'I: lilt& )ountal. POTTSVILLE, PA. EU SATIIRDAY, MAY 3, 1858. ISSLAND'S 'WRONGS AND "ENGLAND'S Or• vassstos."—The theme is fruitful, and the subject one that should be rightly under stood and appreciated. We recently allud ed to some toasts delivered at the annual fes tival of the 11ibernian Society in this Bor.• ough, the sentiments of which exhibit either• ignorance, a desire to mislead, or toadyism of thel / Most degrading character. The ob servation o f every intelligent traveler in Great Britairi adduces proof, That the England of 1856 is a very differen t country' from the England of only fift y years ago:. The. reform secured to. the mother country, has been trans fused to the dependencies. Ireland, notwith standing the degrading influences of priest craft and its concomitants, has 'also made many steps during the past few years, through the.fostering care of good, wholesome Eng liah laws, in the path of improvement. The population of England is represented as honest, indUstrious, intelligent and happy. An eminent American Minister to the Court of St. James, but a few years since, stated that the impressions in regard to. the social and political condition of England were er roneous—that degradation 'had existed, but that laws and customs were remodeled for the general good, and in . active force. :Lamar tine, after his last visit to England, testified that so far from being-qti the wane, as was credibly believed, she Was improving rapidly, and progressing steadily to increased great ness. Our European traveling correspondent, writes in eulogistic terms of the intelligence and happy condition of the population of the mining districts. While England has nee= plished so much for the welfare . - .1 the' popu lation within her immediate boundariesil her efforts to, ameliorate the .unhappy condition of the It'ish peasantry, have not been dnre warded. ' r To create prCitlice, truckle and secure the Irish vote, it may be sta:ed:that the car.serof the degradation of the: Roman Catholic portions of Ireland is England's op pression': but the intelligent and observing attribute it to the right cause, the influence of 'priestcraft and Ruin. For one; we admire the cundact of England, in firmlc protecting her own interests and rights. -When in an aggressive manner,. she touched ,the United , State's. they were, driven into teaching. her a lesson which benefitted her. Apart from these isolated occurrences, the grrattest sym pathy lias always existed between this count ry and lEngland. Strongly Protestant, speak ing the same language;' - and - bound tpgether by pOwerful tommergial links. England is in the . East, _what we are in the \Vest, a bulwark of freedom. Whatever had feeling may have existed. was fomented by Papaey for selfish,. secular and political . purposes. Thosel'who would. lead others to believe that thwenactments of England have degra ded and oppr,ssed the population of til'e• Ro nutit Catholic portions of Ireland, would du well to direet their attention to Cass toivoship, • in this Cdunty. , the Irish Catho lic population that TowAltip, better otr in any respect than their brethren in Ireland ? What i., the cause? We think it is acknowl elged that our laws have ,an elevating ten dener. • We know that many_ of those Irish Roman Catiudics hav'e been living under-1 theiroperatiuns for years. Arc our laws bad, that these people eninint rise from thilirdeg radatiou, and assunw a positiou' su p er ior. t o that they occupied "old 'I" In Ireland as here, Protestant Irishmen, (;er etc,, live under laws denounced as' op pressive, and flourish, while those of the op- I posite faith are unable . to rise much above the-condition of their swine. These are facts,) so plain that "he who runs May read:' Those: who pretend to see differently, and offer such toasts as those adverted- to, are mere bidders! for Irish votes. . 11: .What folly it is to charge Ireland's misery to English oppression, when we are cognizant I. of the fact that the tyranny and - oppression of I the Papist priesthood, through ;the ciinfes-11 sional; keeps•the Irish Roman Catholic down to the level of the grog-shop owner, and de• grades him to such au extent that he has not the , courage to look a freeman in the face.— effect of this system of hierarch:cal rule' in temporal matters is the same, whether un der the laws of England, of the United States, or any other country.. It degrades •and, op• presses its infatuated votaries. In Ireland, the business raid Mercantile ej3tnnitinity is composed mainly ar Protestant - I members.— If we pass.troto ,these grades step by step down to the lowest, Ino:t ignorant and degra ded of the population 'of that country, we find that just in proportioit to the decrease and increase of this Roman Catholic influence, just in proportion the population rises and sinks in the scale of intelligence, prosperity and civilization. No native of Ireland ever 'ap preciated the effect of. tha• influence "upon his country, more keenly than Thomas Meagher.— of all the Irish patriots,, who Sought refuge'' here, the Most respected, inasmuch as 'he re 'fused to meddle in our affairs, before •he be• ' came a citizen. Mr. Meagher tsiid that he would rather be deserted by every Irishman who sympathised with his' cause, than allow, the fetters, of the RomAChurch to Shackle his limbs. A plain, outspoken, noble senti ment, expressiie in a few words, of the curse which bowed Ireland down to the miserable position which she occupied among the na tions of the earth. These facts go tar to remove the erroneous impression which too long has existed, that 4.1 Ireland's wrongs and degradati;ins are due to English oppression, and we trust that in the rotate in this County at least, it will be diffi•. cult to find persons willing to make . Judys of themselves by offering toasts 'similar in int ' port to those noticed in connection with the Isle Festival iu this Borough of the Hibernian Society. i I met at Daniel sill's in ibili troug h, t -• • Ma. BeettsNAN'S RECEPitoN IN PIIIII.ADEL. I Reported by Dr. A. Hegervof PoUsratt Sat. Association.' '' - ' •.. - .' pose of norninating a ticket far Borou l • PtlIA.—A great ado is made bY the Demo- 1 " ..,,. • . . Capt. Nagle was called te;. the chair, , Wallace appointed Secretaryi ; Atm. ielizasea. i Bum. , tissomi...ousaay.vriost.. cratic press of this State, headed by that slave • , The attendance • was iltirge,, and, much inter and free-trade, Jesuitical sheet, the Philadel- 1 4th ' lin " ' 1 eliii • 1 i 1 I est was manifested in the Iteleetion of 1 0. perfectly phia Pennsy!rrinian. bemuse the Councils or! 30 days' a .., •, . I'. 1 i I! .. <l, ITopngreTh.&Geoftruphical.l unexceptionable ticket toi be ,shopOrtedlat, th e Glee-` ' 1 'ion on Monday next. ThefidloWing I ticket was that City recently refused the use of Indepen- I —='-'" I— i — .l l 2' ! nominated and ratified y; the meeting, without , s ator d. di 151i37.!:J 51 .1 itorta. of Potts - rine (car . • • ' • 1 , a dissenting voice: dance. Hall to Mr. Buchanan to receive - his ' Sunday 27 159i49 II "9.31 ''ner of Nrarhet kIL sieeetfi ) I i• • friends and fellow citizens. We would coun ; Monday 2FI 66 i -6() 1 •29.1 u Distanc .4•2 3b°Te meaa tide ' 633.9" ft- I Ch i ef &rursa—D. B. rbriti. 1 T uea ty 21) : fs.) e!m (ru Philadelphia , Tr e as u rer— 11. - Rigg.. ' '_; ; Be no act of discourtesy to the returned Min- Wedn'y .1,1 53 I 431 29.34 95 miler. Latitude, 40'; High Comatabb± J. Dager -, 1 • Thursy 1i391 36 1 1 ;N.50 .44' 15". Population hi; Atolitora—Jas. It. Shearer; D. p. Brown, Edw. inter, who during his diplomatic career in Erie- Friday 2;521 49 il 29.01 :MO, 7,100. 1 I n. ' ----- . 11. Sillimon. - •lAI il : I laud, performed nothing' more than any man 2a = S. ;• slightly cloudy, , •---- ..; i Before adjourning, the Meeting adopted a rest:P ty. light; clear. - , , lotion that each ward hold a,mocitingl on Thurs- Cif ordinary ability could have done—his duty. . 27-6 : w. frob; ' rather elwdy. '1 day evening to select ward office* 1 —but we would have Pwaylvania remember 29,...N. W. do.; clear. 1 • ' / I Pursuant to notice gi!ich 401 Amer icana of the' 30—S. E. do; cloudy, rainy-. , 1 various Wards of our DorOugh met in Glair respec that James Buchanan, . ( 4,3ier favorite son," like I—e. stro'ng; clou dy In 'lte. : • , _ , • 2-8. light; morn. cloudy, rainy. sto'rmy; aft c l ear. ' I tire Wards on' ThursdaY, avaning,' for the 'purpose Mr. Dallas, betrayed his State. lie affirmed ~ . ' of nominating tickets foi].Wiird officers, to be v0,.....--._ ,.....--._ ; • ~ . that Mr. Polk i salts a - hater Tariff man than . ligrAppfirol ' i ' ono for iiso,rlLiccoso...Appli- tad for at the coming eie:Ctitin. The result. is as _,l: Mr. Clay, and the unsurpassed fraud of the cations which hove been filed.} with been I . follows: • Nonni-weal *Nine. of the Court of 'Quarter Sessions; will be• p ant- i Polk-Kane correspondence, which represent- ed to - that Court to-day. - i Daniel Bill Tor Council; !:.• i • e(I Polk as tt . Tariff man, - was a fit aecom. ~A,,,,„' 7A _,—......,.....--- 7 .- i , - I Wm. E. Boyer, School Diteator, 3 years. Ilrentlier during the early part of the: James F. Harris, " i,l .0 2 . panimen to Mr. Buchanatt'S brazen declare- wdeilivia - s 'e baitay and pleasant. Qn Wednesday. tioa." Th 7ribrine - -truly says, that Penusyl. 1 1 night. rain commenced, .falling, and 'continued' ' 1401t171 -e. AT WARD. ~,, Ponied Schertle, Counei ~, . . • • vania, of ll the States in the n Union, is Feuer ' during Thursday will thilly.atinosphere. —4'...........---I----- 1 Henry Zimmerman, Sc cinl Director. i . . • -' . ally considered the one most interested in a "IPA meeting of the Pottsville Female Bildo ', I - StlitiDL 'WARD. Protective Tariff, and yet it has been her rnis- Societe will be held no . Monday evening,' May ; Elias Seiler; Connell: ~ , sth, at 7i ' , o'clock, in the Presbyterian Chnrch.l Richard Lee. School , Di s eer. fortune to haw men in the United States;l Mahantoego' stre et (Rev. Mr. Slceoul). Au mi. I Gen. Fisher, Council. ':• •',. . Senate who, as a rule, have voted directly I dress will be . deliverekby the Rev. Mr. Gray. JamesNagle,D ' ' i School rector. . . I , , against her interests—lookinp to the Southern 1 • ...,.., • „,.'''' ,-- ,„,___. ~. i - eotern WARD, . . • ; 0 “... olio rmittine tratifea —ogee Letille, rest-' r oligarchy to reward their betraya l of their eon- : ding in Bloomin g ton, Ind., swishes inforniation tai • Nathan Evans, Council:: ''.l 1 Mrs John Carr, supposed to be living in some] • . Benj. Bannan, School fret' tor. stitueticy. Eminently among , this Class . of I maim the Cool Region of Pennsylvania. Ad.l • . ' - 4 t.---,---- i • i: •,• tit 4 -11 *bands Mr. llnchanan . . ', . dress hi m at "News-Latter Otte, Bluumingtun ; I Aft-.lfregoijicent Choatet 'Window:J.—During the With a keett's,e,,o of the treacherous part. i Indiana," . ' i present week the chineetil windoil for Trinity ......... • I Church, this Borough, he artistic firotinction of Or Pcomasteation of Eateg n.—On . the 30th I Henry Sharp.2l6 Sixt .Aiiiintiti Now York, was 0141 Mr. Ifuchatintt ell:Keel towards Phila. ' IL a meeting of the members of the Silveri their rourn, l .iielphia mid Penitselton . i.i. ill bette;'ying the : c u m ' e 'k' Library Association was bold in the placed in its nal posit on by Mr. S.i's workmen. On Thursday morning, the iteatfoldin; i g used in the Teritf of I 3 0 into the hands of. its 6temies, : fur the purpose of expressing regret work was ready for re Oval ; end w took advan : i 1: : fo o d oto tosate ax th,,r ;, t I ,Tv • I teittplatetl deperture from SilVer Cr a ee t k th o e f " I . tr.. .1 ieetinle rrl'al. tags of an opportunity ef. inspecting, the window. ! John Beeville, late Pres:dent ~f the A.,e„e• : al r. 1 ~,,..„,,,,, c..: (,0 • , v1;111:11itiLe Witii the ! A Card 'of lite atettihe , F , ..hip, anti a vvtefof :hnatiunkn.v. The teat elisembie of th 'entire winthiw is perfect, .). and equal to anythiiig (1116 laid t 4 lio found in feeling which; prompted the Councils of Phila• delphia to refuse Mr:Buchanan a lift in bis Presidential 'candidacy tour. Look at the effects on the industry of Penn4lvania, of of the abominable Tariff bill of, 1846, and then welcome it you MD, Penitsybianirins with open arias, the, mati' who assisted to belie Henry Clay, Maligned, that eminent statesmin, and aided in the prOstration of' ' f our and manufactiting interests. It its an'insnit to the good sense and right ceiling of, #ur citizens, - to drive them now into offering OVa tions to the:man who deserted teem when they needed his services to assist; in the pro tection of their vital interests. • In another view we agree witi i tie Trantile, that a reception of Mr. Buchadan' i because, he returns from a foreign mission is all humh , ng: There never was any importance in the, nits sion of Mr. Buchanan:—tiothing that could not have bee.n ,ed'through the ocenn mail,„ at the cost of it fete shillings ; and it is simplyl drivel to speak of it as momentoui, or try to galvanize our worthless_diplornati machinery into life andimyortfirce. I ti DEMAND IiOR IRON FOE EASTER I nAILWAYS. —A vast system of railroads is now in eon tetnplation in- Eastern Europe, 'and in vlri Otis portiottS of the East—partictilarly which will, it is thought, require the iron that England can produce for twenty years to come. Various statements- Show. that vast revolution is now going on the East that it will'' lead to • important icommercial changes,. in which the people of the United States must participate. It is likewise air parent that: a rise will occur iii the market value of iron, from the increased demand abroad. The Courier and EnqUirer thinks' that the prospects for • the RailrOad interests'. of this country were never better. The! leading companies of New .York, Penrisyl. vania, Ohiq, MiAtigan and IllinOis are how in the receipt of large revenues frOm pasSen-I - gers and freight. Compared with foriner years, their receipts are 25 to '..3 ;.3 per cent.. greater; and for the current yenri the business will. no doubt be still larger. One remarka ble fat,t in this connectiOnmaylbe stated, and should be borne in mind, viz; that many Miles of railroad in Ohio and renno i lvania, 'con structed of British iron, actually pass beer thousands 'of acres of iron 'mines, not yet opened, but, which require only the fektering 'Care of the Government in aid of the ewer tions of capitalists, to develope their vast im• parlance.. The circular of -Tott4& Co.. ton don—an annual report upon the ,British In. dia, Trade—confirms the statenient as- hi the demand for iron for India, as will he seen from the following extract: "The wants of India continue to manfest themselves on a large, scale, and thirty thou.' sand tons have- been negotiated:ibis? week; the price we believe to have been aboni London, r very nearly the smile as`a , iar - quantity- was contracted for lakt December. The balk will be manufactured in the. Nioth !7of,England. and the rest in the South of - Wales. France likely, as soon 'as the Ores :sure of war has passed away, to be a buyer to' even greater extent than durintrits existence; and she has taken no insignificant quantity Of rails. from us these two rears past. Russia will probably. lie in the. market for rails tin a I large scale .shortly after peace is, declared, in order to compete her lines southward;tfor the; war has revealed ho* impossible it is for her I to successfully repel invasion without increased tacili,ies for the transfer of troops and stores. Other large Contiltental orders are spelicM• of as likely to come forward. The rkrt, is firm, and the last mail from the ,•itates ngs , orderS for rails and sheets." • .1, • t 211.111. 1A15T.. • ,-,-11 is of , known thrit thonsands'of-lettersl sent • toi the Pacific Coast. become dead.letters. To 'rem- . erly as far as possible this 'evil; fie Post Offien! Departmeat, under the autlioritYof CougrT,: has adopted as an auxiliary to operations, , a plan 'for simultaneously, publishing at rich and ,every Post-Office in the Neific in a list called the "Pacific' List:l4lw! names of Persons to whom letters have been ; seeby mail to post offices in California, and the territories of Oregon and NV,ashingteM.—•' The plan is . simply this—if a person writing • from Schuylkill county to a friend in Califor: nia is nuctirtain where that friead may be . 10- ., sated on the Pacific, yet i 4 acquainted With the place he last sojourned at, he can direct his letter, George WilSon, (lat 4 of Schuylkill county. Pa.) SacramHento, Califor ; nia. This letter can he depositnd as usual in the mail for California. Then' in Order lO 'sure the reception of the letter, by publishing; the address in the "Pacific. Mail•• List," ,copy it upon a piececf paper or card and, enelosel the card, together with 'cent poStage stamp, 'or a three cent piece —td defray the: expenses of publication—in an .envelope the "Pacific 'Mail List." New' YOrk, ',The en.; 'velope containing the card, must' of course, • be pre:paid. The first of this series of , will accompany the. mail of Mai. 5111, and will, be forwarded by each succeeding mail. The plan we think, is excellent, and ititist ensure' the safe delivery of letters to pitr>ons whose exact locality on the Pacific coast is unkhown to those writing to them. DISTRIIICTION OF SEED.-TIO. agricultural; Bureau ot, the Patent 0) lice is still engaged iu distributifig_rat r e and valuable Seed through out the cOnntry. The amount thus scattered' over:the/.land will amount by the opening of summer to over five hundred hushebi: Iu Rhode Island 'assorted garden flower seeds of the best kind are distributed latticing the child ren of the public schoo)sos rewards of. mer it. A beautiful idea that.; Stimulating scholarship, and awakening at the same time a love of . agrictfiture and horticulture in their • young minds. DEAD.—Hon Ogden Hoffmati of New York EDITOR'S• TABLE. GIIARAICS MAO kziNt.—The May number of fhb% excel lent magazine comes to ns with a notice that See. Esq.. has disposed .d his Interest to Watson & Co. The new proprietors will accept otir•hand iri Fellowship, and our hearty wishes for the future incremied prosperity ,of Graham: The May number is beautifblly illustrated. and contains a large quantity of liter matter of the must interesting description. The mask, Nettie Dar. ling," a gem of a song, is alone worth price aeked for the entire triattaxide • Copies ran be p:btalur4 at thinnatea. ) focal Maim. ursozoLoomm. NareTioNs4 Ioa! preaentod Mr. Reavilla. to mink of their eeteetn•of him as a mac. s elicit* au, ailMirable officer. r Raurned.—Slr, A. E. Strad)). Curjtowns man, who sailed for Europa 114 October last, re turned in thearabia Which Toadied Boobn last week. His tourstonded as' fir,stst 3 as lE.lyrwt, from the erestit of the Pyranjilils f whic h "forty centuries looked down upon'? 'the; yo4ngAmer-- lean. Nothilg marred the pleistire of his trip, and he expresses himself bights rle.light44l. with I everything that'attracted hilt Istteittlott in la belle, j Xuropk. . j • • . , . 041"; Boronglt Democrat:" '. .A,onmi.Otiole.—Al. thongh *a hare pot learned'i all. the mornipatioos I . made by the Depocracy. for Ilorebgk and Ward ! officers, ere understand that at;..a:;lneekinefitt the Pottsvilte / HiMie on Thar:tally,: sersifirig, Is t iebelas Fox• yaw nominated for Clio!' U , ergeor. ;In the North.. West Ward the tickt t '.ni:!nathinaled is— Couneil—Jacob Itinsley, Seliool 'Directilry—W. I FZBoyer, 3 years; Samuel gatniteTt,:t years. In /the Middle Ward tliere. are four: tickets lin the field. 1 - '1 —.... I • 0111 - Infanticide.—An infant was fund in the Mill Creek at St. Clair, on.lutiSdayi.whieh had been deprived of lifei,upParmitiyliy unfair) means. An inquest was held'Ow, the hod, the-same day, at which an examination um 'fnik;tie b* Dr Evans, who gave as his opinion, thte echo child• sfas per fect and alive when born. !The:manner of its death could not be ascertained, ati no appearance. of Violent means were evident neither'have any circumstances transpired to! indiCate•-itamother, ?)r whoit was that so inlihroafily i.oriinitted it •dend or alive,to the waters if the Mill Tct!eelt. i. , , ,r4lr - A Sri-auger up Tos,cii.-,On ; Wednesday morning, one of those _iron;; df travel which liiii-e visited the lower end] of iowri so re 4: ularly fur the last few year r,? arid Whoso shriek and roar have been heard so, often on every side of u-, ventured through Railr4d street,;to the upper end of town ; This was the ,fi'rst tiMe that a lo coinotive ever passed through . P'pasOilled A law • was passed last year allowing the locomotives to be run on the Mt. Carbon It t ailraad through to 11., and in all probability wo shall iliave theca ie u. lady next season. Several „neiv mil eXtens k v col I ieries have been erected Oh the ditferentbra n es of this r!tiad, and horse pO i werfit getting beF the age fur Coal transportatioM! Itt the' pre) instance the locomotive wax thken unby,lMr:f ter Martr, the Sealer of WeighOtutli3leasur test weigh the sca l es. --,, ..,- '.i• . ;03 - Appuratus for Buimifiii 6- ap plication for the patent whirlf Nt r . Geo'.4e .tartz recently obtained for an iinpro'ved inacpitie, for hoisting Coal, :gr. Martz clatmetl, supporpak the hoisting carriage upon outer tind inner tt.its, of wheels arranged in such a t:matincr in Ire ktion with the doulile sets of railfiray.': trACkly i nn 1 the discharging schute, that the d'oati car in satPhoist ing carriage is made to self discharge it! 'dad of coal into said schute. substantially it set i forth.— Ile also elaiinvd so proportidpitig and arranging the respectivii parts of the bo rarriiigc, and the coal car, that mi soon as 4iei,,elevatitt power: is detached from said 'earitiagrii,; it the toree of-gravity, run back tit; thy: bottiita of the slime track, and re-station the pepper psi sition for discharging its empty_ qmostan tially as set forth. I - ETA Terrible heiiiili.-r,Veiiriccently gave a brief account or an accident the Little .9: Amyl kill Railroad near Port Cuiltpn,i t y Whic r a train id cars wt. , thrown frotn-tlikqtraVk, Midi he etigi ncer.ltedilii g Riter, 1;lt ;killears that the binder was thrown forivalitaft tot the,. which was badly crushed, nail Mr. Rimer! iti auiqwedgeil bid - amen pitifi6ff the Wrecil two steam cocks were opeiiml 'directly bowels, subjecting him to tlietintitit intense and from which he hed itta pitiver Ito hi mse lf. As soon as 6ia h condition was realised I,y those who were tFixtOus tO relieve him, the escape valve of (lie I)+4, and every effort male for his , In order to .1.. h ovever, it was found hvieei.ary t t 'roll into requisition several jack-serikts;':an , ll , v 'means of these the iron arms of lineli,sed him in their unyielding embrae„ Were !opened, and the unfortunate man taken !, t, 'rdieti it war found that, in the intensity of hislagouy, Ito hied actu ally torn ,tpen hi. own howebii inladdition s to the drendful etructs 'of ttiif, stiiain, , ; presented a trust shockingterrible 4peitranFe. t ror,s'i), Fornqn:qbi'drift..• the Spring et' the year has heuni•debiyed o , in. in many of our. rich If4rtii . ing; disc alter eFole.4 are adrall rift}'. wh6t, that has god •n.natt the sheltering ainA e past winter , grows rail bona+ ie_ emerald waves breath of .Spring. The no tirith their quick growth ofi edalternotely with guldeni genus d intielions the up' early green with clover, clo t • emerald leaf a cherry tree t white with willows hend their green a streams upon which they g; ,tor; smiles and rejoices. mnilla:illy. and the flowers ,1 fr um every hedge and hilicit never more busy, and the crops were never more prof" Every available inch of Mil by the plowshare, and the , i , hoe and the spade, have nd since the advent of Naturist J2r• Grmid Exhibit if ,ia.:l-i";:lui Bor p i tigb visited on Friday next, byliil!gtiftel cons) of ° the two laxayst hnd most Potiolae ,Cirt patties in the' United StaieS.i MessrSl 1 Leta are gentlemen capable 'Of !tiffording or entertainment, and 'th•liittlOactions m ji . ust secure them crowded "iuditories lm m copany as cumbined, i praibably, ft which has ever visited thi., section elf thq and the collection of highllyi nifiined hot itself an exhibitien worth eeing' , itilep ~ the variety id the proge rtimai, oflperf, announced in their bills,. ; AO the entire' of the Company will appeirdidto bitthi 1 and evening, two may aoticipatolfor Iles antl•Lettf the most brilliaOt Mitlienlee w ever attended at similar entert4int4nt Mlle. 'We would particullOyoldvsse Is c hild re n to attend the aftt ramSii ' pOrfert Friday next. as it will be itmOinter thug, the evening when the crowd w 0) be der • afternoon performance will •.he',lettiiikl i 4 grandeur to the evening. sit 'potllititg wild and much coinfert , sained,lity selecting i noen Mr lathes tine children tot attend. tarday, the Company will cixhildt in' Tati _ _........•-f -IP,— ':I I ~ 1:"-.0- • Tea rh ers' - lioditute.-kyiit i spebt a at the meeting of this Seeety ', l t Ittoe in our Borough, on Thursday!, !.very niters The Spring sessions of tht:se.liinstitutes generally tet well at tendioll is,Gf i ii Fill set: from the fact that many 4f, the tedche 7 ,,, a mi itt other pursuits a,t i thisll,Seasitn et anal are otherwise seatterc ;', t.it aLfairl tition of the profe , sien - wtissnaele at(' tar was evithint. Th e 5F.9. : j011 was . !!panedi 6 the Morn . 'address from .1. K. KrewSdn,l l :Esol of , , it Saperintendant, which: we t ;tinderstitml and well 4 leticered. In• the nfterfloim were read by Messrs. El0o1I" nal Wit Grammar and Compositiop, ' Prof. Sweet; an instruclot in•the I Phre mode of teaching—a systigit that h'as bi ally gaining ground for thelaiid; thirty y some examples of the mittle,illinfllexet teachers ih. the prom:nevi:o , dr mid st., language as it shoed's/. he . nkett. 7 l i I I We have not touch titni Oor,lmince to give a his tory of this much needed,4Ofeh r iatin: ourllanguage. It was originated .in England!' malty ;Tears ago, ' g..nd Mr. "Izak Pittnan" gliS l e Itt fo l ot in tangible shatmfo the public, and it hattldtecri agitated con siderably in America for OM list '45 iy ars. The reform consists in simply Irepr.tenting every dis tinct sound of vocal artieoltitiiip,b 4 '?s c. also orateand . particular sign or character instead br represent ing, five ,optl six sounds ns at present by the sauna sign or lettcr—increasing!theitlphObet Ito 40 let ; ters or characters—a refortis OS much 'needed in our barbarously written Iftrigifige its ever any im. prevenient was in its heathenish iriveritors pried ; tive mode of giving thatdOngtinge, bad as it was, I anal ie, to the world, cultvtiting this poi, or navi• 1 I gating the oceans. It would'inot lonly make the I English a pure anal •miteli Uinta ;ineli dints tan- I• gunge, but enable the ticholarllto n4quiris and make himself master of it in one-third of this time new employed, even tat acqu're find *rite' it•imper fectly. I • ::' q.! :i:--•: J r r. American Meet hvii—sOmiiiatioi rough Ticket.—On Tuesdak Ocinidg lai our citizens who are in tiqoti. of the of Pihnore and Duni . ; opposed ti eut Natignal Adininistra frier Union State ticket, notatnated yat Dr -. thik for 'di, fl =MI MU soy chart' ti edifice in shut enuarl. The .design 'is beantiful, and the brilliancy of execution preens Mr. Sharp to be a superior Artist.. The colors 'tied In the process fiend harmoniensty and 1 pleasingly„'end cast within the 'sacred edifice tt , light mellowed and grateful to the eye. The lugger we examined the window frOnt every point of view, the . naLre we wore struck with its surpass.; log beauty,*and appropriateness of. design. . I The design which is by Edward 0. Parry, Esq., i our townsman, is nt ast creditable to that gentle. man. The centre piece representing alai ancient I. Jewish saerifite of the bullock. us un atonement ihr sin is must artistically and effettively,arranged . Its prophetic eharacler asfulfilled in the crucifix- i ion of our Saviour ,to aerie for the sins of the world, is impressively ciemplified in the stnokej arising from the sacrifice, and parting; disclosing ! the Cross in light its the rentre.—[See Hebrew?, ' xiiie.-11th and . 12th ver.—"For the bodies of those beasts, whose blood is brought into ,the ; sanctuary by the high priest for sin, are burned i without the camp, wherefore Jesus alto, that he; might sanctify the people with his own• blood, suffered without the gate."] The smoke .still rises to the top of the window, where the trian-1 gle representing the Trinity is revealed, in the I centre of which is the Hebrew character, JehO, liar ! , a, word which was written but never utteiL ! ed, by' the Jews. On the Tight, at the lower i end of the picture are the wheat sheaves—on „the left,direetly opposite, the paiCal iamb. Above on either side of the centre piece, are the chalice ; and paten emblematical ,of the eucharist— The border of the _picture,- which is a del-1 kale design and effective painting, rept'esents the vine. Below and on each side of the Trinity' are the Greek tharactirs—Alpha and Omega. A beautiful effect which is introduced with a teses l- 1 terly hand, is the illumination of the• clouds by the light emanating from , the Cross, 'producing the effect of darkness being dispelled by the - morn ing sun. The sombre' hue of the;,clouds is re lieved by 'rays of, light from The Trinity, striking more strongly upon the symbols of new dispen ration, than upon the ohl,and penetrating to every portiod . yf the picture. There are two inscriptions, one on a scroll aboVe the cross—"ln this was man ifested the love of, Woti." , This text 'was added to! the original design' at the suggestion' ,of Mr.: Washburn; the Rector of ,the Church. The lower inicri,ption ale", on a scroll, under 'the Cross and! 14twee,n-the symbols of the old dispensation and the new—"By grice ye are saved through faith." Tun LAW or Linkt..4--The.press and peo ._ plis .of Pennsylvania' 'have occasion to feel grateful that the odiOuiand tyrannical law dOibel. which for yearadisg - ra . ded the statutes_ 'of • the State, and shackled the hands of "the ; great palladiurn of out-liberties," the. Press, has been amended 'so- that in the future, in prosecutions for libels, the truth can be made a,' ; defence. We published the lawslast week as adopted. by _the Legislature, whielt gives us the privilege. • To J'. Lawrence Getz, Esq., Hie .energetic, nble . and experienced editor of the Reading' Gizzette,, - are the friends of a free, i• utitiarnmeled_press.greatly indebted for the adoption of the law. The remarks which he , ; - delivered - -in the House, pending the passage or the bill are so pertinent, tt9 well as into! eating, that we have concluded to - publish them. Mr. Getz rose and said : Me. Speaker—As a member, of the profession Which the hill now before the House most closely cioncerne. I ask to - be beard in its favor. Our ex biting law of libel has come down to us, uuchang ed, through, many generations, except so far as idilieiul deeittione, which stand in conflict with •4ch 'other, may be - said to have changed it, or, to steak moire pruperly, involved it in uncertainty. is, I believe, the solitary instance yet remain ing, of the old English code governing public Wrongs, which has been suffered to escape the Modifications demanded by the changing circum stances of the times.. By the provisions of this law, as our Courts usually rule, every publication ed . any nature affeeting tfie• diameter or repute tOtton sal an individual, normatter whether it he time urefalse, or with what motive published, is , fire:teamed to be malicious, and punishable as a ..4itne.. The defendant, in a public prosecutiain tior libel, is not allowed to rebut that presumption, lay showing that his publi:_ition is true, and that . it was made with good motives and for justifiable tedds; but is estoppel at the very threshold of the Li:ass:wit, April 29th, 1956. ' I trial, ,by the' absurd Malin—"the greater the Demi Jut:itSLit.:—The change of scenery -and truth, the greater the libel." Now, sir, in every. the eh loge ..f range:tem between Schuylkill roue-, other critnited case or which one laws. take cogni• ty and Lebenosi is indeed remarkable and striking, aanec, the metier , constitutes the governing Priniti and I must say, that the latter loses nothing by Pile. Malice—" Malice forethought"—either tß theTcontrast, particularly in scettery, at this :time reetly.preVed by the nature it the act itself and of the year.,,, -, o ifs attendant eiretnnetancese or amide clear by ie -. The inettnr . ains and valleys of the Coal Region,. iteeietilslquference, is essential to C e netitute the [littlish wild, grand, niol e ven beautifuliu Sum- adrence. - Even the taking away of human life is mere and sitaimated by all the life and activity, net held to be a crime, unless malice enter into whiellthe spirit of enterprise they contain, gives the Oleed. Upon what principle of justice and them, are dull and utoprepeeeseit e ; when compared equity, then, I eel:, sir, are publications; of at li with the Wide end smiling landscapes of Lebanon,. fielietiso nature made a:et:pt.:ens to this general mod her green Mid fert;le fields. Transported an e - hle, anal their authors punished for the esenittis a few brief hours from the contracted views of lion of a ',machete act, when, in fart, inaliee may our narrkw valley,. to the broad and cultivated Lint have been in all their thought,? And by plums of the forming districts of Berke anti Lelia- what rule of reason and common sense is the iin non, the eye never tires in mining ever the . . ! torte n t dietine.ion between the individual wile changing scene,—the fields of young and waiving has no character to be defamed or destroyed. and wheat; tiae plough-Piny turning up the fallow : him whose reptontiun is dear as life itself, eittirle ground : the farmer trimming off his orchards; the ly dune away with, end punishment meted obit great real bents and white cottages, nestling alike. whether the evil th. - e.s or a scoundrel be ex arnsouget the budding trees, all captivate and, Posed, or the . character id an honest man he inn ehnrin. but when we beer the sweet song of the f•gned? There linty have been a reason ler this bine bird, the joyous card of the Rehire and the hi as at the time it bad its origin—fer I weuldalid loud chorus of the black birds, we are delighted to far queeti on the wisdom of our Enelish ante's and ratr ---- Settreely help growing poetic, though Vie fors, as to say that they adopted any law witleolot have beeit warped that it will not ply. titiffiCialt reason—lna. sir, I 'contend that stieh Ties county, like Berke, was originally settled r'este.on, if it ever existed, fees not now exist ; and by Germans, who very ivied. , made their homes ivhen the reason 14 a law ceases, the law ateelf ma here Nature is so bountiful, sure of a . generous 11.11taultl cease. I have high autherity to so etain living, light work and , full purses. ' ' . lay position on this point. Lord Campbell. one We tem: never obeerved ,r , o little evidence of , df the most distinguished jurists or Enelittel, in poverty in any other place, not even excepting the Writing upon the law of libel, uses the fullowieg land of steady Itahits--New England. 13et what language : . appears meet etrange to tatransere, meet- be the ; "It scene to me that the ground upon which ease with wittele all excepting some of the old it is said that private defamation is critninal, ;is people. who still stick to their mother tongue— ieholly fallacious. The ground generally alleged speak both German and English. They often for- is, that it leads to a bre:telt of the peace. I do get and give you half a sentence in English and !lot think Gen this is se, either on principle or in th e oilier half in Dutch, which "leathers us," as Practice; On principle. I'think that ilefematiion Paddy Stars, alit IL iltilii., is a crime like theft or battery.of the person.: * Lebanon contains about five tlitoussind inhabi- 1 ee * * In practice, prosecuttone for tants, yet part of it. which is known as North libel are uniformly inetittded end conducted by Lebanon. though connected, is a separate Bose'. the party injured, and merely with a view of vin- The tome is extended over a space of level graitol, ! Denting the character of the party injured, or of "binge etiough to contain twenty thotteand inhabi- having revenge upon the libeller, and' not in the tents, with margin enough for a city of any ex-. reuto - reet degree stere arty rico, to the protection .if tent. There are several steepled chtirebes suh;', the public pe(tec." etatitially built, and many neat school hot{ sea.-' i But; taking another view_ of the subject. The The tnanuffielories reneist principally of a lidge pewepaper s to which the law of libel now chiefly steam lumber eetalolishment, two - foundries., one implies, is a publication, of comparatively recent for the manufacture of Agricultural Implements, origin. • When this inw took its rise, it had no a very largesteatti grist trill, with eight burrs; existence : and even no late as when Blackstone and the North. Lebanon 'Furnaces belonging to; Wrote, it had not assumed the, character and Dn.. George D. Coleman, Esq. . in.rtance it now p .sscsses, in England and the•' This Furnace, coneieting , of two stacks, though ;United States'. The newspaper, sir, has grow"fi to not large, being fed with the rich Cornwall ore, be a tuiglity power in the State. In England. it will turn nit more iron than the generality of, takes rank, in influence, at least, with Queen, Furnaces in other. districts. It is conveniently . Lords and Commons; and is dignified as "the situated :at-the bottom ,if, a - hill, and the ore is fourth estate of the realm." In this country. it supplied as lit the Monteer Furnaces., close to the le the great vehicle of information upon every top of the steam M. Coleman has recently lonic of public interest—the medium of free in erected two new and splendid engines of Morris's -,- terchunge of thought—the censor of llah' conduct make for.the blast: The engine house in which hf.publie men—the sentinel upon the watchtovier they are erected is a.nuble structure, and a new . ar lihertythe advocate - et the people's rights, office which has' just been finished is not.ohly die- and their defender arid champion against monep gent in style and appearance, hut costly in finish' lily, oppression. anal wrung, in all their protean anal material. He is also erecting en experimen- shapes. And yet, sir, this newspaper, which wee. tal stack for the application of the cold binet, be- unknown When the law of libel originated, is now hewing that it will not 'only be elteeper, but- add almost the only objeet of its pains anal penalties. to the quality of the iron. The Union Canal Is not the thing a palpable and monstrous Miser which has , been widened, anal now in me from Aityl I have a high veneration for antiquity, Middletown to this place, runs close by this Fur- : : anal ?wolf net, by any word of mine, cast re nace. By this line Coal can be delivered at Leba- :preach upon the wisdom tdethe east, to which we non from Pinegrov.e, for about S 3 37 per tot , . 'are Co largely indebted far much filet is valuable The distance is 30 miles. About, 65,000 tune of in our medern literature anal law. Bet I have - st Coal are 'seed here annually. Igrenterregard !for the demands of. the present. The most, rotnarkable thine in Lebanon county, , ;and the neeeesity it lays upon me to tem:aside or perhapssef ite' kind in the world, are the ore .from the musty meted,. of a by-gone age, and IPtiike of Mrtiteall, which rise up like great Meet the wants of iny'own day and generatien.— mounds of artificial . constructlens in the midst of We may prize thelenther-breeches of our grand the surrounding plaints, or slightly undulating feature, as curious relics of the olden time, and country, a wonder to tilt who examine them. Those treasure them in' our closets with.filial veneration. ore banks, or more properly, mountains!, :are three But were we to drag them from their plaees'of re in number, the highest of which is over tliree _pose. and attempt ti wear them in place of the hundred feet Mere the water level, and one entire garments which enstotu now eencti.Ms, I appre ;MUM of rich iron ere, intertningled with the pu- 'bend. sir, we would not only•find them extremely rest of copper, which seems to increase in Oen- rough and inconvenient. but expose oureelres•to tits and richness as it descends. Those banks of ossitblie ridicule.;. It is 'net so with many of the ore arise between the sends-tone and the limestffim , ;customs and laq , s of our forefathers. One after (denotations and seems to have heeu some great , 'another they have outlived their use. and their eruption, or tip heaval, bringing up the trap, be-:;inconvenience and nbeurdite have become appa tween which it lies. At the first glance, those 'rent. Change'fs the inevitable lot of all thiitgs enormous mounds would /teem to be a wash, but a thmaiati; and tai where do we see it more striltings more minute examination inclines us ton different fly exemplifiedethan in our criminal jurisprudence: . theory. The ore is still equally as rich when tEven the Cotemian Law s which Coke styled "the worked at the water level, as ad the top of the zperfection of human reason," has been so tooth hills, but it is mixed with sulphur to at certain de- "fled and changed by Statutory enactments, that wee; which detracts slightly from the quality of :were lie to come to life again, and resume the pro the iron, ns at .present manufactured, and also tfeeeion he so richly Adorned, lie would have - to ho goes to sustain the theory of an eruption at : this ;gin his studies anew. Why should this laity of •point. No pains have yet been taken to prove .; libel he Made the sineleexception, anal continue bow deep the ore may be, but from the facts Which T. to stand upon the books, whaen its policy and jus have keen developed, we arc led to believe that it 'tiro have li,ing since Mantled to exist? Nay more, Must lie to a considerable depth below the present ' sir. why ehould - the, Commonwealth of Pennsyl workings. At a rough calculation, it has been- vania, in repithliean.Anterica, retain it.when even estimated that these hills contain •50.000,000 tons , monarchical England, the country whence we de nt' metal, independent of the exhaustless atuount ' rived it, has !totally repudiated it? The tact may that may exist below the water, hind this immense' not he genefelly knewn. but it is nevertheless deposit, belongs almost exclusively to woe man— matter of legal history, that in the year 1843, the i.R.S.W. Coletnan. This young man dwells at Corn- English House of Ltirde appointed a select coin : wall, amongst his mines and furnaces and eaten- s mittee. composed of its most eminent 'members sive and beautiful grounds, like sumo prince of "learned'in the law," t o consider the whole sub fabulous 'renown with unlimited influence anti '. joct of the law of libel as it then existed s. which wealth ; yet there is, nothing magical about, it, tee .:: committee, after taking the testimony of four of those mounds; are a pleasing reality, and no ether i-: the Judges of the bighest.Conrt of the kingdom, talisman than the miner's pick add the fiery fur- •'; together with that id• numerous other witnesses nice is necessary to make their genii yield up '' familiar with the qeestien„ made an elaberate re the abundant treasures which they contain. ei port r in which the opinion is uneniinously ex - - Cornwall is a pretty little place and would make i pressed "that various alterations in the existing a handsome picture on paper, with its furnaces, :i law are imperatively required, both for the safe quaintly built offices and the well shaded and eul- -; guard of character, and the protection . from vex tivated grounds of its proprietor. 'But I shall I atious proceedings of those engaged in communi ha ve to devote a whole letter to . this interesting': eating useful information." The report was nc- locality in some Altura number.' l', cornpanied by a bill. containing substantially the , The Lebanon Valley Railroad connecting Read- provisions of the bill new before this Douse, ing with Harrisburg, via. Lebanon, is progressing '. which received the assent of Parliament, and is Slowly mind will take longer to finish than :was '- now part' of the statute laic', of England. Ido originally calculated on—probably the rails may not :e'er to these proceedings because I thipk that be laid in a year's time to receive the rolling ma- ; the example of England sham's! govern our legis chinery, though it was expected to delve been ; lation, but: merely to show that the change this finished this season. The labor of making the bill pronoSes, is no esovelty, at which the . most numerous, though small open outs -an this load, t corteervatiem stickler for "things ari theyare" need through the hard limestone, with which the whole-i. take alarm: But it is not twee/teary to took be enuntry is underlaid, has been greater than ; yowl our own country for precedents to Warrant Might ho imagined, from a mere glance at the ;. a modification of our law of libel. Several of the Bee. Yet when finished it Will ho a splendid i Stateii. more alive to the importance of-maintain road. the work on it being-Dr' the first order. The ing the liberty of the press in its fullest !extent. bridge over the Schuylkill_ at,'-Rekding, under the i than Pennsylvania has Seempl to be. here made charge of Bernard Riley,,ES - 0., is progressing ra• ; this subject one of constitutional regulation.-e -pidly, and will .he, when finished, a eubetan'iaU The Constitution of Rhode-lealancl declares, that and elegant structure. For this :work, our new i . -"In all trials for libel, both civil and criminal.. Palo Alto Rolling Mill is furnishing About :one the truth, unlesS published from eunlirions mo hundred tone of iron rods and bolts for braces ' - altr,;! tires, Anil be sufficient defence to the person We can trust the Palo Alto iron, there's no, break chnrged.' ! about it. 1. The .Constitution of New York contains this The distance-from Reading to Lebanon is about liberal a : 1 27 miles, and the rise about 360 feet—eonsequentee - "In all criminal prosecutions or indictments ly the road will have au easy grade. From begin-' for libel', the truth may be given in evidence to ning to end, or at least a great distance, will be the jury; and if it - shall appear to the jury, that ballasted with limestone, which is laid over the y ; the matter charged ns libelione ,is true, rind was whole surface of the grade to the depth of a foot„' ; published with gond motives, and for justifiable making it almost immoveable by the hard frosts', ends, the party shill be acquitted ; and the jury of winter. : . L i! shall have the right to.deterntine the law and the Limestone here, like the conglomerate of our; s ae s" mountains, is the chief article made use of for . The Constitutions of Ner Jersey, Mississippi, building, ate. And to ono froma Region where,' Michigan, lowa, Wisconsin, and I know not how it . is scarce and dew, it seems an extravagantmany other States—for time did not allow me to waste, to see the article broken np in the roads-4 consult them all—contain, word for word, the Ar for no other kind is 'used on the turnpike from, tide I have just quoted from the Cnnstitutinn of Reading to Lebanon, anti used for pavements AM! New York. Now, sir, the iihject of the bill be curbing stones, to build furnaces,, churches and' fore fore Ils; is simply to make our Pennsylvania law barns. • i ' of libel conform, in some degree, to what is the s The - Union Canal, which has been the only i present law of England. and the constitutional or transporting, line through this district. is now, be; .; statute law'of; I'think I may safely say, at' least log widened to admit of the 80 ton boats, such nit : one-half the States of the' 'Union* And why were formerly used on' the Schuylkill. It is fin=; should not this be done? Is the press of Penn• iiihedand in use from this place to Middletown, but' sylvitnin less respectable—lees fit to be trusted between here and Reading it will not, be open for! with the liberty which is its vital element; than boats until next season. The labor of repairing . the press of_ our mother country or of our sister this section is very great, for they have not only, States? Sifiely not, sir! The people' we repro to cut down the solid limestone. hut ' a great min...'• sent di' n'u fear their press, else it would never, tion of the distance must he thickfipuildled hefoM ,' under thekr pntronage, have grown to thel intln it will retain.wa ter, its the eavernone limestone foil-1 ence and Power. it now holds. Honest men have motion would engulf it ns fast as it could be pour- • rin,Callse to fear it. They, never shrink from the ed in. The old ditch, for it cannot be 'dignified ; truth—and the truth, honestly and fearlessly ut with the name of Canal, was planked for ii,. great. terra: for public information, is not, and: never part of the distance in order to make, it water' can ben libel. The very mission of the press, is tight, but tbo plunking decayed so often, that k to speak the troth ; and it is only the canting was found to be too costly a mode. -1; hypocrite, the crafty demagogue, or the sionoth- Tile business men here are very anxious to baits faced villain, who.drenil it. For such as these, it one of the lines open soon, for at.present all their Is not our business to legislate. goods have to be transported by waggons froth If sir, it ever tins the policy of the law to en- Reading, or take a long round about way arid rourage snits and proverutions for libel, its, policy much time.tiv Auburn and Pinegrove, and front • at the present clay clearly is to discourage them. iqd .eqt Po s to In concluding our notice of•this beautiful work of art, we must 'congratulate the artist on liii!cote plete sitOess in the execution of his difficult work, find the'tnedibers of Trinity Church, upon the ad dition to their edifice af au'ornement, theste yet rich. The window is the gift' of an individual member of the congregation to the church. To show the eminent ability of, the artist who exe cuted the work, wo,need but state that specimens of his taste and skill in his line, are , to be seen in Trinity ChUrch, New York more; St. Mary's, Burlington, N. J. St. Paul's, Brookline, Mass..; St. Stephen's, Chancel, Phila delphia, and Christ Chuck', Asstimption, La. engine, tiiru%ltr where ipon hip • torture, sir Cate Late a, e tet:., the u,14. nu, 1 L. I retiglii ca.! 'Fhb pi etetlr;rout; sold tiqtlristqn„ 1 01 y up, I and II •1174 alrea,l3, fra; la xn n t lwuirith ith6- eit - dows :tre t 'tile:I'll:I - evil gr: t i ,I.,:ttvr enps /14tni:' pasture l 11314, the '. , reb ,td bursting, i,440)5, :lint! the water. tki:: Into the life giving Tlilv.riliv'eryohere na "ie hints! secin to sing, piep:ringsip , natoou. , ly elt. ' , ,The;fariners were pinsintet:+! oftthundant IlisiWg• thin ati present. i.t Itit been .furrowed Vaitiinter:, tI4 harrow, lt,i,otitt atioweJl to rek 3tS iN (V Year. I ' F:, lIIIX and g. , ,r are al. :I rds aro ,o I—the will bo .111.ttion tom Com eleb and .uperi bey . offer re. he he fille.t country, rses is in tl,lent, of ormanees 1 strength I f ternoon rs. Welch Illicit has in Potts I tithes and Inane° on n during n. e. The point of 1I be lu.t, the after- On Sat- few hours ssion in tingly are hot qinflS are, nre en the year, repre , en- Went Ing by an r County was able addret.:e., eroq, on biographic gradu ears, gave rued the vie of our in of a. those of porn IJ, the pres• ndly to the liarrisburg, I,r the pur officers. land F. B. LETTER FROM LEBANON. FROM ORR TRAVELING REPopIiTER Chance tin;qt the finished portion of the 'Union Canal,•or by ftiltimore and Penns)lennia taunt. pie severe storm, of which we had a slight to(teh some weeks. 00, did much damage in this ditoction, blowing down houses, terming hp trees, I, 110 - scattering the 4nces in -all directions. 'We see evidences - of it everywhere. Unprotected by bills or mountains, the violenee'of storms are more te,Verely felt here by, our farmers than they can be I by those who live in the Coal Regions. On Fri. day, Mr. Frederick Embich, a young gentleman of this place, very kindly drette me out to Cornwall, (111 btit 'before we got through' with, our observations tiMre, a.stortu came driving up from the South eitSt like mad. and, thoUgt we went home thun- daying over the think road like Peter Bugg in search of Boston, it caught gave us a soaking, artd passed' no, leavnig sunshine behind it, as bright and elm' n if never disturbed by t, stone. Cornwall is about six Miles to the south of Leba nqn : locomotive is used un the railroad connect ing it with the furnaces Km. S. H. D. . . In suipport of this astertion, levine ask you who are the pert Mas that we now' had ino•t ready; to take.fulvautige of the libel haw? Not men of ' guotl*eport, who have established for themselves' : a wine and reputation which command the re spc of the community. No, sir !.not these—Wt . youri;sritaking rogues and notorious evil livers, who view to extort money, or the thirst furltivenge, come iuto court and demand repara. lion for injury to character, when character they never had. I appeal to every lawyer wilt-, hire me:Whether, in bit experience, it is not tote.uft he rarest things to see a prosecution for libel. insti tuted bin; man whose claims to respectability'are ? If this be so—if those for whose protdetion the old English law of libel wat!es tabliihed.Mo longer avail themselves juf its itro 7 visi e w, wily retain it fur the benefit Ittf ; a class exPosure by the • press is often ou'e.; of its ru•tstiimperative.although tinpkivoitit.lutiffk? Tho bill rlow before us is not designed to iiir.4) any lieeni , e for the malicious. defamation of etqracter. but to protect from malicious 'peossetithotit those who,Ott ;lie honest discharge of their ditty, pub lish a whitt, is true, 'for public information. I It Makes no change which time and experience, end the.eample of States around us, have not shOwn 'to he, right and proper. I, therefore, appeal', to the members of this House—all of whom. I doubt nut, are willing to acknowledge some indebtedness to the press—to pass it, as an set of plain, but long d elayed justice to the people's truest friend and , raost faithful servant—tee NewspArEß. The bill pasted tinally—yeas 45,.nays 35. SIGNAL Succxss.—The New York Expre.sHT says:• "Vhen the practice of inhalation for the treatment of consumption was first established here', by Dr. Robert Hunter, of this cite, and_ its success and availability strongly advocated in the leading journals, the assertion ivas made by Dr. Hunter that "If even -, case of con4umptien.in this city 'were placed under judyous treatment by inhalation, within two years the mortality from this disease would be ditnished . one half." . The opponents, of the nevi principal of kcal application of vapour for the cure of' disease ; of the lungs, appeale accordingly to the bills of mortality, predicting the Most diseourage, jig consequences from the wide prevalence! whic;ll the new system had suddenly gained. Atter a careful examination of lams in cone nec ion With the system, we ventured to give A our tfoice, with others, in favour ()fits fair trial. We tire accordingly, rejoiced to see the repeat ed alisuriinces of every good result to thp of tlictedi from. what appears to be the broadest , basil of judging in the premises, of the re , sult4 D. Hunter, in answering the appeal to the! Dills of mortality, regularly published in his! journal, the Medical Specialist, points out • a further decrease in the deaths from constimp tion,in New York, reaching now to the extents: of tliirty one per cent. decrease fora compa'r l isoni of the three months just past, with the corresponding quarters of the previous years,. For it he three months ending March, 1554, the !norther of deaths from this diseas'e are given as 843, for March 1855, the number was 766,] and ]for March 1856, the number is 5,9, a de-, creme of two hundred 'and sixty-three, or. murk than one third. 001.1.0 WAY' S OINTMENT A . ND P 11,6 will Cure Asthma and all disorders of the Chest,. Herf i ry Vincent, of Selma, Alabaina, was al most a tottrt vr to asthma for nineteen years, whitih lit •rn fly shook him, to pieces. and Made hi m i as thi n as a . skeleton—so that he neither enjtiyed est by night or b!,,day. He tried many thiugs for the cure of thizi complaint, but they 41 not benefit him. About three-months ago he commenced taking Holloway's nod well; rubbing the chest Mi.dit and trtorninff. lin tiiedi•ttely he gave . t-hes remedies a fair frial,, he was able to sleep at By rerseVerin ; :: with them for onlyseven weeks; everY symptom of his disorder left him. His friends who have mot seen him fur smile time, now hanlly ko r ow he has so wonderfully i mptoved. • Qom' The citizens of Piatsville, and Sehuyl killl:ounty in general, will find it greatly to their advantage to purchase China, Class, an liCummon Wares of Messrs. TI - NioAr.e & MinuE6., Importek - 2,19 Chesnut Street, übol'e Seventh. Philadelphia, who have a sys tenu!of cluing lousiness peeuliar to themselves. The r y import their wares direct from the best inaoutacturers, and sell them in small quanti ties hi he farmer and citizen.fnst as cheap as they" can be bought in larye quantities at whole saleslay the country merchant. .Messrs. T. & M.'s customers have the• &a ble advantage of purchasing direct from !he importer, hod of St4ecting from a very large and! beautiful assortment, at a saving of at least 25 . per cent. !4.e their card in another column; To N mtvous retired clergy man, restored to health in a few • days, after massy years of Seat nervons . ,sutfering, is .anxious to make known the means of Mire.— Wilt send (free) the prescription used.--- , Dirtiet the Rev. JOHN M. DAGNA 59 " Ful'on street, Brooklvm - ti, Y. ------- UNION STATE TICKET.,:, ; rolt (;ANAL COMMIfiSIONEK : TIIOIAS E. COCHRAN, f York . county l'e NI ile Al:1, 3.1 , . - .1" ; -tt .. .' - : ti l t) LEASE - A '!'rant of Loot I.•, ixt ir m 1 . 1 . seraton. Lucerne (num' v. I'e,. adja...lit a. 11., ... I i... 01 to bliral ethport. N. .oanal to ether' isilem: n: i." , uth.-11. and Northern markets. It ran 'l-e 5 twn Ithatit eater 10,1. and apetied.Ve r 5 litEe exp.: - '-...- ripply" t" S. P , S Ili tEM A l'i LP. 1 - - 2.-- IC 111. , t"'r , '' %,- ji•en s , LI; suns of 'l' Rads f fvont 2:2..0.' the ~ . e ~,,”1, per yard• ou baud ono ,•..0.,- !, D.•••.••.ise!'.. 4..- E. l'Allbl.fl .1 S 0 , • 111‘0Ii 1' 4 .k.1.E7 -- A lar t i:e ( i oarititt•t•! .. loud sl,,p e ishain xfor ',le, ot I a - i. a,• •tr-,f• -. J a, inch to 1 1 , hole,. in didin. tor.. . - Dee. --.. ler.Z.,. 49-E. 1 - A LIU ', '. -o'. f 11? E 111111'.ES. for Cupolas. l'Ioll:;;,.1i and itLe.t Fusee - es. (rem the henathe, Wr r,. , t' isle 1.,. At 1110 . l'l. SEt.li trills X , I Pelts, ilia ...Inn. !!... 1 , 36 , . . 3-11 t:l4- \ .. t 11" l' ' I(: ES TO 1,1'.. I „ -, l'hrt e con-', , 1 v.•lii, - nt tonic,. in Chu! h rille, . near hallrea.ii, • • c 410e‘1. to let. Apply to • .1',113, I!A\\.% pet t...ville, J 311.9, I,:ti 2- : ' note... , .. rl: 0 RENT- I he house :Iml pry tf.. I I ,1•1 lately recoiled la .1. h. Slertdit 11... n sl the. W -... go street. Volt wit's. For terms apply t.. J‘qlN siIiPPI.N. We a a' I. 4.,,,. April I_,'S, ..• a ..c Deli . , 1 4 `OR RENT-:1 Stable on RI & -- ;1 street, hare it t o Repo 111 POtt.,llle2cninsl:i 111:: ten or twelve ll. , roes. Posses,lon t.o• :. tr , :Oily. Apply tat ilEt'. II ti.P.1.1. , 1A1a I Pot t . !.v ille. January In. ls;l', 'OR RENT. ".1 'race' story I f lri:t 14 , . ..." .. ...6 nous, toot :tyre for ri nt-,-or .il o,•r . 5 .1.-oi , hailioati .tryst, near East Slat bet. A pp',: . -*:- ' . . - C. 31. 11l LI,. ....:.-!. I_ Potts, ill,. April l',J.ll":x. . . . . . il O It SALE--A 11k11W 0 arOD. nary '...''. . tire-MO/Ile! 110 Weil built nod iron. , .1- , ' Wit t Prt la reediet Sen, or t . lltlt. 1111.111 , N. :- lor sal, , I q '. nftri 4 la ' .1, .!1 x LI i• - T.7 'Schuylkill 'Haven. April 19. lkLal :'\ ' . A* , . . I OSALE--_1- lot of :•,t•t•t•to 1 -11:;-ti% 1 i i i .t•-or, •t• •,;t• and n imiew Iratoes. sa..l! .1--;•'•'' it.,„ '.(e. All !af A MAI Will be sold alt.:T. •It :.1 pn- -.- V , : - - 1 1.. C. Tit )1; -. '• . r ' I Ca tiler of Centro and Me.rket etre! , I • 2 •'. 7 , .• April 19,1.1.5,-,, la-a• . NOTICES. 1 0R SNLE.- - Ont . 12 0)(01 P-Phi ; . . • 4 Aka- PRIMITIVE METHODIST CHURCH. cornerjof, Pump.: fa et stroke. and 71‘0 feet et 12' ii I, - :A , Lyon and 3d streets. Divine Service every Sabbath at.; with bolts. rings. at:c . cemplade. Abe, I:',a 0 1 - , ..• • - 10 :'adayek. A. M.. and 6 o'clock. P.M. . tivll and as,-41f..et 3 i it... 1 ..10pe eltaill: allot t ett ~-. ttg _ Ara - F e IRST ilunomsT EPISCOPAL, ctlvßcit. s„. 111INE• FOREST, Black Ileoh and . rid wit] be . sold eleelp. . • ~ al M. T. 11;ARVA ‘ • ;",':-tt tett mot Stret, Pottsville. Bey. WILLLor L. 011.0% Payton- , DiAmr , nd Vein rr.al.-The sill:scriber. Itavitaz made • 11012,2111 el e ct Dcr• !!:'• •':' Dirty! service every Sabbath at 10 A. 31, mild ilti P. IL , cctinc,ments for a full and roznlar supply of those well ' I IU ST REC Ei vElq.-A" In rat , Ass, ler ...,„• , .SECOND mEntoDIsT EPISCOPAL CHURCH! Nlaiket Street, Pottsville. Res., J, TALBOT GRAM'S, Pastor, , pared to ship th - emin cleo,ai rie4,l. and with desp ?tell. Or- , ![e e l.sorJules flatlet A Ca. Mot 1,:on. 3h d others. . . kn"" "DI "T;Pri"rikd "4 IV4it' Ash Cams, I' P. ' •- I I meat of s plendid. Perfutpa'r! . . 5..... It, m lite Sinr,,,rer Dikine service every Sabbath at 10 A. N. and 7 1 7!"" P. 3 1 . ' ders addresgelto me will be executeri s oz ( l l % l l;' ,, st fivor- ! 111 - tbese who n, - alat tinoi•erfumery, call at C. 11 1771 able terms. . ; .IJ- - 4 -- , h e r.k and 1 n r i . e. I,y store. 41-3 f. Assoc' ATE REFORMED PRESBYrs curitcit ' . whirr-1., , ,,0 ~roost. ! , cloollJll. Market street. Rey. WILLta3I 11:Parsrt.mr, pastor.' Div i ne ' ()Meer-N . O, kni -; Walnte street,Thiladllphia, and No. i Jan nary 21.15; i : . 3.11 1111 M aseriice every Sabbath. at 10 1 4 o'clock, A, M., and at '7%! Ig9 StMo street. Do.toth • , ' ':‘ MAL .11IN ES TO 1.1. A Sl',-.11:. lull !o'clock, P. • . . . . ; Philadelphia. April 5.1.56 ! 1.141 m *Am • Arir ENGLISH LUTHERAN CHURCH. Market Square' -- -- • --- . - -.ik ~ t.r of Coal Veins,.badh Kcal arid White Asti..P. Pottsville. Rev. Dtxtt.t. STECK, Pastor. Divine !wrier in ' AL STFLAND anti 11 All AN OY COAL. , , ' ii,.: 71 .4 t ,, 1.r...d tenants. in the ..hamulsiti modPl.l , ", Bright, I.orne ...I whi.ll :Ire 111.• vett. hint,',l 1. f t ... „.. 0 .5 thik Cloirch regularly ever,y Sunday. Mon - ling. at 10?..y , 4 -The ? ; i utwrg..!net. are prepared to n ..,•,-Ive orders , I .euntain V . ! in, I'ers-aes w shine to cot ^, . ,d, i•• .1 4911 o'clock:evening. at 7 o'clock. Weekly Prayer 3leeting,. Tbitmlay evening: at 7 o'clock. for the celebrated Ashland Oat ; from. the -Bancroft Pi - ooper CollierY. - Fr- -- rn the extensive alterat ions and L i ce- : '. WSIII m ;iv , . 11 llt • '; p i; 1.:ol tatter r apt!ly s.:on top . . .. . a. A.. .. 6 "-Shamokin. April S. 1Q36 11- 0- • „ 1 14 - WI:LS.II C INOREtiA'rIONAL CRE.P.C.II, Miner"' .piovements made at the Colliery. this winter for prepar- , ... - - vide veld, Pottsville. lies. ClllatEa \Tab ElltrAltlis. Pas . n the Coal. the' , f.. 2 .1.n0 he...Dation in otrerin: It it., the ; HENRY W. POOl ,E'S To potir.i, . . • toe.- Divine service in rhis Church every Sabbath, 'Morn ' - trade as an article that can hav,i n superior in the mar- l' cal Map of the Mine MD Boil r.n.t. in, haallai • VS In! at 10 o'clock• evening at a rr"clock. Prayer Meetingat 9: *tet.bflth as to quality And freedom frobt dirt. Feat, and '! Western half of the T'ottsvillr.lCoal I ruin trot 0 , ' fp' A 451. School far small children, to teach them in the • other Impnritles. They are also prepared to,make con- ! land hegira: Size 42 inches slnare , color. tt sad II ~ ,1 thi•orlesand doctrine-s of the Bible. at 1 1 4 o'clock. School . tracts for Lehigh and Schuylkill Coal from other urines . i Ready :: . ea . amt.+ 1 a 11114. foe reading the Bible, AC., at 2 o'clock. ' Sinking School at I I . . BANCitorT. LEWIS li , Co.. , o Book Sto're:r. and at 31r. PrA's I 'Mr, IT.' 4 o'clock. - • ' . . No. 19 B alma stre.lt, Commercial Bui l ding. '. October 13. 1555. . ifil '.' Are TRINITY CHURCIII SERVIVES.-May, less, ~ i. • eel y . .1 -----! i : February 9. '. - di .. 9 1 0 LEASE-Veins Ntts. 3 illy.. .141 t Sunday after Ascension Day-10! 3 ' and 4. l• Ittb-Whitsunday-10 , ..; A. )I„ and 41'. M. Divine ser-! r 1 0 : CONSI.II,IERS" , OF •BITUMIN vik, will also be held on'llonday and Tuesday, 12th and : : • ors COAL-The Clinton County Coal Company- M ItiFe Ash Coals on the! lo,•n.itidl. estate a! .1 ~,,-7 . Ritb. at 7% A. 31.. and 4 P. M. 1 Seventeen and Thirteen feet.' In thl , L. il . f, F. ~ t • ,:, A: lar ' ; 6 1.,e. 16 Wail street. New York. are about completitr , , int , l, both vet 1 • driven h s t aarketablaetaxl. .I , 1 ,r d I‘4h-Trinity Sunday-10% A. 31.. and 4P. 31.' t th!ir 11:dim:Id to the West Branch Canal , and after Ist CI i tars en, uire of Chas.,W. Clmr"'t!illatt• nib , - f . r I' '7. ~.., 24th-Ist Sunday after Trinity-10?,i' A. M., and 4P. 3f. 1 ; Jabs next. will be able to furnish their Coal on the most ; Sheafer. P.•tr , rille. , r'''t J .' I • shi ' ll S '' .'‘• /orollection will be taken on Whitsunday, ID h, for pro- • fa oralde terms, at tired!' depot. hit t Farrandsvillo. Clinton ' l Starch 12, f, 11 -; r .--.. ' 3!1 ant t A 1 : : ,,1 ... cdrin.i appropriate tablets with the Creed , the Lord's: Col, Penna., or at any other point desired. The Coal' is - 9-- ' -" Payer and Commandments, Ac., for the new emblematic : free from sulphur and Mite, impurities. and sere desire- ' I I 01? SA I,l' . „ Of EX (_;11 / ISGE. 1:01 1 ".1. window over the chancel. • D. WASTIBERN. Rector.. ! 144 for Gas. Puddling Furnaces, Rolling Mills. I.o<4;tuo- 1 (~ rA L. plr; or BAR 1 110 N-i no horizolah' Fr; l/ tires. steammoN. istacktonitbF. family use. kc. The Co - I_la h qie 14..er:• ,, ne tilt le, ::A). horse poser:, aa , hr• ......, --: -,----- ----- '------ ---; pane is now ready to reeeivg 'orders. Flnt pnatiettinr , • h.nrse I,Al't r; ono ditto, 16 horAe power; i ... .111' mai . 4 - '0.1 1 ,e all Marriage ?odic's. tn C, , ,,t.g is charged. l'er-, atrply-to .1: C. 31A1,1.011Y. President , at the office of the 4 .,,,' ..,, I I wer; one ditto, 4 berse pertaidad La ,-. e I ~,,,. Om solo desire th it weddings published , wit/ prease.4 t i -."-. , Comrwny • J. W. QUIGGLR, Rat.. Walnut stettd. Phila. ; - Ik.' ' ;ll ur ''' w il haul hailers. Address "Boy '2,75. p....i . I .''''' I of advertising, mite" 1 thr,o , 1 fieig Ling Cfergyntan, e prig fh II- . • 1 is : ' delphla; MAJOR GEORGE LITTLE. Look Haven. CII - 4.1 f0 1 i ' .te iri c h addition In the marriage fee. . - ~-.: '• I ton County. Pennal: GEORGE ARMSTRONG. Ferrand ,. - .Arril In, It:al : ,' Ito ' , . , Vllle. (April 10. 1f,50 intot . ' • MARRIED. ____ --- _ _ ..- . - - ;i 1 Rp()V ED ('ED AR IV Altr.. ~ d -1 riRsT CLASS COLLIERY to LeL• ; `,-I i1,,,,i.+‘ ''t t .1 ••k • b' •• •I.• M I I,l ' -ill • iMORT-EDY-At St Clair. on Atte 24th inst..by John, •4 seitzinkor, Esq, ADAM' Moat to lIAWAILT EDT. e • -The truttteei Of the kok Farm , adjoittin2 the P.' -, a prime article. led cords, clolLes ll a.. 1,:-`: , 1111 IFERGUSON-DAVENPORt.-On Thursday morning. !,rough of Potts!, idle, offr'to lea4e that valuable portion ; of /1, n'el.s.-rolas. dster., w 3 ght..., ( 1... 1et1,.. pi, ~ ~ , .,,r ti 3.1. y Ist, at Swatara Furnace, Schuylkill county' , by the ! the west end of the estate; which e ml•aces al l Lamp wick wrappine• twin,. to T. Ail .:e• .!''' • '''.7 11. - r.lirtn. It. DeWitt. D. li,, of Ilarrisimr•. N VtlttStEt.. feet of the celebrated in,,,.1,. m ine ;,., . - 'n /,',;/ Alit I rt "' / . t‘ , " . 1 tot to tliftloUt al. I . l4l:l:,lthnni- tIN..): It. 3 IL/ -\ t "' ' , ..uN V EP,IOIO !I tO AMANDA DAVENPORT, both 'of the former , , gMher with the intawd, 11?1,,l' , 1-11 . 4.... hoard anal .. . .Crfrn . 4 .1 .. N . ,,.. 2 and 4 Chest ut,ta -"a-!• 191.!,,!...'-•emr lace ' P • Veins. The west end of this 1-olllerl 1 c at " est wo ,- d l March lill. at. : where the Mine 11111 Railroad passes through the prop: ---- -...:_ . -- - - • DIED. 0011• -the distance to S..luylkill ilavendsonly five miles'l WA N T ED____ A - It is therefore among the ne,re.o Mil. ries to Philadel 1 ,c, , „ • Store 11 , u. , e v ,-ently ~,•,•upi -d by th ,, . d• . KR.F.MER-On the 16th of April, in Ora igsburg, Iles- phis. The superior quality of this Coal generally cow-, I they havirp• rented and real." • 440 the new Vl' "I ' . . ror.sit It to rt•ti . A ...••'' ,4 „pow% ti k r.uta. aged 35 years. utands.morit than the wand market price for the best red . '1 prtrrettAttn-1n ninersville. April 27, labil, Gonna a sh Coal, the quantity is s upposed te be ti Indent (Co i it U ''''' ' ° r '' '' ' . ' ' 1 • i ir,„-. ~hr; tos\JArt.r ten- - .... jORRP II . ROD of George .1. and Ann Pritchard, aged 3: t! v firPt ChM , colliery for it long series of years. 1. . ` Dr ? t;0.,..1p Gr. aittA,.. I 15:• . are prcv...n..:lltll-‘,,1-.;i:•;:,..,,1, 1 . ,y 1 ., :. W..3let.inte ~.".1 ; I • '1,16,1 tht`ii F 111,1),:.., ‘ol'.l • • . , • . : mouths and Z 5 days. 6- .4 l oi l eatioit for further infurMation and terms of le se 'to be made to • aA, itu..rsEL. A g ,,,,,f . , i tdu!'ete....wf1re,..,,,t.,.-I.:!!. th .,. a to :, :_t ti reate la p ai,.. 3, l \%ti: s al , ; l, , v , 4 7 RREVER-In West Raven, on "th e 11th alt.; wttu tx • coiner Ceeond and Malientongo streets, Pottsville , St ' k " ur '.'; :l. - I ' e , tiig 'Aronarts. ton of Andrew and Rebecca Reefer, aged I , February' . '36 3-U I 1 4 1 0I? S NI.E-One 30 • Itort.t. 11- . 4 etirs,3 Months and 3 days.. :. • tln the same place, on the 20th ult.. CLARA MATILDA. 1 E HIGH COAL FOR 185fi.--Tho : Jan:: ell, if... I. ith 11 tail, ts ~,, f-4-1 -kn.:. :" t! , • Xlatialater of Andrew and Ilebocca Keefer, oged 11 months -s • unpin • . o •ine with '• 1. , ._, junderakned having been:. appointed by - the Lehhcb ' 1. ';::;' 1, ::,:r i :: ) ,. , " ;: 1. ,,r d i,!..„,,,, - : , : , : 1 i ,, ~, ...I ~ , ft..r ' ~ JO, .nroll 01 dans. ' --• - (31:11 and Navigation Company; their exth,s,e. , .1y,1.1. Par ' ~,,•,.. ii . ., , - 1i „,.. ~ ,4 1„ ,.. , it h 7 ~.,,a, t ,„, 1.. [b ~. -- I the sale Of thei very superior', liani Coal. and are now , "" n , '„ _ att. ore.tker clitill,---tit WI lie.. i,r;' a i ~,• , a .e' di t • ADMINISTRATION i triviVitize7......7 .. .;...r:udtv:Z:', - ,blinl'h,':',V... ~.,':'.'i; ke';,..! :• , , . • 01 - 9 , e. nearly upposlte Aholl au Ile toe I- . th l I _ . - : der, and the slt'onents• on blard vessels and Istatt. at J. m „..1, ~,, ~,,, - -----'---.----------- 7---. i Bristol and Rallstown. being ,made dirPetiv by e NOTIQE.--Whereas letters of Ad- hi. 411 enatipany. purehasers in.ii• reit on getting - a 0:oll• ! s flarAt h i1:i....: a 1,.. 1 Miniatration of the Estate of Alexander Wiley,: ineartirfo of I.Clitolt Coal 'rho extensile wharfaeo ar, ! i , •... 1, ''' . .lll I 'll 7, 111 F NGIN ES I'OR SALL'', -. !late of the tho r ou g h . of Part Carlsm. Schuylkill county. ! comM alallna afforded by the ihollizb Comp tny, nil i n .. t . t r eit ini k t., :rig i .stn -A 2111 steam r ) l i''' - ~,.. -' het )... iden h..: ••)-P•.' l° . „11,. .teceosed. have been granted to tho. maw bee all persons rattle tn Leapt:link together with our personal at ent. la, I , s l . Indebted to the aid Estate are raquested Make imme- i will. at lall times sees, re to ta. yeas.lo at the lowest iti l diets payment and those having claims- or demands' retotts; and we may wifely ',rotas°. that all orders e t itb t 11, , ne i i. , a , ce. ,tha ur ..k.x. k l, ::. 1 ,1 1 . u :, 3,,r r ,... : : . spina. the Meteor the old decedent ' ke known I, which we maybe favnred ' , hail be satitea . ctivile exert! mil. i tt i l a T t e i e;.:tt fort str Ire. with lie 4. rs. fa.ata a ;a i,., ,„ 7 . , the same without delay to TIO AS WILEY, r : „..1 '._ • : . . tr.IIN!.DDS4IN, NORTON. & CO. • p l y to t, .- .".04,1•••n Iraa 11ad ,5,`..:• , , f , , ..0. eg Port Carhon. Adeninistrator. orrickst-No. 2i Walnut Wert. Philadelphia: No. 63 • ti No. AV. .V.s V fr 1.1:,. i ....sr ~.•,, Or to GEORGE 11. CLAY, of rottsville. his Attorney. Liberty street. corner Nassau; New Yerk. Or to -14- April It l . 1 61 • 14 1 . ' 10.Y.t •.• a %Inert' .1*.1,1•1• . ; 4 1 ' I. '4l " . ) IV "'l i d : Cl:::nhe;l'li.(\e:'.'st?.. N - t - t .- . 1 a .. tt ' t :: :: ~. t; If-3m 'r i Ilried, r a 1 `...: - • . _ - =I DAttWIS: PIIELPS, Am.. of Armstrong county . FOR SVRVETOR GFNFRAL: BARTHOLOMEW LAPORTE, Reti,, frt Brndford !DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET. I= iGEORGE SCOTT. or Coiumbin county • von Acumn otimotp.: ?JACOB FRY, of Muntgoutei•y county. , FOR sr.nii:yon GENERAL. FTIIIOTIIT IVES, of Potter county )zttelligence. .13) TILE FRIENDS 01 , SAAB tTR ;':l'lltotll . .S.-•- Fri , ).ty April IStli, lisel.a large number of Sabbath School Teachers ponne,2ted with .litrer. ent ' , Sabbath Schools in Pottsville. wietdo the Lee turei room of the English E. Lutheran Church, for .ti,purpnse of exchanging ;.iews in regard to the "priety of li"leing a Sabbath School ennven di of County. The proposition abet lel' noir!) favor, and it'erat , accordingly 'resolved Pall rtich a Convention: the pri tiro WI to ,tc.iod-meetiog was called on Friday evening, '23th, lithe Wel,h Calvinistical Church. at which . time the committees representing the differ entlS.abbath Schools. formed themselves into a So. eie6y;called "The Union Delegate Sabbath School Association, " the object of which is more etfcctu allii to carry out the above object..", On motion, it w•is resolved, that the Convention he Bold in Pottsville ou the 101 h of June, ISA. voinmen,inz.nt 10 o'clock, P. M., to continue af ternoon and evening. ()I',. motion, it wits resolved, that an able Speak er tie procured - to deliver an address in the eI:C -ultic. The place in whiCh the Cimvantion will be,held Will be made known hereafter. IIkILL restore gray Ihiir to - orielinll ...olur p...rtuanently - . .ii:asfe...to gror: 'np , To 1. 4 1.1 ,Ibta.ls: remove all drildrira or itching: desorvy all di , - eases of the scalp; and ii used say tiller! 01 twice t we e k regularly. will prevent the tour isms 1.. tstoits.; 'say,, r falling, to any !Magill:o.lr age. read the tenowis s z . 1,.... tin:mita:N. atid we defy you to doubt, (sa,j. l';,e. 11'..t.rly Success to the genitts Whose binici se say. Turns back M Ito color the Ilaie thabwas gray. Pron. Vir 1.P.,..,r1 1/.• or!'!. Sons.thiny si.c.rth 'ltionsing.'—lty Using Prof. Wood's Itch Restorative. gray Hair can be perillanently re•StOr,ll to It-Rol-1;1(1mi color. The - subjoined certifraie was rt"- e.Are4l front .761ins.,n & Storie.,l3ardiner. Me., and Is but one of the twiny Instances that are daily coining to our knowledge of - Its;wsolderful effec - 1......' it is,no longer prol - le:odic:Ll. loit a r. , ll,rhliyut truili.a. hlltfart-th. in our ,Cotuniunity eau testily,' '' , ,' ' 1 6 t)f'. Ino 31111 e 2:2,1. IS:•:s. -4 Nr. H. - Dp.r—Deisi ,'ii..-_f liirtl . l3red two bottles of Prof. Wool's flair ltestoratlbe.,atd ran truly say that It is the greatestdis.sovery of nil{ ate 1„,. ~,..,t . „1„, ~,,d cliatming the !fair. lefore nrinte-it -I war - .,., a matt of seventy. 3ly bairliao now attilled Its ori.rinal col,r.— YOU ran re ommend it to the world witle•ut the least fear. as. my ease Tra.. , one of the worst kind ' Yours, respectfully. - DaNtst. N. Multent. Illinois Central Railroad tete.. s ' taudalia. d um. '2l. 1 , 53. 1' Poll . . 'red—Dear air:—l take phusure in •arltrz voluntary testinusny to the excellence of your air Res . for 'tire. 'film. mouths ago my hair was ref% gray, It Is now a dark -,brown. (the orizinal, cdor.) mouth and glossy. The only application I hare made;has been the • Hair Restorative prepared by you; andv,hlch, from the, result in my own case, I can most earucAtly recommend to ethers.. Respectfully yohrs, I _ F. 'w two Vcd.coT. flair Revlon:ll'm I n our col timnSto ay willP.f , und Prof. Wtx•sts. advertisement "(the ahoy • articleto which we call attention. What it has done ivihave witnessed upon several of our acquaintances in s . Louis. Ilaie 'once gray, mute our view. black or brow n, as. the case Ml2lit be, being the color Of early manhood: and as.fine and glossy as silk.. and that without .anY other applica tion than the ilestoratlve. If it has done this upon other*, will it tilt do the name for any 'of our readers ' whose ..frosty prows" were once like the -ma's it locks" of Lochlefs warlike chief. it they will try if? We think so.--jactsontstile Ontstirriaimstst, Clet, 5, I.ftt. ' ' The Gmtiost Discovery of the Aye.—l t seldom ~,-curs that we notice-under any circumstances. patent medi cines; restorativ e s. or anything of the kind. ill; we Line a prejudice adtainst most of tlnon. ;Rut candor c 0 n,p,.1, us to invite attention to the atlrerti?4rEavnt of p r ,r,„, Wood's Ilairjfestorative. We are tin.) juvenile to requi re anything id fists kind. but FlRute instanCrSof its use horn COM.• to our 'knowledge which alni..st assure us that it Is a soverei.tn remt.ly against the hair bet...min_ wens"- ttinly gr.y.' It is not a "Hair Dye," but upon his ale pllcatiOn, as ., ,iiirected, the effect is''produced npou the skin. whtll, bring s out -the .or i ginal colored hair, with•nit stiffness. and giros it a glossy and natural ap pear-sure. We have seet; persons who hare used it. and they are much pleased with it. Examine the advertise.- tneut.—Missourt 11 , publi , ai1. - Carla 1... 111., June lb. 11.14. I have used Prof. Wood's Hair Restorative. and hare ; admired its wontler{ul effect. {ty hair was becoming, as I thought, prematurely gray, Lot by the use of his Ilt•s -torative it has resumed it. originadeolvr. and I have no ',doubt. permanently ro, , SII,NKT llRrt."._.q". • . I% S, &sotto% Es. . _ (kentlqr D-mo4fretirm 'is Proof ',11,0ti,...- I Th,.se who bare doubted the efficacy of Prof. {toed's. llsir Ilestorn. live in restoring. :ray hair to its natural color. will be furnished with the address of sonte.a tilt' Lin'''t "'"l'' t''''' able eitlzens in this city. Who have Used it. staid fully en dorsed Dr. Rands letter publish'ed In to-day's A im.rican. . —l: , /ts , eorc A no. rt 0 , f -N. . ly . • 1 . .. , itli , lit.,!!,(ltlre.—Welllie never know n any other no theme will a+ hr., a share of public confidence in -o short a time so this ' lnis dots 4. It lots not Issen In 'r'' than a year sine we first he ,rd of it. and It now s' ta•ls .0 the head of all remedies Of the kind: we have never used any of it ntsr , eif—hav 'tic had no oer:1-1,..ti , tom' -crown of glory . not only as .y . t retail , it,. cl;til,4l e.,1..r, teat gets Inor, So—but sum.: "..f our 1 - rico& hare, . au-I we li tv., never'knoa n it to tail of restoring to Its cal:bled color. We advise ;itch as; . arss bet.oniltig. pernia- LAIL elr .ray' to ;dye the Restorative a trial. - , :hrst,r 11. r. all Rh JIM'S. Address—ll .1, WOOD .S: C..b.:ll.l,llroadway. New York, and I IT {iarket ' , treet. St. Louis. Vio.. Proprietors: S. W. Dr rig .r. S tV 1. W11.11t.5.1.10 AZ..ii!. Phila.kiirlila ; , I. C. C• 11.1: , 111E,i. Dru,tl:lst. !went, Pottsvllli.. Pa. . , . '.ltreli ..1. ye: ;to east 11.'54 'l - 2..1.1 lo- A K. -IVII ITS E .../Ce'y ALWAYS SO3IETIIII7IG NEW! ,ftk:AD 1111$ iil.l) AND YOUN,t;' PROP., Wap'S RP,la RESTORATIVES. WANTED. rilwo 12ES - l'I.:("FA YOI N addrch , and blold 0111 :111,11 It t ,• n 2,1,1,41 eitlr tnn yomi¢ Lnlrr ai • -11“1:.1C..:11)1f FEASN Pa. •: I 1 , •It . . \I) WA RUA NTS Wanteti by 3. 1 A 4v. 11,,:..1.:11E1:1:Y. Att , !rilvy iat Law, corner (if Se a , ;:1 and Market streets. Pot.t.ticille, ' t(; -WAN'7I'ED !--Itt :ill parts In Ft 3 h 1 ,10 1 ,,,r day. silfh stamp enc.,,d. Post 1 1 111,;PhiLA 1:;1111 in:effMll:l] OTICE. --_1 Young (;enileinan, go.] lidok-hectfer. who has had the charze f the 1,,,ks or is fh:slrou- of the came hid Of a Sitli.tiOn. lie 1114;r1 . 1 . ,11 1 3 111,111 , 1,131:41S, iZ. :rod Ai in give deference from IfW Ins an Idoit rs. k.n• finin- at this afire. April IP. 1,5 f; 1)() . 1"I ' S VILLE IRON inSTRia . 11n , pr , .141 . 1y gond allary sill 14, paid. ur ;irs - 311'. Men; 11 , 3 , " Brni , w!t It thr p• ,-.2111 prl.riet Ors 10, au vt;vo L. Apply to - BENJAMIN 'F. P. k SIN.' April 12 P;':.; ' 17-If COAL rllO MINERS of , lte'd 'and Deep AAh Coal.—A party who can' intluence And etT•:ct the sale. to first dabs customers in New York and ity.whove notes are unquestiouible. DI my Cash pace.rs") by cAnal. of (coin '..10 to thousand tons viich Cons. desire , to mnlu an ,irrintfultient for the .ante. Any party who rein ship. by mold, Cool Of the tit.4)i i• in ti rot rate order. the Advertiser N 4 01 meet at their place of business, by their addrestirm• It:letter to. 5..1. PEARCE. New York. 01-4 t Mny 3. 1558 LI,EGIIENY AND CU - - _ 4 usEttLANDcom -I,v the cai r n, c:u•,nm . ai k or busliel—warratiteit rob, 11 "rx••eCent quLlity. Dea'Vf!. and large c n auu ;n114.11.11 at Wholesale - rico . . Will L,• dcl“ore,l tkt any point al. - mg:satin! or railroad. Acbtre , i , . or appV t ., THOS. E. LI.. lot Walnut.4rect. hi.,. 1:-Iy' 2A. 1.-f.:;,:t; ititILAND- COAL—From P.• 3jIIIWOK U.).'S Tun nel ed. b..tive. in eente ,, t i,‘n• With Ihe Geiyeral Coal ito.ine,N. takel the a.zeney of th, ah , ee CoaE'rout are I , r,T ire.l h. iv e 4.1 orders. t niay ik :WI re,4e4l to I`,,rt fvrhos, or .49 •itre”t. New York. C.A.STN ER &T. el' Augur.t 11.;'55 :311:tt' 00-PARTNERSIIIP.--'l'he under k Jtiianeti have this dal; form. d a nenartliershitt. !vier• the firtn of N IN 1::ILN ET:. for the purpose of trans aetipy a Wholesale Cilal and Cnnnuissinn business. S. W. ('t r iter of 4th and Walnut st. Philadelphia. acid so.l New'Strt,t.-Now Yorlt. ItA VII) .1. NEVEN. . , Eft. Ftb. DAL. LAND F01?.. - SALE.—A eer- N. !ki n try) ofLind. situate in C,,c towtrship. Sehn l / 4 11,111 eunnty. adjninin la , pd‘ of the .Forest Im• proviim.mt Company lon the east. !It'd lush.rds , n on the west. a nutria as .Ifsetssbney4.,ontain -41,2,-1 let.' and allow:mews. oply to . 4.ID)RGE or 0,1 tiEItROF: 711EricE, 355'1d street,' 11-‘,t ESPI!Igt,r, IPARTNERSIOPH-C. •F. NOR- ftr E. V. GLOVER. the-date firm of Silliman...Norton A: b,ve till. day wniorinted with • them. IV. .1. AVALTIIN and .1. It. VAN DUSEN. of the firm cif -11ohart's, Waltnn4 Co., and the lincineF , will he continued under tie firm of VAN CO.. at No. ',"IS WalOut street Pier N'. 1. Port It irlimond. ' .. , ' Phil;l6lo3la, Fi.b. I. '5Ci. tet•t ~ . C/OPARTNERSHIP.—The under- Ann. , ' have this di, y' Om viddry '2lst. lk: - ...t 1 .'i entered Into nipartnership for the tranaart lon .4 ri General eon] Commission Mod m 0.., and also for the pit rrba.e and sale of Goal. wider' the firm iif W. %l. 11(14:111: 4 .1 - Co.= • fun ...,-20g t-oa hiray. Neu- Yoid; and Iml:entre atrret, ' opposite the American Hotel. I C Port-til , WM, M 110 f :lls:. New York. P D. LUTHER. Pqt.tsville tt.tt • February 9.'.i8 Maktalon, Cox & Co., DEALE RS in and Ship 'yrs of: Ariz thraelte Coal. Willie - and Red .1 , -f yin tlih•. Wharf No. *2. Ri hmnnd, .Cumberllnnd Coal, from the Franklin /Nal 'Companys mines, ship , . dent hr them at itallintore. iNo. It MA KI6TON, 1 No..ft Walnut street, Phila. nt,i. WM P. C , IN p. NE IN. No. 4 New street.,New York. 11.tarrh . DISSOLUTIONY • a .7 • THE (t)P' RTN EIV 4 1111 ) 71 7 14 exi,ting" uf,d-r U' firm 0. le 0,17.4 7,17•.4•71...1 I.y tout flat 0 k. .1 ttt. ' t Itta t rk• 11 7771`• 3 •••• •17 77.71 with D. 1.. 7 . 11 . 7 , daml7.'l k r ,,,, r11:11t, the ; 'he tetotore. ttuder tiAt• atll, 1771711.• 4 r • %.V.12 7 :.\ :A Agri , t Mit) . Is;.i; • .. ijissorivriars.:-11,e -- 1 , ,,,,i, • heretat.ee Letween au.( tb.rtkatk .1,, Atwood. tattler the filial 7 7 7.7 716 11114 II:ky I. kti•lekl,k kt k1r.60.1 c 1 Th • mae.l Ate....rl r,,,, the htke,itte4t of the Isle Leh, hit I I tit-A 1 turr iktiAtel.s ttkrthej , . itk tile k, . , Co, l. 1 . .1777 774 .% 't 11Ii. LUAU 111,4,, J P,..tt .4% :t Mr. Nay , 1 - 11$S0 it rrI9N.--7-1 pziria / exist %,e w 34 tlb: Mt ;'' I=l p.trtn,rs have , t4,tuh, , tiUr st/a. httervst In life Ali fah . ' ark . 1 , ;)/1 , hie to B. I. 01!:.)y , •") Mita, eor nod will settle all the tem , 1111 Apirtl t.... 1.5r1 164 - 3 C. pi 4 I )Alt • l'N EitS1111 ) N Yr IC c,rl+arwer~.hlp. in the 1,1,01..••• r •- 1..• ureit C extatiug.botwoett um, /, 81:E. dis,l:ed 'mutual (~L,r,t. It.id The under , i...-,ro-1 hare thh, 1 ,- , .1`" Into roparto,r•hip tho Lathlet ' steam NIA' :11111. 111:11.:- ' the 14t, : SON 81;,15'}. 1. • I:. ly ••••• amt. I , • TO L firders for all kind, go_u”tr tendyd to tiv r I. I„ at ji I ' .4t a vant c tee v. MIN !Oil. Mt . 4- -,......4 f . ... , ! - -mu,rl, 1 1 j..) Contractors apt! • lin ilucrs'..—'l' to ever ' ;ii Evangelical l'hureli.•of `et ll' I ioll Ila,I.11u ; ' " A: . 'I preititreal to rertuve sealed prop-sal++ r I 0'01;112 1;1 ft 1 .0 Aitteitarsolia,:e. for ttfteen chlos in le ,tat, t t 11,,, ~ tilt e he tiserit)tht. Further particulars tostoltatitt .1 It , h, . lure.. _ FAN , of 77.., l' tl lb '' ' "l '' fart a . ...,ilmstt 11l Haven. 'May •2. l'i , 01 • 1. -, , *Dols 1 NIEE'I'IN(; of the stork`ll,,l,..,Dlot:, I ILof tho )ISurr: Bank of Poll,. Me. in Ihi • O • e t .. to . s; I - rtitrsti,ill. mill Ite held at the Rankin:; Holt, - luil A ,4, ls. r •ot th of Potts.sille. tot Tuesdki. the tenth d .• fj e m il ,' nett et 2 drltsk. it 'M , to taipt into et tisiderat , • i. `,,,, ,Blopostt i AArt tl, 1t... , t 1h ..1 April last. tuithttritioz then ! , e .„ to itt,',reast. its capital Mtl , ek, 1; 1411. - Ir of Ilte'ltt • , a es ,* 1 , ,,t1 , 111,. , 1„ , ~,.. 1.,,,, , t'FitiS. 1..11E5F.11.!t s•., "'vs . ,. llir. 1 1 , i i i"l-ENTI()N 1..,.N . ,"rAti()\ , -.1. • If°tel , • .0.1 in h ; A , eloopapies rotoprisine the First lietzir r r ..' f•,i; .. mu . - kill t•ourity Voltinteers mill tie, tI, I , tr., 7 , - .i,t r.••: , - p. I I oi l ' Tuesday. the 13th lily or May ,to- It,. .. !,,,,, • . Ir y e s, i potttsdille. ,The hoe mill trot It 31.tr.,t ti , „ • .. tem , i refttitig oteriturtland street, to in: ~ :u: i t A t r, 'brim t! ,‘, :il.„ sit i r thout further to h,.-. llt of t;o:t.t.t,„ 0 4,0,,,,. elititze it tel. tly order of file l'. itt • t i the mot . JAm, ". ‘t 141-; % I , • .*Dane P M ett,villt• ay :!, 15.".•. • !I' ..! 41711r11 , • \ OT/CF --' 11) Al.l. -1% 111 )AI - ‘1 "'" nr ' 1 I ..s. It \1" t',KNI 'FUN .—The pol.tp.a r ,. 1,, ~,., v ~,,,„, i T ie t q l: f t, l ; I tvg.titist ,Idurrog. sellitt2. et. In, all \ MAI D.J,, 1, , , , _ 0.'0'.61, 1.. ‘l,l t'',..12.0...• '111,10,11,1.i . ..; i. , ~ , i ,i,.. \l!!tly• ! • ~- , 4,„, Nov. 10. '55 4. - ,-1:' " N$ i ~, %I 3: !..: . ' ! .,:•'C.;il Vi)TICE.- - i ' lle I/claw:ire . ‘t , ,til I; has I . i ,„, ~, nt win i.,• , ~,,,..: 1., .3, , i:•!511'. '''• " miue It \ V the 2.01 in‘l. ',.., ,:$ ..14, , .1, .:11t !,!. !:!!, c, . ' tsl . 1..1 .ill I- n1i•.!!,,•,1 uli:i; Al,l . ill , 1'1.4 ! .11i$IN 11. 'III 3 1-10's I-• !I! ..• ! . , 31:tr!l1 '..:!% I - ,•! N, !,, 'rea,ci .-• 4 . , (E! 11'1 . :!!- ' ----A II Avho pre!er p A l I . : , i , , in.: "ll'at,•r !IT tr in I'l - it:Nil:: pin. it It!nr $ . . , ft.., the Canal ........1 .11 - 1 1.. i•i.a!illit Ai, !!!! Atli Willi th , unikr•iz!,,,l ii'..nlonl,.r. , thh. 1.. th, Spi.inz Wahir 10. in 111.! ai , lni!!: ! , 1" Pntir.vlll!...!.!i et ! ,111 :,,.. wil• taken fr,ni On. r.rhi! ! !! il, ill C ' :11 , ,,1. ' ! , vie •ri ~..f.yri‘n S Tn , o, ‘,. ,-.,..m . , ,- (' P,,tt‘rillo: April F.!. l'i.' , !! ! rro the ('oal Trade of St•htly l, lili 1 '(1° '; 1. :.1 —5t,,,,.,111,.0in.,...r0,..,,i,,,,t ,,4, 11: 1 . 1:-. J•. Ti ri.,,,,,.; mqf lip! (' n il .%!,<ldati.l4,.in, C,rtitr • ,••.•• $ (hirrixiie'7: 11!ii.1,Inre, e!miory Tit.,l3) an ihti Up.ir it !!'‘.1,1.. A_ 3 !..1 , ! 1 ~.'!•!!rh. I'. 31: All 111! , . !!!. 1 ril iii 1110 13••Ir.tri•!,1 tholcnk'fiTt! 1113'1f...tit! .t-,•,!, grap I tit,.,.,it,,,.tt,,,,u:11 whirl i . .. 11 1.., hi p 4.1 m 1.... rill,-.• ,-.• The , titi•li.linient of •• Thr C.G . l,,ri;'llllrp. , 'p J 5,... , ,,, - ... ay ln..eiTCo 1.11. , 7.. I . S, 511.1.A . 31.1N. l'r!-- for a , t I'l-tt,,III!!. April 19, lgre, - • , EMI NOTICES. 1 ., 35 rh.. 1.,.. co. E. p.p.nt...lip lit,t 1.U.1. th •r plrti •1: • .for ptl MEE . - . 'VIYrICE is hereby hilt th 1 1 .„., { 1 p,'..r.t.. merlin_ of the Zwrl•, I; L . ~ t !.. Tit ililrt , seint•tit 1 . , titrtil,gill In; 1,1.1 1 . It . • - m i , •1, -r 1K Ili 0.• city t , l Phil,kol.•ic.ln.i. t.ll - ~.t. . • , r _ of NI:I . ••••xt. :it I'1••••-1 ,,, It. at It , . n . : ::,.! .j .t. ..., eats ~ ni,,, , ti1,...; 1...,11. , •1 hp tl••• Itir•-•11 , ,, • , .., : i , ...i,, ~, 11-1...tti•1 inn (.11` , 1111., Of th•• act • r• , ;• -1 - ll,•i':r. OUt hi: in , tin- It r..., 1;1111111 , 1 `114:1:' . 1•1', i11,, , ,j, , • • , ~ , p,inn. 1.1.,• I I, th.• I. ‘ •_i-!3lti:.• , I I, -. .., .„ ~ ~Z. I II t , II,•I •“,. , 1...,L , .li•••••`, I'. ~.. t t,.i tit r•l' th.• .. '., .' , '..,'. i 4 • •li4 1 . ..11,1.1,13 ,ro r, oi,•tt ,1 I!..tit•-n.t ill. -I' .:, -_,, ri , .;,:-„,;,. I:j;.1111K , . . Dir. , ' f..r4 • I, ' ' , V ...1. , it. i., . */ ,, ni,, , - ILI, ~ Moat .1. /I , • F . V. i I:\1.1\. ,-SI:11.4. In lq Ii•• • (~ ....r I,', /i "ILI it. , , l't Ity .I Ittitr / ;11, L ,J.-,',•• , 1 1.. t_ • , F . ( ,beetl 1 13. Cll It IS'l' ort.rs Itini,4 , i , -....„,„' ill i /...,".11,11t.• t-r lb, 'lb 0,... of I'llici Itn!,- -I ~ • ''',...' . , • -x,-. : ••• w t, i: rott,ll 1..1..0ti ti. - I ~ ,_ ;1',11 , ‘ j',1... .\1•:il '2 ,, .\ /,:e. , • ' ' ,l: ( • T, pprsoii, e!tut The L I hut t', v.ithL_ HI 11,11' KAt t, 31/1/5 I LNo I !. Intet April -,.•:;.1 ,- , , ; , r ' ttti( i dli S . A .—Waslimirton '‘'',i flip,' ) • ~' IP on. ••.liilli.:r Si :, ~ 1 A 111 , ri. 3' . 1111 .t , •,:.. , ' " l i r ',lint:. at !•I,,lintlic'r. tiniv•Ti.i,,t st,,, ~,, . , MM= . 1- " PO R - SAL, LET mar, I 1"? S Supt .r Tilt>pl been 11_1 , ~f Ivv.l. :1: r • I the it tt•.l I;1.11;11 . 1 AI. court I,ET—Fiji? no. ms in the Clemen , ' • ntr. -a - r Nk \ ..4 1. 117.70, 1t - 1., 1
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