OFT HE MITIag JOURNAL. SINGLE strisseuirrioN: • . LiGLLILES per annum, ma i:. to adtanc•--4 2 1 .511 no t p a id within ►is months—and 12 60 Li not paid within the year. TO CLUDEI : Throe copies to nne Adams, In adtanes, ' $ 5 00 Seven do ' do . do . 10,00 fifteen 40 do 410 (lab sato . , 111 iotte roust be Irrfarisbly valsi in ash - 812CM and sent to one “ddrtea. TO JCARRIERri, AND OTHER'S: The Socivii will be furiiished to garters and others at $3 per 100 copies, reshau u s v re. y. Cierrytsea and &lool'rearAtrs,suPplied With We Jan sat M advance. • - THE LAW OF ITEiTSPAPI:IIS. tf subscribers order the discontinuance of their news p.rra, the publish2r may continue to setup them until artertget are If snbacribers neglect or refuse to take their newapa-, pars from the ottlees to which they are directed. they arie he ld r e sponsible until they have settled the, hills and at, &red them discontinued. • If gibers remove to other places arittiont inform le; the pkbllshcr, and the newspapers are wet to the for mer direction• they are hAd.respcintible. . :Thc courts hare decided that eefuzing to take seisps pees from the office. °immuring and tearing them un- P•r• it prima facia evidence of Intentional fraud. RATES OF. ADVERT IS INC. One sluare of 10 lines. by cents for one insertion--stth. sequeot insertions, 25 cents each. 3 lines, one time, *25 ont.. „...,,the e queutriniertlone,l23.6 cents each. All &dyer , ttw .„..„1,.,v J lines, for Steirt periods, charged as a square. i m •hl, t ?..ri nes ' : °552 14 iwS2:% rears. 8 38EL25 y i „li., e s, •1 00 150 200 3SO SOW ALL oats rtes LOEB C0717111:D AS A Boom or Tr! urea. • nut sinare, 12 5 304 300 bOO 800 Tiro squar.et, 2.00. 3;66 .5 00 800 , 12 00 nOO 4''so 050, It) 00' l5 00 Quarter 500 6 ,54)8 00 IS 00 2 00' Half Column, 900 12. tin 16 00 25 00 •40 00 tm,. column, 16 09 25 hif 30 00 43 00 'en 00 is Business Notices, each—accompanled with an advertisement, 50 cents each, Advertissmente before - '3l3rrlages and Deaths, - 10 teats' per line for first insertion—subsequent insertions, 5 tents per line. Nino anima are counted as aline In advertising. . h , r ,,.1,„ 1 , an d others advertising by the year with 'cliartrss. 3114 s gentling . advertisement not exceeding 2 soares of 2.) lines, will fie charged, Including subscrip ti,m,Psls 00 c 'ie. to the amount of one quarter Column wfth • . hances and subscription, VO 00 changes: at alt rates designated above. A irrrti , ments set In larger type than usual will be it) per cent. advance on these prices. All cuts Rill be charged the same as Miter press. .yo Trale Advertisements received, from Advertising ,;cents abroad. except at 25 per tent. advance on these unloss by special agreement With the publisher. Merrinz-s 25 - cents each. Deaths accompanied with no ' rents. without notices no charge, 11 Hres. except therm of, a religions character and for ,iusational ptirposes, will lea charged 2.5 cents for any number of lines under 10. Over 10 fjnes, 4 cents per line additional. Proces.ilnes of mmtingi, not of a g mend or public char s ct , r, , chnrced at 4 cents per line,for each Insertion. To ;facilitate calculations we will state that 328 lines ma k e a column-1114 lines a half columm—and 82 Hobs a quarter column. 2952 words make A column-1450 a half r i llitun—and 739 A. quarter cola n. All odd lines over charted at the rate of 4 cents per line. Yearly advertisers must conflate their advertising to their own business. Agencies IE4 ntlues, sale of Real Etc ;‘ te, tr.. is not included in businenes advertisenents. if -- PHILADELPHIA • LEATHER: rA Raz, lIENDRY C0.,.N0. 29, N. Third 4froet. Philndelpfill, Morocco Manufacturers, and Iruporter4 of Fnmicit (7.1/4-19E139, and deal en. in lied AnrOak Star Leather and Fillip. rhilad4lphin. Fthritary 17, Is-35 i __- [ AUSTIN BROWN, ~. T I ANUFACTURER and Wholesale ..„, DoaLT In FLOOR:CARRIAGE AND iABLE OIL ti. , n . IS. Wrirehon.e. N. 110 North Third street, S. W. .ror. of ham, op ;Stairs, Phtlaaelphis. i Dealers are assured that I have the largest_ Stock 10 . 4 l'hitsdiphi.a, and will sell at thO very lowes - t rates. - '; Niarrb - 17, 1 , 555 11,2 m t CITY MARBLE WORKS And Steam . Mantle Factory , ' O011!TIM OP TV:III.<NT VETF. NTOOFT.T..PRILUDELPIIIA. ' E. & B. SCHELL, having greatly chitripraved their;liirillties for the manufacture of ev ery variety of Marbk, tfimkr. embracing tho best styles of iliblelvs, Flaring, Toombs enid Monuments, are prepaird to supply of upon reasonable terms.' - Phil/1401MM, - Ntare,h lu, 1655. 104hu.' PLATFORM SCALES • IF every description, suitable for Rail 1. 1 roads, ,tc., fir weighing Hay, CO3l. Ore, and gunt , rally. Purchasers ran no risk, every Salle : itiaratif•A corrert. and If, after4rial, not found setts fact,ry. can be returned without charge. 4:ir - Factory at the Old Stand, established for more than twenty years.. corner of Ninth and 3lelon' streets, Phila delphia. AIMOTT k CO, I 0t,74 i S.is . 13-1 m .s , t.cetasors to Ellicott cf Abbott. MILLINERY GOODS. Spring Sales, ISS. 401 , • JOHN STONE & SONS, No. t , , , uth Second Street, Philadelphia. have just opened their Spring 'importations of Sas, Bonner Lucex.' Crape, cfx...; ge., including s‘ , .rtment of Milliner?, Articles of the most fash l•nsble styles. Tht, al. , ve goods hare boon imported expressly for our :prise rlieN. and comprise the largest and beat assorment in our flue to be found in this market. , Phitml;.lphia. Marrh 10. 11 , 45. 1.0-6rn SPRING GOODS, 1855. D. GREEN has now in his store • a large and choice khmk ofl , Fltl'aipliESSGOODS. t" which le- particularly coke the nttentb.7 of the ladies 4 pot :- 'Beautiful spring silks,' from ff'2 . !,e,c. to $2.50, Berege and lrenadine robes.• French Lawns and Jaconeta. Plain t' ambricka and Percale. British and French prints, liarle Inines. Summer mouselins, &r, ilischoWs super. Black Wilke. unequalled in oiler and quality, Shawls and 31antillacle great ,ariety. ant at the lowest prices. .1 D. Greene has but ONE PRICE, and that the Low. Ez4 t.,r CASH. Corner of Ninth and Arch streets, Phila delphia. }larch 17, 1555 11-3 m ' .. BARGAINS IN CARPETS. - DAILEY & BROTHER, Chesnut St., _ , I) above Ninth. Philadelpials. 'air now offering a very ; '.1,-.:e sto.:l, of cminTiNuzi, at - greatly reduced prices. 1 1 4-414...istitig of I 14 Veit ft. Tapestry and Brussels: " • i Three Ply, Ingrain and Venetians: Floor Olt Clothe. Prw.tgets and Mate r ) Canton Matting, Ac., kc., all widths. . . Also, American Ingrains. .'l'.l.Ois.) yards of nen .stylex nt :A,112 1 ,4, and 75 gents. be- I Ina the best sAsorttnent ever offered af the prices. Most I if those goods arts reduced about 2' centa a yard from for mer prices. BAILEY 4. IIitIYLIIBIL Mardi 17.'55 11-3rn No. in 2 Chesnut St., above ptth. REMOVAL. ___, • ' MEISIESCON tat FE/CPIV', ''.e,;• Ler . " to inform you, that they hitm renicred THE PHILADELPHIA FAMILY „ :1191OURNINC;STOR E., .',. 'r rota No. 52. South Second street: to the new building. 1 ' No, 206Sheannt Street, 'Fire BOOR& ABOVE EIGHTH STREET, BOUTR SIDE.) wil.Te they will (der an Indreamectt stock, at reduced • N. It—Daily opening NEW SPRING GOODS. l'hitadelphiA. Starch V. 1855 . 11-1 m • SAMUEL S. FETHERSTON. DEA IN WI VS, LANTERNS, Chandeliers, and Candetahras, \o. 15: 8. 2d. alroet, - 31.;ce, c.:prure. Philadelphia. Having emlargied and im prc,..) his store, and' having one of the largest assort , m..nte of Lamps in 'Philadelphia, is now prepared to,fur hi.h Pine Oil, eamphetio, Burning Fluid, Lard and Oil lamps. and lanterns of all pi/items; Mass Lamps by the pa.-itage, at a email adeanee over anetion price,. Being a manufacturer and dealer of l'ine';,llll, Burning Fluid an 1,1, whirit n ill be furnieheil to' Ilf*bants at ,a,-h - priceq that they will find it to their advantage to tqy.j. Also; Ifousehl Glassware, of all descriptions, at . tb Lowest market prices. • Philadelphia, October 'Zs. 1S et. FURNITUREf FURNITURE!! H. P. Hoover Respectfully . Warms his customers of Potterrllle. and, the people generally of Sebnylkill county, in leant of Furniture, hit they will find it greatly to thelindrantage to pnr hao• at • his Warehouse. where they 1011 find a large stock t the most mcdern styles to sfiect from. The subscriber c. to say that his facilities for manutheturing,arid"bny nz hie materials for cash. and haring no Apprentices. ut employing the best: of workmen.mmbles him to olio* lodueetnents to those in want of really gond Pura. are at law prices. as hi• mach prefers the .:nttithle six tlee to the 'slow shilling." All goods bought at. tilt . .e. , .e.en trill be warrant Fd. and if Intended for then:if: o r* will be packed with rare and devpateh. • 11. V. riCOVEIt, Itlit .ufh .s , cnnfl 'trod, 64~ Dork, meet side. l'ltiladelphia. March 111,1853 ' 103nt PAPER HANCINC DEPOT. 44,Courtland street, New York. ARIA' OPPOSITE nip MERCHANT'S HOTEL IstE cgoToN. 'Manufacturing Co., -rznnized miler the zetteral manufacturing law of `tote of Now. York,) offers at wholesale. In qu3ntlties ,tit parchasjr...- at Matittfarturen , ' lowest prices, for I) 11A.NtlIliti8,o1every variety of style and pry'. .GOERS to anat,i4 l'BlNTSittit Yarietn i,k l' A R F.NT 0 :1 PAINTO - NVINT/I*ll.lA DES. 114; VVINIOW CURTAIN PAPEIIA, and IN NAV SJIADE FIXTUREs, integt etylee and a tqw.rior finitth. all of their own I.efk..t.ure and inverfatlen. Ae their r.toek I. large '• 1 , .1 ,•ntin•ly new, they iterite merchants booksellers Alers in these articles..to call and !MAUI their prices whenev,er they sisit the city. \',•u• York. slarch 17, 1 1 .55 • . 1 •,•`..1 MUSIC PUBLISHING HO S • E. LEE: & WALKER, Sucret•sors to tIFAIIttIE 'w No. 158 Chesnut stroet. under the • Utah lloute. Philadelphia, are , eonstantly ''..4.1.11.ri1t the intest (rum 10".,t I ,,,put ft r Au. • in the United States. in, a style that will ale with i....:tt041, at. any other how:e, either in this country , als , , the pleagure to 'announce vitt'', ',oldie their stock of sheet Music on hand. consists of the 1114 rucr.t eosupletat assurtmeni to be. found In the • . th e ) a m equstao ts) their stock all the Uusir published in tow' York. Boston. publish several Im.truction Booker Are ro•ral u., thr,uxhoubthe country. ' HANI os—A fine m4e.rtrient of the brat manufacturer's York and IS.xtr n. at the lowest cheat) Pri6es. MUSIC kV. IN:ArittIIXVENTS. ‘'• .• ',al.'', aF.aqUitalt Of lisdnus, Violins, 84pjoee, e 1,b. , ,11%„‘ Guitar and Harp Strines. ••• I taliuti q othn/, an 11 which trill 1.0 funthat the public sort the trade at the lowest rats,'. Niue ually uttendo4 to. 4 ;J" rt, Walk.ex Mn.lc ear! Publirlilong ran be V ft. B IN.NAN'S Bonk and ?lair Ninrr. I'otte- 11111 1 , 1t1pilil. Ft.b.4.lksi HERRING'S . • ; • ' Fire _Proof gofer, 'th ball's Patent Pon-- 'roof.l,oclo , . which were award. pa r at e daht at the 'n'orhts London, )s5l, and ,alan at •the d'a Fah% \,m. York., Pit::: and Tttc atil,,ribera the IrViur , r, and proj.rlptors in , tato nt the. aborP ttlynnallPd ; and 1.0 o. Thr reputati,ii “Fierri nett Safi." Is du i , ty, and for thp last t hirt nen tho inercantiln ‘inniutinity ,4111:nony to their ncrcr hart thvaa Safes' hay.. T trco himdrert have pac. - -‘1 I ri ttal tlrra. Tim public ara'.• p•tnntd dy the antwrribors are .pm!. Ant in many. ma ,ol,lfth;have bcyn rn sevarcly ro their a,Tclars In 1110 turn. ‘AdintPnt." Now York, and at Try ,troet, at till in.1",;0 Pre laNt -111,11.4!; and Mill more recently -hot st*, In this city. In which !krcorli.d i ,f,•,tr:Aninipion whey, F A Mai A:CO, Cikrr'.ll Walnut, M. Philada. l't,scidT Proof inannfse itrolors. and of lwrg imps. Bank Yank/4 D00r,.. kr*. rder. All thy most eelebeat.4 Juror.' 'adatitanUrs' sod “IronChnsta" taken In part payment for 'Oleo; • : =E=l PUBLISH VOL. XXXI. ' INSURANCE. MINERS' LIFE INSURANCE AND TRUST COMPANY, 'POTTSVILLE, PA. ' APIT'AL 8100,000-C HAR T E R I Perpetuil. • chts Company, chartered by the Legislature of Palm- Itylvanis, with a capital of One Hundred Thousand Dol lara,3snow fully organized, and has ,zoromencood bud. Den. • The CoMpany Is prepared . to receive monies and other property to Trust, and allow interwt on' all monies de posited In trust, at the rate of Ave per cent per anuttna; principal and Interest payable on demand. For rates of Premium on Life Loam:nice ) see thoprlnted Tables supplied at the office of the Company, .Centre Street, Pottsville, three doeresouth of the Exchange teL, JACOB ITUNTZINGRII, Jr, President. Jens 11. ADAM, see'ry and Treasurer.' _April I, 151.54. THE POTTSVILLE MUTUAL AND JOINT STOCK LIFE INSUWCE CO3IPANY. OFFICE CENTRE;.STREET, next door above Green's Jewelry Store. CAPITAL $lOO,lOl-- - CHARTER PERPETUAL This Company, recently chartered by :the Legislature of Pennsylvania, Is fully organised. The Company is prepared to effect insurance upon lives and to receive and execute trusts. and tp allow interest on monies recedved at the rate of five per cent per annum. unless otherwise agre*d upon. Principal and Interest pay able on demand. Capital and assets safely invested in; Bonds and lied gages and other good securities. Annual divideud of the profits Will be made pay able in cash, or appropriated to the payment of premium& For • rates of Premiums on Life Insurance, see printed tables, supplied at the Company's (Alice. 'NATHAN UV ANS. P . m' t.. SOLOMON FOSTER, Vice Prea Al. T. TATD7r... Secretary and Treasurer. Sept. 16, 1554. 'ANTHRACITE INSURANCE CO. CHARTER PERPETUAL—Granted by Stale of Pennsylvania. Authorized Capital $400,000. Once, No. 99 Walnut Street, between Third and Fourth Streets, Philadelphia. • This Company, with a cash Capital pal& In, combined with the 'Mutual principle in their Margie and Inland Department, secures to the assured ample indemnity, 'Rh participation in the pinata, and without Usbilit y (urinates. The Company will issue rendes at the usual rates of pronittms, embracing Marine, Fire and in/and Risks.. Dr. D. Luther, 'William C. Ludwig, Lewis A uderuted, • Joseph Maxwell, - Peter Sieger,. John E. Addielts,, . George F. Tyler; ." ' Harry Conrad, Samuel 11..notyerrnel, B. Hammett, . . Davis Nersoii, ' • Samuel Castner. DR. D. LUTHER, President: Wit. C. ',rain), rite Prefitillit. Ww. P. DEAN, Secretary. . . la - PETER. D. LUTTI EH, has been appointed Agent for the abbto Company in Schuylkill County, to whom per. smug delairing InFnraneo ran apply. _ Apr11'8,1554, STATE MUTUAL INSURANCE CO. FOURTH ANNUAL S'F., , ,,,TEMENT May 15,1554. Assets. May Ist, Ma $34.."3,318 Cash premiums and interest receiv ed the past yesy, mutual depart- - meat, i - $101,644 32 Bills Receivable ln same. • • 28.647 04 Cash .PreMlunts, Stock Departml. 404582 20 170,568 56. Lon‘sei, exPensea, eummianioux. re- 4 insuranca•, mutual department, 101,506 53 -•• *. stock 1T,',031 98 • ASSETS: Bonds. triortgaiges, stock and other • food securities, 173,13.5 72 Bills receivable, 187,q09 86 Cash on hand and in hands of agents, For Fire or Inland Ituttiranco, apply to JNO. T. S11QEN11:11. Agent '3l^,tly 15, ISSI. t 24-Iy. ,FIRE INSURANCE. VARMERS' UNION INSURANCE! Company.--OPPlCE,Athens,BradhirclCounty,Penn ay canto. • • . CAPITAL, $'330,000.,. • - 1 . ., . . Insures against loss by Fire. Houses , Stores and other 1 • • WATCHES. buildings, Goods, Wares andMerchandize„COAlDlLEAß- , , JUST RECEIVED, an extensive issortment of ElL't, ENGINES, and other Machinery, on as favorable Watches. as follows: terms as env similar Institution. • Fine Geld Magic Hunting and Hunting Case : . . Losses prtanptly adjusbq andiraid. Patent Etter, from SCO to s2' o o. : - DIRECTORS : , Gold, Anchor Lever and Lepine. from $22 to $5O. • Ilan. Horace Williston. Athens, Satyr 11 - criches—lfuntin . g. and Open'Faee trim Sa to $4O. Francis Ty1er..,....( Metier—Also a Very extensive assertment of Fine Jew . 'George A. Perkins, :‘. elry. _. - • J. T. D. flyer . . • • . . Plated ivere.—Just received, a variety of the C. N. Shipman, j - latest patterns and, best quality, by the set or eirl- C. F. Welles. Jr.. o•: . , ' . . gle. piece.. J. E. Canfield, . Flinty. 'Goods—ln every variety, eneh as' Fine Ilon. John Laporte, Towanda. • . China Figures, Flower Vases, Inkstands, Ornaments, &a. Gen. Bradley .Wakeman. Lareyrille, - .. • Muzieat Instrianents.--Bnperbv Violins, Guitars, Amor- Geo. M. llollenback, I)ll4.3l:arra, . deone, Flutes, Ac., Ac. ... . Michael Mylert, Laporte, Pa., ' , . All of which are offered at the lowest market prices.— OFFICERS: i Call and see for yonrselve.%, at lion. lIPRACE WILLISTON, President, MAX LEIM3IERS, (Late L. Fisher.) • C. F. Wiliss, Jr., Vice President a. Ml . :usurer. Centre street, 3 doors above 'l.lhantango. J. E. CANFIELD, Seey.Pottsville, Dec. 10, 1854. , [Aug. 28, 34] , 404 f Refer in Pottsville to . , , WAT CH ES, JEWELRY, - . .- -. lion. C. W. liegina, Wm. B. Wells, Es' .4„, Silver-Ware and Fancy COsods. F. W. Hughes, • . Gen. 3: M. Birkel„ - A CHOICE .ASSORTMENT of the finest quality .I.E. WHITNEY. AgtmL for sale at the lowest rash prices. at MM. 1.1. Ele Next ducw to Miners' Bank, Pottsville.. TONFIE.U3'Si No. 184 South Second street, le i • 3.5-17. . ,I- 0 vreen Pine and Union, West side, Philadelphia. INDEMNITY. '.. : The assortment embraces a Large and Select Stock of Fine Watches, Jewelry, Silver Ware, Albets Ware, plated THE FRANKLIN Fire Insurance Co. with tine Silver, in Spoons, Forks, Ladles, de.—Jet Goats, of Philadelphia... Office, No. 1f44; Chesnut street , i Fans and Fancy Articles of a superior quality, deserving near Fifth staeet. : • ' the examination of those who desire to procure the best goods at the LOWEST cAsntutekS. -. Having a practixml knowpdge of the business , and all 'available lacillthei for Importing and "Min Ufachirimr: the subscriber coniidantlf Invitee purchasers. believing that he ran supply them Sus terms* ram-able as any other estabLstiment in either of the Atlantic Citiell, ' • I All kinds of-i Diamond and Pearl Jewelry And Silver ' Ware manutsctured to order, within eressonable time. ',, Watches, Jewelry and Silver Ware.faitlylilly repaired. WM. B. ELTONiIIiAD. No. 184 South 2d St.. a few doors above the2d St. Market,- West Side. ' In the. Beath Window of tits Store. ttlaV p , e .4,6 tile !amour BIRD CLOCK, which commands the admiration of the scientific and curious. . ' Sept. 23,1554 Sept. 2. 'SU DIBICIOII2. r Charles N. Dandier, - Geerro W. Diehards. Thomas liart, :. ~ Mordecai D. Lewis, Tobias Wagner, Adolphe E.' Florio, I Samuel fliwit, . David S. Brown, Jacob IL Smith, . ‘-Morris Patterson, - Continue to make Invuriance, permanent or limited on every description of property, in town and country, at, rates as low as are consistent with security. The Ctunpapy have reserved a large Contingent Fund, which with their Capital and. Preraluttes,: safely invested, I afford ample protection to the Insured. ', The assets of the Company on January Ist, ISiS, as pub. lished, agreeably toast Act of Assembly,;were as follows, viz: 1 • - -. ' Mortgages. $.90,5.54 1;5 , Stocks, . $51,563 '25 . Real Estate, 108,358 90. Cash, .tc., 45.117 87 , i ; $1,t11,097 . ,67 Loans, Temporary Loa, - ~ -125,4 W 00 ' Sinee their Incorporation, ,a period of eighteen. years, -they have paid upwards of one raffnen tieo ?uwired thous agar, &Wars, losses by tire, thereby affording evidence of the advantages of insurance, u well as! the ability and disposition to meet with promptness, all ;liabilities. . . CHANCES N, BANCKEE, President. ettaittEs ti. Ils,:telitn, Escretary. , . . Thu hubscrib ag e nt has been appoiutea ant for tho above u2outlonod Indltatlon, and Is now pre pared'' to make In surance, on °Teri, deseriptlon of prorty. at the lowest rates. Astarvi 111788EL„4gent. Pottmille, Jan. 11, 1&51. .- , 2-tf EMI _ LIFE IL. Tce, lIE GIRARD LIFE INSURANCE; Annuity and Trust Company of Fldisdeipbb. Of. I No. 13i Chesnut street, the First door East of the I Custom Muse. CAFFT4.L .000.000--CIURTER PEILPETCAE. } Continue to make In.surances on'llres 'on !the most favor- l able terms, 1 . . The being fetid up and invested. together with' a Largo and constantly incasing rosertied fund;offers a t perfect seeurity to tire insured. l ` l The premiums may be paia.yearly, tudf-yearly or guar- : terly. • , , . The Company add a 'hosts periodleallyi to the Insursin.; cos for lit , . The first Donne, apprvpristisi in Dacember, 1844, and the wand Donna In Deeember,lB49. amount to an addition' of CY.= 50 to ever, SLOW iniured under the , oldest policies, tnit'alng, $141.12 50 which will be paid when' it shall become a claim. instead of $l,OOO Originally Immo , ed : the nett oldest amount to $1,2:37 50:1the next in age to a 1,212 Z. , 0 for ot - ery . $1.006: the others In the tame pro portion aemrdlnz to the amount and time of standing, which additions make an average of more than 03 per .. 'rent. upon the prwmiume paid, without iMmestsing the an nail premium. ! Mamas Ridayoay. . John I.llmYrn. . . 7.• Armed Darts D. Danner. •. : John Jay Smith, • Frederick m own. • notert Prai , all, ' , usurp e Taher. . Joseph Yoar.cr. . John ft. Latimer, Timms P. James. Wharton Leiria, , •Joseph T. Bailer. John R. Slack. • . • Pamphleta 'containing table of rates anil explanations.,, - form or npplkation and further informatiOn am ha bad at , the office , . TROMAS RIDGWAY, Pres.ident, leni3OS. J.ucts, Actuary. ; i Se Tho subticriber is agent for the above Company In Schuylkill County, att.4 will effect Insurances, and glee all Jur exmaiy Information on the subject.' i B. BANN klq. , t•l5-le - ' IMMINE2 STOVES & TIN WARE. • SOLOMON HOOVER, WHOLESALE AND DETAIL'.DEALED •-• Store.', Tin ware, Hollow ware, Drama tante ware, Cutlery, Ac. Thankful for peat pat ,'y` 4.. renege, be hopes, by strict attention to businem, to merit a continuance of the. favor of his old CUStnitlArli and the public In general. lle has just added to bls already late stock of the above named articles; a variety of Cooking, Parlor and Office Stow's,. of the latent and Hunt approwsi styles. AlOO, a variety of Household Yumiyure, such as Tinned and Y.natuellect I/oilers. Tinn ed and•lron Toe Kettles, Dress Kettles, Drittasnia Ware, Japanned Ware, Frying and 'toasting Pens, Sad Irons, Sc., de. t Also, continually, on hand - a large assortment of Tin ware, &e. lie has now the largest and beat stuck of his line ever offered in fehuyikill County; td which he -in vite: the attention of the public In gi'lletli; as he feels confident that he can suit them both In price and quali ty. They would therefore do well to (=Band examinehls stock before purrha.vlng elsewhere, B.—Roofinkr. Spouting and Jobbing prooptly Atten ded to. Also; old stores repaired, or odd plates, fire-brisk gram ee.„ can be had forrepahing the same. Old 'stoves, and all Maar old Irvin taken in exebanze for new. SOLOMON HOOVER. 'L :Se old stand. Centre stivet, alxrre Market. Pottsvlih., renna. • m,tt Ang , w4 1554. • Copper and Stowe lhaisulactory. tiZORIIE 0. &TIGHTER annoumvs - to his numerous nl.lt Nettds, and thn public geneis ally, that he bah engaged in the above men -14'4 Honed business end en such an exientdve Pitin `F-c---- 'that he is enabled to sell his goods at price; which eannotbe surpassed In cheapness to any other sitnilarestsbliihntent In the county: file store is In Peat re Ftreet. a few doors South of the place where be was formerly engaged with D.L. to the hard ware ',aptness. Among the many articles in Ids. store, ha will only matte mention of the following: . litolor with pipe., Copper-ware. Copper Kettles? of ail odes: finss Retticis, Japan-ware, Tin-ware, of every da scriptlon, Ifollaw-wan , Tin by the box; finotlng Tin by the Mx; Japan Tin. by the quantity or by the pound: fileet iron, by the quantity or otherwise:- RUMIAS iron by the bandol or by the'rund. Also. a new Pat ent T, - nt4T-cooler. whirl: IN one of the most useful Itn prosements of The day, especially for families during hot Weather, and, In short. all other articles belonging to a eerunleto cstahlbhinent of the kind: . . Orrtcrs fur work in his line, such as Tin-tooflux, Spout tng, u Alen mrwlinx, will be attended to promptly at the shortest Titc bightst roorkel price will le..l,aidle• old gow teriand 1414 4 or V* given iu exelminge.' 1 - 4? Tionivllla, *wanes 12.11161. ' 11 B3=l _ . . . . . , 1 .. , . . • . - - ~ . , ~. „. . , . . , •• . ' ;• 1 . -..-• ••' ,- :.••.•.• :.:: - 17: .`.•.; ..7 - • -;••• ,-: ~.., • •••••: ' , , • ' „ TY' ...AJ ;VT.' ... , .!4 - ;..orf C. 7.1 - ' F .` . ' •., .. . ... , . - '• . i .;,.. r:' - . ,;; , ..•I'.?, 'rili..lA• "Ow ' ' ".,;'.;;- I, , ' . i ~ ”' - - .HANNAN'S .• 4., ...4 ••,` ,. .14 . 4 2. _-..'i, ."1..•"""•,":,-i....i,I.Z-.1.-:"-s• . . ," , • . 7 --..---. .- . „. _ - "7.•7"; . . 41 41 . . „ . - ... . % \ . . . .. ~ ..... _ . , • 0 ' ~. ... STEPAI PittiTlNG-. 0: ..... . . . , ._ . . Milos mewed threw :Freese* we &renew ~ ......., 4t! ..---,- .'• . .. . - • ' - . ~ , - -7-'t ...•-" • .... •. - .. ' . . , „ . _ .. - - . • , . ,_ . „ execute JOB and soox riasTvio or iffeiry . , ,-„,-..- _ : • • a?- n. • ._ .. • , it tees 011tset Tice iineri , Journal, &taper .. ... '.---,, ' . . . . ... , , ~... . . . ..., - - 10 ,Hdait? ill .1 2 4.4 120. 01.1 MINIMA In the COMM ,;;;'„,-.', ..'...... . 1 ... ---:. .. , ~.. ..: . • . , . .4.• ,). . . 4 .1 ' . " .. . .- , -.,. .. . owes, i'amtphkfi, Pills If Ladiai • Page Potters, .. Rad Rend lire - ' • • !:,-. •:-:" Handl/Se, • •• ; - 'Prier ik. ks • - •- ' • ' ' ' ..,, , .' :: ' ' *4ll. . k.' -4611 s • ['vv .- -vp- , • • - - • . " Artid„ of Airreautit, ''; -Mite Books, AND .. van :4- , ,, , -- . ..„...• . : t T ADVERTISE R. . .-,.-1. ,- .. v,- AU ika4, 9 I # 4 A BO , .-, " ' ~.ruTTSVIL'ILE\-;‘, --- - -....„-_-.i....,,f4 - . ----:": - ' 7. "- - ' .-_- ' 'Ur:Lill 4..L.vA-14-‘: f • • • i , . ~... .. • 'Ai the very shortest notice. Our stock or JO) • .. tße:re extensive than that, Of anyothe Ofilas ~ , . , , - ' nen of the lite, end wilteep hands tap., , • • • ''- i .: -.• '• - ' . • . . . ' . , _ . . . . . . . _ - ---- ly.for Jobbing. Iluttts a prectieslPrl Owlie) _ • ~ . , WILL TRACI! Tott TO FIESCR THE DOWELS OF THE EARTH, AND ERIN° GET FEOi,4IIH CAVERNS_ OF MOLINTALiS i METALS WHIC H WILL - OWE STRENGTH TO OUR RANDN AND ,SIIRJECT ALL NATURE TO OUR USE AND PIZASHRIS.— pr: JOh7I4OII.; guarsobse our work to' be; as neat Ai y t , . ~...... • . •-: • - .e-...; 11 • •:' , ~- 7 7 - .—.-----7-7—. . _ , • .t the shortest Dotter. ; . , . . .ED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING, • BY - BENJAMIN . ' BANN - 4N 'POTTSVILLE - SCHUYLKILL .: COUNTY,, PENNSYLVA NIA. :• • . • .. 1 • -- ' -I - BOOK it ___ __ . • :,....,, - „ . . , , ~ _..., - Hooke bxlndlti min% tetiety of style. BUZ& ~ 1 EMI EiEl EMEMI OE Vi 28,687 26 19,55 S SS ,9,704 le NSURANCE NEW TIN WARE COACH-MAKING. COACH MAKER'S REMOVAL. -wttTHE subscriber Miring fitted up one of the largest Coach Shops in rho to in , Coal street, Pottsville, Pa., next to .1. H. Adam A C,I;e11 Screen ItskAory where his Eicilities for 'manufacturing all kinds of Ca rriages and light Wagons cannot be eurpassed—being a Me eitanie, and haring a number of years e pee in the business, he hoppees to give 'general flatidilethgli ' All kinds of Carriages and light Wagons kept on hand. Also, second-band Wagons. 'tc. • All repairs neatly dune. Orders from a distance prompt ly attended to. WISTAR A. KIRK. June 5, ISIS. - • ' • • • 234,1 • CgikpitfflaKlNC eel 6liam Su powe r ia b r lnl ierw . b ent se to en intro du 1 large e , ;7. 11 .2 the facilities of s already extensive Es tabllshment, Inv' the attention of the public to his manutacture of Coach 'Wagons and \'e . hides of every description. • listing every department of the each-making busi ness at hand, employing only th workmen, and using the best materials, rs may be sure of securing.. satisfactory work. - Vehicles of every Style and finish made to ordkr. pairs neatly and submanthtily done. Orders from abroad pmmretly attended t 0... SieShop. Morris' Addition, Centre Street, nearly 0 PPo• site the York Store. Pottsville, March 19, 1553 124 f GEORGE JENNINGS. .CARRI4RFSUIRRIACeI l ancer. ' 111 .M . 4 thanks to theirfriends fo u r m past patronage, - - and would respectfully mil the attention of the public In general, to their new as sortment of CARRIAOI:3 on hand, consisting of ono and , two seated Jenny Lind:, Buggia, Sulkies, dr., of every description, all of which are finished in the most approv ed 43 1 0, and made of the best material. Having secured the services of experienced workmen, and being practical mechanic's themselves: they feel assured that they'ean rendfr full satisfaction to•those who inay favor thorn with. their patronage. All , their work Is warranted to give en tire satisfaction. Second-handed Carriages of all descrip tions on hand, which will be sold cheap.. Repairingneat ly done. Orders fmm a distance; promptly attended to, at their manufactory, corner of Coal and Norwegian Eta, Pottsville, Pa. ' • , LEW- The ' timber' used for our work Is of the best New JerseV Ilickory. , March le, 1855 I+l,y WATCHES, JEWELRY. .BAMUEL W. PEPPER. SUCCESSOR to HENRY J. PEPPER a SON, deal er in Watches, Jewelry and Silverware, No. 175 F it t • Chesnut street, (opposite the State House), Phila.- delphia. lilay rt, 1854 ' • ' • 21•ly AVISE'S CsTIZAP No., TOR AND JEWELRY STORE, N 0.72 North &mud strwt opposite the Mt. Tartu:sr Rouse), l'hiLldelpsla. Gold iefVer Watches, full Jeweled, 18 I( came, VS; 811. ver Lever. full Jeweled, $l2; Silver Lepine, $9; Quartler, $5 to $7; Gold Spectacles, $4 50 to $10; Silver Spectacles, $1 50: Silver Table! Spoons, per set. $l4 to $18; Silver De• sort Spoons, $0 to $11; Silver. Tea Spoons, $4 75 to $7 80; Gold Pens- and Gold Cases, $3 25 to $1; Gold Pens and Silver cases. $1 ; together with a variety of dne Gold Jew elry, Gold ettrb,_Guard.and Yob Chains. AU goods war ranted to be as represented. Watches and Jewelry repair ed in' the best wanner. Also, Mattonle. Marks, floc, .ac. made to order. N. 11,-All orders rent by mail or otherwire, will be punctually attended to. F4)pterober 9.1851 ifii £ CLIELP VATCLIES t JEWELRY—Wholoonle and Retell, at the "Philadelphia IVateh r and Jeu6 dry Stare," No. 96 North Second street, corner of Quarrj, Philadelphia. Weld Lever Watches, fult.fewelltd,ll3 earns fire, Gold Lepino %dawn $lB to S2l. "- .. I Silver Lever, full jewelled $l2 Gold Spectacles, $7 00 Silver Leplae,jewels, - 9 Fine Silver do 1 50 Superior Qnartiers, • 7 Ladies' Gold Pencils, 1 Q 0 Gold Bracelets,, , . 3 Silver Teaspoons , set, l.OO Gold Pens, with Pencil; and Silver Holders $l. Gold Finger-rings 37 1 ,icenta to $80; Watch-Masses, plain, 12 1 4 cents; Patent, 18X cents; - I.unet, 2.5 cents; other articles in proportion. All goods :warranted to be .that they are sold for. • STAUFFER L BARLEY. On hand—some Gald and Silver Levers .and Lepinea still lower than the above prices. September 23.1854 REAL ESTATE SALES. VALUABLE PROPERTY. In Pottsville, at'Priwskte Eistle,iChetip. THE Subscriber.otrers at Private Sale all that tract of Land and Building Igits, known as t e "Carbon iiiii"or "Young's Bill" property, in the bo rough of Pottsvilla. extending from the Ayer Sebuyikill above Mr. Lauer'S Brewery to the PortOirbon road, being. about 250 yards In width, and containing 30 acres snore or less. This property may be said to be invaluable, not only tbr the purposes of building, but also an offering the best locality in the borough, on which to erect suitable Water Works far supplying the town with Witter. apply et his office,' corner Coal and Caliewbill streets. . August 270854 35-kt GEORGE IV : SNYDER. FURNACE, CRIST-MILL, FARNI,A,C. For Saito or Rent. . „rr The &abet-rite:3r; wiehing.to retire Item Inisiness; will Fell or Bent, on easy itgurik terms, his business property, Such 'as Fur , - Orris-mal, Ana, '.4t0i,6 , . 'rouse and Goods, together with .Horses, titres, Wi t/nos and a variety of other poverty. The Purnate is run with Anthracite Coal, and is calculated to =ski) fifty tons of Pig Iron per week. Plenty of ore leave in the neighborhood. Mill and Vann in good order, Possession given when present stock is worked up. Call on thesuh. scriber at his residence. • • M. 3,IcDOWKL, Li ht P. trent. Also. 4106 acres Timber Land to sell, situated above Or angewllle; North side of Knob Mountain. NI anti :SY 1a5:5 ORPHANS' COURT • SALE. DURSITANT:to an Order et the Or phans' Court of the county of Schuyikill, in the Coutroonwealth of ikmnsjilitnia. the subscriber, Admin istrator of FREDERICK lIESSER. late of .the borough of Orwigsburg. in the county of Schuylkill. deteased, will expope to snip by public vendee on MONDAT. the :nth day of March, nest, at 10 o'clock In the forenoon, at the public house of Daniel Royer; In the borough of °nags burg, in the county of Schuylkill aforesaid,—All that certain lot or Ore of ground situate In theliOrongh of Orwipburg. in the county of Schuylkill and State of Pennsylvania, to wit :—Being lot marked with the num ber el. in the plan of said borough, bounded On the north by MlMin street, on the east by lot of Samuel 11. Medlar, on the west by lot of George D. Boyer, and oh the south by a twenty fret alley, containing in fronton Said Mifilln larva sixty-di fret, and In length or depth 101 feet with the appurtenances, consisting of Lone story log dwelling house, late the estate of said deceased. 'Tering and con dltiobs made known at the time and place of sale . by. • WILLIAM FitAILEY, Administrator. By order of the Orphans' Court, • Joentr.t Boudt, Mardi 10,1&.5 ORPHANS' COURT SALE. DURSUANT to an Order orthe ,ptlaire Court of the county of Schuylkill, in the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the, sutScritier. Admin istrator of rEssm Ltmics, late of the -borough of Pottsville-. in the counts" of Schuylkill. dm:ea/led; will e ,pose to vale by pnblic vendee. on SATCRDAT, the 31st day of March'nest, at 10 o'clock in this forenhort, at the public honk.' of Franklin H. Haercher, In the'boren,ch of Pottsville, in the county of sebuylkill aforesaid, all that certain two and a half story tiptoe House and Lot in Market street, situate in the borough of Pottevillo, in the county of Schuylkill and state of Pennsylvania, to wit; Containing in front ,en Market street' ) feet; and in *depth 90 feet. Adjoining dot of Ma ry Moser on the east and John Simmons on the west. Also. All that certain undivided part of thkeo tracts of land situate In Union tOwnshlp,Schuylkill comity, being Om acres of said three adjoining tracts of land, Surveyed in the name of Conrad Foos.vontaining in the Whole DSO acres and 30 perches. adjoining lands of John' BMW and others, late the estate or said deceased. Tenni and con ditions made known at the time and place of ‘rale, by JOHN .11. 'ANIL'S, Adze /nistivaor. By order of the Orphans' Court, " Joint rie Dotty. fleet. -. Pottottilla. March 10,1865. 11 It ' ORPHAN'' COURT SALE. DURSUA.NT tn an Order oCthe Or phans Court of the 'count , : of Sehurikill, In the itrannonwealth of Penntylannia, the subscribers, Admin istrator; of the ...elate of FRANCIS C. KIETIXTX late of the tow tothipof Fait Brttnittieß.ln the ninnttit RehltYl kill, demised, will expdieo to Kale by public Vendne, on svrt'ltb.Cr, the 31 et day of Mirth neat. at d o'clock In the ifternomt. it the hottie of Mary Magdalen.lKtehnle. ioridowi in the borushin of Fitt Ornuswirk. la the eoum ty of Schuylkill atbrilatd, all those two certain lots or pieces of ground Wroth" in the townehip FAO henna- In theirounty of Sehttylltill, and. Mate cif finis, to wilt Pntitart No. 2. Bonndeil in, the eaFt by putter! No. 1, on the truth b land of Satanol •Moyor, on the meet by land of William Prolabach and land of Johr ; t4aaaaroan, m od o n limo north by land, of Widow Miller, Ondabalug. :t acres and inn perches; ttriet mensurp. • Porto, rt No. b. Rounded on the north by norpert No. I. on the mit by land of }au Otriald, oft the smith by land of Jeremiah Lotnlntzer and land of Fehmei L e t o . decroed, and on tbe 'ercs't by !hod of Widow Zeb tlemorer and land of Sainnot Moyer. contrintsix 2$ Ivrea end 113 p_orghea strict Merit:we, late the estate i.f said de- C1 , 950ti. Terms and condltloni made known at tha t . a n d Vice of sale, by SASSA N„ ' • Yttel" S ASS AAI AN, Ay order or 1.4 Ctryttana' Cottrt, . Adwitsisfrotrox. Jwituallorot, mitreb 10,1465 - • • • .46-0 SATURDAY MORNING, MA ICH - 24, 1855. 1 1 PLIJMBING. • CASirlrfilie; PLUMBING C. QMIT &DP I 6V.IfING, BURNT OUT p k i on the iflth hire roopened an establiahmeit, for the above builnecs; in Silver Terrace, where they arillte thankful for prdersi and promise prompt attention and satisfactory Work. rottavilleActobto 'O4.ISM ' Ti;t:Ui/IBINC SHOP. 1T III:E , :NeWNAIII- Beatty's ROW 11 • Nociii . d,gisnl Stroet Pottsville, Penna., his con sta**ly on 1411 d a_sopply of ail sizes of Lead Pipe, thee Load, mock Tin Bath Tote.. Shims' Baths, rants Hose, Dottbkand Slog's Acting Pumps and Water Cos eta; also, all !limas of Bran. Cocks for tester and steam Brass - 011Copirand Globes thr Matinee. All kinds 6f Cop per Work attO Plintibing done in the neatest manner at `the shortest Ontiee.l • 1 , ;../h—Casit'34ld or old Braistand Lear Pottsville, filetober 26. 1840. PLUMBING ESTABLIBHMEBT., DJCIfINSgN reepe cirul }, n aj imiiites to - the pub& that he has purchased the entire stork Of the late firm of Moreton and Dickinson, and intends eat4ing on the plumbing business in ill its branches at the old,Stand ;under the Pottsville !louse, where he in-4e by attention to innings, he may be able to merit a abate of the public patronve: lie will :guar. =Welds wank to be at good, and It will -be done on as reasonable ter4tot, as ran be done elsewhere. I n. DICKINSON. 53-tC, = TREES 8 SEEDS. FRUIT TREES, SHRUBBERY,' fit. it TR E l 'Subsdriber ? Aged!, for 4eP eral lirserles, will 'rewire orders for all Mid* of _ Pruitt* ornamental Trews, Shrubbery, Pfantr, de., trbe litored-aa early as the weather will pennit. - .. Per sons in want te Treat by the quantity. will please sehd in their orders early, In order to secure the hem trees.t The prices can be Otained at 11 Book and Sethi Stem. i Feb. 24, UM. "P IL DANNAIi. •• F 0 ADEN SEEDS. • t 1118t1 . THE Siihseiiber ip.ieceiving his sock •. of 9eetlB'; which he will sell , wholesale and retetll at Nursery pri es :; We sell no; Seeds but what are fresh and obtained from tbose'Who utOeirittaud raising them, with out the intermixture of Vpit le ties, &e.,. they can be de pended on to be what they hernasent. - Ire-Truck diodenOrs supplied by the quantity at sale rates—at.:": B. BANNAIVS. Feb. 21;180 8- , • I BYik and Saa/ FRUIT ARO' ORNAMENTAL TREES. ". FoVSUIe by he Subscriber, , at hitt !Violas...yr, near Slnorestoin, - Burling. _ ten eohitti, N. J., an eatetnrive assortment in variety' ofi.. 1.1 j , FRIAT AND ORNANIENTat TREES. - - .Orders aptikeitseilito the' subscriber. Or to Conroy & liarbe,r le holetainfi tneers, 153 North Third +Jinni, Phila delphia, will iiilo promptly 'attended to. 1. , Trees will be peeked and sista to 1 the Depots in Philadelphia. fried of charge. ' • IL l .:' , I•I • ' j . ArArn - AN PERKINS fa - Cataingnes fainishedl by applying to either of the above. - "- , : I 1 .1 braary 10, 1855 . 0.2 m ,7, , FERTILIZERS. ' GUANO!! ' 3 rriHE SOSekiber, sole Agent for X Peruviali In Philadelphia, has a large stock of Pure `l Guano on hind. vhich he o ffer' , to Farmers and Dealers , at the lowest cash prices, in lots to suit purchasers:: S. J. ell RI i4TI Sole Agent for Mu Peruvian (Imminent, in Philadelphia, 48'Northi Wharria, and lii North it'atir *ref. January 27;185.5 • 44;m IMP. SUPERPHOSPHATE OF 9500 ,! nr u Fe 18. J A t i he n i v n A o . s a t , superior of d de scription, CAIXR ) AD PhrSVER, Rn dE3IF.NT, &e. er i r Aar PiteDtc# kinds bought and sold on Cadmic. Blom . i , R. R.„ SELLERS h,RO., • Pmeording nd Conintission Afercluttits, No. 65 North 31'idirres, Ite wean Race and Vine Stieete, Phlladelphit4abruary 17 1855 MI OM . , IMP. SUPER. I PHOSPHATE OF LIME, i • c ii:rrels df f the. most stpeiior —Anniirmufaciure.l lOW tens Patagnnian. 3issican, and Peruvian Gunn; to which the at -Outten of rers anti Dealers is =lied. ALSO, Oils, Vat:idles, Son /re. Far sale by . t . JpitN L. PO. KROY, (late T. W. Morgan); L. ...V0..101.9. }norms, &dot& Marlit St. Philacielphibrtutry .7,1t3.5.5 640 w 'i CUANO ~,,,OUP. PHOSPH. OF LIME.. THE . sultiteribers are prepared ta.app . ply The aline valuable fertilizers at market pikes, sto snit knirehasers. In stare, 1,000 Lure* Su per Phosphate:et Lime, warranted equal to any that is made. ,:•:,111ientoank Guano. ' Wo call the , : tittention of !Farmers and Dealers to,..this -Guano. By ctretnical analyrils it is found to contain a larger proportleh 'Fat Phosphilte than Peruvian Guado.-- 2,000 barrelBla idln. For sale by ' - • 1 J. B. A. kS. ALLBS. Feb. 10, 18"..'10y . 7crB S. Inetrrea, Philadthia IitEDIOINAL. " MAIitiH'IIIIRUSSES. , . . 4ictYOß SALB.at 3IARTIN'S Drug Store,' r)as asiortinent of Marsh's Improved True. ilex, among ithich ire Double and Shvie improved Trusses, Double and Single old . style ;Tram+ titer° Abdominal Supped en, Wiest' ShMilder,Brarea,Mentletnett's ELutle Suspen der Shoulder itraees;, Suspensory Bandages. Silk amteot• i0n.•,... ; i , • . ,10Prs• 8. C. MARTIN, ..d i pOtt. September ZVI Et 4 • 32..tf --7.----H-k-17-'—' , smOoss cOgrourn or , PURE COD LIVER 140 'A LINE : ...:0::: Sfi-1r - • • CURE FOR A .CONSUAIPTION, paughs,4.l4lls, ..isUlia.lßrrmc..hitie, General Debility, and all 'N..rafurAlis Ilumar a. ' The Proprleiki has; sue ed (from directions of l'e'es tosser Stone) in Combining the Oil and Lime so po t ritly. that the taste Of the Oil, whlib Is so mingereas to ns gollerslly,bletitirelY overrun:Le, and It can be take by the most deliestbfemales 11 pleasure. And as rert;irds the benefit tit this article ore the pure oil, the, following , mu*. by Prof. Shane, is anmrlent to, convince' the ;nog sceptical. The ',Mang lady:Was 24 years of age. ~. • elfer diseaseleraa one of unmixed phthigi, whichlad been expected tri terminate Ih the course of a few months, flitrillp , -The upper part °theft' her lungs was filled With tubercles; andbl, some placep were beginning to soften. The case was erldently abare.. The treatment et, cod Jiver ell was atlind used , b t without marked Imprpre. Meat. The phiesphete of li e was' then 'administered with the oil, and Ole result, is in theca:4ot many others. was goon appaont.l The patient was rapidly getting well." ,CAUTIOI4.4Iti lieriruntilithe great reputation of this Compound for all Lung Complaints, the subscriber would caution the,affiletetikgainst lasing any except that man ufactured hy hint as hebail the only recipe In the U. States far combining the purr OR with Lime in a prep' er manuer.. Therifore as you r ain your braids, purchase untie' exce.pt that manufactured by .., • ' ALEXANDER B. WII,BOR, Cheitisf.f ' „.::,_•,' - J 160 Court Street, Boston. For sale in Philadelphinb T. W. MOTT k SONSII32 North Second i'ffireht, For sale Iti POttsville - by J, C. HUGHES. Druggist, Operant; htcopal Church. t • 1 .51 Totteville, No .1 vemberll, •- 41-ent t M'LEAN'S VOLCANIC OIL LINIMENT THE UI`4P.ARALf,,ULED SUCCESS' of thlt linlineni, and the nalvarulone cures that it has and Is ,Perfenning, in all parts of the Western tine Southern ceunify, Isls sufficient guarantee for its astorr jibing efileary.' ''. ' ' ! : Two Dollar ttettles of MoldiANts VOLCANIC OIL LIN- I3lie'NT has cured the most Inveterate eases of Chronic and Intlanimatly litiruntathan, Neuralgia and Gout i in recent eases a few: applications will give relief. - For Pend yids, contesetetlFdluselts, Stillness or Weakness In 'the Joints, Muscles; or Ligaments, it will 'never fail. If:ap plied accerding ta the' directions, the once shrivelled and stiffened ilmbs4will regain the elasticity of youth. Two applications wilt:cure Sore Throat, Toothache and Var ache, and it will: airiest Instantly remove any local ln dammation or.traln. I For Sim 'Nipples. Caked Uremia, Sore Ups. ChaPPeti Hands, Chillidains, de e it la the only reliable remedy: ' .One fifty rent bottle has never failed in curing the Mel ,I iltindretle - who were afflicted for years with that disfrenringi disease, hare been cured by a,few applications. *twill cure Bronohele or Goitre, any 'Un natural Lump,..',Nrele or Tumor, and it will cleanse find heal any Illetesine lion* or a dame called Fever SoreC on the Leg, no difference how long they may have existed. — One fifty rent bottle will heal the most severe burial or Scald, Fresh Cdt or „Wound without a' Scar. Illtee of Mosquitoes, Stings ni Rees, Wasps or any polsononfiln sect, one epplication will give instant relief. For Bruises, Sprains, ke., it it an infallible Innedy. McLean's Vottune the isms has been thoroughly t es t e d in each' aid all ;of ,the k bore diseases, and we Wive never known it hi fail lu aerie nning a cure when applied ' according to dirO, ions. Who then will suffer from ester I WI LLfA3I( RENS NG ER, Treasurer, in account with the nal diseases when,. a wife and sure remedy Is so .. eaellyeb. Benangh i Audltors: ' D , tattled? ' ,=, ' I .1 ' . ETUIT FennOhraild keep,a supply always on liand;for i To Cash. reeelved from Charles Smith, collector of use in time of need. I I ' ' : , BoroughlTax of Port Carbon $llO2B :''.l 1 READER ! ; t ' Cash 'received front Elijah Bensinger, collect - or for Have you friend.* that r are is front external dig.; . part of Norwegtsn towliallit; 2:17 85 e wes Teen o , ' ill Ahern tti call at once wad get a sup. I, ' . i ply and i.e cured. • J, • I • . . , $554 13 TO PLANTERS: , FARMERS AND OTHERS, - l_ , • I ir Cr„, . .Workbita lart,W;lantnber ef. hands and stock. Itundredit of ' By Cash paid per Tait on Act to bump?. , dollars ran be isatedannually by using 11eLais s 'VOLCANIC ! rate Palo( Alto • . $5OOO Om lartrurrr. 'Hie' equally Ed culotte In curing disc:tees:. Attorney fetes to John Ba nns' ' 2500 In Horse . . andotheianlinalsoneh as Splint, Steal . Nodes. ! Officers' feria and klessenger's expenses Smiling or dainglateS t l It wit; cure Pole-evil, Fistula, Old; , , to Harrisburg '. - 25 00 Sorel; or Sweeneyal properly applied.. poi Shedee; njl l l.l David Rad, for Rewires on street' 1 5,0 pee. Seratebee, Chafes. Saddle or OellarGalls; Recent Sorra ", Isaac Ilensinger.; , do • 'l3 50 ' Wounds, 4te...it ileartinfailible remedy. There is no rata; Henry Shoffner,l ' do t e - 7 07.14 take about. it.. .;l[cl.r.tx's VOI:CANIC OIL LJNIKCCT will p lea j Daniel Arnaud. for desk . • '. . 12 00 re a ver faille Cure of The shore diseases, !repelled aeeor- I EAIW. Cilliwpy, - for meshes on street ~ - 10 voi. ding to the direKtions 'whichl arson:Tarp each bottieln I . Daniel Wolf, 1 de' , .10 fie.% English and GeraWm. , I 1 , ..-- • ' 'I W. S.rhllf4, 'for i dot. Police 'Mum+ ,0 75 Read the follevring certificate, which is INCONTFSTA-; Item Bensinger, f 4 services' on street : 15 00 1 BLE PROOF at What we have eseerted: ' ~ , • Daniel 'Wolf. I do -:: ' . 13.50 1 J. IL Met,e&i.:St. Louis, Moe—Dear Sin 1 was affieted , Henri Shorner. •,,- do ' 13 60 I for fifteen menthe with rheumatism , in ninth thet 1 Was ; 'Edw. (Weepy: l do .! , 225 I unable te attend:letuur business._ 1y legs. am; and fine- , A- U. Mina, for Madan: ol th hill 715 e r e were swollen , dreadfully , the inuselre were contraceed ' Holding borough election I - 760 and, I suffered life' Meet excruciating pain. I applied ', Daniel Wolf. for service* on street • 0 Pi% seine titre or de Mellor' of Ilituttang Lioluient—it had, me' Henry Shaffner, .l ' do 1 ' 01 more effect . than ao much grOu:. I obtained one doyen ; Jame Bensinger. = do i - ' 1125 • bottle`e of TolcanlA Oil ;Linfriont of yarn. agent, Hr. Pike, :'A. IL KllllO, blacksmith . bill ; ' 70 fur, which I, elutil 14 ever .gliblui to - hlm, anditi dye I ,Nerwegion township 1 2003*; ' deye 4 was entirnly well, an I take pleasure in rennin ; W. ft. M oyer, blacksmith bill I ' 44 Trending it to tli..publie. And 1 also add that one 'of my , W. B. Moyer, Constable *nice ; • , ' 14 10 horses got east its the'stable ad was unable to stand lip. ; Chief Burgess , : 40' 7 '. • . la) W In. the monairerit, made ne st my boys nib on some; of ; Town Clerk; .' do I ' -:A 00 your Liniment. and in throe hours he could walk about :. Treasurer ; ,i.. . de ; - .10 Ou the yard apparefitly •es if nothing bad happened ',lto . lsano 13epsinger, foi.sert leo on ,street, - 15 00 1 him. 51r. Harlot end others of my neighbors were puns - lk , nj, Batmen, Pm printing., Batiks, Y:gal ' ' I ent at the Mute:llo they cone* with ine in raying that ha ' Preps, ite.! 1 '' • ' I planter should bjle Ai:Mt:int. a ;Supply 'of this invaluni)lo ' 1 ' anedklue on leuidj 1 remain, 'yenta, Ac., ... • •..1 - • 1 ‘ 1 • MOSES B. WHITE. .:`,. 'Balance in bends of Treasurer . ~.. , . . i , ' , Pinola, Mits.,Sob. 5,1654 r . . . i, ' --... . . • Then trifle nn. finiger with the many Worthless Lint , ' ' We the undersigned, Auditot* of the borough of Palo r.e.nts offered toYtirt. Obtain a supply of NfeLsts , s Cale.' - Alto. diacartlfy that we luireexlmiard theabove account Lai tTED LJNOINDItt , lii will cure you. ..- ' • = ;' of Willianl Bananger, Treasurer of. said -borough, and For tale by J. IIiMcLEAN. sole proprietcr e earner Thii-d ; fi nd it atria, *adjust staterbent to the best of our knowl and Pine !tr.:tete:St. LOUIS: 3101 . • ! inlp -nd hejle' . ii}:oltoE 11..8r11/ER, • For salee. A by .o.l llrou n Pott ot stille; 3 ..Kellar .IrallUc)P I' - 30111 NIOLY:11, } it For Auditors. - illgent f* the en -. JAIL a itss.-1- .j! ....... ~ . ti -NM, :_ '.'''; i :i . e tabisAlttiatititiltit 1.865 i I.1:+4• ' • re .f! ~ ~ ,' gsgt „I . ' • I• 1 MISCELLANEOUS. TUT RECEIVED , froin New , York, tyi Laelug Leather for Belts. its?, Role Leather for FampLbsther fir Mass For We by - JOITN, SIV:NW; Railroad +freer. • Pottsville, February lb 1835 A 6-tf .LUST RECEIVED.--4, 'large assort= ft, meet of splendid Perfumery, &e.,!dom the Manatee; teelee of:Jules Haslet & Co., Itaretson end ethers. IMSI All !hair who 'tint One Perfootekl, call at C. BAR urn Book and Varie4 Store. January 21,1864 341* CHOICE HA MS.---Bes' t Cured, of the firiquallty. fresh from the best' packers, MI be had rook!'" every Wednesday and daturdsy, st • ' - T. C. BOYLE'S . . . Neir :Vegetable and PrOTISICIII Btaittd, liabantango St. 3f ay 2T, 18t4 • • 214 i Era JAMES N. MUDEY ItESPECSFULIX,INFORMS- HIS . friends and,the public, Mahatma comniencood the Dale' and Sign Peintitrand Paper Thawing Business, in Norwegian street, fist house from lentre, and opposlte Mortimer's Hotel. , • By attendance to his business, and reasonable charges, he trusts to mare what he will endeavor to deserve—a liberal stare of eurbini. December 30,1851 , . EXTENSIVE MARBLE YARD„' illaltantaugo St.i Pottsville. • KHC 'Stibscriber is prepdred, at his old Stand, to famish all kinds of materials In bis line, b:ling purposes—plain and onnunental. He in rites particular attention to the ?both Stones arid NOR*. tkret of his manufacture. They can be hadlo ev ery variety of style, and will compare favorably in beauty and finish, with any obtaitud elsewhere; and Oro offered at cheaper rites. ‘ ' . Jan. 11 , 1955 2 -1 y• . JOHN T. LANO. THE subscriber has taken an office in Silver Tenure, Pottstille,'and established an agenc y . he bnying and selling of Coal, and Real Estate, the collection amnia. the lesPettimt of Ninth tee.. tsc. Ile is well acquainted throughout this Region and , the State at large. and hest had an experience of *lvey's! pens In the several departments of business named: Any communi cations addressed to him will be pmemitly attended to, and !Molders earefullly fulfilled. ' WM. P. STEINBERGER,. Pottsville Pa. '3farth . X7,1°55, 11- PHONOGRAPHIC INSTITUTE, Port Carbon, Schuylkill Co. WHY do so many learn Phonogra phyt Because it Is the easieet t nicest, and most desirable acquisition that ever they saw. Phonographic writing is to the other what the Telegraph is to the mall. This has been proved by thousands who now use it: be cause once learnt it rannat be forgotten. A specimen will he sent to the address of any one on application tbr the acme. • Mr. Men] gives font lenno • and the instruction book for $l, through the man, or In classes :When convenient. N. IL—Pour lessons will enable nuy one to rend and write Ftvnagrali With ewe. - eptember, 1854 Mims PAINTING, GLAZING A. PAPERING. Removal. ' T . W.-BOAVEN having : removed his 41. shOp to two doors above the American House, Cen tre Street, and taken into partnership his brothers, the subiscrihers announce to the public that they are prepared to execute all orders in their line with the greatest de spatch. and on the most reasonable terms. They employ good workmen and their customers may. therefore, be sure of satisfactory jobs. • 5' They, also, be leave torall attention to their splendid assortment of Paper-hangings:, Window-shades, Ac., com prising every variety of style and quality. to suit the taste and pocket of purchase's, and which they offer at the lowwit City prices: • ' J. W. BOWEN ,t BROTHERS, . : ~1 2 doors above American House, Centre St. ' • Pottsville, April 17, 1852. • 16-tf ~ . - CUBA HAS FALLEN, So has the Price of ilets and Copt. : 'PoWE Would again most respectfully ittim e the attention of the zens o ttsville and country Ili :general, to our large and elegant assortment of all kinds of goods in our line, that we have non received, and are In daily receipt of, comprised of Hats, Caps, pure. Ace. Gentlemen's Fine Moleskin Hain, always on. hand, or made to, miler of the bitted styles. Otter Caps, Kossuth natty Sbanghalea—in short, anything - In the fiat and' .Capline..; . i , - 1P Would also invite the particular attention of the La dies to our assortment of FURS, which have been selected with great care from the largest Steele in the country.— . Nothing shall be left undone on our part, to give Batts. faction- Call And give us it. trial, next door to Pottssille House., O. C. IJYEELY k CO. N. a—A largo assortment of Buffalo, Robes on hand, at prices to Suit the times- ; .. . NOvemberlB,ilBst ! [May 20, I.yl 45- EW LUMBE • ARD, In'tilthtty_lkM Ha* in. -PALM &' FRITZ, respectfully invite the attention of Builders and others, to their large assortment of &Awned and Green Lumber, which they will be prepared to furnish by the latter end of March next, at the lowest pyasible rates, FOil;CA8111! Our stook eonsistsof Wows and YULOW PM Boasts, Passim andittatoci. Also heavy stuff such as BaaSa, jersve, RArrins, &env:toe, Pone, Au. We have also or dered a large assortment of different', qualities of Joisr and' LAP i gtitSGLIM. norms, Cmcm644.1118. PALETO and fumy together with all other materkde ,belonging to the Lvmber Trade.: , . ; • One of the non being's practical. builder. we natter ourselves on having selected our stock ;in such a manner as to give,entire sattsiketkm. Our heavy lumberhas teen" sewed to order, thus preventing tonal waste to the pur ebbe: orAndideri. I Call and examine before purchasing elsewhere. Yard opposite Dr. Palni's (Mimi P. R.! PAL I!. Schuylkill Haven, Venetsary 51,1835 i My • 7 7— flOTICE TO 'BOATMEN. f ag• Delawar e and 'Hudsion Canal Co. are prepanikto enter Into contreetliith , and mill Ca nnleateto temperate and Industrious men. to he employ ed In frattlag Coal from llopodele tci:Roodout end Sew Voti!, an to Intermediate ewes on the Canal and The Bests are expected average Sir ;The 'season, 'l2O lens, find the Stows end eertion Boats 126 tons: • The Rare of freight for 18E4, will be front ILoneedale to , ' Rendont, 'one dollar and three centic (SIX) Per gm+ UM', and In peeper -proportion for Intermediate plaree. The &awing' instilment' will be irOerred from the freight on feu* trip toward the manna of the Boat, its: On SNAI, (or River ' ) Basta v " • PlMModel,Scowso - ." laid! do do & 'S ectio n Boata.l 22 00 Thm elll alto be reverted $lO and the fractions of a dol lar out of the freight of eiieb trip, until the close of the season. • The piver Freight feces Rondout to Neir York will be 23 eente per grosi ton, reeerring therefrom $8 per trip toward the payment of the Boat. Towing and Wharfage free. The chime far unloading on ell coal delivered. will be tents per tom which will be retained out the freight of . . Beata belonging to tadlvl daals, and Contracting to run to the dosing of navigation, elehasively in the freighting of Coal The this Company will be put ou the same terms ai Company Application to be made, pasonslll, or by letter, to the undersigned at the OtEre of the Del.- and Hudson Ca rtel Uo., .Bondout; Ulster Oa, N. Y.: to' N. 1?. Lord, Iloneedelti, P 54 to the Enporiotendention the line of the Canal; or et the Mire of the Company, 31 Wail street, New yotii: • i I' • L. A SYKES. Agent, HOildont. /Wirth 10. 1 Ms Imut Ap pointed -Agent Stir this' cennty.,for the sale of "VISK'S PATENT METALLIC BVIIIAL CASES," Which supestede all other hinds in nee.. i Being perfectly alt-tight, it obviates the ineceseity of Nulty burials, and also presertes the - 104 from immedbitetlecomposition They are particuldrly suitable for transporting the body from one place to another: The face ip covered 'with a thick giant with metal top, which can he removed at any dine, and the face of the corpse seen bylte friend§ or re lative& We might give you hundreds - of certificates, to corroborate our statement, as to the advantages the Me., taille'Colliti has °ter the Wooden, but -the following will suffice: I • WesumOros, Apia 6tb. . • Gcnaciatro:—Wii witnessed the utility of your orna mental "latent Metallic Burial Cases," used to convoy the remains of the late lion. John.C. Calhoun to the Con' greselonal Cemete which impreteled vis -with the belief that It is Pm te at ' article known to us fir transporting the Iliad to their final resting place. ; . With respect. we subscribe ourselves, Yours, etc., ..0 11 htned1 1 Kenri Clay, Lewis Cass, Dan. Webster, iTm. it. King, Jeff. Uavia, .1. M. Berrien, 7, Y. Mason. D. B. Atchinson: A. C. Green, WM. P. Mansur , ' Howl Bodge, D. S. Dickinson. StrnUar testimonials might be added without number Apply to 1 . U.. . Centre rtrat, , corner V Union Pottsville; December % 1854 i 48.4 m Of the Ri , of Pal'? 16,185 r A CARD. STikIEM . F.NT nu rpm owes of the Borough Alto,;frout Juoc 14, 1854, to February 47194 ftdigio4oiaic. TEE PR 011TWTTTED. •, 1 Once upon a time, as story-tellers tiny, and many pairs ago—yes! I most in frafiltness, own the mel ancholy truth, thoughit does, unplealantly remind me, that I am not near so young as I was, but rap. idly hastening towards that undesirable period of life, poetically termed "the sere and yellow leaf," —I retitember having read tromewhert--er - was it one of the Marv' srell.tohl talei,with which my good .old, spectacled 4 gratulnitothir was wont to amuse me ?—a highly humorousaneonnt of an un lettered .Pedander's chestottecetoldly practised -upon a priest, who was not exactly prepared on all occasions to disabuse his mind of a lurking af fection for the currency, or, in other words, was somewhat sorely afflicted with an itching palm, and not always in possession of the sublime vir txte of granting the favors of the Church without a fair equivalent; and no wonder, forg let me ask the momentous question, can the clergy, any more thin the laity, live on sir? Pat Donoghue—LmaY his choice - fraternity in crease and multiPly!—was of a class of racy, fun loving, laughter-provoking characters, to be often encountered among the Irish peasantry: Like - Rory o'sloore, ho was a broth of a boy, .though Rory's antipodes in morals. In the free and easy nature of his habits and ,disposition, ho was the i fac-simile of the mercurial mischievous valet of 514 f CLarley O'Malley—nay, it might. be shrewdly sur mised he was the great prototype himself of that devil-may -Garish individual, and Lever had him in his mind's eye when ho drew his Mickey Free. Be that as it may, certain it is that, like Mike, be bad a coolness of assurance positively refreshing, and the highly national quality of a seeming sim plicity, perfectly matchless in the eventful history of such rogues, although in the' estimation of too partial friends, it did not often happeu that Pat was deemed more knave than feel. lifewas, too, blessed to a degree, quite enriable t with that happy talent of making the beet of ev erything—tho darker appeared the brighter side; and that ready adaptability of himself to all cir eumstauee.e, hoer adverse or prosperous soarer, which we all so hugely admire, but do not equally, possess. • Although, also "a holy Roman," he was, by no manner of means, so intensely devout as his illus trious namesake of sainted memory could have desired; and, consequently, praying and fasting, and the like observances, so rigorously exacted by the Apostolic Church rarely shared, an& never liberally, either Ids time or thoughts. Unfriendly whispers of this scanefoftem maywitiusti would not unfrequently reach the religiously nice ears of the , good Father Maurice O'Rourke, the parish priest, who considered him indebted in an amount, of penance, to be discharged only by a life . of unin termittent devotion and repentance. Such a life,. he either despaired of living. or regarded as a; work of anperetrogation. Yet like many of his bet tors in such a strait, he cherished the forlorn hope of Chance, some fine morning, bringing him gra tuitous forgiveness. Not that he ever experienced a conscientious qualm, for the rhymer tells us, "When the Devil got sick, The Devil a Monk would be," So our hero, whenever any misfortune from Sick nese or other cause befel him, was wont to be vis ited with the keenest apprehension for misdeeds whilst in health; but like the Prince of Vallen''' Angels, also, whenever there was a prospect of convalescence— " The Devil a Monk was he." • - 1 There was one circumstance that above all oth-_ ers, disturbed his tranquil self-complacency. His I father, who while liring,proferred the boisterOus jollities of the rosy god, to the serene beatitudes of the Church, had, when dying, directed a sum of money to ho expended in• masses for the re pose of his soul, and its speedy translation from !,purgatory tb a more congenial abode. Now Pat bad duly and truly complied' with the dying- - wishes of his deceased parent,' in having the re , quired ceremonies performed, and had thus as he ' thought, procured the happy liberation of his er ring father's immaterial part; but he found it- ex pedient to omit remunerating the priest for trans.; acting so skillfully the blissful business. "Only, think of it, good christians!" ho woul exclaim, as he lay stretched upon his bed, having accidentally dislocated a joint, and from the ex cruciating pain the dislocation produced, imagined his dissolution approaching, "only think how I' denoted his riverence! 0, holy Mary !'what will beconie of me? Send, do send, for Father Mau i -rice,till'he confesses me!" 'ccordingn messenger was despatched with an instruction to make his understandings do their • speedy utmost, for.the priest, who in hot haste ar rive,4, and entering the' apartment where Pat lay, ho ordered those who were present to withdraw, and forthwith began his spiritual task. "Well Pat,".itaid be, "what troubles you?" "0, wurther ! weigher! your riverence," shriek ed the penitent, agonizingly, as hu confessor, in leaning over the couch, the better to see and bear him, chanced to place his hand rather rough ly on the swollen limb. "God of heaven! murder is it?" asked the priest, with a look of holy horror; for the moment a com plete and certain annihilator of all and everylappe of absolution and he prepared tura soul-harrow ing tale of bl and. • - "Not' murther, your riverene.e, but perhaps as bad or worse," and Pat paused, as if in deep men tal anguish and afraid to go on. "Come; come, said Father Maurice, pityingly and encouragingly, "let melee: it." "You'll not be too severe with me ?" queried Pat. "Proceed, pray proeeed," mid his reverence, earnestly. "That's just what I want, but cannot do." "Cannot what?" "Pray, plase your rivirence," mceklj answered Pat. "Como, sir, no trifling! - what would yeti con fess?" demanded the priest impatiently. "Well, if I must; I must," said Pat, in a tone of -desperation. • - "D'ye recolleeteuldPather Dan McCann r • "Yes; ho was my preeeeessor in the parish." ~ • "Did be over ten your rivirence that I robbed him?' room 1500 "Mobbed him!" • exclaimed the eceifessor. "0, you sinner!' robbed a priest!l I fear there's little grace left for such a crime; but go tn." • , "Well, your rivirence, when , y father—rest his soul!--died some years ago, Iwont to Father Dan McCann, anal saes I, ~ 1. ' •' - "'Father McCann, plaza your rivirence, I want my •father oat of purgatory.' ' , • ' •• "Wm the man 'ill do that for ye,' Says se. "Darlin, ye are,'. says I; 4 'share I'm forever. obliged to ye. ' "Of toots° Pat,' says he, 'of comae, I know ye are; but share a gintlemsin of your manes won't forget therelargy in respect of thatiame ` 'By no manes,' says I: itrhativeryourririrence axes; you must get.' "'Well, then,' says be, 'all I'd expect is a five poundnote.' —' '"And you paid him?" remarked Father Maurice. "No, your ririrenee, there'll where I played' the divil, and when Father McCann came for theme. ney, says he, in a yoke of honey, • * "Pat, your father', sting in besi - en now; 'so I hope you'll remember your promise.' . "I'm glad to hear it,' says L "'And so you ought,' says he, got I never had' more trouble with the likes of that before.'. I "'There's no fear of him getting out,' I axes. • "Divil a taste,' says he, 'for I've settled him there havens ',anat.. "'Hamm acarunse repeated Father Maurice; .'you mean liecida steak/rum, I suppose.' ' "'May be so, your rivirence, I'm. not *tied and, disremember the exact worde.' ,_ • " 44"0 matter. proceed.' "Well, you see as I was resolved not to pay him at that time, at last, I began questioning him again. . . " 'flow . = Ito know thathe's in heaven?' -: "'Won't you take your priest's - word for it?' asked Father Dan. . . , . •• 'Troth,' and - I'm sorry to say and I won't, says I, soft and easy. .1 "'And why not, you vagabone?' says he, flying into a mighty tanthrum. • "'Debase, I won't,' says I, waxin warm, .'and that's a phrty reason, bekaaait'a a woman's, but I'll tell you what lido though :" and lazes him Iwas he on spaking terms with Saint Pettier. "Father Dan looked at me awful serious, sh:iok his head gravely and muttered, I . ' • "'Shure I am, and with all the 'saints also, ye blaggard.' ' . '"tic to him, then,' says I, 'and bring am a re -1 ceipt fortny fi;thei.' a. ' . • 1' i ' I. "With that the and ,book his head again, clenched his fist, and stamped like mad. , "Don't be so loityttoity,' says I;' and the •Ould Boy—Holy Margin I Mother of HOD I forgive me for taking his name in vain at this present was spurring me all the while. 'Thin't, be so bui -1 ous,' says I, 'or,' says I, 'maybe rd be afther pat. I thawyou_to the'rrouble of proving Saint Pethel i band-writing.' • "That bothered him completely; for be cut his i stick in alarions rage, and the. last word I heard I him say, was, he'd excommunicate use fora gc4. • less heathen, ao he would; come what Would, from that time after he never darkened tpy dooriPP The gravity of the ghostly adviser iite'never nearer beteg.upset, when Pat bad reached the ca tastrophe of the hoax he had' played on his rev erend brother, and with dillierilty ho repressed la smile. Pat, who on tusking a clean breast of it, I had been . gradually gathering confidence, was now looking him fall in , the face, and quickly Pereeiv-. i ing his embarrassment, 'brightened up with the i hope of obtaining abiolution, or at least of being t let off with the infliction of some trifling petstioe. "Won't your rivirence absolve me? for sure ain't I heartily sorry for doing so dirty a tbrick4 and that on my priest?' "You'll have no objection, then, I presunte,:to hind Over,the sum in question to me?" demanded the suceesior to Father McCann.. ' . . "Vain, and that's more than I'm able to : do at this present minnft," was the reply, which was to-, ally Hic,truth, for though Pat poltexeetl,iu a llotit 85 67 OM An Irish Story. MI lag bard hy, the needful; wherewith to satisfy the Priest. Yet, in his disabled state, it was quite im possibbilor him to rise and lay his hands on the money.; "You're a great sinner then, Mr. Donoghue," said Father O'Rourke, With ill-disguised chagrin, and tuust.do•me a penance, before-I can give you communion. You are too feeble, however at pm ens; I will see you again as soon as you are able to undergo the punishment," so saying the priest went his way. • Fat recovered and was scarcely himself again, when Father Maurice paid him the threatened visit. ' " Yoe are to take off your atom toy good ma," says he,..in prescribing the act of atehetnent Pat was to perform for the affair of St. Peter's receipt, "and weieftain this to kiiiielda twice every Sun ' day for six toreks to coma": . - _Pat looked unspeakably crest fallen and mutter ed as the'priest retired, "I must on'y conthriva and do what your rivir ence says." ' At the expiration of Pat's Weekly pilgrimage, Father O'Rourke again appeared. • "Row are your feet?" .he asked with an arch smile. "As well as ever," -was the cheerful answer. I "Get me see them," requested the priest. Accordingly Pat alacriously. uncovered them, and smirkingly presented the soles thereof, for ti clerical inspection. "I declare they are," cried the • priest in aston ishment. "What did you put on them? . . -.' "Boots, to be shore;' and Pat laughed consu medly. The truth was out. Pat bad literally followed 1 the injunction of the confessor.'but had slipped on j a pair of- boots, conceiving that be bad a right to I do so, seeing that wearing Iguits instead, on the occasion, had not been specially interdicted. - 1 Father O'Rourke Was eonsumately incensed at t 1 having thus been outwitted ; he lectured, threat , cued—sowed he'd manage Mut this time at any' rate, and ordered the , performance f a similar course of pedestrianism, with peas in ' shoes, or 1 1.3 boots, if,lie chose to-wear them , binding ha to its due fulfillment, on pain of tho church's everlast ing displeasure. • - After the uecossaiy lapse of time, 'n F9th er Mau rice appeared once more. He Was o horseback, and appiirmitly in haste. Pat had lust returned from his last journey. • ' 1 ' . • "Well, how are your feet n ow, Mr. Donoghue ?" asked the priest, emphatically.',: - "Purty well, T thank: ye. I've a fine poultice ion them- - 4 _,; - - "Didn't I caution you against that ?" demand ed the good father, testily. "What is it you have to them." • . "Only the pays your rivirence - told me to put in my brogues: I hope there fens no harm in hitio' thMs.. " -I And again came forth the truth.• Pat, in depos iting the pets, in his bads, had-first taken the lib erty of boiling them to mealy softness. The spir itultdirector of consciences burning with indigna tion at having,been a second time gallingly duped, was ftiriously eng,ttged in - disentangling , his whip, In order to inflict summary personal - chastisement on ; Our he - ro,•wlten Pit, eluding his ebservation, auceeeded'in goading the flanks .of the reveread 'gentlemen's nag, witha thorny-stick; at which, as was very natural fora well-bred horse to do under I :itich a stimulus, it reared, plunged and took 'to its I fieelS, carrying its sacred rider . over half a dozob hedges and five barred gates, and ending in genet 1. oinks treating him to a fragrant plunge bath in the c t verdant Waters of a duck pond. : Father-Maurice like his predecessor, Father Dan, never agaikerossed the thresh Old of Pat's dwell ing, and Icing after would the priesthood be teady, i • to exclaim with the "Fair One with golden locks," l whenevet Pat made his appearance, 1 ` . "Verily, our confidence haslost UP, Are your the divil; sir, or Doctor Faustus?" ~isturicat. Ai.P • MUUDERA IN THE ROYAL , FALIILY .0P RPS - first surmise on the 'announcement of I the death of the_Czar, was that ho' had fallen a victim to •surne conspiracy.. There "would seem, however, to be no grounds for this suspicion. Yet"' the almost universal suspicion Ofinurder was nut extraordinary, when it is considered low many of the royal line of Russia have died forcible deaths. What with the dissensions aniong , the imperial family, and what with the conspiracies on the part of the nobility to remove an obnoxious Czar, no dynasty of civilized princes had ; ever suffered so much frem steel and cord, since the days of the Roman Caesars. Talleyrand's famous dbfinition of the character of the 'Russian .Government, that it was "a despotism' tempered by glSSassOnatiuti," was as true as it was witty, or gather, vt'us witty because of RS truth. During the earlier . period of Czarism, nearly every emperor destroyed some ri val, or was.hitneelf destroyed.- ~Even in the last century, the murder of Russian prince almost universally attended or preceded the accession, of a new monarch to the throne. The bloody drama was opened by a.father killing his own son, and closed by a son consenting to the murder of his father. _ . The incident to which .we Ern allude,-was the secret execution, of - Alexis, only son of Peter the i Great, by order of his father, Ate D. 1719. The Prince was hoitile to the new =Meares introduced by. the Czar, favoring the old Bayer party, which I adhered to the ancient usages and customs of his country. , For this Peter resolved., to disinherit him. Alexis, knowing what { this meant, fled abroad, hilt being discovered, wits' dragged back to Russia, compelled to renounce the succession, tried by secret judger, and barbarously put, to ,death. The next great tragedy , which occurredi in the Romanoff family, was the. murder of Peter the Third, by direction of 'his Wife, who immedi ately ascended the throne as Catharine the Sec 'end. This woman, celebrated no loss for herprof. ligatalife than for her political geniis, was the grandmother of•Nieholas. Her hastrinnent in the assassination of her husband wits Prince Alexis Orloff, IMO of her paramouie, a', man of gigantic stature, who subsequently unblushingly paraded himself through .Europe, and was viewed with! terror anti curiosity everywhere is the person who, when the. Emperor resisted, bad throttled the un- I hhappy Prince with his own hand. A brother of this monster went to Italy,whire a Princess of the Ronianoff line resided, whom Catharine feared conse9iienco of her better title to the throne, and having inveigled the - poet girl into a meek i marriage; trapped heron boarder a Russian frig ate, and carried her a prisoner to Cronstadt, The I miserable victim of this atrocious perfidy was drowned in her cell subsequently by an inuada-1 'den of the Neva. . The parricide to which we allado was the mur -1 der of Paul the First, father of Nicholas, with the knowledge if not the connivance Of Alexander, the 'predecessor of:the late Czar. Paul was set upon, at night, in . his chamber, and assassinated after a protracted struggle, in which he fought with des perate resolution, though unarmed and in his shirt. At the period of this Wady tragedy, Nich- , else was an infant. Rut his ehler brother, Alex- , ander, was a young man; and was, it is generally 1 believed, aware of what; was about to occur. Re- ; Mores! for the act is said to have embittered the! closing days of Alexander. It is asserted by some historians that even this Prince tell a victim to a violent death.. It is certain that he died suddenly, when on a tour in the Crimea; and as be bad be come quite unpopular with a large party in his climb:lions, it ii, not impossible that ho was poi soned. In.all these eases Of assassination, it was at first given oat that. the Czar died f apo plexy., nor did the truth appear until the lapse of years had rendered harmless the publication of the facts, In a despotisal like, Russia, when a Prince is to be deposed, then' is generally no course left but to take his life. He cannot be affely tithed' to abdicate;.for ho would be a bold man who could thus "hell the cat;" and while he lives, even after abdication, there is always- dan ,ger of rerolntion in his favor. Hence Talleyrand's remark--.Ph Ga. Ledger. Xf"COST or PCIILIC BUILDINGS.--A correspon dent of the Washington Union has furnished that paper with the following abstract of the cost of public buildings of Washington. as compared with the cost of iota° of the public buildings in other cities: • The Treasury building, tuadir thoroughly - lire- : proof, anti coitering . an area ef. 29,:tsa feet in it s plan, and-with its' noble colonade, 3R6 feet ill. lonkth, built' of out stone by data work, cont $650,000. The General-Post Office, a marble structure in the richest style of architecture, and covering 16,- 600isquare feet on- its plan t .and • thoroughly fire predf, east $48 0 , 000 - . - The Custom-hoese, Now York, a warble striae- , Total, $2O 63 tore, thoroughly fire-proof, and covering on its, The expenses at the cemetery ; including the plan 12.000 square feet, coat $1,120,846. : ; priest's charge of $l, were $2O 25.: Mass at the The eantro building of the Patent'Office, of cut , church, undertaker's fees, etc., reached 120 more. stone, with its grand pottieo nearly 100 feet in ex- , An Irishman died in Albany, not long ago, who tent, covering on its plan 10,500 square feet (nein- I had deposited over $5OO in the Savings Bank, M oire of portico, and fire.;proof, eoat $410,000. Fthough be lived in great apparent indigence. - No Th 4 east wing - of the same building,.-just finish-; sooner, was he dead, , than a grand "wake" and ed, built of white'Marble, thorsiughly fire-proof,' bririel was decided upon, and it eost his family and covering on its plan 1;250 stir. feet $510,000. over $126 to get his body :into the ground. The The,Boston Custom House, built of Granite,', liquor drink at the "wake" cost $42, and there made fire=proof, and , covering an 'area of 9,800:, was a charge. for four . "sympathisers," who were tenure feet, on its plan, cost $1,101,110. , ; hired to make lamentations for the. departed—to The Pregbiebt's House, area on plan 15,000 ! ' wail and howl over his dead body. The coffin, square feet, 003 t. $660,000.. 1 • the carriages and the Masses amounted te - a round -Tbe present dapitol,'aree of plan 5,600 square ! sem. And so Pat was "decently buried:" feet, cost $2,690;460. - • • - The Treasury, Potent Office, aild :General Post Mr-Joarprt Howe, M. P. whose death is racer- Office buildings were , all erected by our fellow, s ded in the English journals, was a native of Moo citizen; Hobert Mills, and they are cobsth . leted in 'rose, Scotland, and was born in 1717. Ito was ;the most Autnontial, manner. - educated for a surgeon, and entered the naval ter . 1 rice of the East India_coMpany In 1803. He was Fam.r. of the -young man whu! soon afterwards placed ih the Bengal medical threw of his wennelothing because the sun shone I establishment , and served. during 'the Mahratta. brighter than asuali•shordd never be forgotten, iu war. He returned to England in 1808, and spent this variable climate. *More sickness is caused by several years in traveling ever the-United King doffing our winter's gear prematurely, than folks i dom• as well as the different countries of the eon generally imagine.l , "Not for May' with all its ; Jinni. Ho was elected to! Parliament from \Fey churns, will I throw off my winter's arms." So: mouth in 1812, and from 1818 to 1830, be repro sang an old poet—end experience proves that he 1 dented his native,_ borough. Montrose. lie wu was right.-`• ; then returned as member 'for bliddlesez,•and in -;sr - i 11837 for Kilkenny, In 1842 he was again elected coquette is a rose from Whom every for-; *member from Hutton and hasi_aver, sloe* rep et plucks elver—the thorn remains for her future; resented-that borough. Idr. Hume belonged to hurhantl.,. . , , , ! . the relies) reform school Of English polities. _Books of miry deserintiOliinanntsclueet, ponzetapd riled to or , - der, at short notice. NO 12. pia-ADV/C6 TO COSSIIIIPTIT63.-411 SOON good -adytee CU constunptive4, Dr. Hall says:— ''Sat all you can digest, and exercise. a great deo in the open air, to convert what you eat into pure, healthful blood. 1)o not be-afraid of out- , door air, day or night. Do not be ,afraid of sud den changes of weather; let no .s chartge hot or cold, keep you in doors; If it is rainy. weather, the' more need for youti going oklt, because you eat'as much upon a rainy day as upon clear day, and if you exercise less; that much more re- Mains in the system of what ought to be thrown off by exorcise, and some ill result, some conse quent symptom of ill feeling is, the 'certain issue. If it is cold out of &ere, do not malls yopr eyes, mouth and nose in f::rs,, veils, woolen comforters, and the like; nature has supplied you with the best muffler, with the belt inhalirg regulater,that is, two lips: shut them before you step out of s ° warm room into the cold air, and keep them shut un til you have walked briskly a few rods and quicken ed the circulation a little; walk fast enough to keep off a feeling of chillinesi, and taking cold will be impossible. What are the hots of the ease; look at railroad eonduCtors, going out of the ot air into the piercing cold oft winter, and in again ev ery five and ten minutes', and yet they do not take cold oftener than others: You will scarcely find - a consumptive man in a thousand of them. "It is wonderful how afraid consumptive people . are of fresh air, the very thing that would cure them ; the only obstacle to a cure being that they do net get enough of itt: and yet what infinite pains they take to avoid breathing it, especially if _ it is cold; when it is known that the colder the air is the , purer it must be, jet if people cane get to a hot climate, the* will make an artificial one; and imprison themselves for a whole winter in a warm room, with a temperature not varying ' ten degrees in six months: all such people die, - and yet we follow in theigfootateps. If Iwere seri outly,ill of consumption; I would live out of doors day,and night, except it 'was raining or mid-win, ter, then I would sled} in an uuplastered log - house. My consumptivO Mold, you want air, not physic; you want pyre air, not medicated air; you want nutrition, such as plenty of meat and bread will-give, and tidy :dorm; physic has no nutriment, gaspings for air cannot cure you; moo key'capers in a gymnasium cannot core. If you • want to-ger well, go in fer brit aqd out-door air, -and do not be deluded into the grave by newspaper • advertisements, and untlhdable certifiers." watch FAkILT UPTERNMENT i 3 not to children with touspicious eye • to frown at their merry.outbursts:of innocent hilarity ; to ttupfiretis tlicirloyous laughter, and to mould them into little modals of octogenarian gravity. And when they have heeu in fault it is net to punish them simply on account of the personal in jury, that you may have chanced to suffer, in con sequence of their fault; While aisubudieuce,unat tended by inconvenience' l to yourself, passes with out rebuke. Nhr is it to overwhelM the little culprit with a r flood of angry words; to!stnn him with a deafen- Mg noise: to call him. by hard names, which. de' not express hie misdeedi, to load him with epi thetS,'which would be eXtrartigant if applied to_ It' fault of ten fold - enormity ; or to declare, with pas .sionate vehetrience; that; he is the worst child in the world, and destined to the gallow'. But it is to watch ansi'ously for the first risings of sin, and to repress them: to counteract the ear liest, workings of selfishness ;• to surpass the first beg,iiiiiing of rebellion against rightful authority; to teach on implicit and unquestioning and cheer ful obedience to the will Of the parent, as the best preparation fora future allegiance to the require ments of, the civil magistrate, .and.to the laws of, the gTeat, Ruler and Father in Heaven. • Itlis to punish a fault because it is a fault; be cause it is sinful and contrary to the commands of God; without reference tn whether it may or may not have been productive! of immediate injury to the Parent or to others. .It,is to reprove with' calmness and composure and hot with angry irritation ; in a few words fitly chosen. and not with a tnrrent of abuse; to pun- . ish es often as you threaten_ and threaten only when you intend and can remember to perform; to say what you mean, and infallibly do what you say. • It is to govern your f4tnily as in tho sight of Him who gave you your ; authority ; who will re ward your strict fidelity with such blessings as Ho bekton ea on Abraham. or punish your criminal neglect with such curses is ho visited on Eli.—&- tigioosficraid. SArbEICELLENT Apvtb.—On the subject of behaviour in cowpony. Leigh Liebmann gives the following excellent advice to his daughters "Be cheerful, be no gigglers., Be serious hat not dull. Be communicative; but not forwent. Bo kind, but not, servile. Beware of silly thoughtless speeches; although you Way,for i get them, others will not. Remember that God's eye is•in everyt place, and His ear in every company.' Beware of levity and familiarity with young men; a modest • reserve, without affectation, it is the only safe path. Court and encourage serious conversation, and go not into intelligent company without endeavoring to iraprove, by the intor4onrso permitted you.— Nothing is more - unbecoming, when one part. of the comPait l y is engaged in profitable and interes ting conversation, than that another party should be trilling and talking comparative nonsense!! • LEr but the great ibody •of the people be, enlightened by the word of God, and they hill form the firmest bulwarki ngnimit the encroach- - ments of every erroneous pnd delusive system. • z •Per'ROXANHIN AND THE vrlßLE,—Boorish hos tility to the Bible is cenfiried to no particular country or locality. The same deadly hatred to the sacred volume preitiili hero and everywhere. They have burned it in public bonfires in many of the.towni and cities in Atrierica, am% in a few in stances succeeded in excluding It from the publie . schools. We see that sail inspector of schools in France, recently published, for the benefit of the school masters of his departments, his intention of visiting . all the !tattoo!! in company with tho priest , and his determination to: bun- all the Bibles and risignients he might find in tbem, and suppress all hooks, except the catechism of tre diocese, a book of easy' moral lesson's, and a book of with metie: In n late memorial to the Lord Menton . ant of Ireland, by the Romish bishops of that Country, remonstrating against the establishment of certain colleges proposed, it is said in so many .words, that the Ronson Ctidioic pupil* could not attend the lectures on history, logic, metaphysics, - moral philosophy, geology or anatomy, without imminent, danger to than faith, sinless a Bowan Cothotic pro . fmor were appoilized to cock of the choirs. Such is Romanisns the world over. Their aim is to control the schools, prohibit thre,Bible, become the educators of the young, and sow in youthful minds the seeds of their damnable hero idea. Failing here; their abject is to get Protest ant children into Cathalio i sehools and seminaries, and in this they have been but too successful. .:Apropos, the following ii from the Bull of Pope Gregory VI. to all Bishops and Priests: "Yom the reading of the Bible will spring lib erty, of conscience, and 'religious liberty, and thence, as from an inexhaustible 'source, Public prosperity rirld:,political liberty. Accordingly, it -is your dirty toriemove from the hands of tho faith ful, Bibles in the vulgar tOngtie, and all other pro ilibitcd books. We aro confident that onr exer tions and yours will ho se c onded by the civil. au thorities.' j l2Er•"itecEttrt.r-Ilcuirti)."--A person of inferi or degree recently died irt Rochester. He had a trifle over $lOO in the Sitirings Bank. His wife directed tbat this shotild be withdrawn when ho died, in order to secure to: him a "decent burial." The money wax taken 'out, and $Bl 92 were ex pended upon the "wake";hrld the funeral. The Democrat gives the following "bill of items," for the expenses of the "wilta ' Jan. 15, 1855. ! To To 5 gals. whiskey , - ' 4 gals. dark brandy, $3, "" 1 gal: wine, - - " lb. tea, - - " 5 Ibi.arackere, - - "10 lbs.aheese,: - " 3 lbs. tobacco, " 6 doz. pipes, " 4 lbs. sperm candles, FFICE 1E TYPE I. , In this sitt foyfti ',sprats omit; ne 4 / 1 1 that ian bt )LOBS-don omo*. iscttaa~. prepared to description, than It M n Aty, sort as $1 83 - 12 00 . 2 00 - 38 40 - 1 25 48 21 1 50
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers