - might hinder the development of his genitisi , , Pursue all or any of thes'e ways, and you will experierice a most marvellous lions deliverance, if you have hot to mourn , -4ver a debased and I - ruined child! Thousands of patents have practically adoptedo these rules .in the management of their children, and , the results have been ex actly what one might anticipate—" Their gray hairs have been brought down wiith sorrow to the gravci." • virLtoirr Scrreas.—One of the great se crets of health is a light supper, and, yet it is' a great self-denial, when one is, hungry and tired at the close of the day, to eat little or nothing. Let such a one take leisurely a sin gle cup,of tea and a piece of cold bread with butter, and! he -will leave the table as fully pleased with himself and all the world, , as if he had eaten a heavy meal, and be tett-fold the better for- it the next morning. Take any two men under similar circumstances, strong, hard-working • men, of twentyyfive ; leers; let one take his bread and. butter witho's cup of tea, and the other a. earty meal of meat; bread and i rotatoes, and the ordinary etcete ras, as thti last meal Or the day, and I will venture to' affirm, that the teadrinker will out-live the other by thirty years. - Ll r„ jpswTIOZWREAT NOT ALWAYS BCCINNEAT. —We beg, that reader Who is thii morning making himself happy over a plate of hot buckwheat cakes to understand that they may not belheyenuine article. There is s noun. terfeit article abroad. is made, faint the seed of thi broomcorn. and meets with &Rex tensive Bale in Piusburg and northern Ohio at tour cents per pound. People differ as to the -merits of the two articlei. But have faith and 'est your lirsom•seed cakes. " POth i ltssgsa Pets merit f and readers it:egtveslale; a man must have , ensi nant:qualifications to support himself erithom. . i COMFISRINO. I , A Young fellow who is enjoying, hithself - t CodsfShing, on the banks of the Newfoundland, , itirOSE OF THE SECRETS or PROSPERITY. furnishes to the Batavia Spiritof the ?Arms, —There cannot be a greater error titsest° - be 1 the following sketch of the modus operandi: continually changing ones business-. -3f any Fish here are all caught with hooks, and are man will look around and notice -who Aare taken from the'bottom. Each fisherman: has got rich and who have not, out of thOse he ti strong line, of from aisty to seventy fathoms started in life with, he will find that the slid:. in length, to which i* attached' a lead,lof a cessful have generally stuck to some one pur- Cylindrical shape. weighing about five [minds: suit. Two lawyers-for example begin to prat- This 'of course, is the sinker. Front thi4 pro tice at the same time. - ;One (devotes his whole eetids the 'pennant,' which is a cord about mind to his profession, laysik slowly a- stock :twice the size Of the line, and about tl:free . of legaLlearning, and iatts patiently, it nay! feet in length. To the :lower end of the ;pen be for Tears, till he gains an - opportunity to' ham, and attached to it by a small nipper show his superiority.: The other tired of such ' swivel, is the 'craft; which is a small stout 1 slow work dishes into politics. Generally at 1 cord about two and a half feet in length,lhav the end of twenty years, the-latter will not be i ing three strips of whalebone laid aroupd it i worth a penny, while the former will have a- i t . , the middle, wfiere it is attached to the -handsome; practice, and count his, tens of. Swivel of the pennant; The whole it l kthen thonsands.in bank stock and mortgages. , 1 I served or wound with tarred twine. Oneach Two clerks attain a majority simultaneous-' 'end of the craft, is a smaller swivel, to Which .. L I ly. One -remains with his former employers, ' t h e guaging of the hooks is attached. 1 The lor at least in the same line of trade, at firs" Iwhalebime. serves to keep the hooks about a - on a small salary, :then oti a larger, until f oot apart, so there is little . danger of ;their finally, if he is meritorious, he is taken into' Isecomieg entangled with' each other. { partnership. - 'hie 'other thinks •it beneath i . "The men arrange themselves on the wind him to fill a subordinate position, now that , ::ward side of the vessel; throw over their leads, helms become a man, and accordingly starts zind unreel. their. lines, till the lead rests on in some other business on , his own account,' ' the bottom; It is then drawn u' so that the or undertakes a new firm. in., the old line of 'hook will be on 'the bottom with the ;down trade. Where does he end? . Often in -iiiiol- • pitch of the vessel, and with nippers drawn vents, rarely in riches. To this every trier"- ; „ km their fingers to keep the line,frwn cutting chant can testify. . - I ;them, they lean over the bulwark, patiently. A young man is bred a mechanic. He ae''' awaiting a bite, which is, known by a alight quires a distaste for his trade, however; thinks..;jerk on the line. They 'then give a -sadden it a tedious way to-get ahead, and sets out for Dull, in order to hook him, stand back and the West onfor'Caltforriia: But in most ca- - haul in the long line,,hand over hail 4 I ; until ses, the Sadie restless, discontented and B r . ''the fish is hauled=to the ' surface f -whenl he is ulative,spirit which carded him away.at rst,;,. taken in hu deck, unhooked, and thrown into renders continuous application at any sane; a square'box, which each man has fiStened • place irksome to him; and So he goe.s ;wen' i L at his side, called a 'kid?' The hooks are then Bering about the world,' sort of semi-civil- ~ baited and hove over again, and the fisher irkd Arab, really a vagrant in 'character, and ; ; man, while the line is running, picks tip -the ' singe to die insolvent. Meantime his fellow-'.'fish. caught and cuts out his tongue. -apprentice, wild has stayed ,at -home, practi- . "Towards night, the fish are counted out srng economy and -working steadily at his! :from the kids, each one separately and thrown •trade, has. grown comfortable in his circurri. , into alaige kid near ;the main hatch, ;called stances sad is even perhaps a citizen of mirk. , the 'dressing kid.' They are counted; aloud There are men of hhility in every walk or ; a s they are thrown along, and each man is re life who are notorious for never-getting along. ouired to, keep his own account and report to Usually it is because they neverstick to any - the skipper at night,' who keeps "a separate one business. . just ,shen they have mastered j account for-each man on the log-book The one pursuit, and are on the point of making; dressinggang, consisting.,of a ithroater,' it money, they change it for another which they 'header,'a 'splitter,' and a 'salter', now coin : do not understated; and in a little-while what mince:dressing down,. After passing through little they are worth is lost forever. - We knowli hands the of the first three, they assulTl some scores of such persons. Go where yoll aill,,f what the shape seen in market. They are • you will generally find that- the- men who; then passed down between decks to the salter, have failed in life' are those who never stuck; who 4 puts them up in kenches or layers, lay to one-thing-long. ' . . :• :' ing the first tier on the bottom of the hold, ----- 'l' and building up with alternate layers iof 'salt and fish till the kench reaches the desired height. .The decks are then washed 'down, sails taken in, and the vessel anchore4 for the night." ~ • . , - _ dot Voung gEr(iFFICE BEGGING--CORWIN 9 S ADVICE;I —About three years ago; a young man' prei , i sented himself to Mr. Corwin for. a clerkship.; Thrice was he refused and still he made al fourth effort. His perseverance and - spirit oft determination awakened a friendly interest in his welfare, and the•. Secretary advised himt in the . strongest possible terms, to abandon! his purpose, atufgo to the West, if he could I do no better outside of the departments. "My young friend; said he, go - to the Northweitll buy 160 acres - of Government land--or if ! von have not the money .to purchase, squat on it ; get you an axe and aanattoe . k ; put uP a log cabin for a habitatiOn, and. raise a' little ; corn and potatoes • keep your consience clear, and live like a 4eeman—your , own tnasteil with no one to' giye you eiders, and withoul; pendance upon 'anybody. Do that and you: ; become honored, respected, influential and 'rich. But accept a clerkship here, and; you sink at . onceall independence; your en-1 ergies beconte•relaxed, and you are unfitted fin a few years for any other and., more inde pendent .position. I may give you a place to-day, and I can kick you again to-mOr row ; and there's another man _over at the I White House wbo can kick me out, and the people bY-and-by can kick hint out; and :4o we ga. But ifyOu own an acre-of land, it is your tKingdom, and your cabin is_your castle you are a sOVereigo, and you will feel it in every throbbing of your pulse, and - every day of ypur life ,Would assure' Me of your thanks for having advised you." , • • ); wattling. THE Immo:6- LOVE. We love to yea the blooming rose, Weh r all ite beauty dieet, love to hear our friends &agora Ille'emotioria s of the breast; • We lore konethei ship.arrive gWell ladoil;to out chore; We love to fee our beighburs thrive And love tu.LlosA the poor. We love to see domestic i life; - li With nnintarrapted joys: - ' I We love ttisee a happy wife, , 1' With lots of girls,and boys. l': ... ' We love all these—yet far above . 1 1 , All that we eras said, - ' We love what every printer loves, i, ~„ - • I , To NAVE StBSCRIPT r .10;15 ata. •"' . RAILWAY-STATISTICS. - ,‘ . .' . l Th i e American Railway -. nmes . publishes the following statistics!of Railroads inrthe United States made op to the close.of 1844: . .ifiLea 1' . ' ' ' Niles' is course 'States. ,' in arra- of con- Cori: , Via. ton.. strtiction. - , !!' Arsine, • . 12 - 477:• 35: $13,749,.021 N.liampshire,' 16 - 512- ,34 15;q60:940 VermOnt, 7' 419 '5O - 47,996:835 Massachusetts, 39 1;293 56 -0,167,781 R. Island. 1 - 50 2,6141484 Connecticut, 12 , 638 51 25,224: 191 New York. 32;- 2,625. - 801 111,882, 503 New Jersey. , 11 '437' 13,840 030 Pennsylyania, 69 . 1,992 1,406 94,657 ; 875 Delawara i 2'' 18 43 600, 000 Maryland . . 2 , 512 30 22,654 333 Virginia, •23 837 1,095 16,466 250 . 5 7 381 243- 6,847 213 S. Carolina, 10 790 -; 374 ' 13,547, 093 Georgia,. 16 930- 452 17,034 802 2 54 250 000 Alabama, • 6 221 • 659 3,986 209.1 Milisiftsippi, 7 239 '755 •.- 4,520. -000 Louisiana, S 169 393 1,731 000 Texas, • , 1 L. 72 - Tennessee, 121 ' 517 946 • 10;436 610 Kenttiehy,• - 1 10 - -228 512 - 6,179 072 Ohio . , • 47, 2,927 1,681. 0,793 202 Indiana.. 33- 1,453 2,608. 29;585 933 Illinois, , 31 - 2,662 1,556. 55,893 856 Michigan, . 5 - "st 3 • 22,370 397 Missouri, • -6. ' 50 963' 11000 000 lowa, 4 115 1,315 2,800 1100 Wisconsin, 11 - '283 746 5,300 000 Total, - 444 21,310'16;975 $621,3]6.303 The Western, Railroad Record . furnishei the following stunmary of Railways in the Northwest: Xo. of rue*. Cbmplete. in Prettiest. la Ohio, 41' "- 2,344 miles. 1,801. miles. In Indiana, 26 " :1,388 if 1.443 . 1! " In 26 " 1,909 1,556;' " In Michigan, 7 " 434 •" - 200; "- Wisconsin, 8• ". 173 " • 450 " In lowa, , 5 " " 983: " Six States, 11&• 6,2 • • 6,4331 Alqy. Fs DAGUIRREOTTPEb.;:-SllO I is full 40—is Fanny. Sports curls likesgifll *of 17. They are auburn—poeticsily so Has a keen, flashing eye.. Nose between Citeian and Roman, rather good looking. Cheeks with a. good deal--quite too Much—coloring. Conies of touge.• Bad taste, but no business of ours. Lips well turned, and . indicMive oft firmness rather than of-sugar; chin. hand-. 1 sihnelY chiseled ;, Whole countenance betokens a woman of-spirit and high nature generally t o form fine; Chest model—not summed it carriage graceful and stately; rather tall:and' emphatically genteel ; pretty foot;: ankle to, match ; hand small ; likes to show it ; thews' in the cut and dash school'; fond of ribbons,: laces, and - millinery ; talks rapidly; iOl witty: and brilliant--cutting and lastful ; proud .as Luzifer, t. fond of fun; hates most of 'her re lations; treats her father and Nat. almost bru• tally ; has three as pretty girls as ever wore earls; is prong of them, and PLOW; heart less—is a tarty lives in elover ; is worth $20,. 000; got it by pen and ink; when passing the street takes eight eyes out of ten on the whole—wonderful woman -is fanny.Baston Dispatch, 1 Tut earth is.about 3,000,000 miles nearer the sun in Decmber than in June. An eclipse-of the moon can only hippest at the thnepof full moon. , The sun' can only be eclipsed at hit precise 'time of a new moon. Two. sounds may be made to pr rinse knee and two listim.dorimess. STEAM -PRINTING OFFICE Ogling piocureil Ares Presses, Irmo an two prepartml to **mime JOB sad BOOK PB/ I NTINO of *Teel dolooriPtloo, ate, (add flo *owe Jatirmial, theerper lbw It' out brt tloil itawestablishmilezit Irk the County, suet ma Pamphlet . 4, -Lame Fbiterr, - -Rawl mas, of .Aprecetent, I Buokt. 'flat Headt, I (Mier Boost, dr.. 1 A$ the sen , shortest notice. Oltr :stock of JOB TYKE le *se extensive than that of any other Odlee to this are tiaia of the State, and we keep ,bands employed caPrer. lifter Jobtdag. Iteitur, a practi,.. Printer ourself. so s 111 petrantee our stork to' be as peat as any that an be trusted out to the clam OOLO'LIi don at the shortest Patine. • Deois belied Iriesery vartetY of style• Moak ifoOLo of ow* cuumbetwoo l & bond sad riled fo or do' of atuyt nat.*. • . • NO 6. Stif - A.FIRSI9IATE: 111A11, have you.a good library? No. Why not? I can't - afford it. Why can't you afford iO - I'm too - poor. Do you smoke cigars or chew tobacco? Yes. How much do they cost you per annum ?:1 trifle—a mere trifle —only a mere trifle. 'llow'much do they cost You.each day? Well, its I am very temperate, only. about a dime for cigars. St the end of the year, do you feel any better than yo'u would if you refrained from the use of tobacco ? No, -I can't say. that I do. ; tfiey.cust y,ou each day ten cents; or, a little over thirty-six 'dollars per annum. Oh, not so much ; . Emit stop, let me see—ves, you're right!—thirty-sir dollars a year. Now, that sum would purchase a first-rate library ; you spend it, for what—aye, for what? Do you comprehend the reascin that-qou are too poor to.,have a library-4 you comprehend the reason ?—//illsdale Gazelle.. ger HOW TO It CCON I.: AN Amex: WA N.—A na tive and an adapted !citizen . were disputing the: other day about their respeetiVe patriot ism. laid the adoptiA citizen: -love America as much is von do!" : "Granted," said the native: . 1 love liberty With a fervor you cannot - excel." ....• "Agreed." . 1 . • • "I vote conscientiously, pay my taxes be fore they are due, foster education both pri vate and public, cherish the constitution and laws." - . . "Well, and what else?" _ asked the 'native pOintedly. "What would you:have .morer demanded the adopted citizen.. • "Share our naiimuzl prJulic . I and then I will Call yon as American.' • Stiy"ltacxNEY CoatWs.—They are. of French origin.- In France, a strong kind of . cob-horse %sits let ,out on hire for short jour-, net's. These were latterly harnessed, to ac commodate -several wayfarers at 'once, to s 'plain vehicle, called me/Le a hacquenee• hence the- name. The legend that traces their ori gin to'llackney, near London, i a• vulgar er ror. They were first licensed in 1662, and subjected to regulations during the reign of and Maly. • Cabriolets are also of French origin. iit was, however, the aristo. cratic taste of Englishmen that suggested the propriety of obliging the driver to; be seated on the outside or the vehicle. • `CAPACITY OF THE GREAT :EFROPEAN EbtrzcEs.—St,.. Peter's, e at Rom will, hold 5,400 persons ; the Cathedral at Milan ' 37,- 000 ;. St. Paul's, at Rome, 32,000 St. Paul's, at' London, 25,000; St. Petronia, Bologna, 21,000 ; St. Sophia's, Constantinople, 23,000; Cathedral at Florence, 24,000 ; Cathedral at Antwerp. 24,000;; St. John Lateran, 22,000 ; Notre Dame, Paris, 21,000; Cathedral at. Pise 13,000 ; Stephen's, Vienna, 12,000; Cathedral at Vienna, 11,100; St. Peter's, Bo logna, 11,400; St: Dominic's, Bologna, 11,- , 000: St. Mark's Venice,7, ooo . air EASILY Yeatitizn.—The followirg cu rious and unfamiliar fact is worthy almost to be reckoned as natural magic, viz; "That one tumbler filled with pure, clean cotton wool, may be completely emptied into and held •by another,of the same size full of 'water, with out prOducingahy overflow. • air THistatts are a Dutch invention. The art of making them was .brought;to England, by John Lofting, mechanic from Holland, who set up a c,vork•shop at Islington, near London, and practised the manufacture with 'profit and success' about. 1695. !' . , . iir IF orn iMaker thought It wrong for Adam to live'single when there was nut a wo man on earth, how Ilty are old bachelors, with thP - iretty girls. Let young I- Th- 4e sun on ...Janunry - Ist, oniyi.....Lant 93,505,- 907 miles. It 'will be 96,695,208 miles dis , i'tant on the 3d 'of. July. sir Timis are four good m. tiers, of whom are - often born four unhappy daughters:-- truth begets hatred, happiness pride, security danger, and fiimiliarity contempt.—Ske/e. seiy.• Tits, 'worthiest people are most injured by slanderers as we usually find that to be the best fruit which the birds have been peck ing at.—Dean! SW /?. . , • Nifir Ir.ts a mistake to think that children love their'parenta less who maintain a proper authority over them. On the contra), they respect them more. SirlT COLD water - be throttn On cast•irnn when hot (u the back of et grate,) it will crack. Cut iron articles are brittle, end cannot be repaired. . Sari's& rich fool •ii likei a . pig that is choked with its own fiii--fit only for the sham blelic—Chine.te Saying. • . • _./frlrry.t opportunities of doing good net neg . leeted by many who are wiliting for an oc casion toverform, great acts of charity. 1111114Ctiesti _words are like hailstones in sngtpuiythicticif robed, woad Artgiat the tendetiNitii they better demi. sir Tut tobseca ,chewer tole 4e goose.anti-4114r oil, the ills. BANNAN'S . 1 3 ,2 Priv,. That BOOK BINDERY.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers