- T„ 3Y,3 02 THE MINERS' JAIRNAL: ".., ?I'N'IL". e-1:3.-i'lt.ti•TT. ... , . • ~,v.i ' 1;1 .1.1. A !1 ,, ' ptr anr.uul: ply 11,10 in a S.) if not lvanrt•- • •=2 '25 ~,,1 ot:bi , o sit: nootin--mot ;F ir pat ! . ~ ,„1, , r,r. T, ".1.1.:::Sk . ..,, z.i..1. • . 011 P Ittlr.ts , .. is adrom,t,,, ..1, (x) ~.:, 1 ,1.,. a, io . to d, d , - io oo .ii,.,,,, d,,, . ~.,,,. otb‘crtp.i , na Inuit b • int ,triAbly pat,llnodvanre; ~.:,.tot to n riv addrets, ' .. T.) ckaramts ano".e . racni.: . • - .I ,, tu.sm. will be furulAh4 to Carriers and other's per 100 copies. cash on delivery ' ~ •117voten and &loot supot,d with the' 1.0 LI. at tl fu advance. rue LVX OF 'NECrsp . Apip,S. If cilbS • ribors order the dip.e.mtiouance of their nsqe veer', the publi.her may continue to aend them Until , r reArAgee.,:kre Raid. - . I: .Ilb:scribers ne;lect or refine to take their newspar .es f r om th,:,,ineea to which they art directed. they a •1:1 re:N:1511)1e until they have settid-the bitlsaiad rp l, ,i,red theta 41i1410-liliiiiled. / If subscribers move to other 'Aare., without 'alu:ling. : publisher. and the therrf•papers are sent to the former I,s-tion they are hebirespouxibio. Thp courts titre deattdd that refusio,t , to take newspa= from the office. of removing rind leaving .them un far. is prima ticia evidagca of intentin4al fraud. . .. . , , . , RATES Of ADVERTISING. '. 1.. .t n-• linare of ,1 1 1 lilies, 50 cents ter one insertbit-Lsub: .!, . in.sertiens. 25 cents each . : 2'5 lines one time. 2.) i -- - -•-- -- ---- - , ~.. CI ..% -su tr4r jue tit insertionS,l2V cents eacli. All adver- i .. JAMES-H. MU D E Y , • i 1 1. enents over . 1 1 lines, fir short twriods t . tiharged as a• : souse & 'sign Painter, Glazier & PaOr' Hatiger I ' NORWEGION street, first house from 4 • .011,• ' _(1)1X. Iwn. : TitPFX. FIX. TwELVE. ~ . t -•• far , tines, nd'onpOSlto 'Mart imer's note! E•2l. l;71.- $1 5 0 . s' 2 '=•) ,S 3 on l I_ Centre. a . • -I',v.• linei,' 1., 0o 1. 50 2,00 353 500 i , ,f .Wall Paper.. ,11.iven FiltP.l.lstps COUXTP,D AS A meIPARYi Or TtIa,LINPI. I The Besrd Prints, At.. of various styles, at theyeweir Ali Apprentice wanted. ...s' tunic'. 125 200 3 110 '-5 00 8 00 I,,Cash Prices. . 111 - • ~ 00 ' 3 50' ' .5 111. b . 5 AO -12 00 Pottsville. March 31,1855 . (Dec.'3o,'ss 511 13-, Two s.ruares, - - Three squires, 30) 450 ti :',O .lO 0) ,10W ., _...„ f - , ~ Four s .lnt-es, 4 Isi 5 5 1 ) -T 00 ' : 12 u° . u " 1 PAINTING, GLAZING St. PAPERING. Quarter col., .4 no 560 .. §OO 1.5 ',,,),• ~..?2 i, - Removal. • .. . .• Z Half column, 9 (s) 12 00 10 0) 25 0 0 1 0 " ' - .T.' 1 One column, 10 0.) - 2:t 00 30 la) 45 00 f w ; r " ,, .'-W,;BOWEN having 'removed his .14 with an ri - e• lin ;loess-Net iceSs. $1 iteh-arcompa . .10 • shop to two doors above the American llot4e,Cen-' ail v ortisemen t. rot cents aarh. k. , ~, , ..0 . 1 „,, 1 .0 c ,„,t s 1 toe Sleet, and taken lute partnership his brothers, the; A4vertis:aneiiis before ilarria•;el. 1 sulsscribers announce to the public thattheyl, are prepared ' i t pe-. tine for first ins....rti)n--:sabseque3nl:inSer' tions.s cents 1 to ex.t.cute allt%rders in their line with the\ greatest drel - ''' . 1 4 • 'a spatch. minion - the most reasonable terms, ' They employ i . line :Vim! words ate eoutitel as a line qu o dertislag.• . . ri . ... 2 i.. p l'llercisnts and , others,. atiFuct_i , n l4 ' by the ' 7 e 3 .4 r , 7!i / 0 ' good Workmen and their customers may, there Tore, bet , s,--ez. ..,c•-• , -. SITICLIS OP .tailittlT. - ..4 ' 7. ' 4 ' .. E' rhirntes, and it stateling:fulrertis,mtont not e5.c..., in,t - sit - 13m.; of '2O lines, will ri,e'ctiare-ed. including 'subs-Tit, , sure of satisfactoryjebs. -. i '• . •'t "Ji s. Z „lir, no , The,.. also, beg leave to call attention to their splendid' itc_ t i coo- Dry Goods. , Confectiouery,'Books. * Carpet- I • . . a 'tr. 4 . 42; -.,--,- s „„„ to the amount of one fluarttirc. 4 nut n, with , . assortment of Paper-hangings, Wintiow-shades, - -.ll.ing•e , and subscriptkin. , 21) . .nt) , prising every variety of style and quality, to snit. the I - An in v g its. 'e l l l g ni a iTt7tt 3 . l V 4lsh i Glas tar- Ic I ' B°' ' • ii- Ivichr,ut. chant:es. at the rates f . icsiA3lateti above. , . ' , .' 1 Page a ' lld pocket of purchasers. - and which . . - they,orr . er a . ...thenware,Grindstones. p G pe roc r eri 4P' ll to vi cer tkeltients sit in lar,f,r - typo than usual wi11..ix...1 the lowest-City; prices. , J. W. BOW E,'..`i .t.BILOTI1E11.8:' ' ..,, ~,v e t 7ot per cent. atirance , on these pri , ies. All.cuts 1 ms, ardware, Hides. Hollow-ware, '._2 '• I lln n "'• e P 2 ', . 2 doors above American House, Centre St. I ~ i'. i t., chrpel the s um, as ietter pose. -s; T 'a d, x4p.rtis.mnt.nttt •rettelved from Advertising 1 Pottsville, Apr 11,17.1852. 16-% if Leather,llachinery Oystersolls,Seeds,. I Al A eSt ,.. e . r.CottoniCollee.Grairl.l3.ar ." Tron, ... tz. nt, alw,llt-I.o:Ceept at .::, per cent. advance on these I „ ;, • ~..: unto,4 1,2,- st,,,nal tic:reemetit with. the pub isher., I I-. 4.;earl. Molasseli..Nalls.Spikes,Rtee,slur. /S. Iti,l er i ,_-_,,; c ents oadt. 11),Inths:a"cornytnit1 ith tti, i ',. ___ :_.__ . . .2._ ___ _ _ ..-. _____ _ _ ,----, ''!. Brv i lo r l v a, i li n re g' i s k u if:: o wh outo lsk o, eY MlN . ton i I 'l :.11.0TEL . - t,,,..,:, cents, with :lit notices. tie char:e. 0. rotie is. evl..et th,se of a relizitius chara-Iter and ': "'THE- UNION(' • ~ ,• I Pitch and Tar. Salt.4 l lertip Iroti,Timber ). 14 f, , r oluto h.nal purl - wises, will tee,,ibtrged 25 cents for any )loch . m c lul k..s i L Co um k b . e e, r . C . o A rd e l Rood, :, Clay. Gravel, • ~..mo..r 4 liner, nutter 10. Orel' 10 lines. 4 . cents per Strifet, between 3d 4 4th, Philo:In: . . , i ns I , l4itionat. . ritorpaETons-EVANS ..t NEWCOMER„ . . . 'Brill i',*:* ii II! , of nt.441.11,:s not of a general or nubile char- . . , . ~ Inv, Limetton6, Manure, Pig 12 . FOltlIE It I.T WEBB & .NEIii',COMEUI• . 7 ; • Iron, Plaster. Si,ste, kr , '. •tor. charged at 4 cents per line for sta l e ericinsertit tn. , , . 1 . .Theirs o. Nears, , . Flour. per tetrrel. • ' '2O. T. , fwilit.tto raletil ttions we will t that ll2‘t lines :, II,• a r damn-16r lines a half I...intuit-4nd S 2 lines a , 1 1 1 : .•; .. ..t. i. 'e. itAsr-L . in ;A 7 1 'to 101 Df;itNtti-13 en t';:t trtly,l't o 3 .. Oct. '2l 18.54 ' 42-tf 4 . t . 7; 11 ' 2 ' • ~,.„, Ladies' I - -''--- .• • la trier column. 2.45 d wordy ntake a cohint n-1476 a half . \•' , I,VU:J-and 7'..1i a ..p.tarter column. All odd lines over L. Philadelphia..Ft.bruS. iy-24.1K.5..74,„ _ _. ,_ 5.. ,..._ 1y' . ,, , ..., -: PHILAD'A .I.= READING RAI - OAD. e vil 4in ire. r•ltarif.ni tit tit - • rAte of I rents per line, '.J. S. STEBBINS', . ' . i i isigumillint: - - --- 14: - =. T. Yearly int, ertisers‘riuust e ,,,,fi,,, , . their n .iv e rti,l)::: t 0... ANNIIM . a.... 1.1 . ".1.11k . 1 , 1t or 't er. . t toinoWn inn.ithic,.... Accede , ftr others. f.n1,0 of Roll I.:s- ' ' i ii..t'll;t: of the Philatia. &H. IL Co. t,, , ,,,.tz,., b, not i...:11,1.0ci,i business ativertisentents. COURTLAND STREET,HOTEL, Tile AVednegday Dolliiii• Journal /Tv,. 28 C6tirtland Street, New York, - 7,, ,-!' . . Philadelphia February 28,1855, . , ihe rates of /might and Tolls on Coal, transported by Is puldish,.:l at th.. %Mir.. of GI Miners' Journal at .z.:l - IN V l'l'E S the attelAton of . C-ral ',\ fer- • rthis C. , ?? 4 Y,-vIU be aafollows. Irian March bili to June per 114.11t1T11. -AA ct.r a...meats Anserted,ea Av. nquai rate. ~ A ' Intl' ..lbol • • , 'lnuits and Operators. and the trarelitt,; • pul.lie \inale- • ' • • ' t . , IA 4,,,lucti.n of 50 p"r -emit. is made front the Journal-' rails I o Ilk ei.talili:4lltdent which is situated in 11 etil,if [t4 X- .., . • l••••,1 14 11011 p , ..rslnc advert i.se itt,hoth pap,rs. . . itaity ti, the place or landau;; fosse PitlNtelphis, 11osten" The .tinerican Republican, . i D.,. 15,'S:i s,4itiil, • ‘ tiertnan pap-r. at i'l. per 1011111 M. II Issued from the . - -7.- -- _ _______ - of the Ntin...r.' .Ir.,u}mal 1:v ,•",, W. A. IIEIizLERA: CO. .., WESTERN HOTEL. U. D. Winchester, Propript9r , . . ._ Courtland et., New York. - REAL ESTATE SALES. (PHIS 94.1 •- ! lloeel is lusted in the fills es. .. i ..- ; x part of the city. and near tile real Exchting... To. •,, .10R • sjulE . ___.:A F ni ' „ i e liouse..-1 . persons tra, ellie , ..frait. Penns: , Ivania, it I, vecy•conveni; ~ 1 . 1 and hit on niist Market street. for Nile on ma-lU' . ! eHt t I ' 4 " situ ' ll ' al ' ut a re s. ''''‘N'' frifia the J. je "''') . F O r Y , ., J %%% Ho w E N k B r o c- 1 where the: . rla . nd ,. . . ''4 ' ' r , ,nnt,l,terlng. Apply" - to ; • . at titers and Paper ll. Angers, Cent r u street. Pottsville. i '' anuar . ' . , it,:ri,l.".h r.o.tint_' .: ' CHESNUT STREET HOUSE, • • .., . . 1 Illk SALE OR REN A desirable , 121 (lIESNI.' TS TB 1...: E'T, I'lllhA PE LP111.4. i. -T -! SAMUEL 11ILLER, PROPRIETOR. • i ~ :;.bar)4nm.. dwelling. in Merri‘' Addition.elear of all .; u;:;t.ratie es . withal' till , modern improvements. in gas. , ' 0 those is - ho are fond of good livin - - - ,: ,!,•r. &c. '.Tire house iN -Pt feet [tont. and the lot ID) kind treatment and courteous :Men ion. and who, `. deon. with a lar.tit frame dwelling how, in the rear. at die same time. have no money typend thr What they ........... , ................ !!. Pottstown - . •,ession zis en en the 1,- 'ef Ap r il:l ..,e, Te e 'terms to a o red get. we would say. patrotilse , t,eueralMlLLEß.- , ~.... - .tit puridetsers. !All app teatimes to be cadet.'t . we house is io the most business levet of the city, and , " DougLassille , . ,; W.• 11. 'OT TS, Agent fa the Estate. near the Merchants Eaehange, flout witich the omnibuses.. *. Itirdslairo' , .. Readifir..' - . Pet tat ill.. oan _PI. '56 - - run t., ell parts of the city every few 'minutes. , . - e . 1 -- -- - - - 1-Im. : " Between . - Reading . and 1 1,1 R SALE -The premises latelv2 •- • (""' '• ' •' • .., 4 ocriiided be .1. It. Nietorlit h.in the upper end Ce. ; 1 . . . ' Mohrsville, • ' •'. TREMONT HOUSE, - -.-." Mohrsville, f Thiletritenier street. Potts-y ille.. The lan, iy, e xnb.. • Treinont, ,Schitylklll , County, ra, 1 .• 4. Hamburg. .- .. ..4,4t•i,t1 stone buildiee. 27 feet trent. in good order and - • • . .! Orwigsburg, --‘ . ;air. The 1 , 4 is 1211 feet front 1.11 Mabanbater , street., HILIP- KOONS, formerly Inn-, ;; • ----- By order of the Board of Managers. • 2:,0 feet in depth. to a letek , street.. This property is keeper in Pinezrove. would respectfully Infirm. Marco 3.1855 9 , 4 f . S. BRADFORD. Secretary tee of the most desirable r e sidents in Pottsville. For ! his fermer patrons. and the public generally. that! terms apply to JilllN SIIIPPEN. Esti- • 'taken the -ritEmosr tiorst:." to Treninnt; and is pre-! . e , President ct the Miners' Bank, Pdtsrille.. PUBLICATIOI4 pared to eoradve ancraccommode` in the best manner, .1. itIN M. SCArt - r. E -t. 1.. all guestri who may favor hint wi th t a tall. IF4LhOWton N.1 40- ' ,l 'luhteir i ' l "• ! - frit - 11., would also bring to the notice of,tlit' , people - ' :----- . --• s-. 1-t f • DUNLAP'S • . • ''•LAWS OF THE . UITED STATES... , TO THOSE WHO WISH 'FARMS : in ft, mountainous ernintry. blessed - With saluhr , iwis Mr.'. ' . ' not quite four miles distant from the beatitiful •{\ 3,ltara k , DIGES'r Of the General Laws of it) have Fertile I,and at a cheap prwe • pflts:' making it altogether a desirable place .r Summer . and wi eruy tants. :tour attention is called to the resort. 1 P , April,l4'.P!ss 154 f _ A _ thellnited States, with references to the Acts .re• 1 ealed t : supplied or modified, and Notes of Decisions and lta tem AY FARM AND COAL COMPANY. Twenty fire , Di. to of the supreme ' Court of the. United States, by 'f!"!:.; a more in proportion, are given for S.a.e.' JAMES DUNLAP. Just published and for saleby , . in Tentsalutents 'of $1 per week er $1 per month. It is'l73'hie WATCHES JEWELRY - B. BANNAN. . located in Elk eonnty. Pennsylvania. and has Otte of the 1 3 . ',lre4 Markets for ft. , preduee In the 'State. The Weil is a ! AVISE'S , - • - CRATES! -, • • - .. rich /earn, and is not' to be surpassed forfa6rotty. :IS tl7.- .', . . • ' - - Just Published, a New Discovery in Medicine! amination will. show. It has the best elements Id pow-. : . 11-LEAP . Watch and Jew- . •• A FEW WORDS ran the ratronal treat pretty; {wing underlaid by two rich veins or real, :cod' elry "Store, N 0.72, North - Second ' L.• ' i iiiti . meat, without Medicine;of Spertnatorrht a will shortly be intersected by four railroads. The thn- . street, (opposite the Mt., Vernon -........... . i or Local Weakutess, Nervous Debility, Low - sber {A of the most valuable kind. -. Title unexceptirin- , • 'House). Philadelphia.. - - i 11111 tort om - • Spirits,Lassitude,Weakness of the Limbs ably good, and warrantee deeds are given. it presents , Gold Lever Watches. full Jeweled, IS K cases. $2B; Sil-1 - and Back, Indisposition and incapacity for Study and a good and substantial opportunity to commenee far- , ver Lever. full Jeweled, $l2; Silver Lepine.s9: Quartier, Labor, Dullness of Apprehenaton„Loss of Memory. Aye:- ming.,ph:,,,vidiaie for wse s ehildren nr inakint; an invest ss to $7; Gold Spectacles. $4 50 to $10; Silver Spectacles" stem to Society, Love of Solitude, Timidity, Self-Distrust,mont. ',..4"ur.the e particulars ean be bad from the pout- . $I 50: Silver Table Sperms. per set, $l4 to $18; Silver Dar Dizziness. Head-Ache, Involuntary Discharges, Pains in phlets flitch 371{ sent to inquirers. Letters answered ! iver, :poops. .i:',l to $11: Silver Tea Spoons. $4 75 to 7 So; the Side. -Affection of the Eyea ' Pimples on Abe Earl? ps , ,,nptli: Apply or address :•;A M. 1., W. CATTELIo Sec., Gold Pens. add Gold • cases. $320 tra-$5; Gold I'ens and Sexual and other Infirmities in 3lan. 1:15 WALNUT Street. north Side. ltjeween Freirth and i Silver cases. $1; toeether with a variety of tine Geld Jew." : '. From.the Paunch of Dr. B. De Laney. Fifth sts.;' Philadelphia. Full information issontained (dry. Gold'Curloluand and Fob chains. All goods war- The important fact that thesealirtningcomplabats may In the pamphlets. ' Feb. 9. 18:.6 Chn . .. W re -__ .rtnted to be as represented. atches and Jewelry . ,i; easily,.be removed without Medicine is in-this small trio t . • PRIVATE SALE. ; paired in the best manner. Also. lilasonie Marks, PititrelearlYtteinonstmttl; and the entirely new and highly • dc. made.to order. . • •.' .suc..essful treatment• as adopted by the author, fully ex , \t rim, be sold,.on reasonable terms, iN. 8.--All „... .. oy mait .. tr otherwise. will be . 'plained:hy means of which every one is enabled to cute T two houses and lots of groutyl in Tamaqua.- ! punctually at enaed to. Sept. 22,-','55 Vela." '-, 1' himself perfectly, and 4t the least poseiblecatt. treoldlng , Bounded oh the west by West street. 1,-Y 3 fifty reef street. l ' I Itierebfall the advertise/a nostrums of the day. eu the south, and a thirta" feet street' on the east: These I ' STAUFFER & HARLEY '• . r Sant to any address gratis , and post free in a sealed en- , • 1.4. are well f l •nced and \re numbered,296 and 297, are ! . CHEAP WATCHES' S: JEW ELILY-Wboliorale , velepe.. by remitting (post paid) two postage stamps to eaett :10x170 fet, The ht pies are good and comfortable ! , _ ii ,„2.-; and 'retail-at the -Philadelphia ,Irdtch and', . ...;., . DR. B. De'LA NEN , . dwellings, with,a well of Water op the premises. The : • Jewelry .'ore," :No . 96 North Second street ; cor.! Setif: M . 5 51 , 17-6 mo 17 Lirpenard St:, NOV /in* en . ratens are furnished witlrfruit !rat:. such as peach and , , T/P ' - our of Quarry, Phi adelphia. ~ .1 TI ME CE NEW VOLUMES eherry. also, curraets, loth black and red. A very deli- • Gold Lever Mdche.t..foll Jeweled, 18. carets fine, $2B. ' . ' or cable property ,!either to retain- n its present state or for l ' Geld repine Watchea. 18 to $24. MACA'CLAY'S ENG LAND. - ', ereetine additleAl houses, which could be readily and ' Silver Leteefulfiewelled,sl2lGolit Spectacles, - $7 00.- D profitably rented, , inquiries will be answered. and fur 'Silver Lupine. jewels, -9 I Fine Silver do I 511 rr E.C_ontihnation of, this great 'work then tufamation Oven by either of the undersigned. ~ ' Supe.rior Quartiers, 7 Ladies' Gold Pencils, 1 00' IIS tine ready for delivery. 'The Various editions can . `W. S. W EPIITTM AN, Mount Carbon Gold Bracelets, - 3 I Silver Tea-spnons. set. 1 00 , ' - be lead of th.. Subscriber. - -..., n , 1.. P: LI. Met'AßE. Tamaqua. . \ ..:; {131.1 Pais. with Pencil. and Siiver H ' olders $l. ' Prices of Butler's Philadelphia Edition, 50 A.,,, 644 eta. per - ',;VI -41.4 f '•• .Gobt Finger-ring5.:',7 , ...; cents to Sett; Watch Glasses, a olume. . --, ' 7 - :: plaiff.l2t,s cents; patenf. 157 . 1 cents; turret, 25 cents :'• Harper's New York Edition. 25,62% and $1 5.1. i . VALUABLE COAL AND TIMER LANDS,;' tr: other articles in proportion. All goods warranted to be' • 'Phillip's L. Sampson's Boston Edition, 50 cents. - TOWN LOTS AND ,LANDINGS, ~.- :,:. wliat they are Slid fa. STAUFFER ,t HARLEY. I ' Millie im,,iir before and behind the Curtain, by Anna ' . . • ' FOR' SALE, • . Om hand-same Gold and Silver 4.evers' and Lepince Cora Ritchie, (formerly Mrs. Mowatt). ' .4 2" .rni 1 - .11'1..; olt l'l - BLit.' Si LE. - ; atilt lower than the above prices. .. . ; Rose ('lark. by Fanny Fern, . g :o -' .. .29 9-10 m '55 :1 . TIIE subscribers beinmit -to re. •• t •S-.Pt • . , Basket of Chips. by John Brortgliam. . Crotchets and guava's, by Max' Ntaretzek. . move teat.. W e st. offer f. ir sale, n{ ,thantageous 11 - p. WATCHES. . ' The Memoirs ef Susan Ailibnno. tarns, all their real estate in SOluvllsill ettinty. Penn- ' .11J,T RIXEIVF.D, en extensive rssortMent of ' Ambrose's Leeking unto Jesus. sx i t rinia, areara 'which'ere the f a elbing tracts: . Watehe .as 1 ., {flows: , • Modal, Pilgrims. by George Wood, 2. vols. . • IN TREMONT Ve11';',S11111'. • . . Fine troll Magic hunting and Hunting Case - The Testimony of an'eseaped Novice, by Miss Bunkley. , . I. 520 acres valitable,Coal land adjoioing the town of Patent Eever. from V*o to $2OO. ' The New Purchase. by hail. ' Tremont: known AS 1.11. , Red Mt. tract. IVArrantee. Ja-. t r Gold Anchor Leva and Lupine. from $22 to $5O. lowa as 11 lA, a eompleri; guide for emigrants. e.h Gunckle. Fisyn, the south Sidt. of his tract the Mine Mree• Iracher-liunt ineatul Open- Fare from $5 tri $4O. Moister liarl'a Sketch Book, byt. U. Leland.. . Hill Raileorei is leerifed. and near the east? side. thef-Swa- I Jewelry-Also a - very extensive assortment nf Fine Jew- Tlie Elm Tree Tales. ' ' ' • • t are n a ioirad. Then- is also a fine waterpower (the East I . e t ee , , flayard Taylor's Irldia, China and Japan. • . • •.- s..y a tara: ( - leek. up - M . the'seuth side. Upon the east side ! ' Mater/ ;Firm -Just received, a variety of the The Good 'rime Corning, by T. S. Arthur. • '''. • te e n , . are ale,ut: 3. 4.1 acres .4 the best lim ber..stil table for . latest patterns and best quality. bythe set or sin- The Hidden Path. by Marion Harland. . , pi! to. sills end curd-wised, suftleient to pay the prim , g Fancy Gonds-In ee ry le piece,The Match girl. or Life Scenes as they are. - r ,e.. ,'.laor the t met. T his'tract undoubtedly presents the ' . l variety, such as Fine ' All new hooks, received as soon as published, and for '3l .At laver-able. opportunity for investment ' , tiered to ' China Figures, Flower Vaerazal rkstands. Ornaments. Le. sale at B. BANNAN'S Yapitilist to GAY minty : e .11asies,d Instruntents.-Sup. Violins, Gultarl. Actor,'. . , • . . Donk and Stationery Store - . 1 2..16 •y'..r.•s int chit! ly adjeini nit the als,ve on. the d'eons. Flutes.. Le,. ,k,.. (' - , . - ,;.,..4 . ,ia.,., on whie't are et erted, Ityve double dwelling ing • ~r ,0, 1 ,1, 3 , atferell at the lowest market pricett hr tee s. H . .:._ . ,t, ' ,Call and see for yourselv,..nt • . i.: 126 arras, warrantee. Wm. Graaf. situate at the. . • • • MAX LEI BItERS, i Lob. L. Fisher.) . „ . . n,letinft of. the ! Mon, Lorberry and swatare Ilainead"... - . ' Centre street. 3 ..1, - errs above Mahantango.r Tbe Soutlo.'..in is urn this trait. and also a large quan- :. Pottsville. Der. le. 1.54 ; Atte. 2tl "4' ' 404 f tits of tine E{ulber, -.,7:, Atr 64, , lit ~ it .4 , 411.•,. Coal land. warrantee. 5... - 11: -- Feint:le situate upon emu eest side of the Swatara Rail- , r lA. \WWI wbf, h is a break,•r 1e... at the S,•hupps.. veip. Th • Soittli vein is Ake, upon this inlet. • .. s•, aaes (''cal land. warrant.", I'a 4 witirre Ileberlieg.' 'ill.. Ransil l'reel: rues through.und tle• extension ',4 the Mile! Gel Railroad will pa, •oeir this tract. This is ..,,,. of the 1..-.. t Coal terets it, the region, the largest veins 1.4111 up-•n it. and being already opened and prv,!n.. Th.. 1',131h,, , tr.zl.l -tract. containing about 570 a.-res. 4 ,• ne a which the Lerberry Itailead is now ro .; . iet ' ~, .!1-11 ',,,{. 33({ ..,..i. which the contemplated , ii - ~,,..,,:,..., ..,,... also pass. There ~";,."; is n . - e- urn this' tenet a' eolliery, worked 1y Ile ley L. N:-wrma,•r. and a iar,:e wuntity of excel r!!.!!!!4.-r. It adjoins Inds ow - red by J. 11, Mauch. ue n emelt a large breaker is now ere...ting, Ind rental ' th- web. 'vies rat see 11. 7.1 3 Pres part ei lel saes. warrantee, W. Hoch, ad -!!!!'. .: laird , of Fi'yhi rig Cr,-et, Company .. : . ~7 .e ere'-. warrantee. loterllule!r. a:ijolitine' the Pau- . !...t...• , 1101,1 old John Miller treas. . , 0 71 ', T o e warrantee, Samuel' Ilain. situate near the • Jue.-tier of th e s,6iar e ,,pnion and Label - rY Railroads. ' !‘ , ..'eel arm, 1 ., -631. {and. formerly owned by Charles ' 7.try.l•-r. adjoining' Keller's impeoetneo t_ and tract of ..0 serer. warranterr. , sleyepli S. ether. and Nlicha,•l Selt- ' r,...warranlee. .{. li .' 114 ate - u warrant.,, Francis spaaxer, lying near the-irinetim el the Uhion. Swatart and Lerferr Hall. reeol. I:tnunry . '1,!I Tamiqua. ort.l“,' „. Ig4, 12 12{1 atn'ns. 21 perehor, w - arrantee. Hain, atal the J1.111,0D11 of thr.ttne reads. l't 1 - .4 :t-rett. per.thett. trarrantee..Franrks ;ipar.t7ri. deing'fan.l4. , ef .roltn le.iher. warrantee. and Mieltael .-..tratttee. attd . near th... Feather tract. i ( angle,, nitvz the %Via. T..tbia. and t" at her traeta. Tit. f.drosti az has jou thr. town cf Fremont: Sr. 29, f r,nerlp owned 1, Jaint-s . . . iiiiil ~ • S3ITIPIIII e f..rd. ' Sr.. 75. • " " ral rid: Neeley. N , .s. 1 ci.i k Inc., ,- - Jilin I larii, , , 14:: it 144. i" Pat ri.•ir lirirriloy. . . i IN Nr tvN i; T , )‘‘ ssitiV. 1 - . acres, iatql. o w ned by Jahn and liarilvl Mr4r. Si riviriAtoi.v.l r r. " 1.."..1fi " I ••‘ Sautue,lidilin. ' . -., .. • •IN N )17WEGIAN T..W5.V . 1111.. . ' 1 • I?. i 3 of l'N at es. adjoining Lands of Solomon, Christ ,1,.1 A l.ratatn, Fer. lg. • 2... '.., (.1' 4410 .2: '.f.. i‘Ojr.ininir, Inp4x .if Wrri. (irahli ;tnie i 1 ' f '-ir:tn , l Hain, trarrentee, - late the estate of wiiii nn _ It--h. ..... - . , 4. 'l' ' IS I N EGROVII T.)WNSIIII.. . ' 21 In a , rosli nh'er, land. situate upon the Blue Mt • 'r , . , ,0 , 7 , ..i.1,v lands of Grove and Peek. and Jun. Markey. 9 a4 , ,,,,inunediattly west of Peter Filbert's tavern, t in 1'i.....zr .v.h. bring a Trearurer's title. .! - I , 4 ,,, , , r , , , ,Z;f , rtner1y the property of John Strimpller. .!; 1 ,, , 3 , res;pranorly the prOpeity ,of Christian lo,y'a 1 ,- ...4,1... . t , . ' - •^`rev f ermr rly , the property° f Samuel Elate and "1" °E. 'he'nut land, ad - ;• . !Art,. Ephn Zerhe and D 3% id Uhler and j • Wre .rt I etV trtrt • of the John Zerbe farm fs2 •Irrt. p , i•rches.lef ehranut timber ' that` t ae.3rinunr r .-lubb and John 91erhe's land, n I n liatltoid. and miles .oal loY f ty at rineitmve 24. acres.perches.timber land. 1•t4.-fh 417 Juiutr% lyinx ont.ide of th C r" , kl ptn..land roa s t:lining. about 125 I. 'gloat.. shiest. V milt from Eckert & an t, I 111,1 ter int h, fi, up t t i n Yyncriti hart Rah, itt,st, th rnnch tt . terilyine It very roneeinent for• the in.nufarl or. of HP. t.e 2. 1 t 'urn! ts ty B neeltz 4,1 tithr, to the town et I 'le, r tit I EN 811.01, ' , lt'll , I I] F: Ito{ Irty ffrmcriy one. 1'1) lo.rl k. hirton I 12nst t hatffni yn t Imnburrs MIT tilt Kauffman 1 lul ; h unlol uu (ho A a , 1 Er. -1 F. udi by I .4 of Fred al • "' 001 by lulryth It . tont.and north by ostriz T 5 " 1• +it h p ru,p,ll "syn itroet. with yt : fr:~ al1 I i""tt I yty.l 1, ofitn,r t he , • „- tt end lat. In J'oekson •111•or.,on SouthFnd. hatootad.l.l. S.r.te • , 31,p!“ torch a hoar,. TALI:, and veal , tl-•• 13 , 1 T , Werilli.ll je: ' • 4' and 4 a•-•reo o t P li; , l ll [l:4,zan . UPI. on tha 1. z•to 'tarn t t reek and otqn Canal 2.i landlntat. Nog. 4. :1..3 xnol she weft akt o of n 110.111. • A ''aUtre landiriz iu the'rulan Canal Ilaoin. to '-reels aro nm9ny: h., in -at rnmeni.nt np the El3sin, trin:r.,'alrea;tr wharfed. with t truorel-uork to 01311) t% 00Iona ann an ually. a,' It, tr,,ta are ol.lA a, ada dtf not •••• 0,1 I to dlotnaefof al put;lte• ordo, npan Eagter '•lu • , lareh Sat h. lf•A al . at the hotel. Kam , . In ttot.',u a' of Tremont. Further in . 4 li - irlbtflilld , p!lent I 4:lta David roc 4l- - . t”.l,ohn at 1,43 11114)111. I*. 'a!r.t:7,ltwt 1.118 •• . ,--. .;:,."; ~ • ';',.:7;•,1•?..,,, ' ' '''''. - • .. , . . . . . . ", ... • "M.. . . I J _ ... 0 -• ..1 s • ••1 2 . . . ...._ - c . • -. ; • ' • • '' I . , . J ..../.- .- . . . . . . .• .. . . ._ ...... . . - : - A. :ND .pcinsvlLLF, , . . , • ~ ~ . . ~.. . . .., . . 7 ..„ ..... , . . ~, . . . . . . ~ . .. . PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING, I.BY-..04,1) . ix,i11.-)3ANNA.I%I':, ;poirts - ylii 4 E,•scilum: •.:‘ootiiTY-"PENXSIYIOYANIA.I VOL. XXXIL AINTING . ,. &C.. 'TO BUILDERS. , - LUMBER! - LUMBER!! rI I IIE subscriber having on the i st Clay of November;lsw, purchased the entire interest of Harris. Severn t CO., in a sawmill at Mount !tope, situ- t, atc iu thwuAlip. SchtlYikill county,. is prepared to furnisr4liilts of:Lumber with despatch. nod respect fully solicits the rtininiuze so• be ' s tow e d. on the t retired firm. aussEm.... = January 1.. 7,5 ,LUMBER'AND PROP TIMBER. -aIi'TZER & I)A.VIES, are prepared to \ supply any quantity of lirmlorlVand other tlm-, her, from their Mills' (sawed to order) at the cheapest I.' rates. Dealers and builders will find it their interest to buy fr , M them. They I.AVe also a quantity of propitim- i her for wee. which they will 'deliver on the Little tlehuyl-, kill Railroad. 3 stilts 3411N0. Tamaqua. Tamaqua, July 7. '55 LUMBER! LUMBER:: The subscriber resketfully announces! k to the public that he has completed bin Steam Cir cular Saw-mill in Locust Valley, Schuylkill county, and is now prepared to furnish all kind. of Lumber at the lowest prices—such as Phut. Hemlock and White Dak.of eti.ry Size and description. ACE,- Dills of Lumber cut to order at the shortest notice. t' Nos. I ,- ,'55 46-tf EDWARD K. BLAND. WILLIAMSPORT PLANING , MILL, WM WE Ezr n Sunbury & Railroad and the Canal, Opporite the Furnace. iriltianorport, Penn rr, i IEO.. S. BANGER & CO„ jr.v..tle and net :vir rimier., and Manufacturers of white and :cellow pine llo.zr, log boards, sasb, doors, blinds, shut ters. siding. wood mouldings. Sc. .3iz and scroll sawing.i fincy and plain. MI descriptions of turning and planing i done with.promptness,,and In the best•tuanner. Feb. 1. 'fo; . , &Iv LUMBER! LUMBER II THE Dauphin S; Susquehanna Co., haying . tiro saw milts running. can:flit with dispatch.. and at filo lowest rates. orders for Hemlock. l'oplaror Oak • lumber. of the usual sizes and lengths under IA) Also, Chesnut shingles. shitiglire'. lath, and plastering lath always 011 hand. Persons desirous of ordering brea-'. Ver bills or at - y heart'" quantilieS of lumber, will find It' to their Interest to apply to the undershm ed. as the Com-i. posy has a large number of trucks on the track, and can give great despatch to any orders they may receive. - ELLWOOD 11 )RIIIS. Eng. re. Supt. " Letter address---Harrishurg, Pal - NoThmber 1A.'55 -4 ----- ---- - NEW LUMBER YARD, 1 At least the present is your own, In Schuylkill Haven. I - While all the future is unknown. . . . . 1_ I)Al. NI & FRITz, iespectfully - invite , ' A happy marriege, mars or maid Can now secure by RON DOM. aid. the attention of Builders and others, to their barge - assortment of Seasoned and Green Limber, which they ' coNtrems. will be prepared to furnish by the latter end of March t: . It teaches how to make ladies or gentlemen win the next, ' .devoted affections of as many of the opposite sex as their at the lowest pyreible rates, FOR CASH!! e and Tettowitetz Boars • hearts may desire. And the plan is so simple , yet so cap Our stork consists of Wiiii --; t . t Prating that all may be married, irrespective of age, aye P text:Land Dowse. Also heavy stuff. such as DEANS, pearance or position: and it can be arranged with such JoL.rn4. I. 4 rrrnx. SC.SNTLINC.S. Pens, Sc,. We hale also or'• tiered a More asNartment of different .qualities of - Jo:ger ', .. teachesand delicacy, that detection Is impossible. It how to make love.. and LAP SHINGLT.g. PICKET'6, CEILING-L.IIIU,- Psusit and It teaches every eye to form a beauty of its own. PLANE.. together with all other materials belouging to the • It teaches how toilet when fascinated by a lady. Lvtuber Trade.' It tenches how to make the wrinkled revelment One 6f the lion being a practical , builder. we flatter .1 t tea Ches you the, kind of wifo to select to render home nurselvee on having selected our stork in such &manner h i ppy. ..,. . a 5. ingiv r e entire sit iefact ien. Our heavy lumber has been satveatto order. thus preventing much waste to the per- . It gives adrice;to the lover who boa been once truly sc; eePted. and is rejected afterwards through, the interfe eltssee or builder. ' roma' of friends.' Call and examine, before purchaelne elsewhere. Yard .; It dies a remedy for an requited love. • . opptadie Dr:Point's of fi ce. P. It. PALM. : , It gives you Instructions for bietUtifying the person. EDWIN IT. FRITZ. ' Dow to have abandseme fare and hinds. .." _Schuylkill haven February 21.15t, - 5, S-ly . new to rentointan and freckles. ', • A LeCture on Lese - , or a Private Advice to Married La dins CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS. .! ditat and Gentlemen. Tlio Schuylkill Co. Lumber & Ntuatilicturing Co., This is decidedly the most fasAnati ea.. Interesting and really useful and practical work on Courtship, Statrimo. Il k WING now ',, their large Shop on • nv. and the duties and delights of Married Life. that has Railroad Street in ,Ball operation are prepared to ever been issued from the Amerhan press. This artificial fur:, t:t, to carpenters and builders. generally-. Doors: •soeial system. which In so many Instances .prevents a ttlimls.:;llutters., Sash Mouldings; Door and Window union of hearts, and sacrifices to conventlocuslism the, Frames: and every article In our line In, the latest style . happineiS and even the Hereof thousands of the young ..sod workmanlike manner, and at a saviag'of 25 percent. 'and hopeful of both sexes. ii thoroughly analyzed and .on former cest. Tbry have :deo on hand a large as&fdt• exposed. Every one who contemplates marriage, and mint of . ' -4 - tl .. wisb;nl for an infallible guide in the steleetion of *partner . White Pine Plank , 7.. 21.4. 2,1 - V. .11, i. I. 't.' ‘ A -1 ,-,:ittelnieti. ' for life. should pnreilasethiegreat teit book of tubbable! ... ' White Pine Beards and White Pine Fleeting. • felicity. ' .• yAl ou do t in . Yellow; de Pin, No one will ever regret the price paid for such an I • D r y and 611+01 Detnleek of all kinds for building: pur- - valuable secret. . peva.. • Bills Of.any of the specleinythg banks la tire . 'Znl Oa„. Merle. Poplar, f hair. Plank and Scan t iln g' Beardi. States or rareadasrieilvedat par. Gold dustean . las t i and la: ineh. , ~..iling% .. . , from California., , ; ..., -. Clrery and Walnut Plank. - for railing . MI that is Demur., for You to do h to *rite a letter . . - Also turned work. such as bed posts. tabls legs. berths In as few wordy •as possible, enelosinC one dollar. sal tees. on hand or turned to (nyder. and bills .f.stuff sawed write the name, with tbi Post office. County and !date, to order at thesitortest notice. ' : end direct to PROF. RONDOET..PuUtsher it Aid/sett , One Ten none. Engine with 2.11 feet better. all itemplete • - • 'N0.82 Forty:4l*th street. New York. ...and in we'd order, for sale, cheap. by th:.t Stelinylkill.Co.4 Dew err & Damestider. I en&leasetts atreets.are the wliole , iments-r eorneany. ~ ~. . . • ' - de agent.. buts Apsuf:. , ock , '!olerf:' • , .p,4 s ; spy, in,..,:u..t it 0..5 • • . :;•.: 1f , 11,-- R. , r.: - , . . • . . . Mil .11iNk. ....... - --- - .. . . ~... . . . .. . ' ~'?.- • . • • - . _• ! I liILI.. 'TEACH 1 - 01:.' TO PIERCE.V4EAKIWELEI.CiF THE EARTH, AND BRING Ottt,VNONFItIN•CAN NA air.moixtitsra, 11.ETALS.W$ICH WILL GIVE' SPRENcTi T4:OI,TIt HAti ISIIIIJECT ALL NATURE To oua-ras AND rutaivaE.--Draohnton. -;-... • . . • ...,.... • 1 TRANSPORTATION. THE. ADAMS EXPRESS-COMPANY. 1100TTSVILLE TO HARRISBURG. Thisline connects daily with all their great South ern and Western Bentsen. By arrangement their place of business in Painville will be at the office of Boward Co S. S. WILLIAMS, Superintendent. tlprlt 22,1854 . ISAL ~ • PHILAD'A. & READING RAIL ROAD. 'MAW_ BATES OY YREIOIfT ON 3IERCIIANDLZE. • fIN AND AFTER NOVEMBER Ist, IL" LSM. un4l further notlee,"the following Rates of Freight yrlll bo charged per 100 pounds -• . 1 90 185 I'.. ' 2Go 195 a. • • -• •• Inclined Plano, 1 90 195 vp, t v.w n.. l 90 1. 5.5 ttvriiiantown l:. ':+o 135 galls of Seliuylkill, 1 90 I*s ManayunlZ. 190 1. 85 Spring 1 65.1 1 60 Conalleboeken and Ply month Railroad. 1 6 Itatnlxis and .l'otts and -. • Jones. '! 1 60 Norristor or Rridguport, . 1 60 Port lionedy, 1.60 Valley F<, . 1 55 l'hmnlxilll4 *ae " I 1 45 Itoyer's 1 45 I _ ME 27-tv - 1111:1 I 40 I 40 1 1( 1 20 1 20 I ,1 20 1 q 20 1 20 PUBLICATIONS. •. IMMENSE SUCCESS! - • THE CHEAPEST M.I GA ZINE IN THE WOHLD. - DA LLOrti DOLLAR MONTHLY." Dcsigncif for Every American Home -1 - 7COURAGED by h.: unpleOeder..- -4 ted success which •thil popular monthly has rate wit and the rapidity with which it has increased i ,cirrulation. the t proptilor has resolved to make it still _more -worthy of the patronage of the public. That this admirable wok is ,i miracle of cheapness, is admitted by ' every VW. , oniayng. as it 110V3 one hundred pages of : reading l matter itterich number, being more Phan any of the $1 magazines:And forming two volumes a year of six hundred pales each. or twelve hundred pages of reading matter per annum, for ONR DOLLAR! 8.d1,0t g Defier Monthly is printed with new type, upon fine '*bite paper, and its matter ISe:irefully compiledand arranged by the hands of the editor and proprietor, who has 6-en known to the public as connected with the It is.' tan press for sixteen years. it pages contain news,tales ' poems. stories of the sea: sketches, miscellany, adven tures. biographies. wit and humor, from the best and most popular writers - ot the couptry. It is also-spiced nith 3 record of the notable events of the times, of peace and war, of. discoveries, and Improvements occurring in either hemisphere; forming an agreeable comfisnion for a leisure moment or hour. anywhere. at home or abroad, each number being complete in itself. No sectarlan'subjeets are admitted Into Its pages: there arc etunigh controversial publications, each devoted to its peculiar set or clique. This work ,is intended for * *Tux Mitubx," north or south, east or west, and Is filled to the brim each month with chaste, popular-and graphic • misrollany.jnst such •as any father, brother or friend, would place in the hands of a family circle, HIS in all its departments, fresh and original, and. what it purports to be. the cheapest magazine in the world. • Any Ripon enclosing $1 to the proprietor, u below, shall receive the magaiine for one year, or any person sending us eight subscribers artd sB.'at one time. shall re ceive kropy gratis. : • • 31. M. BALLOIL Publisher and Proprietor, Corner of Tremont and Bromfield streets, Boston. Dee. 1.'55. ' • 48.1 y WHO WANTS - TO BE MARRIED,' THE ART OF LOVE MAKING. ' The most est raonlinery honk of the Nineteenth century! THE BLISS OF MARRIAGE. 'flip WAY TO THE ALTAR. )1ATIIIMO;iT If &DE EAST: , mt. HOW TO Wilt A LOVER. (AN E• volume- of '.160 pages, 32m0.:-- N. 7 l'iiie One Dollar. 530,000 copies already Issued.,- Thirteenth edition ready. Printed ctf the finest paper, and illustrated in the first style of art. - -Love rules the court, the camp. the grove, For Love is Heaven. and Heaven is Love." :So sans the bard :, yet thousands pine • For love—of life the light divine— , Who, did they , some gentle chosen, The„hesrts of those they love toWarm, Might live, might din, to bliss supreme, . < • Possessing all of Which they dream. . ' ' ' The road to IN ed net would you know! - Delay not, but t RONDGET go. • Time flies and f m his gloomy wings • • A shadow fails o living things: Then seize the moments as they pass, Ere fall thelast sands through the glass; SATURDAY MORNING;.. FEBRUARY. 1..0 _1856. MISCELLANEOUS. • TO;BACC ;., • ICARS AND. OATS. i' T the Hatillurg Smoking 'A'otiacc.o and 61 - 0:, Mannetory j 10,000 bnabels prime atio; 200 barrels SmoktnF ?oboe:. an: 200.000 that EipantOt Mut 100,000 SpatlsEetzes• 25,000 gni*, Extras. , ' • JAMES S. MOYER. ' ••-• • . Ilan/burg, &nits county. Sept. I 38- • PATENT. C • LD LARD LARIPEL . tibscrib • rs being appojnted sole Avail for the, e otStoneWer. Smllb'e'Pateat d LarClani rai, InTuylkill rounti, !mei a lama u sortment for ch are highly reereatnended for OCOnOlilY and convent` ce. BRIGHT t LERCH -14., 856 13- IRON COMMISSION WARE NOUSE, CENTRE , STREET,' Potts:olo. The inbiscrihsrsle prepared to furnish the Trade nachinistiand Opernrs at Philadelphia priers, (freight added) whOlesalior retail, best American Bar Iron, man ufactured at Pot tile and warranted of supeirlorquallty. Also, lightl rallesuitable for mines, and Cable Chains furnished itshort uotiettdireet from the importer. E. YARDLEY & SON. . . 'York SU,Pe. Xor. 22, 1 t ; • 414 f j'..F:4I.II3TADI'S REPOSITORY tIF LOOICIN;G' GLASSES, from 12F A . feeut;i to $2 ', Pildi. OIL PApiTINGS ,PRINTS, MUSICAL:INSTItUIIt:ISTS, and fan c y ar icies.;,. . ... ',: . Manufacturer- Of g ilt 344 ornament:ll picture-frames, of all kinds-el es and description. Store in nabanteogo street, below , ..itto4el4_otheo .uundhigp.' :.1 -P&i" 2 4 1 . , ;1 115 I -; _ ..,. ~,, 1311 IiENCLER ,di: CO, , Hanfieri and Dearer* in Ezeiningls ; ll.:i, 2 dt,ore 'South of tit'c .E.rprets 9, 1 fi4, -17 V I strictlv attend to all collections entrusted to them, negotiate Business Paper, Loans. Sfocks,and al other securities. • ' 31essrsTaylor, Brothers, Bankers. New York, Drafts nn Duloriliank of 'Loudon, Belfast Banking Company of Ireland„ . NatiOnal Ha 'k of Scotland; also at the office of MgAi.ri.-Green Taylor. Liverpool, j Mom. Taylor, Bruce k Do., Lieth. Scotland. Cons'anfly on hand nd for sale for any amount, from it upwards. in sums Ito suit purchasers. , • These drafts are plyable at sight. and are Rood in eve : . ry part IA England; Ireland. Scotland. andj Wales. 'En current-bank Notes marhanged at the bestvates. • Land Wm ratiti hmacht and sold. Jan.19.1550l ti- II I 75 1 65 165 165 lis 1 65 165 1 45 1 So 1 70 1 70 1 To 1 70 1 70 1 70 1 45 ' ,• 'I SOLO v.ON HOOVER, • , , • , Whol :sale and Retail. ` l 'l'olrES, T N. and HOLLOW Ware, . Brittatinia and rass Ware, Cutlery, .6. K tchen . Ranges, Rage Boilers, Portable Ran- I r g - 1 ' ges, this brims, Heat rs. de., de. Having en-4.% largki lila store he has added to his former ~ .. stock a large varlet of new patterns of cook.. - lug. parior,r, offirean hall. stoves, and he has now the largest stoe that has ever been ilered in this tounty.;lie invites his friends and cuatiimers to call and exatilitie for tbe selves feeling confident that he can suit thSin in qualltt and price. /STIR - 4e calls theparticular attention to his sheet Iron parlor Stores, Which he warrants to itlyi more heat, with. W.0):Idel than ay other storwin use.l 1 11 e has also it splendid article of itchen Ranges, which be can give f c the highest reeonim ndatlnn. Pottsville. Deeem r I,'S5 . . 4S- in EEO 1 40 1 40 1 40 1 40 1 30 125 1 25 1 25 1 15 1 05 1 55 1 55 1 55 150 1 40 1 40 1 35 1 35 1 1 '25 1115 1 05 1 05 105 1 05 1 15 1 15 1 15 1 1,5 FLOUR AND AI B. BEY 1 . , yhimaclf Jesse businesii the above lu all its vsrious br have novr on hand rots of Bodr and tul which they will eel on the most reasonable terms PT cash or ;approved c • it. M. IL Bell returns his sincere thanks for. the libeell'patronage heretofore extended to him In hislndlvidurl capacity, hoping that strict Atten tion to 15tinem. and an endeavor to accommodate custom ers, will continue to the new firm all the 'patronage here tofore extended to himself as well as bEing now !WAG'S*. era the present firm cf BELL & IIATIFEIIB. Corker Railroad and Calloivhlll streets. opposite SuYcler's Foundry. 19-Ity RETAIL DRUG WAREHOUSE May 12.1g155 WHOLESALE & AND Deronifor BrOlviesCelebrated and Cherry Pectoral. DECEIVING continually 'large sup ix rilleirof Drugs, &e., in original packages, I am prepared to meet all demands from Storekeepers. Physiciasza. &c.. tiltn advance of a few.per cent, on city prices, baying esolved to make It advantage ; ous foteall persons n want of pore and fresh* Drugs and Chetuirals..te.buy in this market. Constantly on trand all the new and approved Chemical and Pliarinaceutical preparations of the United States and Pruitsizia Pharmacpisa. With the services of qualified .•. . personstand my ow personal attention, the citizens may • feel coefldeot of h ring all their wantit In the way of ' , Drugs and the compounding of Prescriptions accurately ;an d faithfully attended to. 011 N GiBROWN, 0et..40,, , 55 '42-6 0 Prubgispad irharmaerirtist. .1 1 ---:7 • • . :'CR AT BARCAINSI ~ I i ?Reduce Prices lal crothlingk;;:. \_ 1 fIIIEAP COTHINry STORE; Cen it,ii; street, on b door below Ilarket •treet, west side, I Pottsville.. The stl bseriber returns his gratetu! thanks 1 to hiifriends and thd public, for the liberal .manner in 1 whichlhey have heretofore patronized him, and tutorial; , them that he as no-- , hand a large) stock of ready made . garments,. tnufactured, under the super. Intendenre of • :ed workman, and made of the! best Materials, rest fashions, of ererp.varletY, iwhich nahnOt I fy purchasers: I Ills stock eou- ' sins o Fine DI and Body Coats, heavy knelt. ped atIC Wint its of all desdriptions, Black. I Blue and stri ire Pants and ',Boys' Clothing! ; i ancy- Velvet . aud Fancy Satin Vests. QM!- , mere And Woi l kinds. Flannels, Striped and 1 Dressed fihirt, SatinetJackets, and a variety of ntlirr alibi mus to mention. all of which beinfruds to , ',west prices. j Ile alto makes up'all,kilids of .) order, at Orel shortest notice. lifir 7 . .. Don't fc street. one door below . , Market at.. terstside. A. 01I,LMORE; . -Agent, Dbi.;iBi 'EI 1 49- ri- i t t ' and : dqnler In WI; c oktcidalogicte. purr hnd unudul Ota al/land Gins, msiiai and Lim ring,ll . 6nch Mut, O 4: in. Ism,. • . . , liiit'uJ-P.lninit or r , ",;. ,ii ,, i .... -;,.., • , BAD: READS! M I I I. P 0 1 n i t ed . Ago ß nt E f l S ' o S r t!o N , G ounh:Sty. t.,ie b t e h e e n ap pointed - o " f "FISK'S PATrTIETALLIC BUI11)11, CASES," i t 1 high eupereede II o th er kinds in use Be i ng ng perfecti y il 3 air-Sight . it obs tes th e •nocemity of hasty bdtiali. and also preserves tht body from immedlattidecotnposit ion Theyare partienl sly suitable for transporting the : body I fromone place t another. The face is covered with a I Welt glass. with 041 top, which can be removed at any time, and the (se of the corpse seen ter its friends or re latisek.' We rag t give you hundred .of certificates. to I corroborate our statement. as to' the advantages the Me taill4 Coffin has Over the Wooden, but the following wIII - 1 tlfsre: Wasnlirow. April sth. Gettlittmen:—W a witnessed the utility of your orna mental "Patent Metallic Burial Cases," Used to 'convey the remains etltke late lion. John C.Calhoun to the Con gresalmial Cemettiry, which Impressed us with the belief, that:it is the best article known to Us for transporting , the detid to thelrlfinal resting place. I- With:respect. we subscribe ourselveli t yours. etc.. (SlinFd) Ilentts Clay, Lewis Cass, Dan. Webster, Wm. B. King, Jeff. DitTift, J. M. Berrien. J. Y. Mason. D. B. Atehttuson, A. C./ Breen, Wm. P. MatngUm, 'Diary Dodge, D. S;Dickinson. I ' Similar testim nlalsmiglit be added without number. APO' to 11. DRESSANO, , - Centre et red, corner or Union. , Pottsst el le. Jw e 9.11 1 55 . I 254 f , . . :_ - CLAIIKEI • AZENT FLOURING MILL. f 'The Greett. , . Invention ,of. the MIT. r lIE suWeriber announcers to the eiti-1 -- Sena of Scheylkill county that he "has secured the' tto sell EDWIN and,JAMES M ELABF.I3 new Pa- , y g r tent 41ouring Mill, which Is pronounced the greatest ; Ameilcan invention of the dayr The Subscriber bascule of these 31111 s in! full operation now, In Tremont, where ire invitee all ptons to call sod Pee it larration. . 1 Title highly i senious, and much need Invention, forme en entire new feature In the menu ure of Wheat 1 Into: Fleur; and he splendid matinee, In which it per-. forme its stork, rinding, Bolting, and separating the ' grain at &single pored= into seven different qualities of Flour and F , and that within a space of only tweet- , twen ty-one feet in length by four feet In bteadth, at the re- ' pidity of twelve .bushels per hour, on, a. pair of French burr , millstonesonly thirty inches in dlanieter. The Grate Ls convert d at a single operation. into Extra and fluperline Flour, Flour, Middlingalfilpstuffs, Shorts andttt ra, any power being applicable t propel it, from a tburhcirse up to filly other desired. The small s p ace it . es-copies would not be missed when pieced in a room with °thee Machinery and the mall amount Of power it re quires to propel t, makes it certain that, ere long. it will supersede and reVol ut ionize all other Flouring 311118. do applicable is thiti Mill to the wants of the world. that every Saw-mill, ras..blue shop. locomotive shop. foundry, forLsi -rolling mill, o. any building hating a power alrea dy etikted, can now bare within its wells a completeMer elute! Flouring 11l 111. et the Wittig cast of from fear to seven hundred dollars, and thus the enormous amount of Main raised Within the United States, can bet 'coiner. ted Into Flour within its limits. I tiliti ono of these Mills nearly every large Colliery.es. tablishment in this county where stem power Is used for putimintr.anduld be supplied. They could be erected at a tundi eapenta end wOuld enable theta to trillt3thr• tine: their own our. I . I Thlollll oulyLoccupies the spare of 'fret in length. by tin.width. II Is also p ortable and when put up ran ihe Oared In a wean or ray, and with 'a single ham haWed to anjOrt where they desiretz use it. Tinton. strnetion is so simple that it can be connected with any engine by* Angle algal/. ' I Nuts or Tovisaip Right, ulll be dliTonetl of b 7 lb. 1 Itiblevlbfrr tod4lnit In Tremont. ntwitt4s of eertiti i retail front Millers and others who have seen the AIM in 1 urination, can be area at the rerglamiejt nr . the icalNetibeir • ' :NA, T.. , TICE. , • Vgi.:k - Z ,* N.', ' • I . t i ' AI „tf , . - , • .. ~ . , V- ta FEED, PARTNERSHIP. L having. associated with lathers in ttie flour and feed business will 'be continued .nches as heretofore. IV:ley land are constantly receiving large II tea. as well as hay; oats and corn, 'INES & LIQUORS. a•signed, I.egllly licensed iev and Liquors, offers the following 3Tery article In whic , is guaranteed 1 rated. • WINES. uiee. Oporto and Burgundy. St India, Bold. ' . 1 . I , Amontillado.. r . Itephe, St. Julien. • 1 Haut Sauterne. Hamar. Em. ic. &e., I - • 2-11ochheimer. Nietenseiner, I Deft's ttheimer. Trantineel &e. rand Finery Moisseaus, &e. LIQUORS. I„ t, Castilllon & Co. C.iognac. . Martell, Maratiognacs. Cherry. ; ,/-, - • t.Sran. Bohlen, 1 Schiedam Schnapo.l. a SpititS, New England. . 4y Malt Scotch. Old Monongahela, .Q.. and Pennsylvania Rye.- I EXTRACTS._ .. qenliler, Absyntbe. Kitshenwasser ! litlr N nit Irs . i. • !purger Cheese. SardiWea. liolland Her .card. Olive Oil. French Chocolate, &c. MOSES .STROUS.E. Corner orCentre k High Streets. totterille, Pa. . ,( . - 41-Cm Pir4--Osspe Madeira —Ea4 Shitery--Itov C/Stref-9t. qhite Wines iti/tzga—Lint REburnish in = 11randy—I'la 4 • TH. 014rarJa,, Ln METALLIC COFFINS! PATENT • gl .1. - , ,- • J. CLAUDE WHITE'S NEW COLLIERY, AT TUCi MIL.E.;:. .! 1 The above engraving represents a. new riably . much higher than the southern ba- I Tucker4illelalso lies. The ,capacity of this -,, Colliery recently erectedat! .tuckerville—a sins. Yet, though some of the basins of i Colliery is ltbout 6 ; 0,00'0 tons per annum' of small .mining village built up by the Coal I the bottom veins may be worked here en- I Red Ash Coal.. ,The Prtmrose here:ittay 'i be --Trade,. near the Falls of ,tha‘• Swatara, since tirely above water leVel,'a few hundred yi*tis I considered a good Pink.Ash,auttthe Daddoie .... ..- An' 1 a , - ' If•• thea • -. - ---WO; and named in hollo'i of John Tucker, to - tic south, those veins form deeper basins I au,. ..,iatrion : rents are, 0 • deepest and Esq., President*of the Philltd,elphia, Reading I than tlfey do at Tamaqun. . 1 purest Red. Ash. : .i • . 1— -,- and Pottsville Railroad Company. It is situa, I " This Colliery is favorably situated on the I Much hasibeeti said anent the,drift system' ted between Pottsville' and 'll:remota. I I Primrose, Daddow and Big Diamond veins; Iby those notl aCquainted With their nature, as I , l , 1 .___ , ' • , This Colliery Establishment is complete in , on. the east side of the Smilers creek, ;with I adverse to economy in minute.. put:the tact I its arrangements and contains - allthe im; I gangways driven t o the - e ast. It was come I is, though' itl is not - payticularly the interest of I provemettts that have' been made in the way I menced rather more than one year ago, and I Schuylkill eeunty -to , 'admit it, the drift of preparing Coal 'for the innrkets up to the lis just completed, presenting a picturesque i tug system is much 'the' cheapest, safeSt and . present time. Though the arrangement is iri I 'appearance, and quite •4. different one 11'00 I producth'e. I. There is nut aria great outlay of! same respects different,the niachinery, break"- I that which 'we,gave recently; b_ eing worked I capital needed for engines, pumpi and fix.. er, screens, &c., are erected upon the same by drifts or water levelS; Here we miss the ! tures tbr +sting and' pumping; neither ift prificiple us those of the Colliery described in i slopes, pumpg• and engine housei, and the I there the continual drain to keep them at work a regent number. But here instead of iticlined : great mass of attendant! matchinery. l . ~ I- end in repair. Then, again, there is but little, planes the drift cars are hoisted perpennien• I. On the main track may be seen a team Of ;dang,er froni explOsion Or wafer; and•the great larly,' to the breaker. li4 as regards the mules drawing up a train of empty cars,whielt,: difficulty and cost of maintaining a correct hoisting of Coal, there can be but little ' dif. : the locomotive, now backed into the branch, t and reliabN system Of , ;ventilaiieu is lessened ferenee in the economy; it any, we shotild lor turnout, to take dowti the loaded ones, had 'in an eminent degree.. . I ' - -. ' •I' - I speak in favor . of the incline, though that left. Those empty' cars are drawn up ashOrt 1 - But the ,drifting system must naturally grow would depend:entirely on thle nature and posj• I distance by the mules. to= where t'. e branelt : out of use, , its the Coal, above Witter level be! tion of the ground upon which•they are to be 1 and'tle main track is connected, and are then' cbrues exhausted IT' qtd ,'as there is but a coin• erected, as the PerPendieuhir mode neetteie i dropped down beneath. the Breaker hinns to' parativelyarnall portion of our Anthracite in .less room than the incline, and perhaps posses- ;be -loaded. The squitre liner, el , which ,is sigh a posiiiim, that will soon occur. Indeed sex the advantage of being .Ildal) . ed to almost ' Aced the figure of a horse 2 contains the appa. I in the first Coal field ; with theeXception of its any ground. . , . rates for hoisting the drift cars, one of which' eastern antllW•estern extremities, Probablvone . i 7 I .The Coal is herr worked by drifts, and so may be seen going from , the drift to its hot- I third, it !10 1 l one•halfl of the available Ccal far, altogether abOve , water? level, Plough Mr. 1 tom, and i n the upper part may he seen a math i abo4e Water level has been already extracted. White is now sinking a slope on the Primrose. i about to "dump" or empty a car ,of Coal into : Very.lttle (oall lies abOve.water level oti . the The veins lie much higher in this district I the Breaker, which lies beneath the square I Lehigh at present, and . Nature has so arranged, generally, thar; . further east, until they pass 1 shed above the Liens. : Behind the tower rises 1 the Wycnni ni;-. a'nd the Lackawanna that tun. Tamaqua, when ley aglin commence' rf- I the stack fr,int the Breaker engine, and l to the I rtels,.shafts and t sliipes must he 'employed to sing 'rapidly. Tuckerville,;; is at the foot of left one of the drifts, which is on the Pritnrese; , obtain it: i The Shatnntlin . Region: is a n ex the Broad Mountain, abot(t nine miles west I the other drifts, on the Daddow and the Dia- I ception, Where probabl l Y - one•third of - the Coal . of Pottsville, and on the northern basins I mond veins, lie further to the south, o ' r to the i formations) lies above water leVel;of easy:Lie . of the Schuylkill Regionl, which are hive: I right hand.of the picture, where the village; of I iess. . i ' ;- . 514 m i . • . ' Augustus Gesarcut teeth, or sit alonbefore j - Mrs. Grund)'s, etc., etc., are the sole . inis, of : _ : some women's lives—Ncause they have been . - , , r They prom tn! Sunday Dispatch: I debarred from proper 1 ; mental endure. i . THE PAST: . : I must have xome object '. in life; and be assured, __ T . 1 .- : if they they not taught 'to' strive for a proper IC Br ALTtlii ' : goal, they will seek an.' improper or contenip .'• i • Turning our thoughts nrola the bygone years, ~1 utile one. How oft the sad Real sus ttei eye with tears! t, , l'ostich it is almost - Useless for me to offer Stow throbs the hind with thany a Tall regret 2 lan admonition, for it reformation with - them For acts 'twonld be a mercy to forget— ~ For evil thoughts and hasty accents spoken— - I must be radical, or not be made at all; but The trusts we have betrayed—the vows we've broken! 1 thoughtless, young mother, I beseech you not • We think' upon the hearts toour hearts bound. ' Ito turn a deaf ear! Heed My warning, and Now pulseless laid beneath Hie cold, cold ground; .do not inflict such evils on our children as I We think upon the lips-to Marlitespressed, I have depicted, but remem er .that ; you !are Now sealed forever In death's voiceless rest : 1 The forms we've clasped in sweet arid warm embraces, i responsible to God for the welfare of your .Now gone forever from their writhed places. I child, moral, mental;, and p ysical, no matter • , ._ We think of many a one whose friendly heart ' how successful y,sti may. be in driving off: re- Sexnell linked to ours in chains no power could part, flection or finding oblivion._ %You may shirk • Who hat grown-callous to Our love, and cold. ' 7 . your duties, and steep remembrance in the' Forming new - frlmidships. and forgetting old: , •,. Oh! how debased, how-worse than vile and rotten,. 1 deepest Lethh while ypu live, yet at the filial Is friendship that can be so' soori forgotten! I judgment your neglected duties and shirked ' •- ' - - ' I responsibilities, will ri4e before you as so many tilt not marvellousii.sadlg strangf, , - That aught so pure and fair as love ehould change ? 1 accusing demons. Vcrbum, sapientent! • - Yet there were love.'s in those bright days gone by, f 1 . - ELLA, TILE GEORGIAS7, Which fondly we believed could never die; f 1,, TLANTA, GEO. ; ,ti. A few years passed: th....:plighted souk were parted, Leaving us desolate and heavy-hearted. , =SI ?would i "CA N''T AFFORD flotms."—What? Not The Past! the Past! W‘that some rayless gloom . Might soil it in Night'stomb ' creel:ninon : able to buy. books for yourself and children ! -, 1 would that from out my tortured soul 1 might You are too poor, you say; previsions are so Forever cast its full 'sad withering blight: • For I have many sine to he forgiven ; • i high and books, are a, luxury? You smoke, Ily man on earth, and by my God in Mayen. 1 you chew tub:lmi), or you indulge, in an °pea- IN rgive, forgive me ye whom I hove grieved— • siorial glass; setts wife wears a rich silk foe • I All that 1 hare evei wronged. bet rayed, deteived: i her best dress; your .`daughter spends not a • "To err is human; to forgive, divine i little owribbons; and yet you say you can , t,... . rilw ye tho God's part—fallen man's is. mine; ,, , atiora to - beyinstretidive_ books, übieli, it' a And I will pray that., when life ti chords shall sever, Messed Ye may be °toed hi'lleOven forever. .. I just discrimination is.t o be made, are far less ,' -7 . 1 luturious than either.ut these. Cigars, silks and ribbons can be One without, and at no greater sacrifice tlian that of a 'eseless. habit, or tli%_ denial of some personal 'vanity; but books are absolutely necessary to 'you, it you would keep pace with the increase of kttowl "Oh!" you say, "what mother can be thus: edge,be cultivate thejtigher parts of your na• Unnatural?" Why you, Ma'am, and you, and : ture; Mr it is absolutely true of every man, you! ,Perhaps, however,ty(iir don't do it pur- 'no matter what his original gifts, that, if he posely, for some err, from:. ignorance; but, un ; ; does not advance, ha recedes; and that he natural as it may seem, Many err willfidly„;, will recede, it he deVotes his leisure to .tnere-, ftom.thitt, same unhallowed foolish ambition! ly sensuous gratification, to the lusts of the to excel which fills society with so many gay- • eye or the flesh— Nii one can advance in in plumaged female poborin.ins—a false, puerile, tellectual or. spiritual development, without' and contemptible arnbitien when thus inisdi• ' cultivating - those rested. . I books and ono of the appointed means fur To you who err Willfully-, I. will speak first.: th i s. Yes, you do delimit yotalchild, - or daily ril iS- i You can't afford `to buy books for your treat it with a fall knowledge of the risk et ; children. You will Suffer them to grovi up deformity resulting front, the mis treatment, , without' a taste fur books.. Do you know. the and you subject your child to., this•risk solely ;consequences?, Recreation they 'must have, that vou may boast that your child sits, stands, : andif they don't acquire a taste for • refined or walks alone sooner the ii Mrs. .Grundy's b rutalizi n g they will infallibly seek coarse and : Prem.: all foolish woolen have a Mrs. Grun-. brutalizing amusetifmts. - Three-fourths of dy--6 horrid Moloch to Whom they ruthlessl y 1 the idle youths, who lounge about the corners sacrifice the interest. and•'ettinfort of their ; of streets at nights, and who are continually families in various particulars„) Thu are not ! bring ing themselves: and their families into ignorant; for you have been' to:Air-often of the i trou ble, might _have been saved, if a little claager, yet you will persist in trying to force money had been judiciously speet on hooks .your poor infant-to sit up - ere,Nature gave 'it i fur them, when they Were children. You' mis a spine to sustain it, , aiiir4° stand atid walk ' take, if you think it costs touch. Books are ere she has given it bones to support it. You ' the cheapest things there are.• The pleasure 1 have been admonished often, and have had ; of it good book hutss all the While you' are ! explained to yoti the danger of placing your reading it, while the. gratification .to be had child in positions which will injure it, and of: from otherthiligs is soon over... Besides, most trying to force its development; so I will, s a l'-' t books will bear a secoud perusal, indeed all no niore to you, 'except that God will assure ' ' books such as we Would recommend to be 1 ly;held-.You responsible tbr the curved•spines, • ' -- cmght. if you' would have your sons to suc:.' narrow chests, and bent limbs of your child- : reed in life, you must cultivate their intelleet, I ' ren Whom you subject to these evils for the ; and that is best done by giving theta books nil 'papering of your despicable vanity. . read. If you wouldmake your daughters ea- , Those, howeverowho iare unaware of the 1 pable of attracting rising young men, let; danger,l earnestly [beseech to be mindful of _them hove instruetiv,e'books, so that titq may it, now that it is. pointed out to them. Your i become conversible Compri ns, Cannot of i .child is yet in etithrp,•sO to speak, siuce its ford tn.buy books? ~ Why, it there's anything system_ Is immature, like the delicate plant 1 rots cati.,afford, unless you ar actually starv- justiptuthing its tender white stem 'above the , in,g, it is books...Ltifger. soil, which is yet destitute of woody fiber,and ; t , , , is s flexible that the slightest force twill dis- ! . ili '• . 1 • ' • • .through the world ; 'or man, visited by . mis- Loos. at career of man,- as he passes tort, it forever. Thus it is with your infant, i for its bones are'yet unformed, and •are soft, flexible, cartilaginous substances, easily flexed.' fortune I How Often is he left by his fellow I to. an improper position. Thus, when you men,. to sink odder the weight of his afHic-; first try to make your child sit up at too early Lions, unheeded "and alone ! One friend 'of ', an age, it falls over, for child ewile. is yet too i his own sex forget him, another abandons. &Met° Sustain it. While,in this , soft,.carols -1 him, a third, perhaps, betrays him; but wo ginc us state the bones can be easily ' crooked, faithful I man, woman,him in . his and. kept in improf er positions thus, and they . !affliction with unshaken affection ; braves the zeta n them is they acquire hardness grads- i changes' of his feelings, of his temper, em- . illy! Your efforts, then, to force your child I bittered by the disaPpointments of the world, to sit up or stand ere Nature has ,given sail'. ',with the highest of all virtue; a resigned pa cient firmness to the vertebrae of the spine, I tience-ministers to his wants, even when her and the femur ,' tibia, anti fibula of the leg I own are hard and; riesaing; she weep . with may lead, and te`tit infallibly lead, to,a flexure him, tear for tear, in his distress, and is the from the proper form, and to the deformity of I first to catch and reflect a ray of joy, should your child by a curved hack, or knees which ;but one light up hiscountenatice in the inidst bend inward or curve Outward like .a hoop. lof his sufferings ; and he never leareS him Many,are nut aware of the injury; yetitieon- I in his niisery•while there remains one ace of ceivable and monstrous its it is, some mothers lode, duty, or compassion to be perforMeaese d. ' (young . ones especially) kill persist in trying And at the last, when life and sorrow c together, she follofs him to the tomb, with . to farce their infants to kit up. when the poor,' little, weak neck bends Unable to support .the that ardor of affecttbn which death itself can weight of the head, anif the infirm spinal ver- i not destroy. tebrto curve when thet.hitui is supported, even . , - though, they are remonstrated with often; and 'i :Useful e inforutettoc 'admonished of' this.dang,er of injury to their • i • ;-..,,-, childrenand all - for the mighty triumph of 4--------- * ---- 7 - 1 - —-- -7 r boasting to Mrs. Grundy that George Wash t ' PRESERVED ' sjrNemws. -- - ..4:. ... life areinatiparable, that is, Buell ingtoit Bonaparte, or Angelina - Ida' !Antlers 1 Light and ..,_ . . , . ~. can positively sit, stand; or walk n few 'days i was the generally reiceld opinion inanylears earlier than nature intended, or than Jerome i ago, and in aCmdince -with it, houses were Napoleon Otani Grundiecould. Magnificent I Wilt, liherallyiupplied with windows, and" as triumph! ,Is it not: - 1 'Tis monstrous, yet i liberally' now—but go Along any of this - fash • , New York, and ,yon will true, and mos burl* the welfi-e andtom• I ionable streeta of, . . ~ . . -fort of their families, dibrnally, for just :Such 1 find : not less than th*, and o ft en sip; disti nct ;.; , i vas to keep - out the . sunshine and paltry triumpho: To wsr the finest hat„ the I cord-v-n . . ~.., . , costliest ahead; beast_ the most fashitniable I gladness. First, the 1 enetian shutter . ou t he tourn - ui . e, ha ft. 4, iinkitnist bEimillitul ail ! ), or .._ out st le . ' '1 • 'Rectmtl, the tlose sloater on tlictiti• ....... .i, lEEI . . . . . . . . . .. , . i . I .. ... P 1 . 1 . , . . . • . , • . rem . ~ . p. . . '. ; -.. -'4 . . . . . . . . . . GENERAL ADVERTISER. -_._.~~ OE .i , t - rt.11:4. , !!,. 1 (Choice poetry. side: Thi2ithe; blind which its ' moved by -1 t. - rollers; , theljeurthly, there are ; the - lace (nits! tains; EilltiMie damask or . other material do.' In the slime train domes the', exclusion pf: external air: by mean of double sash; and a • variety , o 1 patent contrivances! to keep any little stray whiff of air! froni enterin g at the l bottom; sides and tops of door' and windows.; j ! At this rate, we will iti tine tit e dwindle into.; Lilliputs,A, indeed we; do not die off_sooner, I with all science and art, and leave the world I I to begin anew, from the few sons of the forest;! ! who persisted in es*wing civilization. We ! lay it dow as - a health axiom =The more out. idoor air a td` cheery siinshine' a - wiari can use,' the lopgerjhe will lire. L s ., • But thel Preserved .Sunshine!, What about it? .That) very samelsmishine , which 'so hay. ishly beamed.upon our continent with!all its I tropical fervor in the earlier ages of creation, what has yeconie cif it ? . A:. casual reader of the Journ,7l will exclaim, "What a fool , of a! i question that Lill" • Let us leisurely inquire' into it; buton doing So we Most take it - for , , granted, that the reader ; knows sotriething,- In Ceatt!ral America. where the sun shines; with allhat btilliancy land fierceness, vegeta•. f tion ieof ;tabolous growth, of a!luxuriance al- i- I most incredible. !' . ' . • - . I But hoW does a tree grow? ] Without light,' I no wood is made in lany vegetable growth ; , i the woody fibre is fortned from carbonic add gas being absorbed by the leaves and through the bark of any growth. Bnt Tight separates: the two. constituents - which compose this cal- ' ! bonie acid gas, carbon and oxygen,-and two ;different uses are made - of it • !the oxygen is I m I iberated,lthrowa out ;andbreathed b animals i , 1 and!en,lwhile the carbon ots"c.s. at' goes to - - • TUE Ur , REATEST Bathos IN ; TUE WORLO.-- , form the Woody-fibre 'of the plant, which pre- I Tile*: people. of Canada are .gifed . with no I sents'a kind . ot rinm; plainly seen in sawing; mean ideas relating to "the future progress through any tree; the, number of rings indieat. , and greatness of their country." '1 he Bri. ing the a` e of the tree in:years; some of these ; tannin] Tubular Bridge, in England, is justiy dings are broader, some narrower, indicating , considered to be the greatest engineering work : of huge building its the world; but the Cana. most pro ably the more or less sunshine of . that years for a plant will ootgrow 'as much I dians have the courage to engage in. building in a cold) suminer. aS'in -it warn one.. In a I a bridge over the S . Lawrence, at Montreal, section of a California tree, o I:part of which ! which, when, completed, will completely dwarf we have In ouroffice;More than two thousand' the`now-famons . Tubular Bridgesreferned -to. such rings wer i e counted, showing. that these; We do not know if they will be able to carry trees must have lived in the times of David !;-!--out.their designs. but J - 11dging from an article ],.and perhaps of Abrahlr s. , ~ .. .'on the subject in the Canadian Railway Guide, ! In the 'earlier ages-of the world, stone great'- which' contains the report of Robert:Stephen. . - - flood or, floods • , !swept sways' the immense son and A.V. Ross ou the subject, wit believe growths of the . .-trordcal climes, which drift e d they will make a bold attempt to execute `-northward and lodged mainly in-what is: now ; them, it a cost of $7,000,000:. This]bridge called Ohio - an*Pennsylvania. In process of: is designed to be composed of ,huge wrought. tinte , thiS driftwood was covered with earth;, iron tubes, like the Bntattnia Bridge, and the -stul stortes;and eventually became "coal,".the \i .. svorks. to carry out the plan were commenced anthracite and bituannous, with which we are', in 1854, some of which aro already completed, so familiar; and the very - identical ,carbon, ;such as appeciaches on the north side,„l444 which the sun light of agesage separated for ! feet; 'approaches on the south side,lo33 feet; the purpose of making Wood.' is now by its' , and two abutments, 484 feet. _These are-coin- '. combination with its' Id risseciate oxygen, re-. pleted in a most permaneetfmanrier., - The 'turning - to its originalcondition of- carbonic!! stone work is • massive, and bids defiance . to acid . gas, and inmakin - ,thatithatige by what , the largest Masses of ice that.are to ho fodnd 1 , 'we call - "burning," warms our houses, lights floating in the St. - Lawrence, • up our streets, and is-preparing to greese our; The masonry of th], bridge' piers, 24 in rail cars, by the oil which it is capable of number, range from 40 to 72 feet in height. •yielding: . ..- -..- -- • The total length of this gigantic structure Suet', reader, are some of His ways, who `will be 9439 feet, viz: approaches 2377, abut ruleth_the world in, loving kindness; in the; 4nents 484; tubalar.ritilway bridge 6578.. The thousands and thousands of years ago, !h e ; number of arches-,or openings by which the commenced processes for laying- up iu store a' river will be Spanned is 26.: The iron tubing material ,which in these latter,ages is such an' is to be 22 feet deep in the centre, and gradu• essential; agent for the advancement of eivili• ! ally inclining towards the. ails, one in every nation, the "coal-beds" of the world, for with.; _3,1',1 feet, so that at each end it will be 'about oat gent; on. manufactories 'Would stop, l our , 17 feet high. The centre opening, which- is mills and engines rust,. and cold and privation, 7 the channel course, will be 350 feet wide, and with their ]attendant,- diseases, would sweep each of the other openings 242 feet wide:— s fmm the world the race ot civilized men. . • . The tube' will be GO feet above summer water - . . - --6--- . . . level at the center, 37 feet at Abe abutments, SLEEPLESSNESS is] the result of over bodily and 16 feet wide.- • Th,e weight of the wrought or 'inent 4 l effort. When a man works beyond . iron 'tubing througtriihich the *ill- his siren th, or -thinks or studies more than .pass-is estimated at 11,000 tons;'atid the - mar.:. rest:can restore, then, sooner or later, comes sonry will contain upwards of, 28,000,000 cto that ins ilits . to' sleepsoundly,that kf 1 ' , wa e u -I bic feet.. It was designed by Robert Stephen. nem, which is more Nearing even than bodily . son, and is uow being curried out; under - the ',labor, and whiCh feeds the debility, which, firsts' superintendence of Alexander M. Roils, the gave rise to it.. The resuhis,a.mania always! engineer of the Company. The contractors tired; never feels rested, even when! he leaves ' are celebrated firm of Messrs. Pato, Bras. his bed in the morning; hence be wastes away,' sey; Betts* Jackson, England: . and finds repose only in the grave; if indeed,' -. The great expense of such a bridge has led insanity do not supervene. It is too' often a' a number of' those interested in the grand malady, remediless by medical means. Avoid; Trunk Railroad- to suggest a suspension then, asyou would a viper .or a murderer, all ' bridge, in place of the tubing, as its cost over. eff rt of mind and body ,; it is suicidal.; . i would be far less—only about $1,000,000 Whatev r you do, get enough-sleep ; whatever; but R. Stephenson objects to a suspension you do,-k.ake enough- rest to *tore the used i bridge: as being too weak a structure, and en• energied et each preceding ttrenty.four hours;l suited to the position it would have to occupy. , if vou do not,you may escape for a few months,' . We understand that not a few engineering er r acid it Ossessing a good constitution, years; rors have/ben committed already in building mayiputs away before any decided ill result! the apprbaches ; to thid ; .bridge, and this has forces .itself on your attention ; but rest as.' . caused Some dissatisfaction_ with, the plan of surrszt;the time will come, when the too often , ' the Foi l itself. ' We hope, howev o er, that nob, I baffled system, like, dbaffied horse, will refuse: itit; w I prevent the complete executionV to worki it will not take prompt and seised! thug,, ntic enterprise. Science bas its pixt ' sleep; it will not Wrested by repcise,and that. try, a d great works of engineering are its irritating wakefulnesi - ,will come upon you,' Epi , ' which philosophy cannot conquer, which medi• : . i ] eine cannot - care, and - wasting by - slow de. Mir etiaoLOG/CAL 0541:livatIONs.--4:11, ,- us gases to skin rind bone, rest is found 'only in rangement has been entered into betweei. the grave.—Halls Journal of IfOalth. - : Professor Henry, of the Smithsonian inititsi . -, ---- ---..........,......-..-.--- ---; -, 7.. :.- tion, and Judge Mason, r. S. Commissiorter AN INCH OF RAIN' ON THE ATLANTIC.-.—WO - (4' Patents, by which the system .of meteor,: Mice been struck with. that passage of Lieut.!: lo.sietil observatiens hemtofont conducted 11, Maury's "Physical Geography ot the Sea" iii. ; thZlnstitotion, will iye hereafter execnted utt• which be computes the effect! of a single inch ' der - the direction of the' Patent Office. In of rain falling upon the Atlantic Ocean. The'. pursoartee of this change, the Commissioner Atlantic includes an . area of 25 millions] of, has issued a circular-, - directing attention to agnatemiles. Suppose anitich of rairttu fall -, the severe germ - of snow, ',ail, :and rain, upon - only Ottezfifth tit this ; vast expanse. "It ' which extended itself over a large portion o' would weigh," says - 'our author, "three hun- the traion, from the 4th to, the 6th of -last dyed and sixty tkoosand millions.of tuts; and month. and :Islam.: for -informal too s, the salt which, is water, if held in selirtion in, r.:.. EIII NO. 7. LUNN!! 13ANNAN'S I STEAM PRINTING OFFICE Raring procured three Preset., we ar,) now prepared to execute JOB sod BOOK PRINTING of every dvscripildn at the Mee of the Kind.? Journal, eheaper Mau It caa bo done at any other establishment la the county. each as Books, ParnPklct*,.. 1 Bill+ of Lading, Large Powers, ,11 .IRailroad Tickets. Hand Bills; Paper licake, A rtielci of AgrecA'ment, Tune Books, . Bin Rends, I Order Beaks, dc., At the ver? , shertest notke. Our steel: of JOB TVPF, to more sztenialvettlaisysat of any other alley to this see tkin of the State, and we keep head/employed expressly toi.‘Jobbirg. Nang a practical Printer ourself. we will afi plaraittee our work to be as oast as any that ran te turned out to the cities. PIUSTEtiCt 4.ti COLOIIB duo* ' at 'hottest police. • BOOK BINDERY. hooks bound to every 'witty of style. Dia= Boots of every &seriph= tnanufzet =A, bound and ruled?te alder st abort notice. , • the sea, and which, when that water was taken up . as vapor , was left behind to disturb equili bnum; weighed sixteen millions more tons, or nearly twice as much as all the ships in the world could carry at a cargo each. It might ;fall in a day; but occupy what time it might,- in falling, t'his rain is calculated to; exert so much force—Which is inconceivably great— in disturbing the equilibrium of the ocean.— If all the water discharged by the Mississippi river during the year were taken up in one mighty meiyiure, and east into the ocean at one effort, it would Lot - make a greater dis turbance in the equilibrium of the sea than would;the fall of rain supposed. And yet, so gentle are the operations of nature, that move ments so vast are unperceived." fibreljant). MaI:OMIT SCENEs.--Ale midnight •hour, how still and solemn. • A death-like stillness reigns. All mature is hushed in deep repose. 4he starry orbs that deck the heavenly cano y, seem to vie with each other in their spark- , ling brilliancy. The moon comes up from the eastern • horizon ' • and travels onward through the mi da4 of her brightly arrayed at tendants, now vllPting her queenly , face with a snow z white cloud, then emerging 'neatla a darker one, and suddenly,bursting forth in all her gory, and mnjesticallypursuing her path _ way through the heavens — but how silently, how noiselessly. How, grand, how sub ime a. . sight. How awe-inspiring to the being Who contempfates it:'atid who cannot but feel him self intinitely'inferior to I.lim , who created all those starry worlds, and, who 'still preserves. • them in their places? 'Tis a solemn hour! Ask him who tosses I wildly upon his pillow, tormented with the re• morse which a guilty conscience cannot tail to give at this solemn hour. Dreams of hap py days lost and 'gone, disturb the deepest slumber. .The, widow moans, with. bursting • heart,..for, him on whom she bestowed 'her youthful love, snatched from her, "e!4.• life With him wail scarce .begun, - or after a few short years of Wedded happiness, she has been called to consign hinyto the tomb, and travel • onward, a' solitary pilgrim, ' , to buffet with hard, indifferent world, to supply a voting and .belpless family with daily - bread—how !wake• • ful this hour oft will find . her, `..as, she • sobs is WidoW'h prayer, to Him who has promised to be her friend. _ • Ah I bow shall we find the pour orpinu. et this hour? Fatherless, alintist - - See him tossing, restlessly upon Eksleeplesi be& hear him murmur :—"I once had kind par•mts, , others, and lotting tl '• and t ,crs• but all are gone, and I an alone- -all alone in this cold,:mnfeeling world. So tend moth er's gentle hand to bathe my aching brow, and lull the troubled spirit to rest; no sister's loving smile to .cheer my lonely path Way, ttr share tKy griefs, and 'speak words of comfortA, which would prove a -healing 'balm to }-outhe' my spiq, when cruShed and wounded by the pier - et g.Words of. Chid humanity, or those of unmerited slander. Still more bitter, no kin dred spirit, in whom I can confide, with per fect rehab - de on its sincerity. Oh! no. lam alone on earth, and must bear the finger of scorn and .7untempt pOinto at um, for I ant an orphan, atid no one mires for we. But lis ten ! One cares for thee; then rest thy head upon thy pillow, and close •thy weeping eyes,. for Hi will wipe away thy tears, and ever be:. thy friend. What mean those kneeling forms around that dying bed ? Is the hour bright to them? Do they watch that wasted form, with happy hearts 7 Ali! they will not soon forget-the midnight solemnity that steals o'er "their hearts. as they gaze on the ghastly. face of a loved one, just called from their number. The dark and dreadful deed committed at this hour, add also to its solemnity. The midnight assassin leaves his hiding place, and starts on his murderous mission. Cautiously he'huters the room, and gazes on his victim, sleeping so sweetly that peaceful sleep, which only lie with a clear conscience can enjoy. Gaze on the hardened one. Wilt thou . not yet relent 7 he lifts his hand. What is it gleams so brightly-in - the moonlight? See! he phinges:' that glittering knife into the heart of the be ing before him. • The deed is done.. He starts! Ho earthly eye has seen him, but he is a murderer. Yes! 'that' bleeding - Corpse will hauat thee, day and night. , The wort() may nut suspect thee, bnt thy own conscience will condemn thee. Thou canst not escape. Yes, darker fdeetl>arlirflils are committed at . the "midnight , liourT when night has thrown her mantle ojer the earth, and veiled it in~ darkness. /Yet; how vain the thought that nu one suspects. Can the darkest night bide anything from Him who "never slumbers 'or sleeps,"-atiddoeshe forget to punish? -• • • 'STELLA. I= M
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