,tai.. POlrrari ..gitIiLLJR, PA: 41117L1,- l'B6T. T Monocle 'rot :se Row now.. PIOPLVA iossiouttettox.—The - most eminent political coon , exist of the present day, mold hardly succeed - in confirming himself that thwsole coos of the koala hard times in the business world is e reek leer epecalatiou, hit living, and the multitude of extravagances, by .which a people' bring theal !MlMl' to the verge of pothattiary ruin. Is Is true that vie often lorry too ouch oat for the ideci,itif our craft; hitt there is an nederourrout cam more, fatal to the progress of oar voyage , than that which, m i na s" f ro m ourradves. • The feet is, that ,it has teen Oar rate dating these burgle, yeariof the Republic's existence to be governed by men, theorise either 'fools - or knaves, and I' faith, in some instanors,Cmbraeing a combination of both. • Harsh may seem the terms, we apply, rod yet in . the name of (*meson sense; Chat other epithets so appropriate to the truth, when evils arise to the nation, such as.thosti we are now isboriniun. dr. It would be a matter of se:prise if , hard ° times did not come, under national attainments ' blighting in their effects. •• - • Take for instance , the preseatTariff system—al • • , •• 1 4 of the Democratic party , ,„ led "strongly upheld ; 71. by the Administration. Look at the article of /ran—which under a proper system of protection, would be oup of the moat iniportant of our pro duction& Ifrfirordiug emplOyment to thOusandi of workman, absorbing capital, and, promoting the growth and prosperity of bur country, by joining communities in railway bands, it should be peen ' With° oldcot, of the foittering care of the eon*. try. And Yet under the system forced upon us by the fools and knaves of government, Iron. since - ' 11146, placed in ..ench a position, that when it is soiree and high in price, it is most sav agely protected, bat when low, and produced at, a siollice here hi competition with England, the wade of duties makes it lower. The same policy -natenfle.iteelf to other branchei of our domestic Predill*, Is it actuated by wisdom, or and,lnitery? The present hard' times bear teeth/Saki against the wisdom of the colas, while an applicetiOn of the pritudple to an individual's zbasiness, would Stamp him SI dedoleatin there'd. nese, and blind to h'ls interests. . tinder the present Tariff system It Is not 'at All sturprising that hard times are upon us. ' Had it not been for California, years sines at the rate at which we have °entreated debts abroad for impor fations,..—for 'goods, the mesa •of which should have boon mansfactured in this Country,' and would, had we an adequate protective system in Operation—we would' hate been bankrupt--utter. ly impoverished. lip this very day—lt has continaed for Years—the California steamer bringS • two millions in, and the Liverpool 'reamer takes two millions out. That the work of thereat' and itnev,ol,l9 the present Tariff system, is the enure of'this ekenrating drain, is proven by the fact that in 1846, the period at which the Tariff of , 1442tratioposied, the foreign products consumed in theHnited !Ratite, amounted to but $3,27 per an. num for eritih Perstin in" this country. Now, en dor the system which is carried on, $7,00 worth of foreign goods are consumed by each person in this country: Domestic products are neglected; , labor soaks' in vain for employment; the poor man struggles for sustenance with "the' wolf at 'his door:" capital is diverted from its lOgitimate ()trmils, and wo experience periodically, whit is technically known as "bard times." If our people . trace correctly, the true eausi of 'this state, of affairs; If they will but think t Calmly an eantettlruiton the subjiet, they must agree with us in our estimate of the legislators 'who inflict laws upon the country, which are tin. higenistioal to its prosperity, and the welfare tuU happineu of its citizens.' They will ndt then we ate sue', think the tonne knaves and fools.as ap plied to the men who enact such laws, either in tippropria la or, disrespectful. To things, right 'tonnes shbuid.hetipplied. We yield to no man in respoot for fbe aloes of President, Judge, Con gressman, &Ate Legislator, for they are bonontble, _and reimpnalhie positions, whioh an. American Oltisen ihoolithe'proutl.to boILI- 7 het alio, we often ...liars bat littie respect - for the men who occupy • them. Pcali to party sprains; the dmolnments otottori; personal ambition' and sottish interest, —override hi many , instances, the duty of office- Is-aides* to the people, rind we arc saddled with unwholesome enactments, seegonal opinions and 111-advised measures, hiving 'alone for their ob ,feet the continued organisation of party, and the ' retaining in its hands the spoils of Once. Thttin. • aatguration of en idminietration to the eignat• for . , laying down - it programme for the next campaign . ; for the success of certain Measures and a particular ;•• party::: The people from whom all power should 'spring, occupy a secondary position; permitting thomseliek to be mere puppets, worked by nn -2 scrupulous, selfish, ambilionsqmderr. That the people's interests suffer under this state of affairs,. Is painfully evident. r Although • the pollof to. which the people timely:submit, has much to do with: the. Crisco which we aro constantly 'exPerioncing, still not to it alone, we might' add, is attributable the present hard times. A prominent . eau ist, the increase, of 'poetasters, and decrease of producers. Many now living and growing rich on the Mors of the produeers,—;•enieting the put of leeches on, the business public,—should bo engaged in legitimate business. Isi place of tilling the soil, or main. factoring, thontands of Men in this country exist on the labor of their fellows, for every speenlator, trefficker in money at usurious rates of interest-and middle man, who produce. no • thing, Is literally a robber—taking from the pro ducer without equivalent, the wherewithal to sup _ port - and enrieb himself. That:iiipArvinisation and even, utter prostration : Of tininess should grow out of this is not to be wondered aIL.-.1 pable cause of bud times. , From the State to the. National governments, there ie•eviueed s disposition to encourage these depressing causes. , ;Modern legislation, corrupt to the very core, appears to axial only for the purpose of thwarting the wishes of the people, • and to test the experiment of how far it can Pro gress In a career of • folly And knavery, unchecked by the people. We trust that the citizens of this . Stabs, of the entire country, will bestow sleiriol l / 1 thought upon the subject. Let them resolve ,In view of 'the reptill disasters they have experi; anted, growing out of insane and criminal Ingis * lotion, to elevate the character of those bodies, both- State ' did National. IT we ,have suffered, seep it ii,our own fault: Let us now en ergetically apply the remedy. Let on exiled. from public office, fools and knaves. Lot us be ° wise in time, in . this matter, and hard times will become a "Alai linked oply with our memory of the past. . Sufi nr 18fp1'.—The progress of Spanish, within the last few years has been very oonsideraile.. Roads are becoming better, more plentiful and More segefer: Spanish ships:multi ply In Spanish altipjardo, . nnly j orsities are rail- Ting, free sehooli sad institutes, are established by Government, and' an agricultural Presi Ands an' ample geld. Lines of railways reaching '-Francie through Catalonia and Navarre, Portugal gluon& Ratretnadurakand the Attain tic at Cadiz, are in process of construction.. The line from Madrid to .Valencia on the Mediterranean, as wallas several abort lines in Catalonia, Andalusia and Castile;, are completed. A noble aqueduct lea& the waten of the Loyola to Madrid,la die- . lanes of fifty miles. A telegraph acrosithe Pyr-, shoes Oyes instintanetnis commianiestion with the rest Of Serape, and , will, we hope, twee pines! Madrid within a few seconds of York. Hos pitals and alms-houses and public primary Schools I • .are to be found throughout the country, minister ing to the necessities of twenty millions of peo ple. In Spain at the commencement of the pre sent year,•there were 15,348 priblio schools; Justi ndu and univenitlis, with 24,606 teach. ' and, professors, and nearly a million of pupils. • , Tits ".43nsig Steve,"--Powers' master-0 was.revarehlieed recently in New . York, for $6OOO, by the Cosmopolites' Art Asiociationi It 'any gated that the lady who drew it beforerwill Lave an opportunity to repeat:lthe joke, if unoblipetion-- able. The Slave Is certainly a gem,- and it may he intimating to those desiring to become mem ber* of the Association thy year, that at the next . annual drawing of the!. Assyeintion, it Will be among the works of yirvitistrthisted to the coh. scribers. ' The Assoeistion bus purchased the bus'_ melded tiatiery , value 4 at $6OOOO, efte of the i latliet collection's of, paiptir.girgu the country, which lb* Association 'Contemplates distributing amen fp•aosinhors. nisi. will be an additional altreetivelsetare of the,iiiiovistion's prognunine for the pretest yea. A' subscription of three *Meta saute. the swhesrliper to a share to the *whits ak r istaligriwslag, and to a copy of be wisseXtosittaim Likosiiis is spat, for tilt eviohait4 ell/ mr4400 tit•Nosse," .dsetaff,i;liilll.llll 6 ,, Tire Pans—A iteror- In comet—Ur Artie% on lb. of To- W11:111111!1 111113M1D 71 0a1v0340111 (I)Mute) New le an assertion of the cttefstfaa Advocate -Is, Oz.: the aim of a newspaper ihoolithe, -to bring young minds into community With beau ty, hOnoiend virtue, instead.ot with deformity, baseness and crime," settuirlts • • ..A A noble missionindeed,lotinit'which otiestedgh bor of the Christina Advocate avows to be bia— s Mission which is too little appreciated by the mats of newspaper readers, an welogret to say, too .little , emulated by a testiontr of newspaper publishers. It is e polanehot* 404 apparent So every casual observer, arras_ bere is a morbid ap. petite of the pubtto mind, In many though not in sA commanit • for Wuae Pltriant.details of cor ruption and. scandal' ' of horrible crime, from which the natural Feelings of every human heart revolt, and the unfamiliar eyes „of childhood and innocence turn iiiitioathing and disgust. It le natural—and, by sequence, laudable—for the pub lic to desire to know th'e facts 'relating to any great Violation of the laws ordained for their own peseeMnd safety, and it is proper for those facts to be spread before the public, through the press, to the extent of Indicating the author of the crime and justifying the penalties inflicted upon him. But the press is fulfilling its duty in this respect, his too often forgotten the limits which a duo regard for the public morals would suggest, and/rem one step to another of competition for favor and patronage, it has entered into a disre putable rivalry for the particulars, incidents and surmises pertaining to every discoiery of neon. doneness and crime, until the lowest and most putrid "material of society, which In the days of our fathers was considered too ; rank and noose. one to be even pricked with ,a pen, is now at a high premium for immediate consumption at the homes and firesides of the people. ' While every member of the editorial fraternity will heartily concur in the seotiments of our SouUtern mitempOrary, he will also kecognise the fact that not, to the secular press alone is due the depraved taste which has taken possession of the people during the'past few years. The press has but yielded to a phut of the 'popular disposition at the present day, which induces pen; women . , and young people to turn sway from the modest narrative, or the calm, dispassionate statement, for the prurient details and exciting denunciation. The religions press need not eater to it. Its ma 'dem do not expect 'of It the minutest details of the vile and the houible. As fai as the secular press is oofterned, the New York Spectator thinks 'that it has rather yielded to than created it. it it a natural element of Ire mind,' existing before newspapers were known, and where thopare stlil• unknown; avid' all that the-press can do:in the matter is ft modify and correct it, by supplying it pure l and healthy diet. At this a fair proportion of the leftist; press constantly Ind peperveringly also, with, hoirever, only partial success. Another porticin compromise the matter. They yield to it only so far as, competition seem, em to require—not becautie they approve of lt, but because . they And it needful for the aequi sition of a paying ciraulation—aad as in offset to 'nth concession, they exclude a class of advertise ments that they might ' very profitably insert; While yet another portion throw off all restraint, , mad foster and toed the popularldeiiro for horrors and the detain of crime. If penthre is to be bestow. ed for this existence of the morbid sentiment, let it be besbalred not arone on the preu, Which weakly yields to the demand, but npun those who buy and read the newspapers, Anteater to this popular love for the horrible or vilo ormarrollous. The discovery and application of a remedy are diffloulties,eontinues the Spectator. When "the people will !wive it so," it-will require self-dental, patience and Turugo on the part of high-minded Journalists to:make it - othorwiso. Yet undoubted. ty with journalism must the cure begin, And the necessaity of s cure is urgent end innnediate.- i - Dieguetjng details, with flaming headings, appear in journals which have free access to, nod cannot be exclodod from our families, end which years ago would hero published no such matter in their colonies; add there' needs to be a return, on the part of the editorial fraternity, to some such stand: and of duty, as is iniliated by the following con cluding remarks from our cototeporary, - the Gal veston News • • A fearful responsibility rests upon those Who assist to create or stimulate Ws morbid 'appetite for raw-heads and bloody bones, or who pander to it when once aroused. It is no excuse to say that the.publie demand the feast 'of blood. It is an abnorinal craving, and every wise .and conscien tious man will rather seek to correct than to en. 1 courage ft. As it is sure to "grow with what it feeds on," that supply Should be .witlibeld. It is enough that' the cowls and juries aro made ac quainted with the' horrid details, and, that the pub lic know tbat,steady an., , impartial justice is ad ministered.: It Is-enough that actual crime and corruption are known, and ire under the correc tive ,observation of the authorities, without :the inventions of tortured fiction to multiply them in all their disgusting deformity before the world. . • - Every journal in the sand should .do its share in bringing the minds of the people "into commu nion with beauty, honor and virtue,. instead of 'do minify, , baseness, and , crime." *With every gbt-minded editor it is as easy to do this as the contrary ; and he must be abandoned indeed who will voluntarily abuse the exalted province of a pohlio journalist. His audience is always larger than any ordinary Sabbath - congregation, and frequently more vast than the strongest voice could compass, if all his readers were brought. compactly 'together. lie talks to their interior sense, ho Claims their attention, more thoroughly than the mod gifted 'orator, inci the light or shad. ow of his'words reaches through the eye - into the mind, and is dagueretiotyped - in lasting holors there. - If he feels not the responsibility of his position, he is not worthy of it. If ho sells his influence to the highest bidder, or prostitutes his columns to the dissemination of immoral or li centious thoughts; if he seeks to build himself op by pandering to morbid appetites and pas si ns, ho becothes at once an effective emtninary td tho Prince of Darkness, and he deservel to be regarded as an enemy to every interest of seciety, and destitute of all claims to the, amenities o lifo: ' • On the Ohne hand, if ho entertains a high ap preciation of his duties to the public, and ondoav brs to conform his mission to the best interests of thiroommunity in which ho expends his nervous thoughts and energies, he indulges a nobler am bition, and reaps more enduring satisfixtion, than falli to the lot of any other profession. Tug G OS II NATOR IA I. Coarser.--pio day upon which the people of Pennsylvania will be called upon to:elect" Governor for the ensuing three years, is near at band. Before us are placed two candidates, either_of which occupies an enviable position in the eyes of their fellow-citisens. Both are inteDigent ; hi:4h highly honorable gentle inen. They are David Wilmot of Bradfoid coin. ty, and Wiliam F. Packer', of Lycomiltg. Mr. Patiker's sentiments upon the Question of Prohibition. our reader{ are familiar. He Is a decided friend of Temperance, committed to,lts principles, and consistent as be le epdonbtedly, on this - question, he would if eleco Governor, , sign a MU still further restraining the sale of In - to.cleatitiquer.• On that subject we can go hand in hand with Mr.' Packer, to fire death.— .. Were that a loading prinolptoln . the contest, we could we think, support him. But superior to that qiestion at this Him rises the intik, shall the pro slavery party 'of Pennsylvania be.success ful? Mr. Packer as the candidate of that party, rises as the champion of another measure, even more desolating and blighting than the work of the demon Rum. As the candidate of a party in favor of the extension of bunion slavery to the virgin soil of our free territory, we'forgot his - ad vocacy of the cause of Temperance; and recog nise the question of the extension of !Battery as more Important in thli contest than that of Tem- perance. . . David Wlinset however, as'rnueb as we:admire Mr.,Prielter's,Tensperanre proclivities, claims our' Support. First because tie is the esponent of those glorious Ameriesn-Republican prinelples, dear to Washington, 7titerion,lickfon!:44 Adams, prin ciples whiehemliodied opposition to the adding ;of atiether inch of slave.tersitoryto the Republic, 1 1 anco cause, we believe. that if the lislattiro ; and in the ne = t-place , lemon coining - be does from a district, strongly favorable to th' Temper should pass's restraining liquor law bit , while he occupied the Gahernatorial chair, tha t be be woald not veto it. • Although Mr: Wilmot hi not token strong ground on this cootie°, we helleve that he would net, having in view the- go od of the State. , Although not strictly absterai as isimseW, •we think we are not deceived in stating that he is a friend of the catme. There are. many men in. *Pennsylvania who without committinthemselves to the principles of Temperance , feea warm in terest in the 'tureen of those prineires, and do When occasion requires, thiow the ght of their ; mi influence in its favor. Such ama we " believe David Wilmot to be.: . • _ , 1 Of the two therefore, we must ee l t the nd!, date of Freedom , David .Wilmot, h ing that in the event of his election that our. impresshMs in regard to ids , Temperance principle may not be erroneous. ' , ' A view ot the Reid, and of the From en the, respective sides, refloating for battid,, bids us say to the American-Republican host,. be Irt good cheer —the prospect of success is far from' diseouraging. TheDeinocraoy of the State are . the ,reverse of harmonious. 'They are irretrievably ! split on the question or this sale of the Main Line. , .Those Democratic members; of the Legislature who Con scientiously voted for it, and those Dinuocretie pa ters dist issire had tba - independene4 i and courage to defend the netion,of those mem ~, hive been Ititterly and violently 'assailed. their , friends have rallied in their 4ieffsnee, erimination and n °4°lol4loll have • ensued, and the linos' hostile feeling tithe malt. 'The airmen irke is lest to theDesacente l . m e Gemini igiort reTIFISend ell dh g listi a .4 !iiit the restating of their aindi- thite for Governor, fdr.,,Witletei;• They 11 , 14 44 WM *MO for soilirflk Mt l l llo aktdorswill'fse; fotanutas iliffetelous to allude to WU' is CO io a k i vit ;redo _ bed in numbers=-it a mcro cor polOte ,guird. Ae tbepeliticalrplukeglics" : , o fpfittitdelfahia, they, may create Ws° little ex ; nifitiOnt there. liejond boin:dati of the' city, they tiitrliterallillM.Where.". The Awed cen-Bcpublican part/ bee nothing to fear from 'Sanderscin's sidadear dollar men.. This is pout. bIY, the Lai titan-we shall base Occasion to notion ' that whllom artal adjunct of tho Lofoten° party. '•Tiefore the elation - It wilt, *a think, din, end liafideraon will lire only in memory to bedespieed by honorable mal t Bah t we dislike even ter antigen the fellow's name, so derPkettble Paiiloll - le thal,orier. : • The,skies are bright, Arnericad-itePtalcans.— pc ocm, resolre to support with all your energies, ' , Our glorious i , prieciplea, and we will have the satisfaction of electing by handsome majorities, Vecalt and Lewis. Stand by your guns, undaunted, and victory will be yours. Remember, shone° divided *gait itself mast fall. " Pons litioneiree.—A writer is the Record of 'the Timor, gttes the following 4, • 01R11011111 Movemenits. From Indiana—Senator Bright was Om re• elected, his opponents said, bat ostarued unjustly asfelected. The . fairness or unfairness, hoverer, beta nothiug to do. with this expose.. The quar rel is not between Senator Bright and his politi. Coal opponents, but 'between Senator Bright and Ids political friends, with an issue that brings to mind a faiMite line of the lale - popular' ballad, "Tell/ please you to death I v;riwell know." To make au , story short--the party. was all in an uproar. Two or throe of the prominent De mocratic papers, recently came out—pepper hot, andallegedinsmbstanee as follow*: Bright. was anxious to be re-chosen, but. Goy. Wright had ' ardent friends, whi - c- thought offices should not be hereditary—that Bright had had his full share, &a. Seeing the !'mischief brewing." Senator Bright left his in Senate—repaired to In. dianapolle—took rooms at the , first hotel—treated —chatted—laughed—shook hands—gm sump: birds banquets, like an English lord canvassing for a seat zn Parliament. ~,VO-To this be added thit assurance, most emphatic, that if Governor Wright would withdraw hie pretensions, combine with his .(Bright,' Meads, and re-elect him, he could—and be would obtain for Goy. Wright a seat in the Cabinet, or * first-rate foreign Em busy. Presio. Thb bargain was concluded.— The thing was. done. Bright was returned.— But oblivion east a somber jet over his me mory.,:_ GOY. Wright and all the fair promises to him were forgotten: A Cabinet was formed —the Foreign,. appointments wore being made. Gov. Wright and his friends could stand the treachery no longer. A perfect aander stone tamed! The whole story of the seduction— promise, and abandopment was published in de tail. Bright was scared-; - -the Cabinet frightened. The cry . went forth—" Don't eons down." The bold and energetic charge brought Bright and the Cabinet to their marrow bones, es the document will show. ,Appointment by the President, (National- intelligencer, June 4th.) AW."Jolueu A. WRIGRT, of Indiana, Enver Syrasotteruartr, and MINIIIIIMPLIINIPOTRIIIIIARY or Tile U, STAT6II at thiftCOUUT of WS MAJILiTY, *az Sou of Precasts." IttCOSD. CURIOUS /fillirLit. ..WILLIAN A. • RICUARDSON. This distinguished citizen, member of ..Coilgress from Illinois, then right hand man of Senator Douglas, who piloted throsighrl the infamous Repeal of the Missouri , Compromise whieS Is now admitted as a breach of faith (sojartly - and eloquently denounced by Chancellor Watworth of N. York) and to be the cause of the. reign of Discord . which a ffl icts the land. This W, A;Richardson, no way lucking in talents, was tho candidate for Speaker, but was out-run by Banks. Resigning his seat, be re paired to Illinois and was tho Douglass candidate for Governor, bat defeated by Bissell. Whit was to be done? Douglass was pledged in honor to sea his twice rejected friend provided for, but having failed to obtain a place in the Cabinet and finding himself an object of jealousy, he 'too tried the new Melia's, not of persuasion but Intimidation. In the present so nearly balanced state of parties in Senate, you wilt, be aware, a -Senator ilI an important man. Portentous rumors came from the West of Senator Douglass' . heterodox opinion in several mooted points. Tifo danger was roes—tbo necessity of Conciliation apparent.' The friends and attaches of Douglass must be gratified. The cry went 'forth, "Don't shoot—we'll come down." ° OFFICIAL. 'Appointment by the President. "Wittiest A. RlcnAnnsos, of Illinois, Governor 'DIA° Territory of Nebraska." "Tug Cuir z STILL TIM Cour.."—We allude to the bills which ore pouring in openly; through the meaus of-Uncle Sam's mails, from every direction. Paper bills and - all other kinds of bills •reach of accompanied by the appeal, "help rui or we sink2r It has the effect of driving ns Into the same of business, and to meet oar engagements, we are compelled to throw ourselves upon the kindness and consideration of those lalobtod to us. Of the promptness of onr patrons in liquidaling any claims wo have bad against them, we have not had occasion to complain. doll we feel confident theta mere allusion to the fact that either bills or a collector will shortly visit them from this estab lishment, will prepare them to liquidate tbo one, and send the other away wth a stalling countenance. Those who can avoid causing our collector to call twice,.will confer a favor upon us, and expedite a business that in itself involves no small amount of labor; in the course of the ensuing week, a collec tor from this office will ilsit Shamokin, Mt. Carmel, Ashland, Tamaqua, New Philadelphia, Tuscan,- ra,and Port Carbon. It our friends in thole places will prepare.to see him, and permit him to_ get through expeditiously, they will receive our ac knowledgments, and relievoys of aandry•troublcs that now stare us in the face in the shape of bills. Money, money is the universal cry. •We are com pelled to to-echo it. ; A "SAncrom":B TM! FAR Wasr.—Tbe sanc tum of mlit or of the Weekly .ffercad publish:. 'ea in Loevenriorth, Kansas, was recently visited by a correspondent df,aci Eastern paper. Bo ,thus describes ii: • "A visit to the printing officcr , stibrded a rich treat. Oti entering the first room on the right hand, three - law 'shingle's' were' on the door; on one side was a rich bed—French blankets, sheets, table cloths; shirts, cloaks and rags, all together; on the wall.hung ham, maps, venison and rich -engravings, onions, portraits and boots; on the door were a side of- bacon, carved to the bone, corn and potatoes, statiotwry and books; on a nice dreising ease stood a isooden tray half full of dough, while erockery occupied the profession al desk. In the room on the left—the sanctam-:- the boa/moire, cook and editor lived in glorious unity—one person. He watt seated on a stool, with a paper before him on a piece •of plank, writing a vigorous knock • down to an -article in the Kickapuo Pioucer, a piper of a rival -city.— The cooking stovd was at his left, and tin kettles all, round; the corn cake wils a doin', and in• staid of scratching his head for en idea, as editors often do, ho turned the cake andtient ahead." The tout etiseyable of the Harald', sanctum must be refreshing. Not :Chad plan that, turning, hoe.cako and with the effort Coining op an idea. Our Herald friend is certainly ln advancti of the site. Bum ARmossione.—Five bank application , notices for this County, app published In our ad vertising columns. These added to the number ,publishad in other sections of the State, sums up an aggregate of between $l,OOOOO and $5,000,- 000 of new banking capital to be applied for at the next session of the Legislature. Ighere bulk ing facilities are needed—in this County for in. stance—they should be accorded,and we do not op poke them. We think however, that the passage of a General Banking Law, based upon stooks, and embracing the features of the bill presented by Air. Bill at the last session, is what 'Tye really, , need. Under, its provisions where 'banks are rot 'ally needed they would be established. A notice elsewhere, states that an application for its pas• sage will be made. Similar notices have been published in other sections of the State. The psi. sage of a Galena Banking Law in this State, would afford the business community all the banking tacilitiee it requires, while banks id existence in .ter ,Its 'provisions,. would be,strictly prohibited from "shaving." It' is what the. people want, And they will not rest setisfiett until thereretain it. "Tan Assaatean livansetai."—This work by .(ndrew W. Young, author of "Science of Govern. utent,'"Tirst Lessons in Civil Government," "Cit aen'e Manual of Government an Law," publish. od by Derby .11.1ookson, /19 Nassau street, N. Y., .an only be obtaiged by subseriptieM. It is a pa lacel history, exhibiting the origtn, nature and peactioal operation of eonititntional government in the United States; the rise and progress of runes; and the views of distinguished. statesmen n questionaof .foreign sod domestic policy; with n appendix, containing explanatory notes, poll'- : ;Cal essikyh statistical information, and Other use. at matter. A review of the work impieties us -vith the holier that It is Iris from material errors; -that it possesses claims to, the public favor, and conduce in 's great degree, to a higher and a iore general appreciation of oar political last': Woes. The price of the wadi is $3,5% Mr. W. Wiltitartif , is canvassing this County, obtaining übscriptions to the work. A copy of, the work ; an bosom' at Itaenau's store, when) alsotmbserip. : ions to It will be tit/Mired. A Coviimon of the County School Superin., indents_ of_Ponngliania, hoe been coiled ) by . • tr. Illekok, tho Soots Buperintendant, to assemble; RoteAring. on , Wed4aNlay, 'tho 22d thateat,' tlO eolorit, A. if, for the pillow of coaanite-', ion with regard to the' pre ms tandition and fn=> into preemie of die Ckwaton Sokol mai, or !kir qoaunowrealtb:" • :13i%f=M Yam Fortaina's Neuss Sim Hossi4earim This superb rock by Beery William Herbert, an. thor of "Prank Forester's Fleld,,fiports," "Twit and Fitibing, o " "The Complete M a nual for Young. SP4litenn," etc., etc., eta., is,..Oublisbed: hi two magtillisiont imperial octavo. volumes of eleven hundred Page*. illustrated with smel engraved original portraits"; paintings and drawings by distinguished artists, of - Bilden celebmted horses. Thts Work ,Contains s toil:10ot° Military of the knise,:arid:commedis Ott -evitithing connected with that noble animal. The work, published by Stringer. & Torrnituid, 232 Broadway, New 'York, is just toady for delivery; :ft le furnished only to subscrihere.:-. Price $lO. A sample of this Mimi tulle Work, can be seen et AVISIeI. bookstore, whersiorbibiripttees to itwitt (sod. . . :1411`Th - e Mexicans are preparing for the threatened invasion by the Spanish expedition. A lite_lettfut sue that the works of , defence at Virg. Otms, Tampico; and Other parts, of the Re pablie.proceed with activity. " • ? PrA yoirag Tinian named Elizabeth Willies minueittM suicide In Cincinnati a few nights ago, betimes her -partials had effected her marriage Millfteman.againit tier wlsheb, after first . banish ing a lover to whole she pas attachei. - • It is old that, prepious to the year 1850, the number of Americans alto indulged in a tour to Europe, never-exceeded: 7,500 la any ono year. —Now the number of those who cross the water for an airing, annually, hacswelled to 35,000.. • " Affe'lliss E. C. Williams, a pretty. Welsh -girl, a populatartist and vocaliet, and favonibly known in, England as the "Welsh Nightingale, " will Wee for•this country the latter part of th_ pre, sent month. She .gives an evening's performance, a tor gnarl& Stanley. Ifilirlbe English mile b 1,760 yards; the Rue ilea 1,100; the „Italian, 1,467 ; the Irish end •13dotch 2,200; the'Polish 4,400; the Spanish 6,028; the Gormin 5 866 ; the Swedish and Danish 7,333; and the Ibmigariin- 8,830. • The French by the mean league, wbieb Is 3,066 yards. JIMIT-Some wide publisher or teicher once wrote or said "that the art of plifying on the vie . - lin required the nicest perception, and the most dtilieste sensibility of touch of any art in the known world." Some country' editor in com menting on it says—. The art of publishing -a country newspaper, and wahine it pay, beau the art of fiddling higher than a kite." • plrThe Allentown and Arburn Railroad, is rapidly prOgressing., The line I. divided into forty sections, upon each .nom of which the pick sud shovel is industriously plied. in a few days the contracts:ter the sills are to be made, and, but for the bridges, culverts and rock work on a 'few of the heavier sections, the road would be ready for the Iron Horse before the year 1838. Se-Colonel Froviontis now engaged in put ting the list finishing touches upon the new and complete edition of his works. shortly to Noah- Bribed. It is said that be is to reeeive4lo,ooo as an advance from the publishers upon the prospec tive pales of,the volumes. The furniture of his house in Ninth street New York, has been sold at auction for $4,000. He is soon to sail for Europe.- ~11686- S ome feeling exists between Fermis and A. H. Davenport, the actor. Davenport menses Forrest of acting improperly with his wife - For rest denies the soft impeachment; the matter has become a subject: . of newspaper controversy,.and there Isla flare -np. ft beautiful a:ay) the stage is in. We do not wondep that its mem b ers suffer in the estimation of the public. Their conduct so imprudent. - `The editor of the Senthside Destoerat an nounces that on a 'recent visit to thit "dirty, Gipsey-like 'region," opposite Petersbargh, Va., -"known as Pocahontas." he saw "a tall titebeepoiet figure, slightly bronzed eomplexioried female in her 68th year, withal youthful looking, her long raven black hair flowing o'er shoulders, and she leaning over—et Yankee tub washing open work stockings I The last female and direct descendant - of fair Poenhonruef" • illitt`The London Times newspaper is printed in an antique, ngly looking building in Printing House Square, and the rooms are all low, dark, and uninviting. Eighty-eight compositor 6 are always at work on advertisements, and forty-three more work on parliamentary debates and other matter. Four presses are required to• work off the morning edition, and to take advautage,of these four pressesrpart of the paper is regularly 53 electrotyped. The dallyedition of, the Thnes is ' ,000. • • jserA etealthy, clergyman, of. Brooklyn, bay ing recently visited Europe, his daughter, during his absence,. became acquainted with a Young man • of small means and large affections. The two fall in love, and as the father's consent was out of the question, they determined to eive. • On Sunday last the young lady plead slight indisposition, and' informed the family that she should.not appear at dinner. A carriage was in waiting a few block, 'from the house, and going oat unobserved, she ran off with her lover. , jagir-4. distinguished chemist in a recent lec ture; while showing that. all species of moving power, have their origin in the rays of the sun, stated that while" the iron tubulai railroad bridge over the Mania straits in England, four hundred ArirDenifitry.-z-itr. 51. D. L. Dodson, the dentist, la ' feet long, berit but half an inch under the heaviest Market street, west of Centre, has fast completed twei premiere of a train, It will. bond •an inch and a sets of teeth, one of block-work, the other Allen's con-1 half from its usual horizontal line, when the sun thriven gum, which for beauty or finish and natural; shines upon it .for some hours - . Ile stated that appearance, have possibly, never tZ,n, sur p asse d in thi s Bunker Hill Monument is higher in tie evening County, by any manufeetu than in the morning of a sunny day Nile little ror. The continuous gum Is made without joule, sod on puttee plates, the me w sunbeams • enter the pores -of the stonae like so substantial and convenient metal for the purposewhich man y wedges lifti ng it at • jillr•At the late celebration for the imagers. can be used. Good teeth are very ornamentali lion of General Warren's statute, Senator Mason as wall Is W , cial• Where however , we lack awn. Bub' of Virginia, when called for a speech, read ri lee stltnteeferoneeded,oranyattenticoi demandedtoprevent tufo to Massachusetts on her duty to she Union. drat'', Mr. Dodtion Can attend to -them we have anion to Think of that—and on Ducker Will tool The believe, In a sattsfaehey manner. We commend him to crowd acted very differently from who* a Virginia the patronage of those requiring the services of a cum crowd would hare, done bad Senator Sumner of fni, experienced dentist. _ _ tMatuehusetts addressed them in Richmond, on : Ittabgwootee Rork tuna liscLugsa Arm sus Lomas Quairesms Rai:W.—The American editions of these able Itnetsh'inthilations, tbr Zane -and April, hare berm issued by Leonard Scott A Co, Few York. They teem with the moat interesting original papers. Mire whir log to subscribe, an do so at liannan's beok-stOre, Schisylkill Meaty Agricultural 87cidy.—We are requested to state that the Sixth %Annual lair °Nils Society will be held at Orwigebirg on the 20th, Sditoind 2:d dare of 9cbtobeir next. - Air Reioriot quirt ataeb—W• hue" made MUM mettle with a yoting member of the bar of this 'county, who vela 'future report a/I the law ours. trauipi= ring hero. It will be an interesting *Natant bribe Jo= 422•Ropts9—srater sad tireproof—is furilsbuthl B. nazi= at 8 mats per sqtare foot. ' tisis Is at:tout( the cheapest but thalami article of the deseriatkas to are county. Isinuauce compaalmi wall tabs is risk much quicker whom banding ate covered bp' .this 'Calm Pea Office.—Until further notke 1C wfl dose at 834' o'clock its the evening. This ts In,aensefaaeee of an alkiration In the thns-tahle of the Rending Mammy, by which the trellis . arrive her; half an hove- seriter.— The morning from PhiiiiAelphia which Merl] resehekhere at 12.13 P. M, now teschai bent at 11. 43 1 A. If, and the evening train which ihresterly Teethed here at 6. 16 r kt, tow -reaches bare afT. 46 P. IK. ail' flotation of AO Liquor par.—John Belk rho lives on Port Carbon Road, was arrested this Week by Onastsble Osmoisltargedwillt selling liquor without a license, and to minors on the Sabbath and other days. Us told liquor to boys it Is niter tedng notllled by their parents. Ile Lan able bodied mitt; witimut a tinnily, and this Is a groat' ' ii tl nof the liquor law. After a booting, Bagel wee held to hail to answeri Lana *coming his security:, y • .q Ea *pie o.l.—Tts medial aeSs 'odd to be eery effeellve in redievlng rheumatic andOtheralfections. Theagerst:in this County for its sale Is John (1. Brown, druggist of this Borough. It is also mid hens by • con pie of /patterned - Whom personal appoint:lm Is delight fully auggiaMhe of Mort this warm weather—one in. &aging 14,a briod•hrilamsd cooler, and the other In a collar where almost lronsparaut 'Pittman, and bugs proportions, are suggestive of Areticice-berp. 'The Oil they selh Is we inderstand, really meritorious. , . sir Ara aid heary'coalt have bren comfortable du ring a greater portion of the weds. July was ushered In chillingly, and with rain. Yesterday would hero done willseredit In poirit;Of dreariness, to November.— t i umMeewelwenutoe, la s peetponed arrangement this year. Our ar j eeo rd is as ' • P:, ILA P. Tzusalarn Omer. rtneohlassia !fail, fhttreilit,} Pet., Juno 27, BA. 111-414'degfe . ea above serer — clear. Mon, 22, • —6B " " —raining Tura, 80, " =6B " • 0 w ed., J u l y . 41 _6B •44 (4 06 Thurs., " 2, " —52 " " " 3. " _62 e 44 46 4 4 itie•Actroneerical Lecture.. - Bev.'B. S. Huntingtcm, 'Principatot Aston Ridge laminar'', will deliver at the Town Dell, In this Borough, on Fridsievening next, an Astronomical lecture recently delivered by. him with much eat in Philadelphia. The subjacent the iodine is the solar system. it Illustrates the Divine Wisdom of the arrangeinents which "cure Its stability, and op. poses the mistaken views of Astronomy and Prophecy which prixlict injury from comets and other.. causes.— Mr.'llunltMgton is peel:dimly able and inter4tlng on this subject, and,we earnestly hope that he will haveon Friday eVening next a large, intelligent and apprecia tive audience. sir MeWag of the Car COnsweers of LA Bereugh of .Pensri/k.—Pnrsustitto public . notlce a meeting of the gas consuneninf the Borough of Pottsville was; }Rain the Town Ball, Monday event ng,June 29.18 M, to take in to consideration theiideanee in the price of gas h 7 tho Gas Company.'' On motion, Samuel Ilan Mlnger, tgeb, was choose' pr:Mldent and .1. 0. Flick, Secretary. At the tieirivit of the Prraident, Benjamin Maywood, Eaq, stated' the Alert of the meeting in a few pertinent remarks. , The piked statement of the Gas Company was fatly analysed by several gentlemen; a number of bare urselra pointed out, and the true cost of manufacture of gm atiown, It was, on motion, Risoloeci, That the Comosit'se appointed at a previous meeting be continued, with' power to act is before. It was further Roolest, That the Secretary of Ibis Meeting be requested to give stones through the public paters that an adjourresi meeting will be bald on bleu day evening, lith Inst. On motion adjourned. sAmtin 11UNTZINGElt, Pre &Won. J. O. Yuri , &aviary. • AsiiirTobliceo is advancing' in - price. AV-Watches are riot mailable matter. OW-Deaths in New York last week, 224. V' BiekneiCs Reporter bas ceased to ',silt. j/Vr•Deatbs in Philadelphia last week, 134. jar-The stores in Pottstown a 11l bo closed to day. ' . • lasnon.. Xeno Beadder of Massachasefis, is dead. There 'are 750 paper mills in the United States. pft-Langdon Cheers', of South Carolina, died last week. • .• ~ itSP•The Empress Eugenie, will soon berome $ mother again. • ;110-Mid. Isidore Clark's - concert in Readiig was successful. itfift•All the stocky:lf the BADE of Pottstown Las been taken. • ft Maple sugar makers have greatly pros pered this.season. . ' OlMP`Mauritius is the mostexpensire place in the world to live in. -In Philadelphia since the first of the year there have 5744 deaths. _fitgil`Tho Unitin Bank of Reeding will go into operation in September. • ,1141 , There will be an exhibition of fire.works" at Reading thii evening. Ifilfr*There are 18 persons at present confined in the Betts county prison. MN,Tohn H. Brownell wasateidentally killed at Pheeenrille lest week. Ilib`At the Reading Works, 30,000 fire bricks • are manufactured weakly. I At 'Mary Jule Prescott, fell and killed herself 1 in New York tut week. Rum I per - Andrew Daly, aged 10 years, was acciden tally killed•at Pittston last week. ,fiter•United States troops are en route to Utah. They are certainly wanted there. Jlifir•Extensive pablie• flower shows Are being given in various places in England. 'Seamen's • wages are falling. TO Liver pool they, now receive only $l7 per month, • jlter•Au Irish woman named Mahan, was acci dentally killed at Manch Chunk. last week. ' fit-John Tucker, Esq, has been elected Presi _dent of the Camden and Atlantic Railroad. 02-Pearls hire been found in mussels taken from the bed of Beaver Run, Berke county. 1 /Or In trading: beef sells at 14 cents and but-1 for at 20 cents per pound. Eggs, 18 ets. a dos. /filfrThe Lo'nd'on:-Tieies says that clairvoyance Is Monk of soohtg through • M2OlllB alsore not sharp enough to sea through you. • ,`The earthenware dealers had a Convention la Philadelphia last week. It was pleasant and l profitable. Agy•The. steamboat General McDonald has ' commenced her trips between . Philadelphia and • rape May. . . AY-Tim yacht America, , the ulkkatner of thel "ear," is lying at- London, completely destroyed by dry rot. ~ ; - • • ordobn Drew has a theatrical company at i Harrisburg, while Mr. Perry, a talented actor, is splaying in Reading. a itfrSixteen ends of butter ware seised by, the market ele of Reading on Saturday but.— I Canso—light eight. i po jtair•Mat as• Hate, aged 35 years, a firmer 'of Douglass to nship, Montgomery county, was ae eidentally killed last week. -tar-Henry Dainty is under arrest In New York, charged with =Wailing 'from Messrs. :Phelps, Dodge .1 Co., to a heavy amount. ims`The Fourth will be appropriately observed in-Hamburg. Several Sunday Schools will plc- nie in the woods in that vicinity. jitErlohn It. Packer, of Sonbury, has 'Weed ,elect id President of the Bank of Nortbuntheil and, rice Wus.Vameron, Esq., resigned. t rir Imla Mentos has written a sexism of lee-, taros aria various subjects, - and. intends ,to- in. diet the New Yorkers with thew in a short time. jar-Tho Ist inst. ushered, in a tight:money market. Relief honorer, will soon be afforded by the disbursement of large sums on account Of in terest. • The Reading and Culumbin Railroad—pin 'acted—will thirty-eight mile, in length, and swat $llOO,OOO. Efforts are being toad* •to put, It under way. ' • , • • 01114• Col. Joseph Paton Tilt gives dines, to *large 'number of Mt pertionnt friends at, Cata nia* Wkly.: Reveal seutlatoon•• of this plate wilt be present. • pirA, bridge L to be built won the Rhine, tsar the oOntluenol of the Malai.sts lost of Rune million gittliareut Mast of Ow ter ntliton dellenr; EDITOR'S TABLE. focal Maim. PEN, PASTE AND 13011150115. jfirrrThio whole ameba of oaring basks la great. Britain is b9l, the amber of depoiitors 1;3010122, and the amount . on deposit equal to $12801,6215 In federal money.. )1217-Tho fennel opening at tho Lebanon -l'at lay Railroad between Reading and Lebanon, will take :plate on the 6th inot. Trains trill com. menet rousting regblarlyi on the 13th. . garlasob Krante, •of Lower I'M ilforch.Lakigh eceinty, noway lifted in Ilillegos' store, Peons teirg. s keg ornalts weighing 125 pounds from the floor to the counter, wits sit tooth. jeir-lion. Noel Dow, the advocate 'of teipper ince, is reeeiving •much Atte:MOD in his tour In - Great •Brltain.' , a hat addrived _largo audi o/neat in Sheffield, Leeds.' Glasgow; Nottirighw Deft. the duties of the South to the Union—they heard him quietij and respectfully.. When he ceased, "Burlingame I" ' "Burlingame I" "Wileen !" was the . - Neither gentlemen responded, and then three thundering cheers went up for Old Massa. chn Its. Was apt that an apprepriate answer t On the 24th ult., a race for, 2000 a-side, cam off at Albany , between the Dalton horse, o ed at Albany, and, the Taylor horse, owned in ew York. The distane was twenty miles in ness. The Dalton horse made a waiting race for seventeen milers, lying close to Taylor's' quar ter, and taking It easy, and at the eighteenth mile Alton drew ahead and maintained it for a mile, / when Taylor ran past, him, going in a few lengths ahead. The time for tnavellingwenty`miles was one hour, twelve minutes end fifty-four seconds. The Judges decided the race is favor of Dalton, who gets the stakes in consequence of Taylor's horse running. The horses are matched for a fif ty mile race to come off at New Xork. ItiffetA. bard story-is told about the late lire in Memphis, Tenn. It is said that as soon . as the two banks caqght fire there was a stream of whis ky, brandy, ale, ruin and gin, that commenced flowing down the broad gutters towards Main . street. The liquid current i caught' Are. The blue lambent flames floated down the broad thor. oughfares of the city, and were fanned for nearly a'mile by, the fresh breezes from the southwest.— A negro was seen endeavoring to exthrguish the flames Mit ho might get a drink.. He brushed_ ' the floating Ares up the stream atd dipped intgit his flat nose and dense lips. The dam above gave - kay, " and there came a flood of alcohol, the negro was overwhelmed, his head took fire, and the last Jean eflim be was travelingat railroad speed, like 1 a torchlight inotteuion,,down Jefferson street. • Mr-The oldest book in the United States, it „la said; is a manuscript Bible, in the pasession for Dr. jWitherspoon, of. Ala bama, written over n' thousend years ago . He describes -It as follows: , —The, book is strongly bound in boards of eld i English oak, and with thongs, by which the leaves ' areelek well bound together. The leaves are en anat. made or parchment, of a moat superior -litalityief fineness and smoothness 'little inferior to the beat satin. The pages are all ruled With great accuracy, and written with great uniformity • ar.d beautifully in Hie old German text band, and divided off into chapters and verses. The first chalifer of every book in the Bible is written with a large, capital of inimitable; beauty, and splen didly illuosinated with red, blue and black ink, still in vivid colors; and no tiro of the capital letters artpreelsely alike. jelr•The Hamburg Truck Parm,'o.l2. Itarlook er, proprietor, contents • thirty-four'; acres._ It is one mile south of Hamburg. The place was purchased by Mr. H. some nine or ten years ago, when it was in the condition of ordinary farm land in - the neighborhood; but by dint, of locos. Sant work lied judicious improvement, he has brought it to the highest state l of cultivation, so that every foot of it is as fruitful as a garden.-- y The soil is a rich sandy leant, so light that it may bit turned over and worked with the baud as cad ly_as ordinary soil I. with fife spade, and,yet ea ; pable of retaining moisture to the longed period. The products of the farm in their various sea sons, are, strawberries—to which Alio acres are devoted—raspberries, water melons, eantelopes, putrappeaches, etc. All the vegetable, capable of being raised in our climate, are grown on the farm. The predate or the farm And a ready market In Pottsville, Tamiqua, Milton, Williams port, and even up as far as Elmira. Last season one individual in Pottsville cleared $3OO by his sales of this fruit Impelled to him from Hamburg. Truck farming should be more genendlyedopted 1 'as ti particular bueiness in this section of Penn .42lvltnin- . It "Aye." . ' I partlon. • Pargb, American, has been elected Mayor: ! Near out.—Finiej Yarrow', Ainericam, hlibeen elro- 0 ted,Mayor. ' • Vranown—The itepublkana bare nominated Arland Fletcher as tandidatelor Governor. .• Tim Flannigan' State Conventkm of Maine have nom- inated.liat• hi. Morrill for Governor. Tao Chicago Pius notice", as slgiddealt bet," that Messrs., 11111,11, Toombs; Otr, Douginst, Drosken skim Stebnrdson and llrisht, all pros livery boilers, have reasrally been Interested In large puithasas atrial estate la the Tree States and Territories:4; . Waxer Aso Ilittenowet.—Thu Philadelphia bus pub lishes a list of Its axehauges that have plaeod ir le names of these two gentlemen at the head of th eir " earns.— The amount stands thus: For Wilmot, et I Ica lltaleturst, I ~ - Barite —Tns Peanuts:lU or nts Fan BUTZ Per.- 1%8 Chicago Traemse thus rams up the platform and purpoaes of the Free State party of Karma in , opposi tion to the pro slavery party in occupation of the' de facto lotsl government :,, . . The Free State men of Medina hate chalked out a bold, streightforwatd programme, and are bass Ibly resolved to follow it out to the letter; In the first piace,they will pay no taxes to the usurpers, nor reo nuts* the validity of any of their acts. In the nest ilace, a census will be Immediately taken of all the nhabitants and voters In the Territory. Thirdly--An election will be held on the drat Mon day of August, under this cement, for Governor, State oaken and Legislature, as provided for by. the Topeka Cauditutlon. • , , Fourthly—Free State men Will. attend the e WIN this fall, at the Territorial eledtlons, and secure both the Legislature and the delegate to Congress: which Logic. Isla it amembles, will immediately repeal, vie prolie% wipe one, and obliterate every vestige of the seta and appointments of the bogus Legislature, from the day of the first invasion down to that time, and Fifthly—Said Leglilatate; will 'inbuilt to a vote of the people the Topeka nation, while of tonne, will be ratified hy an overwhelming inajority. This dome Anent will theabe Su-warded to (linty's, and admit -don asked into the Union. Sixthly—lt the constitution about bring framed by thebovder rams be adp submitted to the emitt sill/ be quietly voted down; but if uoustoridiared to vote upon it but those who tam been atistereil f the bee Stateaiso MU refuse to trote, Just &alba hive done at the meat ekotiou. Than the ten eenatitatiosa • . - w_itt emu Whirs Otmarese—oue otthour I.l* work of Pro' 134 Tor y illibasteratheother sabtslying the .10 of the reit majority of the hositjtde settlers of-liensts. ittuk. ..alrtkeresore, th e latter vrill June MS stamp of "revs- , whity" upon It, because' of its bus tnriposu submitted, to the people for rstitratiou, by a . Lesislattre create& t,y virtue of the orymulesist— !!Jades ecru bill. Thara l eaa be nu rejecting It On the frowod of illoguiorttY• - Anterteanpaepubltests State Nolalna. glow. - • • comutoxi , , • IIIIVID WILMOT; cd.Br!inifota county. • • curat:coxiasszons WILLIAM MILLWAILD, intila delphls. \o r =Ma 07 nu ittrazia aims: ' TIMOR; of Takrettsfarotty,- -0 JOBl4ll J. LEWIS., of Cbelier comity. • . , : Dentocratie State. roatlnatiaits. . . . .. _ .. . • , uovaziolis. , ~ r"J -BILLTePitI. PAOE6/4of i L7ecelnl 16434: WU& OXIUCCIWOM: NIMROD ,82111CKIATUR of Chester 4 01 tnti BMW. MGM iffRONCi. Bork' county. • JAMBS TUOMPSON, of Me county. arilrWood'a Hair Ilys:weTitirt admiratleartlcle Is rapidlylarprovint the bile ? ! Noatikle of, a slinitar kind, now brewer the jvublk; enjoys • bet ter repritation as a restorattre and Iw/tyrant% Inds tonic. Its wi ther chemical quelittea have a benetclal effect; upon We growth and ebanector of the bidr„ ,. glefug a 'silky and glossy taature to that which ;was timerij' of a coarse and dry 4 nature. It has alsoore understand;* tend/way to preeeren the youthful' col+. and appearance of tie hair, and destroying or counteracting the erects of aiie. With such recommendations n Its favor, we hardly per .ceire bow any 'lady or genticiintsi should be wlthoueso 'Tale:ibis an adjunct to their tilsr. The article easy be had ofjha Druggists thrbugha t the etrantry.—AfinoWrl . . . . - R. R. R.. . Dna/linen Loons nes OF ran Bowels, Lusrin, e:rum. Comae licuuttn, thyme, Venter Pnieriiiit AIM VOIIiZEINS, mut rrorrir DINO Tali IR 1142111FAII'll RUST RUM. • '' . 1 • ' - :q A Lover Or DUDInoni;TOLCin beard the . teembi4t Shotwell, on her trip bons Rew Orleans to Cincinnati, Michele= had laid on their backs some lif.y out nf seventy-Bre passengers; Aii +few Wire the seen tiles of the most terrible character . . Among the passengers were two , regular doctorei and a staunch friend of it4.l). WAY'S READY REUEP. The two doctors tools unbar their ears the patients in the ladles'. saloon, ?d the patient ' s on one side of ate Be meant Wean.- The •R. R. friend - took the desk pkssengers and those on.. ~ o larboard aide of the forward cabin; as fast math' y 1 Relief was applied to the EL R. R. patients they trod, and before the two doctors got out of tbs. , 11140011 evevy.one oat of the twenty-6re that were a k, ;old were treated by the R. Relief; were out of - gee and bee h r am cholera till the doctors refused" 4 0 .i.. use the Ready Relief, and out of the twelve a under their treatment; see+ died la the simile of eiii; era. At lan both oithetbootone were tiken si*thallakt was new left open to the R . seines* and Wilistbe assistance of some get who had ',Mowed Wind moutons *Mosey, It was applied to all the rienditt4 pa tients, who were quickly relieved from their cibetreiaing and dangerous sitnatkeu. The two dieters I two , cars now the Only sick tinea . • boat.: Dr. W., a man of good sense and liberal dews,, called ft. S. K. advocate. 'lir," said the doct4, have made up my mind t 6 try your quack medic! ft is out of the power of Ventsdles used tby the iettrar order of.our acuity to cure me; Z wEt, therefore, the flak of being denounyed by the faculty, consent te e re my life by the assistance or Radway's Ready Rellof."-'- . . Not so did Dr. Ntiodle, he being determined to teaks himself a martyr to the "'dignity of the Profeasiorir':re 'fused tome. his life; by a Naiad; medidne." dashed aside the Lite Restoring Remedy, and left as a trophy of his firmness and.adhero6ce to folly, a lump of detid nity. arnsr Ping tr' - ' lir SERIOUS RlClENRB3lPREVR3lTlD.—Eadwarggitem edles should be kept in every house if they are reeorted to 012 the first Indicitics of Ittrioeis, notblog serious will' follow. They will rest re, stylish and correct siC ferry nbuities and disorders / Immediately. Roxuediessre 'cid hydrologists overythero. Midway's Reidy Helier, 25c., 50e.. 31 It d• lay's Resolvent, $1 Per bottle. Railway's Regulators, (30 0118025 cents per box. RADWAY July 4,'57 27. qt.) .!' Proprietors. air $l4OO SUMIWIJAELD will be *M • fer. any Medicine- that willl PRATT a BUTCHER ' S MAOI.O Olt, for the foilowin disesses:—ltheuntatbre, Neural. gis, Spinal Affection Contracted Joints, Cholic: Pains,' ele Palna In the Side or ek fiendache,Toothsche,Sprains, Sore Throat, thsta,B Barns, and all Disease. of the. Skin, binaries and e Blade, . None genuine; 'Milord the signature of PRA A Buret's:it:attached to each label. V, Principal Mike, 206 Washington street, Brooklyn, N. Y. • Jens G. Rama, Druggist, Centre affect; Pottsville,. Sole Agent he. Schu lkill County. 1 ' • AZ - Tins tato ce By that I have made but o nes nti cilia of the Magic :Oil on my fingers, which has been drawn from „contraction of the cords; brought on by rheumatiain. It was of seventeen mouths standingiand I am now entirely Cured. 'I cheerfully recommend it to all afflicted likable. J. M. PINTROCK, - ( Harrisburg, TS Locust drilet. June 2/, 'AT '( 1 • • . 26:ty , litligioni ..Ateltiginq. AtirA tarns* of the Sehuyllol/ county Female DIU& Society will be hold on Monday, evening nett, July o;tit the Makttrb Lutheran ChinCh, In Market MitwQ lll •Ti D. ferzca,)at haltkipait T. iiriliddress will be be &tiered by the Rev. Mr. 111401.4. ~ , MiIITIOUS• -PRIMITIVE METHODIST CIIIIRCITi corner or Lyon and 24 street. Divine Service every Sabbath at 10 o'clock, A. M., andt o'clock, P. M. , NUT METIIODISTEF'ISCOPAI;CfURCfIFee. and Street, Potbrrllle, Rev. Wu.umit L. Our, Parton— Divine service every Sabbath at 10 A. M. and at 735 - P.51 • 4111F-ENOLISII LIITIIIMAN 011011011, Market Square Pottsrllle;Rer.lDAmtrx Said hotce. Divine :service In this Church regoliziy every Sunday. Mornhw,* at 10% o'clock; weenies, at 7 o'clock. iVeekly Prelor Meeting, Thursday even ing. at 7 o'clock. - M*URLED. LOVE—MOON/LLD-013'0w 2 6 tb of JunP,b.l Eta i ' Joseph Ate Coot, Amtimuma Lora to Adass.Monon ,1 both of NewAttoes, Schttylkill county. " ' . o, * MCDONAL* , -AANKIN—On the same day, by they same, Walla* TdcDonatm to MAtalitre RANKIN ) both of New Mum, litchuythill county.a , i BESINGNI-DAVIES--On Tuesday. eyentng, Jane 80th, by the 4tev. A. M. Loom }Wu ,B. ORILLtICIER to Mart A. Dance; all of Portearbon. ' ,I ' , - - da T u tl gh O t t r N o — i t ni n Ch eo t re bore si ;b:o p .ah aT T h il arirda - y it :hist tlle , Otlr sth you of her ace. - L ST &' FOUND. OWlLOST.—Stiajed away C on Y Ndq, June 19th, from the premises of the subieriber, a dark red Cow with white - piece out of one ear and a cut in the other; also ' hits a abort tall. Any pe rson returning said cow will be sail. ably rewarded • , DAVIS, June 27, ' 6 7 • DISSOLUTIONS. , 1- - is§oLunoN.—The ,pannership beretotee eilating betweei Georg* Rickert end 1 ) . . Ludwig in the Sawing. and Bait' Roliding Blatt nem at the Onrigaburg Landing under UM firm of Rick ert 4 Ludwilt, wu dimelved by mutual ceimetV, on the Ord day Of April, 1857. The businelse *l'M.' NM Inn math be settled up by George Rickezr, wito cieutinues the bualnesiat the old place on Ws ewe aceovent. • . -cmonagiticiritgr, June 417 .15.6 t• . Id. V. LUDWIG. . 1 C c RTNERSHIP- NOTICE.—Tho 4artnerablp In the lumber busitlims brcetotene ex between IL O. Wilson and Lewis Boyce, wits ibis day, (April 25,1157,)dlainired by mutual iionsent. I . . R. e1jW11.1301 , 1. - ~ LIMB WYSE. :. ---* - ,) The nderdrind ttavotbla day qpril 21 7 4:. , I / iart a' Into ootartne;blp, In theinadiei biudno. saw tei at the foot of the Inclined please' & 8. II; It. R. • under the firth of It. C.A JA - 1 AU pedal for lumber protnpUy attended $ 1. Illsyi2, '67, IS.] . • ... .JAlfl FOR SALE & TO' .OFOR SALE OR EXCHA ;GE FOR any hind of available property: On Odin Whist en. Wagon, Esq., (Watehnisher,) of Pott , ligament. fag t s26, , nrid Interest from June 40410 , ,- . lf not dler' posed of by the Ist of January, 1858, the! claim *tit be' . sold at path,: auction to ttni highest Id er, end due notice beigiten In the mess. For part ' n apply to il, -' • lIERRIC a ois, 1 ~ 1 , 1 . No. 62 Nassau street, Neer R oth. ii July 41, 1 ,17 t 274 t ,!I A sorts or T . Rails, from 22 to 6 ands per yard, ea hand and ferrate hy ' ..1.18.54 . 4S N. YAIOLEY 8 SON. r"N - - VFt3 FOR 80E—In th ' Borough of Port Csrbon. Apply 11 . 31 : , •!. • J. 11. WYTU Akeni. Pol". 14, 17 ' IRE BRICKS for Cupoltis, Puddling gild Slut furnaces; from the Iteilithe Waite, toy low, at the PIONS= f URNAOL 1 yotteettle,Jan.l.9,lBslT ' set `[PRINTING PAPER.—Po r o: k & Newa Paper; of every size and Weighty of !wedge quallti ; ado at pries,. • • - .111.0ARILIGUW. Awe, Pottain August 9,, Id . -j ., 3.141 JUST RECEIVED.—A Iprge asiorVi enfotiptendid Perfumery, to.; from the Manle/to Whir ofJolee Hanel t Co., Harrison arid others. • All those who want fine Parfutosti:,elll at C. RAI; OM'S /took and Variety Store..; !January 23; 11167 - , • : 3-tt F__ .. . 'IRE ENGINE fdr 5A1;E.....h ,d 2..--1 good aimed den ITEM ZIMINS, In good order, biting been..tatety "neared and palmated, wit! be sold lei' der caeb. I Ad dress *A3lqB DIIIISSLX2, Mug Boo," PbUldrAphia. ; June 27,'87 ' . ' 2631 FOR RENT—A ThrOO Story litielt Veining Box* with stOrseccen at- ' tatted, suitable br any kind of - badness. Also nu • dikes to rent, w ith Gas anti Witer•plgee, ill on Ceti! ste.et, between the Pennsylvania llaland tiovAnserkai noose. At.. two stone dwelling bottles on Bill:wed s* iAuply to • • '- M. 3tIIBPIFY. Pottsville, VebruirY 1, 'Pt 8.4( reserve SALE •Olt IiEST.- 7 131 view of the official Action of , the last 11. reote in their Annual Se* Ora , And also to ' woo. dance with the action of the male vietabert of the &- mod M. F Church of Pottsville, liatructing the Trim tees to make such dispodtion of the said 111..k.Chttreh es they may think best, It wait on tpotloy reeolved, in Abele racial meeting, on the 26th Innl. , that the acid Church be offered for BALE or RENT immediately. The True. tees*? the 24 M E.Chumb,thrtingbibeir Cammittee, te iMedfUlly therefore otter the Church. situate in Marker st.Pottsville. Pa., Ibr aloof rent, forthwith. TbsChnrch sk good sized. subehusUal brick- building, well ,ter itished:beseenent haM and. two riltsl ZOOM balow.4— Chni*.. on the •ni U.er , bandueuely paperhd, and Os lights through Use (Atha hewn, The price Awl terms of payment walla Made reasonable.; NSW* VPIIMInt tO puttee or rent will .please .apply aeon to the under. signed, " NX. WILSON, 4 • .1,4,1111:13 MOWS, Oulu O. sum, • ma so Is? 424 t f t :: COAL OPERATORS . AND sal to make arrangements with an vil a t o f a Company,' to . unload, store and de • liver town to ten thousand roue of Coal In the rilY , ptailmard.being dtaated where Coal L lute the the Wit possible t spew*, ft,v,m the ltrgding ad and Central, to deliver to any part of the city. !noire yard men than I rood, I would be pleased to receive proycials from any responsible partite wish ing 'to dente, Coal in the city. The beet tefettUteS given SI 6) 011 , geity, ~.Apply to. or address • ELLIS BRANSON, • /31`.. ard Istrd West of limed St. MI& July. 4, - - • 10111RN.,EYMAN-GAIIINET up MIS, to ,wbom good wages and **oaten' employ -Wind Wilt be Rhea, oz. 'Baud et Ashland, Schuylkill county, ea.: • AMOS =CIL • AftilauS,MaY 2 1 Vet - 184, sy - 00:60 Car ; X l req fu nltt an dltis . dalr 821437 Sir Fo r pAttimaars, tactose stamp, and address ". A. R. MARTYN, Slay 9,'57 1414 • • Plaistow, N. 11. VAN'VED—Four School Teachers tlro males and 2- females, tbr the borough of Palo Alto. A public examination will be held on the Ilth of ~july Applfeatiota of teachers will be received by th e Bead ett the day of examination, written or per sonal. • MICE/ALL UEIGER, Sterctetry. Jane - 27.17 • • 25.3 t 50~C A I, ANI) TRAVELING ci VI,/ Amin ivaNTED is the WEST! Business payirqutroni to $l6O per month—no humbug or ammo tradnres. Permanent employment given and no capital requlred„ For partlonlere cream postage stamps and address, - • ' A. SIMPSON, Exeter, N. IL Apiti ',a - ' 15-3tu ..I[ - . 1- IVE i HUNDRED 'MINERS AND LABIIIS2B WAED nINDDIATELT by the ow T 'Orli likhzoond Coil Co.,'mar lb? thy of Bleb mood, Ts., to whom gcod wages and tonstant employ ment will bii orl oto SUSSMeIr and Motor. ' ' Ingoirs at the .IProierm: Woo, 'Depot Or the "SIV' Add litUsl Those mlnoi.do' not motile ilre. or Ono:- tom 'gifts. , ~5. U. DADDOW, Supt. km 27,, 7 36-3 m Bor 54; ; • mond, Vs. IT O TEACHERS.—The School Di rectors of Timaqua , District, Schuylkill county, 4 will eciploy Tvo Ilahr.Tescherr, at salaries of Fitly and Forty dollar's:we month, and doe Female Teachere, at Twenty to Sizteen dollars per month. £1 appilatets most pnmerst themselres ter exiuntruition at the Broad street Sel 57 l Muse, hi Tamaqua, on Tuesday, the ith. of Jul ) ; /5 7, at 8 o'clock, A. 81. By order of the Board. June 20, 9. ii , ..arCA BE, Secretary.. ' .2= • N - OTICE.-4 have loaned to William .11 ;Schooner 'four maw, hareem /pd. wagon. AU persons at* hereby otatkoted not to molest sold property !sit Wong/ tono.' LIIIPL9 ROYER. 4; .7 22-32* IVOTlCE.—Whereas; my wife, MA -11 8ir. , 1/131iT has lea my bed a‘nd beard without snyjnstoanse, I bereby give notice that. I will not pity an debts of her contracting butter. J uiy 274t 41, THOMAS MIT. books and papers of ' .ionn named:. deceased, late of Auburn, are tom znY lunedsjor 'collection. AU *ems indebted there in are *Nested to call without delay and, make. pay ment. „ AUGUBZUB SCUULU , Auburn, July '67 :MK 'DROPOSALS.wiII be received by the :andlosigied up to flatirday, Month lost, for ding r /Tabs. School novae In Poster Township.— For . Plan and Ppeellication, apply to' Wh1.11131310N8, • ' Ulan Carbon . ! President Haan* of Diriiistrae. ti .. 27.20 VOrrlCE.—;4lii accordance with a reeilutlon - of the sae enisumers,'adopted Monday evening, Jute 2fith, - a meeting wIII be held at the Town Hall, Monday evening, 31417 6th, to farther 4: 0 11411er the quanta :Cot the advance in the.prtee of gas. • ' rims, July IT .; J.O . . PRICK, &artery. 71-It OTICE.--Sainuel , Schollenberger, iiistee of Valenti's, 13cbolleilteriger of Antwn, at Placid the books, notes,ete.,br saki Valentine,Sehol. Waterier Itimy bands *be collection.' Ali 'pereotis in dibtod til him are requested to adl at an early day at my place and make payment'. AUGUSTIIS Belli:IL= .tubnrn, Job , 4, '67 . • 27-dt • N, the*C r urt of Comhion Pleas of Zkl/1 County. • • RE JOCK PAT:811.80N, No. 4. ' }-Docember Term-1852. ' A DKR SILLIMAN. Bill in Brinity. ' • And - now to wit, 27th of June, 1867, the Court order. and direct:the Receiver, H 001 7 00141111110, Ba to sell at public sale, to the highest and best bidder, the inter, eat of the said parties in' the lease of the Coal veins Made by the Kentucky Bank to them, henries date, Nov. I,lBsl,3ogether with the Colliery and Appurtenatces, Including all_personil property connected on, the Ken tucky Bank Tract near Tuscarora, on Tueriday the 14th Of July, 1857, at the Pennsylvania IL% Pottsville, at 2 e'tioek Terms of sale to be one-third cash and the rema ining e two-thirds of the purchase money in ap. prov ,paper with security at 90 days and 6 months. By order of the Court, SAMUEL utisrmsoza, Pretit'y.. ;In,ribedieriee , to the above order of Court,- I wilt a*. peso sit public sale at the time and place therein named, the celebrated Locust Mountain Colliery, Mende at iTumirora in Schuylkill enmity, as the property of the late• partnership of 011.1yden t Patterson, erected by them under a Imo to them 'from the Revive/it Bank,, having yet about fourteen years to run, together with all their Right, title end interest In theutid imam and all the vitachliery, thieues and Improvements necessary to COD ' titillate it a Snit class colliery, having about twenty breasts and capable of mining and preparing ter meant it Isait, two hundred and tidy tons of coal per day.— The Improvements which are in a hood condition and testi" new, consist of a2O hone power steam engine, with boiler, breakers, hoisting connections, double set of 4ige 'states Mr preparericoal,2largecirentarscreens t lamp Arid steamboat coal sautes, together with 52 drift ears on the road and In running order, and 7 others not la running order, I dirt airs, 6 miners' houses,learpen ter Awl smith shop, tool', £e.,l subto, Z. ones, Stove, 41v:woes and 6 mules with barna*. 1 track wagon i and harness, 2 welsh scales, 1 cutting be:, otal Rail toed iron,old Iron - wheels and azies.lototrpikeN oil, pow- i detain", straw and oats. prop timber and sills, 660 yards of tatilead flight Zia%) I mile of flat bar railroad inside. and - Outside of said colliery. The above colliery Is now carried on by me as Rereeiver and-will be delivered treth with to•thepurchaser on day of ale on compliance with the conditionVhereof. 11E,aIRY 01MTERMAlf. , . Pottsville, July 4, • 7 2111 - Receiver. g t ENERAL BANKING LAW.L—No , tic* is herebylleen thatipplicaUon will be mad, to e 'lust *63011 o the Legislature foe the passage of a °spend Winking w, based upon _stocks, and upon the general features of the bill submitted by Mr-Sall at the last session 151 . the Legislature. 4 4 ' . • . • July 4, 'LT , i ; 4 , 21. Sliiie,tl is hereby . given timt . ,ap, i i placation Will be nude to the next Leithdatnre for bo'incorporation of a bank of issue, with the usual pet climes of banksomder the name and title of .11tE in- NE48111,144 SANK," to be located in the boiongh of Illinerwrilte • Schuylkill county, with a capital of Two .itundred Thousand Milers. - :hilt 4,17 ! ' • - 27.6ra N ------ O_TICE.•:-;-Notice is hereb y given thatan sppliastion will be made at the next sese sion.of the Legislature of Pennsylvania for the inrorpo ration of a Dank With the privileges of fine Banking. and Diseonnting, said Bank to be called the 'GOAL BANK OP.SCIIITTLKILL RAVEN," with a 'capital of Two_ 7lnndred Thousand Dolliirs, and to be locoed in' 11;4 erm:nib of Sch uylkill Raven, Schuylkill county, Pa. kbnylkillilaven, June 27, ',7. . 20. em TMi'OTICE.r , -Notice is hereby, given i • that an application will be mode at the next sm. s tof the Legislature of Pennsylvania for ,thfc chatter ota gaik of issue with the usual privileges, mid Dank .101bejedled the "74211.CDANTS` DANK; with a capital Oil Hundred Thousand Dollars, with the privilep to Ininmust tbe 'same to Five Hundred, Thousand Dollars, and to be located In Market street. in this borough of POttgrille. Schuylkill county, l'e. , \ . . iJune 27,, IT I hem N OTICE: Notiee is hereby' given • that anppiketion will be made at the next me. r of the L egislature of Pennsylvania for thetD corps.. ration of a bank with the usual privileges. said bank to toe:Med the '•ITIVION BANK OF TREMONT," with II esp. ' Its) of One hundred Thousand Dollars, and to be loco. red in the town of Tremont r ßehetylktil County. 111,1JAII RAMMIRR, lIIINIZY HEIL : WF.RTiIItIMIL - T.. I . OO DnIKY.. A. L. TICE.. _ • WY. IL SEIBERT, .41, JOHNN_DARNZIT, 'D. B.ALTHAOBD, - ADAICWOLIt,- ' ZAP! BATDORFT, LEVI g. alumnus, HENRY IltellBL. June 21 TO I , Re.goi. - h -orrl v E.—Notic6 is 'hereby given that an application will be made at the neat. see: . of the Legislature of Pennsylvania, for the charter r of a bank et lane, with the usual privileges-sold bank i tb be ailed "The Ashland Bank, —with a capitol of ~One Hundred Thousand Dollars, with the privilege of tocceasdng the lame to One Hundred and . Fifty Thou. 'land Dollars, to be located in the borough of Aebland, county,State of PennAylvania. • , - . ' 1 R 1 .V. 1 44 OMPSON, ROBERT 0. WILSON, . i c I ABRAHAM NLASN, DAVID V. McKIIIIIIN, ISAAC BURKHART, • JAKES R. CLKATKR, L. P. OARNER, A. ern% JONATHAN FAUST, WEL lA3I IdITT. Ashlind, June 23, '47 29 dot i 7 1 4 . XECUTOR'S NOTICE.—Where. 1 ,4 ai Letters Lette of Admirdstratkm on the Estate of Ilt !art TIMMERMAN, late of the borough ,Of Pine. grove, Sebnylkill county,. dammed, have been granted to the subscriber, by the Registerlet Schuylkill county .-Notlee Is hereby given to all persons Indebted .to said 1 TAttate to make payment, and !M . oe ha_ ring elainut will I •present them for settlement. JOHNII7Z3ITLLER, 1 ~. Jane 20,'57 255 t• - I - Keerator . - . •: , 7.)ontered `estthestealt ell •ri the M.,11: ' k wu.soN. ILSON. r • • t • I -ET lit els. 41 10 . -1 /el els& tit• , er, ; DorrsvlLLE MINING & MANU.: PACffintllfil COSIPANY_.-.!-At a meeting of the [stockholders of the Pottsfille Miningaind Manz:Octet, I log Company, held June 234, to the horeogh of Potts: } vine, the ffilloving persons wets elected officers to *erre until the nest election: • Prctident;—RlCllAßD JONES. r • rws Presider/2-=Franc" Spencer.. 1 Trcanacr-.43gorge. Spencer. berrterry--S. Norton Ewes. • 'Tie books fol• stock sobscriptlon are now open at the .office of the ree Preiddent, Pottsville, and at the office of the Company, No. 61 Walnut street, Philadelphia.. I June 27, '2l', • ' ffilffes NOTICE.—In" the Or ,plant nr or Schuylkill county In the mat ; er o the aecornste John Knees, Administrator of tho ostabsof Anton Peter Simon, deceased: The undendned, auditor appointed by sold Court to %estate and resOlte them:a:motet John Knees, Admin. 'strider of the eststi'ef Anton Peter Simon, deceased, and make distribution of the musts In the hands of the said Administrator, to and among those entitled to I , lame. will attend to the dull, of his appointment • MSc*. Centre street; In the borough of Pottsville. Oh 'Wednesday, the 10th day of Augnst,lB4l, at 10 o'clock . M., when sod whore all permits Interested Attend. Ilir*R STROM, Auditor. , June - *DA RTNERSHIP NOTICE.--Notiee is bertby given that James D. Strambeek storer chased the Interest of Richard Itolman In the of 1. Wells d Co., in the borough of leinereville. and that the business of merthandising will hereafter be ranted en at the mid store by Web Wells and James B. Strum ,heck, under the name and firm of J. B. Ptrumbeek A Co. • J. B. STRIIMIMCK.; ISAIAH . WELLS. . P. hotness ot mining and shipping Coal fr the Diamond Colliery, in than township. will be contin ued as herototbre by Um dgu ed. under tbo 014 firm sumo of ft. Ifolsoon Co. undor • It. lIOLILIN, ISEIAU WELLS. IfinerorMo. Juno dy, -51 s 9641 -. CO3PA It'I'NERSHIP.—The under -dgried Wire this day. (June 19th. 1597 ) entered In. to volartnershlp for the' kiIIUIRIGOOII of General Slitting , linsittesn at the Colliery Wei, held and worms( by , a Ilk; ifLTUR 0. Setnillenberzer, altsuits In Blythe Township., Rehttylk Courtly, und e r the Brut nem of HAMMER ECUOLLENDERGEIt. 1F:LI UASIIIIOI., 'GEORGE 9CLIOLLENBERGEII. - Noncz.—lra tip anaarsietted. hire this day, (June. _)Bth.,lB37.)purchaced trona tiattarna O. Ficholleteherwer al: hist right. title sod interest or, to and ton certain com e ry moonily worked by him, sit nate in Wyllie Tow et thlp. Potntylkill Comity, together with the ctore, xb-re goons.; mules. Lortes, cars toarhlnery, lialwree. awl , evit7thing tnoroblo and Immovable In, upon aboog, or uad in futtrioriiinl with or aniurtynant, in the . said Callen , . and that we have empleyod the rata 0 OPiSTII/1 O. Behollenberger et euperintetamt of mild Colliery. . HAlairi I ECHOLLENEBROIIt. 4113111 20,V7 • • .• • • Igs • i WANTED. NOTICES: FERTISjZKfI. ik la • To retramer a **dusters. rIE - SUBSCRIBER • bite reeei ?ell the Akimey, and *lll homatter: keep rue sale th e .4 lag Fartlllarre, which trill brrobt by the tee, ) 8 ,,, ,, sor tam', at tbe' Importers and Ilalitaicturora prisec caret:TA shltletl. }'be r,llawing are the prices furnid.4 1 at ids Ave:Lows to ,pottirille : .. . - I foodrette, per barrel, . - • • - • $2 ea , Do. per fit, • . . . . . I Laud Platter, wet, per bond, • .. - • 2•4 Bear Clapping-I, per barrel, . • . • •, - 3co Do flawing., ens. per barrel. • I ... • - 3 to Super.Phorpate of Lime. by the mum), 2% etat,mor lb. A Peculate GILSIXf.v tad genuine No. I,(by the bar. 113.4 eau ) Per Sou, • - -- Columbian 43 mated imagine Na I, (by .-. • the eq. zg eon i rHO Per ton, - - -48 Co ifoxleall Guano, per Ira, • • • - - • Sa Co Those Fertilisers will be found eheapir than manure that has to be purchased and !ranted any dletarma .... ' !WSJ. BANNALL Jos a, 17 P a t stirztr The foil i rr L lag is an extract from - the report 4 Lisa committee appointed •to superintend the recent trial test of burning Safes at Erading: - . "On the 28th o: Ye:Dreary all the Inembers of the Cob. mitts. met to Witness the Sake and Seeps and poperrs, (placed in then) and wars perfectly antislied that all wai right. • The day following the tenting twit place, un der the superintendence of the Committee. After a Mr.,' and impartial bunting Or fire hours in the. furnace of Striate. Farrell &Herring. the Safe of Mews. trans ce Watson was first opened. the Safe bring 011 fire inaidr, and the contents partially consumed, wbU•the contents ht the Sale of Ileum Fermis & Herring was in good condition, and no lire inside.". • The Editor of the Ikrks..estd Schuylkill Armlet, to. - gather with fifty bailee's men, who attended the burn. . log of the Safely testify to the ;ruttier the aboveatate twat. • For good and. reliable Bake at inanitacturene prima, tall onß. IIISKAN. Jgent for ltarts:re te/krrian'a Safer. . Pottsville. Nardi 1411. - '67 - U. MEDICINAL. TREATMENT OF CANCERS, TU- • r • MORS, &C. The Phi/ode/Airs 'inflate, for the Treateseto of Carkeeri; Tumors, Woes, Scrofula, Ulcers, tte. TAR.- LOUNSBERRY & CO.,have, 1111 treated these Cowes specially, de IMOD Ats past; and their swags bee Palm/ been equallodi diamaedsro treated without stark& operstriorts;%nd the great advantage. of thts important discovery in Medical Bdeooe Madsoitted by all who have witnessed its•suc elm No, further Information and advirsor our wash. y: let ,on the Ireatment of Cauca% patSenta will address (euelocing a postage stamp.) DIL LOUNSIIRRAY A CO., Nalel North nth M., It doors below /itch. west tide. ' Phil phla , June d, '67 • 24 em • A CD EA,ADIgDI • D.R. ill - P0 e 110.8191711. uOLD PILLSa A E E INFALLIBLE in removing stoppages or irregularitlea of the menses. Them a re:nothing new, bat hare been need by the Doctor for many years, both in Prance-and Ameriesorith Un paralleled sums la every case,and he is amulet, many thousand ladles who have used them, to ma - the Pitts public, fbr the allevlation - of those meeting from any it whatever, a won ma a PrwoOollytt to Moo ladle* whims health will not permit an boom of temi• JD ly. Pregnant females; or those supposing lens so, - are cautioned against using Ilene Pills, la he Pro. prletor assumes no rerponsibility after the a e admo. nition, although their m'idness would prevent , ny Inju ry to heal th ; -otherw is e, these ,Pilla are nded.— Directlons accompany each box. Primp-4V whole sale and retail by 0. W. RPTINO, corner Norftle' e" : in* , . , Centre i etreeta, Pottsville, Pa- , Ali orders must be- addreated to the ahoy, amoral Agent, who will supply the trade lit Proprietor's prices, , and send the Pills confidentially to ladle. by mall their enclosing $1 to CRAB. W. EPTINO, at Pottaldller Schuylkill county, Penna. /Kir Seetiagnators, J. Dolosco,* on each box—none Others genuine. • Pottsville,/ sine 13,17 A RETIRED:VHYSICIAN. - WHOSE SANDS of Life have . nearly ru m out,' diwormed, while In the East Indies, a certain ea re fur Consionplkr, Asthma, . Bronehitis, Coughs , Colds, and General tiehLity. The remedy was discovered by him when his only child, a daughter, was given up to die. He bad heard much " eg the, wonderful restorative and healing qualities of preparations made from the Nast India Hemp, and the thought (enured to him that' be might make a for , );,Is child. lie studied hard and succeeded trr= lidos his wishes. ' His child was mord, and is now am indwell.- Ile hai shwa administered the wonderful remedy to thousands 'of sufferers in all parts of the world, and he has never failed In making them corn. pletely healthy and. happy.- Wishing to do is ;Duch goodie poadtdc,, be will. send to sucked' his afflicted fel low-beings as request It, this recipe, With full and expW cit directions for making It up, and succesafnily twiner it. No requires each appliputt to Inclose him one chil ling-=three rents to be retpmed as portage on the recipe, and the remainder tote applied to the payment of this advertises:writ. Addnuer • DR. U. JAMES, . ' N 0.19 Grand at., Jersey City, N. J. 'N. 11..-Dr. U. James hair neither race nor agent inliew York, as mune have- pretended and adver tised. The redpe is sent from so MAU but N 0.19 Grand at., Jersey City, N. J.. June June 6,'67 . . • fit) M.lnt • ALYER'S CIORRY PECTORAL, VOlt the rapid cure of Coughs, Colds, Iloareeuess,bronehilia, Whooping Cough, Asthma and , Constunpilon, is universally known as the best run- CO CM'yet discovered for every variety of Pulmonary disease. wide in the field of its usefulness sad holm. morons the eases of its curve, that almost every section of the country abounds in proems publicly knosnat who have been restored from alarming and even desperate diseases of the lungs by Its use. Whin once tried Its superiority over every other medicine of Its kind le too apparent to /crape obespration, sod when Its virtue/ are known, the public no loam hesitate whet *athlete to employ ibitte distressing an& dangerous affections of the pulmonary maims which are Incident to our mate: Dy its timely use mazer, nay almost all attacks of dance upon the ,Lungs or throat, are arrested atia thus are saved many thousands every year !roma pre. =titre gram.. No listully should be without It, fuel those who do neglect to provide themselves with a rem. oily which wardsaff this dangerous class of disease will• have cause to deplore it when it is too late. Proofs a the surprising efficacy of the,cherryyeetorsl need not be given to the Amettean le,—they bare' living predate every neighborhood Bat • ut those who wish to read the statements of those whose health has been re. stored and whose llies hare been saved by Its use, wui find them In my American Almanac which the agent be low nomad has to flaredsh gratis Der every one. prepared by Dr. J. Cl AYER, Lowell, )lass..—And veil by Druggists everywhere. [June 6, '67 21•21 e monorriv . I; ; i ijnok T o, elan • Llfiramillt- BeseettN i", Easaad tarreatf t ' Mami Liniment, eltille Po Bevutettgs EmbroesOan The Great Linthwas. Cans irOINK4 sad Brom. Benstetro Minimum:maSou: Tbi Groat Tom. Cana Anis sad &gado. , Bentetre Einbreeistlea t The Grist /Aida** CUSS lbolliatAa mut Bon Throat. Benemerea B ripest! tTM arra Lialamaik Beitadato Ems . owe Grad waned. Beimetes Eiglorimides t ?be Gm{ Lialzoint, CartyakapPect Bands, and,atter Om 'lake, Aiwa. AM *WV: sad-10 theresamys4 la tato way. • it la espodaly-reemzionade4. • Bersaettis Itimarreeadest 116* Grist LIAhnlA Betas very strong sedffiseehessefb is the bele Lai meet Wet eeit be Ned **the Thole; Lad thossaids . gloss s“. tor. To 11 ;Weirs be* or 1111.1 r bwowe oo„tt•to hitrobiablo • sod to Lothar, tuttn.frooot. . ft to efreCially reoc:mweaded. _ • ilearettte Embrecatfori, TlitGrast Li.twoe: aad Daesietra halm Oil. ter dap-Mir. is for sale Ey all Dniggigs and 'l4p:table Storekeepers e'en. where, aad L prepared by JO .1. lIENSNtr• :4 MtaaxacaresoaL CULXIST. Wil404•1001, _ _ /firlor sale In Pottsville by CHABLBS and ler sale by all tle druggists' IR Badding, Norristown, and Judi 2 0 '67 throughcrat the outlay. , _ r Health and Strength mast Inevitably follow its! Ue. • BOERHAVE'A HOLLAND' BITTERS Disease of the Kidneys, ‘•• LIVM# COMPLAINT, • WICAXiTE,SB OF An RIND, FEVER AND'ACUE, And the caricitu &Sections consequent upon a Murk.' STOMACH OR LIVER, Such as Indlgestiort,l Acidity of the Btornarh. teliM Pains, Heartburn, I.Oss of Appetite, Despondrort , " entos*, Blind and Bleeding Piles. In all Nern neumatic and Neuralgic Affections, It has In nuloroo Instances proud highly benctlelal, and In ottor.tir , l' MI a derided cure This is a purely vegetable roMponud. prepared rs I Strictly setentier principles, atteethe maneerel th' r4 " butted Itulland Professor, Iloerhave. Iterat,se el p.r.l encase in most of the European Ftatrs, its Introducii: n Into the United States was Intended more tepee's!!! P I those of our fatherland Mattered here and there nrerlie , NCI) pf thlg :nighty country. Illecting.wltlrrristYn . ` teas Met.. I now •eer It to the trerice n poi I- , • knowing that lie truly wonderful mediolnal rlrtne.nne t leaekrowlnlgid' It Is particularly reeounnended to those ',owning vkte' ronstitutletts may have beet) hominid by the condos • our use of ardent spirits, or other lbrmi of dbalpation Generally instantaneous lu effect, It f ode II way ditctlel to the lest of life, thrilling and quickening every nei tr. mitring up the drooping aplrlt, and in fact, In lost ng svv health and Vigor in the system. ' NOTlOlL—Whoevir expects to find In thlr a tl`Tal' willLe disappointed; but to the sick. weak Itsd In. oil: Ited. It will prove a crateful aromaile cordial, of. Mugu lar remedial propertits. Caution I—The gnat popuLtelly of tide d e :idol+!' l ' . Armna Las' Induct 4 litany the el should guard agaiLat porchaeinv. 141 not persitag.d • buy anything Oro until ~a, u girt n 111.1110 , Holland Bitters a taktrlat. Ono )...tar sill 1.141111‘= you boat Infinitely eurellor It is to all these 7ialtatao ,- 4*-13oid at $l.OO per bottk, of als ivliks ter P .W. by the gets Parrs mai . BENJAMIN PACE , & SO., 31,sn af,egaiiwo aerheeeeth an.l ftt, masa. Pittsburg, en.. Par hale p 19. ;hp !dors 013..; P /". 1..!, • 1. I 1.1.• ainvt; • '• 103 eti,:o. Eroding, by titter & : I..tneaster. by Ph: It Can: rottarltle. John t: Mown. ant 1. • 11 . 7 1 ...., W, gptlitzt Taulaqu.A. by E. I. ErY 511, "" f T 1 : : 3. S. turps, stall fu FaLu3ll.lll Harty, by Dr. + 7 L. chaster. July L,'54; iiiii==ffi NE ' 019 ow_Proof lattes4' WITZVALZT, end aahimer, It orate, IS authorized to sell r Safes in rebnylkill county. Vi furnish them at the ianufacturers' prices, at hie itom In BiAtinitlie where the tud a list of Melia' wan be ae Safes, on trial hate pruned superio r In protecting Hooke, Ire. from aro, to Roy man n I ed n the United Stake, my axe ollerrill at *putty low
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