TEEMS OF THE 111111126',10113111AL7 auraLastrawatrrsoa: • TWO.DOLLARS per imam, Parable la sassier—PA rir not.paid within six ihoiltberaad $241 it nqt paid wilidethe year, • rtiree'eoil Is to ono iddolls, to laraztel,' .- 'l .. 0r 00 Seven .. do do do . , • 00 ' Masa do do .. do - , • 20 00 Utabs obieriptlonsmat boliiviriably paid In adraace, stad satt to one addross . ro,ooxtirlis LID mini: hiriatotgarwillbb famished ta Cantersind others at SiOr 100 ooples, cask on deliem. ,g7seen and' School Teachers supplied with the parawa, at $1 to advance. , ens LAW, Or ILAIIPAPIIII. . • If anbacribersorder the dleconUnnaue•orthelr news p‘pera, the publishers:nay continue to send them lama. arrearages are paid. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take theienernigia pers from the Wipes to which theyare directed. they are rid responsible until they havenettled the billtand dared them diseontioned. If subacribers move to othcrplaees without Informing thepublisher,andt e newspapereareprAthirformer 'direction they are held responsible. The court, hare decided that retrial:lk pies frost the office, or removing and I. called for, Is prima facia*, rldence RATESSIF ?!DVARTISINC. one „ nu , o r lon Des, 50 cents for one iniertlol-0121). ictuantiosortions, tont/ each. 3 tines one ems, 25 ents ,,, o 6sequentiasertions,l23,icenta each. Aliadver somas& OH( 3 lines, Dm short periods, ettssged as a square wassus. oits. two. 711655. • SIX. trams. Throatiness%63 88 $1 66 .4215 $3 00 Pearlines s . 80 425 115 275 400 Tiro liass„ 100 11 60 200 300 600 KZ tines, 125 25 260 400 800 Alcove lines, 125 • 225 2 70' 460 700 Blight lines, 1 254 225 286 6 op; 6.00 Mae liner, 125 225 300 - 650 900 ALL OTIS WS 1.11155 COUNTID AS AIKILMIC 01 753 15)155. ODs square, 122 •2 25 . 3615 '6 00 10 00 T w o squares, 2,25 400 500 900 14 00. Three squares, 360 600 •7 60 12 00 18 00 rout squares, 450 600 800 14 00 20 . 00 Qaartor rot ? 000 900 12 00 13 00 30 00 s,shorger spice for abort periods, as perapteement. easiness Notices, $l, each—accompanied With an advertisement, 50 cents each. Ad verthsemen ta before Marriages and Deat 14,10 cents perline tor tlrsi inseriton—aubvenuen t insertions, 5 citib per line. Nine wordsarecounted as a line in advertising. Merehenbrand others, advertising by the year, with eha ages. and a standing advertisement not exceeding 15 lines, will be charged, including subecription, I $/000. Spate to theamount °flour clearest, with chart. • gee and anbiscription ' Without changes, at the rates designated above. Advertisements:sot In larger type than visual will be charged SO per cent advance. on these prices. All eats till be chargi.d the same as letter pees& Na Trade advertisements received from Advertiaing Agent; abroad. except at 25 per cent. advance on these prices, unless by special agreement with the publisher. 'Marriages 26 um ts. each. Reaths acentopanied with no tices-25 cents, without notlcea, no charge. Ail notices. except those of a religion, character and for (Auditionsl vurposlix, will be charged 25 cents (bratty number of lines under 10. Orer 10 lives, 4 cent-opaline additional. Proceedings of meetings apt of a genersliit public char 'der, charged 4t'4 cents par ,line for oath Insertion. To facilitate calculations we will state that:22B lines make a cpuna-1114 lines a half coltunn—and 82 lines a quarter 2952 words mate a coltmon-1476 a half *plume—argil:i a quarter column. AD odd dines over each t ' are, charged at the rate of 4 cents per linkfor one t lmmll, and rents per line for three times. YearlYadvertisers must confine their:advertising to 1 their ord lmslneas. Agenelea for others, sale of Real Et tam, 41e.,Wre not included In businessadvertisamenta BOOTS, SHOES; SOOTS„ SHOES, TRUNKS, &C. THE Subscriber begs leave to inform his "customers and the community at / s erge that hi has Just returned from the city .with One collection of artlelecin his line, con- ''tl›.3 l lo. dowsiating of BOOTS. SHOES. ' • • GAITERS, SLIPPERS. PUMPS, ko., • of all descriptions, for Ladles, gentlemen and children. An elegane article of Misses' and abildrens' buttoned gaiters, something new in the latest style. new lot of Trunks, Valises, Carpet-bags, Satch els, to., Ae. Cutdorner work neatly and eXPeditiouldT attended to Store and Shop In Centro. one door above 11102 street. Pol)/rirNext door to theitrd Front. - DS • tevltle, May 30, 'VI' 22-ly J DANIEL SCLIEETLE. EDUC TIONAL. ' PIANO TEACININO • l in* -E'lllege Organlst,P giver in . rtro ' . lion on the Plano Foi'le and Melod im, la Pottsville and neighboring towns. Terms modfrate. Apply at hie ofßee, sreond . door below Ise Post Oiler, l'etterille. [July 11;'.57 'A- WESLEYAN FEMALE COLLEGE, wamington Deiliware. ' THIS .INSTI'T'UTION; chartered with full collegiate powers' to grant diplomas and agfey &met., Is designed to meet the demands 4L16., trail Female Education. No expense has been pled To make Urn Kra Oils butitutlen. • A FULL BOARD OF INSTRUCTION Is - regularly employed, affording facilities for an extended and thin , ongh education, such u can only bo had in the best in eitufeeni. The Collegiate Year commences SEPTEMBER let, 3.057. Catalogues may be had by Inquiring of the Presi dent, L. C 4003118, or of the Financial agent, T. J. TUO3IPSON. [duly 25;'57 34.1-6 m PAINTING, &C. • NEW STYLES WINDOW SHADES.. TUST received a large and eleg.nt sortment or Window Shades, new and beautiful de /Inns, includinF'Oold Bordered, 011 ed, Landaeape of Flo ral, Gothic Ae., de., cheaper than ever. ALSO Figured, Glazed and Plain Paper Shades, 'of every de scription For Sale by . B NJ. BANNAN. Centre Street, opposite Epieropil Church. March 14,'47 11; • JUST RECEIVED . New Styles Paper Hangings, ORDERS,. FIRE' • • B Board Print'', 'Curtaln Pa. Pere, Ac. Pieces from 0 cent, to • • $2 00, which we iry prepared to.* " th la rut up at'ahort notice. • . House and sign Painting, Glazing, doe: St.ttned end Enamelled French and American double thick, Chrystal, Sheet and Plate Glass, furnished to or der.' Al/orders promptly attended to. • DIUDEY k DOWEN, . CentreStreet, 2 doors above American Rouse. Dl►rcb 21„,'57 I2•tt • REDUCED PRICES. WAil 3Pairoferr .Cheap. THE, subscriber has a, large lot of eery chhlco Patterns of THE, Paper, suitable for Mille, • • Parlors, Dining Rooney Chew- • A here and Public Dulldlngs,shlch he will sell at greatly reduced•• prima., The; Stock embraces the • ••av • . latest and most esteemed Patterns.• Paper as cheap as 6 &lAA's Piece. Now . in Ibn time. for 'Bargains, foi Paper pineal:sand Botike at ' B. BANNAWS 2 hasp 1171oletaie and -Reba Paper and Book• SYmn. 112• PAPER ITAROERS SUPPLIED VERY caner. October 31st, 'n't 44. INSURANCE. , 11 1.1119/4L,LIFEMODIANCE AND . TRUST CO,. , Piottsirille",patiwoui t „ • CANTALIIOO,OOO-CHARTERTIOETtAL. ri II IS Company, chartered by the Legislature of l'encsyleknia, with a capital Of One 1 unfired thoottanJ Dollars, to now fully organised, and has rommenretl business. The Company Is prepared to relic limners and other cro.7.erty in intei l and illow interest on all.mouers deposited In trust. at the rate of tire per rent. per annum; principal and interest pay.ble' ..0 (lemma .For rates of Premium on Life insanities, ee the printed Tables supplied at the Mike of the Com pany, Centre etre.L Potterlllo. three doors wroth of the Exchange halal. JACOB 11UNTZINGERJr., B'es't. WEI.I.IXOTON KU. NZ, Secretary and Treasurer. April 1, 'Sil3-If . .. ~ 4!aiIIIBACITE INSIIRMICE COIEPAIN Authimrlied Capital, $400.000 1 ' CHARTER PERPETUAL---Office, Nk.,91 Walhut street, between f bird and Fourth- A t ree'te; Philadelphia. Tills Company will Irma e *gal mit loss or damage by Flre. Daildlngs, Furniture, and Mar. chandile generally. Also %nor. lastmasce., on 1:0;eels, C.‘,..rove and Freights. lattwo Imausaacs to all pada of the Union. • , Duracroas: , li. Luther, Darla Pierson, f,- l' LOVIIPI AlldeUried, . . Joseph Maxfield. ''"Y , Prt..r Sliger, Dr. Geo. N. Eckert , 0 " 4 Jelin li. lllaoklaton, . B. Hammett, 1 Samod 11. Rothormel, Won. P. Dean. , D. LUTHER, Presukal: P, rice Presiderria W, 11.-Srulth...s^crdary. n- p, 11. tr7t16,1 hnr 1,1. ,, n appointed agent . for She emnpany in Relmylkill county, to whom persons Arlnz Insurance can apply. Jatr...afir 1,'57 '. [April 8, WI 14. J - • • INDEMNITY. 7 . ' rillE Franklin Fire Insurance Com l.. tmuy,nr PhilAdelphla. Mice, N 0,18334 oktesnut streeto, near Fifth street. • • ' . . . . , nubile,:, f!hrtrles .N. Danaher, George W. Richards, • ... Thanes hart, - Wordecal D. Leads, Tobias NVar,neri • Adolph, E. Bode, Samuel (leant, David S. Emma, jarnb IL. Smith, Morris Patterson.. Continue to make Insurance. pertiument or limited on •vere .I...kri igloo of property, in town' and COnatry. at atom as low a. Brecon.latent with Security. Ti t , c )111 pttly hate reser/ad a large contingent tnird, witirh, wits their Capital and Premiums, safelylniested,' afford sin pie. pmteetion to the Insured. Sinew theta in corporation, a period of IS years, they have paid upwards q 0 , 10 rnillam, (nm hundred timusarwl dollars. Imam by fire. thereby hlr , r,ling nvldenrr of the advantages of in, I u ranee, aS wellas t ie ability and disposition to meet with promptness, all liabilities. • • • • eilfo. LIANC.tiEIt, PrtrldentY Cn 11. G. BANTKER, Secretary. The sobscriber has been appointed aiont for the above mentioned Institution and is now prepared to snake in. surance, on crery description of property, at the lowest rai n ., AVDR.EW RUSSEL, Aieut"t, Pottsville. Jan. 11.1851 24f LIFE LESVILANCE. • . pIIE Girard Life.lnsurance, Annuity. 11 . sad Trust Company or ebilsdelphia• Ontel, No. I.4 c 4 e , flutic r ,,,t, the first dpcse East Of the Custom liotoe. `,....-,;-.,- 4 Mt P/TAL 6 310 ,000—Cildit TER PENPEMZ4 ''' ) ni. l nu+ , to make i 1 11 1 1)Tall<M4 on hires on the tea, togethe moat favor able term. 11 with a : . The capital i eine mild i up and invesr a large and constatittsucremiu fu Perfect security to the tortured. g reserved nd, offers The premiums may be paid yearly, hair-Yearly or querteriy. • the rose parry add a Dusts petiodieally to the busman to. for I ife. The drat Bonus. appropri ated In December, 1411. and the second Bonus In December. 1549, ount to au addition of 8202 50 to every SIeGOO %intro.:l am under the oldest pillcies. making 61.262 SO which will be timid when it shall become a claim. Instead of el.nottet.fah.- anli 0.0r..rh t he next oldest. amount t 0111471 60; then eg e in are to $1.212 50 far every $1,000; the others in the wee proportion according to the amount and tale of 'Mellon, *bleb additions make an average of more thao 60 ficr cent. upon the premiums pith!, without hurter ng the minus! premium. A Thomat Rl,l.lvray, ' John A . Brown, johna Lark. . D. Donner. 4 : Is, Smith, PreJ& , rirk Drown, Went mall, Goo a Tibet, li al loseoll ;razor, , John 11. Latimer, ' '• aaa P. Jaams Wharton Lewis, I,,,„"ati'sar• Ralleb .- • John R. Lek ......—"Vewts„ wmtaloloo table Mr rateeandimp/arastions: • , -- 7,,_01440nni0n Led tnyther Information eau be bia ... r • ?OMAR RIDGWAY, Preside/tit, Li on ..,_ -air rts aft,47'l7. in Be boynctu gouty. bad fee th e abiTli COMPaat *feet reamrszleat IWkal El's oil nocoomilli Id ea l" Um =bloat-. APilll4B4 ZelbniiMblit - -11-brAltiat 7 - • . • so mass: newrps• thrall* un. . I fraud. eating of you._ __ gi. . _.• a trfil. I placed tnyself in the'hands,of a barber, and had my head rubbed Ith a good stiff brush, and the Restora tive then appl ed and Well rubbed in, till the scalp was aglow. This - repeated every morning, and in three weeks the yotfogitalr appeared and grew rapidly from' .tingust last t I the present time, and Is now thick, black I , and strong— ft and pleasant to the touch; whereas, before, it was arsh and wiry, what little there was of it, and that iltt was disappearing very rapidly . I still 1 i 5..... use 'your Re . rattle about twice a week; and shall soon bare a good ' d perfect crop of batr. Now,' bad read of these thi and who has not r_but bare not seen hitherto any case where 'any iftrsort's hair was really benefited by toy , of the hair thole, ke g of. the day: and it really gives me pleasure to record 'the result of my ex-, perience.• I have recommended your Lireparation to others, and t. already has a large and general sale tbroughoutt e Territory. i The people here know its ef fects, and ha e confidence In IL The supply you sent us, as whole le agents for the Territory, Is nearly et hausted, and daily inquiries are made for it. You de mere credit i your disetivery; and I,- for one, return you my than s for the benefit it line done me, for L eer. tainty had d spared longlago of ever effecting any such result, • • . Yours, hastily. J.W. BOND, B of Bond ft Kelley, Druggists, St, real. . [Omit 13 Editor of the Real Estate Advertiser.) • . - Borrox, 27 School Street, larch 20,1853. Data' Stil : Having become prematurely quite gray, I was Induced some six weeks since, to., make a trial of your Restore Ire. I bare used less than two bottles, but the gray barave all disappeared • and although my. hair has no fully attained Its oriels] color, yet the proem' of rige is gradually 'going on, and - 1 am In much great hopes bat in a shor tame mohair as air will be dark de formerly. I have abet been ncY gratified at the healthy mot tore and vigor -of the hair, which before was harsh a d dry, itidlfbaseeesed to come out as for merly. ; Res . priertilly yours. I • D. C. M. RUPP. Profane* Wood. . . , 'Caa.i.ris: Illinois, lune Iti. 1845. I have ri s Profeeisok :Wood's Hair Restorative and have mind " Its aotkhrrful effect. My hair was heroin. log. a s I the slit. prematurely gray, but by the tme of 101"liesto . Ire," it has resumed Its original color, and l hare no do bt, permanently so. 1 SIDNEY DREES.E, 1." . Ex-Senator United States. 0. J. IifOOD & CO.; Preprietors, lid Broadway, N. Y., ,1 spid 114 Market street, St. Louis, Miss:nut Sold In Po Henry Say) . Dr. E. Chle where.. Allortant Discovery. CONSUMPTION, . AND ALL tiBEASFS o r. TEE LUNGS ram 'THROAT ARE llositiyely curable by Inhalation, irtaleb, conveys tbevemedlex to the cavities in the lungs throh the air passagea,and coming in direct con tact with t e disease, neutralises the tubercular matter, altars the ugh, causes a free and easy expectoretion, heals the I gs,Puritiee l t he blood, Imparts renewed vi li reury t o r h nervous system, giving that tone and ever! glr so India'usable for the restoration of health. To be able to stet confidently that Consumption le curable by Whelan n, Is to me a source of unalloyed pleasure. It is as mu b under the contriil of medical treatment as , any other l' raildable ease;dis n Indy out of every le hun dred caws (tan be cured in the first stages. and fifty, per cent. In th e second; but in the third stage tt is taper 1 Bible to sew more than fire per cent.. for the lungs Cr. 4 , So cut up the disease as to Lid defiance to medical skill. "hvei, however, in the last stages , inhalation ef forts ext ordinary relief to the sett:ring attending This imi scourge, which annually destroys ninety five thonsakid persons fit , the tailed States alone; and a 'correct ealgulation shows that of the present popufatlon of the earth. eighty ntillioos are destined to fill the Consumpti e's grays. , Truly t quiver of death bas no arrow MY fatal as Consompti tr. In all rages It bait been the great enemy of Ife, for t sparest:wither Age nor sex, butsweets off alike the b ve, the beautiful, the graceful, and the gifted. B i the help of that Supreme Being. from whom mouths' . good and perfect gift, lam enabled to offer to the *MId a permenent and spredy cure In Con entopttoo. The grid cause of Usherette is from impure blood, and the immediate effect. produced by their de it. position in , the loons. is to prevent the free aduilslon of air into the, air cells, which causes,' weakened viten r ty through the entire system. Then surely it is more national to expect greater good from medicines entering the cavities of the longs than roam those administered through U. e stomach: the patient will always find the lungs free pad the breathing easy after inhaling rem diet. Thtia. Inhalation is • local remedy, nevertheless it aetarenstitutlonally. and with more power and certain ey than'&menthes administered by the stomach. To prove the I:towerital and direct influence of this mode of administ tion,ehlorofbrn inhaled willentirey destroy sensibild in a few minutes. paralysingthe entire ner vous (let In so that a limb may be amputated without the idigit , pain; inhaling the ordinary burning gal L will de life ins few hours. The in !alien of ammonia will ranee the system when fainting or apparently dead. The odor of many of the medicines is perceptibte In the akin a few mire rates tiftersing inhaled , and maybe Immediately detect ed in the blood. A convincing proof Of the cone/tn. Wood eff is of inhalation, is the fact that sickness Is always produced by breathing tent air. Is not this posi tive eviditnee that proper remedies, merely prepared and judiciously administered through the lungs, should producehe happiest results! During eighteen years' practice,. any thousands', suffering from diseases of the lung and throet, have been under my are. and ;I have after the t i o sufferetead been pronounced in the last AN" which frilly eel 1 ilea me that consumption IR no longer a fatal stines. y treatment of consumption is ortgloalamd st Loaded n Long experience and a thorough investiga. lion. MY, Yerfatieclitlaintatice with the nature of to. herein, 44. enables me to distinguish, readily, tbe va rions fortis of dimwit that simulate eeneumpticm, Sod Apply the'proper remedies rarely being mistaken event In a sing' ease. This familiarity In connection with 1 t eertain p. thologlail and microscopic discoveries. enables Me to rei se the Mugs from Um ellects of contracted 4 m ehmte. t ;enlarge the cheat, purify the blood, Impart to' renew vitality, giving energy and tone to the entire 1 I Pb". i .........•' • - ... . . . ... . . . . . _ . . , . • , .. • . : "1'....... • '.' .' :• ,' ' '.-••• . c'• • " • • . • . .., ._ . . ........ .:.. , , :Y''''' - .,. ' 7- '' - ' - ' %: -.....--, ‘- i. ' :. 7 . ;.. • .... ;I ' . : . • ; 1.1 '..t 4 t5 , : z7ii4:.;!::,-s 24:27 .-••x ~, * . r ,i-..r.?...:::57,,- _ - ~-'.. ' ..,1. -...,...:,. i' C.:.E, P • :,. ~ -..: F 4 '' i - ......'..: ~., !' ....:-' 7 .--' --;',.7, 1 1 .... .1 . .•, . r - . . , . . 1 .., . , • ...imikM I . - ... . ..: • ... '..•• - - - . A4/ 7 ,cf- - ; : - ".•*: ._ c• . ~. , -.. ...3:::• .. , ' _ , .. ••‘ \. •. -: - ,:./..,.:, ~.-. . _. . ,„..; ...... ... - ir - ••., ~,, ..,....... - -.LS: •., . . • - ' ._ c ; ...'''..., . !••:-. -, 7c..- . - ‘,. :-....1....,:".., ,mss.,, . :'` .: 1:1' . „r'-"•1-4 11.::1:: ' ..' :' ' ..,• zr• . •••.:.;••• • _ , ._, , ~ . ... , . ~.. , r . „ .. : ..,:-..;,..," j• :•,. ;„...; .-, ••::!•‘`, , . •'-• , : : f. ''.. l . ... , '-' • .! .: 3 )' ' '''' ..,.:_, - ' V., , :i , ~ ''': ~ . ... , i : ' ;. ' 7 * rm. t_ ... ~. _ . ;, , . AND .4, ....,, T r o. . IL.rr ..• . . • . i 4 TIS .. - , , ... ~‘. ... , .. . VOL. XXIV. -ICINAL. ,LYON eflAVin E YO for the ?tali? , e 1140 world And Bald bead& i v; after i'haldneas of .1 ' KATNARION. used Lyons' Kathairon t Is the most delightful toilet' arti• is preeminently benedeiel for arsy [ eßsthstron fully restored my htdr etre years. [ Yours trip - AT M.. No. 56 Warren Street,Ne A w York: t of Pure Yarnell.= Ginger; for dye . mug debility, de.. can be had at C. MULLETS • ty Store, Centre Street,Pottmtle. 1 -taf I Also, Lyons' Ent panda and ganef:it Perhun and OctOctober ery 23, 1358 1,11 W. 'EPTING, rsale. and Retail . . 1 , prazigiFir voaci Casena..t.ore. B.E. Corner etitre and Norwegian Sta., i ' ~ Opp 'le Martioner's Hotet,) POT T ITILLEi.rWE'RIIIIA• ''AND BOLN • PROPRIETOR OP !s Pectoral allitnre. i• AL MIXTURE cares Oaeighs. AL 3ilTTlAtiores Infiriensa. Rah MIXTUAE cures Bronehitisi. UAL MITTIIS.S. cures Sere Throats. RAL ItIXTUTtErwIII relieve consump, n'adranced stages of the dlsouss,_ RAL MI XTURE sold 4J/teal. Rau • • I ! P.M. lII.XTIIItE sold by J. RistsAS 'dile. 1 - RAL MIXTURE said by Wis.B. Kean, yen, 'i IRAS. MIXTU RE sold by all druyststi nshout the 'county. __ MANIIFACTOR .e . przNa•s rEcro EPTINCPB P 11 EPTINO'S P EPTINGI P EPTING'S P five petlents I EPTLsiG'S ' *t't, Asidand EPTING'S PE Brays, Mine EPTINOT Pr. 4, Bch ay! k tl EPTINQ'S 1' generally t h October 24,'57 l OWA 4 thitenlient .1434 for the retie :I firi THE H in clew ol caused by fauna hpon the =loaf . several years afo CLIARITABLt Dispensary for in all their Them TIS, to all who their condition, in ease* of extra' FREE OP CRAP soriation comma and will furnish' The•Directora, that their labor been of great b young, and lb with renewed r1:1 ASSOCIATION, vutiadelphias idiots, estubliShcri by special eisdowsimet IV the sick and disfreseckajiicled WARD and WARD ASSOCIATION, he awful destruction of human life, (Deems, and the deceptions practiced ate Hefted' such diseases byQuitake, directed their Conauiting Surgeon, as ACT worthy or their name, to open a a treatment of this , class of diseases, and to give MEDICAL ADVICE GILA- 1 pply by letter with a deerription ot age, occupation, habits of ilfe. le") and a poverty, to PURNIfaII litliblelliES GE. It's needless to adtl that the Ale do the highest Medical shill of the age, the most approved modem treatment. on a, retie* of the past, feel assured in this epherle of benevolent effort, bras neat to the Meted. especially to the 9 bare resoiyed to devote themselves, , to this very important but much des. ptsed cause. Just Publish by the Association, a Report on Spar man:lntim, or veinal Weakness. and other Diseases of the Sexual O in s.' by; the Consulting Surgeon which frill be sent by all. all. On a sealed ,encelope,) FREE OF CHARGE, on receipt of TWO STASH'S for postage. Address. for fteport' or - treatment, Dr. OFANDID -o.iLtlOUN,Oonkalting Surgeon, - !toward Association, Np. 2 South Niritti " • tavllla by C. liagbea, P. Sandenon and • • Taniaquatl. J. Fry; Schuylkill iiauea•.- ter, and by all icapeetableDra6giataeiyary• Feb. 21.'57 5-ly • es with fhil etreetrons sent to any part et the I ate, atieftinadas ty patentee easternaleatlng *ens b, letter. Ddt the gore wank! be nom UN patina abated psy me a 0214 which tretild a opportunity to examine the tango an, erne preserlbe with much greats/ esrtalnty, and cure could Le ideated without toy . stehm ;the Pin•d. W , GRAFIAN, if. 11‘....„ 1-11,1ber0 shwf;(44 .ffe . l4Xt.) Went A 01414 • :PERLIDAirePRIA, . PbasbAM 441/, aff , . . . I RILL TRA.9II TOD, TO PIECE THE BOWELS OP THiE EARTH, AND MHO OVTpEOX THE cArratas HOHNTAINE, INETALE WHOM Wtt4E, . 1 501 t rV;1119 4P :In*ti TO ONA EEE:ANDP Ii I 1 ► Pt a I a • PORT CARBON SHOVEL FACTORY. Charles Pt•prietot. . Ankbaiohmalshords.spademoalrittillOW The patronage of the public isrespentivkleo ll ettett.• Anna ry 10.'57 • • i'ett • - WATER METRES. THE Subscriber having been 'author. lied by the sustsueseturens or Water Metres, will torply all orders left with thempat their prices. Pottsville. August 30.'66 E. YARDLEY SO N. StOVELBI 13140V1k3 . t SHOVIgLe 1 IP HE SU USCRIBEKS would eat the attention of Operators and others to their superior ar eh atonal and or shovels. be made to enter. either extra heavy or light, as may be disked. Watts h Coal street. • J. &J. SPARKS. Pottsville. Animist B, 'ST ' 32elava BOILERS, WOKE STACKS, IRON CABS And Vanua 'TIRE SUBSCRIBERS are prepared A to furnish the abofre articles, et Best Batavia) and workmanatdp at the ab*leat notice Ballets , and Yana eanstantly on hand. J. & J. SPARES. Aug. 8, '57 Cm* Chat Streel,'Pottretite. 2 , 41 0 .!ge ht?rwis°! . . it'Al, feint re:, ceire orders tar all kinds of Iron VitiesdkotteiS, Ere, Wickets. Pilots. ac..isi,mainesctured by Wass a Pesos, late likens Woo, Ridge dientut z Philadel phia, and will furnish theca at thalr CASH prices—car. riage t ogether AA:look or specimens esn be seen at our stort with the prices of the different "M -elva • BENJ. HANNAN. WILLIANISPQRT PLANING MILL, Between the Sunbury de Erie Railroad andthe Canal, (oppoalte the Furnace, Williamsport, Penna.) S. BANGER & CO., Whole- IA sale and Retail Dealers and Manufacturers of while and yellow pine flooring boards,sash, doors, bil ode, shut ters, siding, wood mouldings. de. Jig and scroll sawing, fancy and, plain. All descriptions of turning and Puling done with promptness, and In the best . niaziner. • Feb. 7. '57 • , 64y • • EXTENSIVE MARBLE YAR D , eassamatong9 Street, rottavaaalts aw THE subscriber is prepared, at his old stand, to flunisb all kinds of matorials in hbrilne, uilding purposee—plain and ornamental. lie In. 'rites particular attention to the tomb Stones and Moon tuenteof his manufacture. They ran be had id every variety of style, and will compare favorably. In beauty and finish. with any obtained elsewhere. and are offered at cheaper rate*. JOILN T. LANG. ' June 6, '5723-17 • VULCANIZED RUBBER HOSE,' r . ibr Hydrants, Locomotives, tire EN:flees, and other per = THIS HOSE ' as . great" advantages Over leather, as it needs no oiling, to , will stand a very high degree of heat witro i r t a- Jary, and is not affected by the severest cold. It can be • bad [irony also from 3 inch to 3 inches inside diame ter—larger sizes made. toorder. Alto, Coapll egs, Branch Plysts,litc: Por sale by B. HANNAN. Pottsville, ma, 23, 'G: . 21. Nom e. To Coal OperatoriLana t[ohaylklll,Couum. I • tytorah:too. SMOKING TOBACCO, by Swam\ power—mothsaday, at hamburg, Smoking • Tobae• co and Seger Manufactory, on hand and reedy thr sale. 200 barrels sweet emoted Smoking Tobacco. W,OOO half Span Idt Nara. ..200,000 Sixes, Spanish Ocean. 100.000 Seed end Extra &mai Orders thankfully received and promptly attended to. Terms easy. .3IA KT ANN MOTEL . hamburg, Berke County, Pa. 3e.tf Sep .5.'57 .1' MAUCH- CHUNK • Wire Rope Manufacto'ry, .11P1arlier =ass eirkvi • • Manufacturer of Wire Dom tbelnellrted planes, shafts, slope*Ac.„, would inform the public that he is now pre paredito make , 4LLY, KINDS, ZENGTEth .11,7) SIZES 0)' FLA.? • AND BOUND ROPE". At the shorteit notice, of superb* quality, and • on the most liberal terms, at his Wire Rope Factory, liffauch Chunk, Carbon Co., pa. Reference can be =de to Messrs. E. A. Douglas, N. D. COrtrigid and A. U. Broadhead, at Manch Chunk; to N. Patterson, Summit 11th, 0, Sharpe, Leisenting & Co., Tll more Luzerne county, Pa.. and In fact. nearly all the op erators In the Region who have been using his ropes. , August 8, _'o7 32:1y ,CARRIAdE FACTORY REMOVED. . ripHE undersigned respec i tfully em lllmam this opporttutityof intbrm lug the public that they haveremored their ► .., extensive Carriskgrri'aciory, Trout Mahal Chunk street, where they hare been '‘`-milawc. , ' since the late Are, to their New, Large and commodious building, In Morris' Addition, on the old site, where they Ire prepared to turn out CARRIAGES EQUAL, TO THE BEST IN THE STATE and ready to accommodate their cnitomers and all those who may favor them with their patronage. An entire new and well selected stock of materials and the same old hands will enable them to do work which in elegance and dutibility cannot be ' surpassed. They will continue to attend to the businesshereafter as !mien', with determination to give general utisfac tion 4a-All orderawill receive prompt attention. . air-Ropatring doneat th ABIUGUT & BUR}ltf&RD.' - ' S OTTLL Saddle and P narae S si Vl nan E ntsetary. •d - HEREWITIVinvite your especial . attention toiny very extensive stock of Ready Rade (fiery, Marries:, Collar*. ere, embracing the largest variety of styles and qualities ever offered- for sale In this ceunty, apd at prices that wilt compare favorably with those of any other house to the trade. eoe,o , Rating been, for some years past, ••••• ~ In the habit of purchasing my • ' Rain Rateriaiezeineirrelyfor Cleek, I find myself now in the possession of advantages runs this cause not enjoyed by the trade generally, and feel that I can, with confidence, solicit the trade of all claim of dealers; and my arrangements for the coming me mo's trade are based upon eras a larger amount of bun'. ties/than I have hillurlo r one; you can therefore rely non finding at my establi meat everything that la res. gutted In my line. Orders by melt are rwpecily solicited, and the goods sent warranted to give as Lion, both sato prim and quality., • LEFEVER WONELSDORFF. Opforrlle Spiseepal Chunk Oestre street, Itasentle. March 4.1857 !Gay 8 0,1.011110 R HOOVER. Wholesale and Retail nka , .. .. FIEALER in Stoves, Ranges,. Heaters, Tin Ware, Hollow Wire, BS. Ware Braes Ware. French Ware, and Cutlety, Ra ngei Hollers, Portable flanges, Clu Ovens, Summer Furnace, le., lc., has added to his former stock of Stoves a variety of new:. terns of Kitchen Ranges of ' he tan give the highest reonnmendation.. , Rels particular attention to his new style of nea ter w hic h he Is confident will nuke the heft Mester that hen ever been Used in this part of the country, also, a variety of new patterns of Cooking, Parlor, and Hell Stoves. lie calls particular attention to hit sheet iron Parlor , Store, it Is au improvement on theMieterhach, which be is confident Is the best stove in' use. Ile ha, now the lamest stock of the above articles (too numer• ous to mention,) that has everbeen offered in this part of the country. lie invites his friends and customers to call and examine for .thecoselres. feeling confident that he can suit tbemin quality and price; be flatters himself that be hes had much experience in his line of business, therefOre be feels confident that be cannot be surpassed in quality or cheapness. ifrhoofing and Spouting and all kind of Jobbing done at the shortest notice. Centre street, 5 doors abort Market, west side, Pbttroule. -March 21, '67' , ' • • TO O,A.IIPENTNEB AND BIT/LDENS. 'SCHUYLKILL COUNTY LIMBER mAtFAct e iiiiiNc COMPA NY fIAYe. oti ba nd at th r extetAve esta I ment; on gall road street, a greet quantity of lumber of every kind and description, which they can supply to Operators, Carpenters and Builders, at lower rates than it can- be• bought elsewhere. They are also ready to supply, through the means of their extensire business. and !s -lier sawing machines, manufactured articles in tbeirline eta easing of 23 per cent.on former coat, Their large workshops have been In successful opera tion for the past year, turning out vast quantities of Door's, -- Window Frames, . • Sash, „Panel Work, Dlraraldinets, Ded--posts, • Blinds , ltriantsters, Shutters, i•, . . And all kind/ of Prattled, Partekd and Turned Work, Which they Mitre constantly on hand. They are ready to execute orders at the shortest notice, for any quantity: or quality or sawed or manufactured 'tuft Dryand green Hemlock, of all kinds, for buildingpur. paw-v. Oak, Maple. Poplar, chair, plank and walling boards; Cherry, Walnut, Mah ogany, Se., for cabinet work; White and Yellow Pineboards for flooring, raw or , made to order; White Pine *link, 2,2%, 2, 1,1%. and, inch panel, always ready ; abra, plan k-beams, rails. scantling, posts, shingles, Lath, ceiling lath, pail. . ug. Ic.. Sc. /aril ni l of sawed strati and everything In their line an hand or to order, at the shortest notice POtteville. March Zi !AT • • 10.. STOVES! STOVES!! STOVES!!! • 1,0 11 ERE! • tiNign ofthe Stove : 0 P GEOittiE 11. STICIITER, at the " r zi -: Ow Snow, Centro !greet, Poturille, 1 5: - . s4, ' opt J.O. Browa's Dro,t Store, le ' ' , maki ng amingemenla to sell Ith ex- - . ''' - re essortmeut of --..... STOVES. ' . trisiavAne, . . BRIT TANI A eWAIIII. . -. , 1101LiLOW.Wallit # At price', heretofore unparalleled in this ration. ' • The &flowing is a ihrt of the Stoves, together "with Dumber andyrfeei:" Wm. Penn—Noul, 8, 0,10, with arta*, troth illT to Vletor—liqe. 4 end 5, hoot 512 to SILL . . . . Olobe-46, 0, 7 and 8, frock 06 to Va. Crimple as, 3,4,5 and 0, from $0 to VT. , Cannon,o ..itsg—Nritc 4. 3,'4 and ai ' ' ' ' .% .. Plato Cetnion—Nos. 24, 4 sad b.- • ... Samteeillstsges, for kitelteserNos.2 Sakti,* $2 t' Parlo r Stotts of all sisee, Shish Iwo with Cert Iron Cylinders. • , AWN, common Coal Duelots, at prime sexing him 40 'rents to $2. Galvanised Coal Buckets from to $2.10.: Stove Pipe sold for 9 cents per pound:. thugs 10 eta. extra. Rani* Iron Pipe, TlTcallett ponied. Tho ropy , nR,II/tot taikedletwoar articles will alan always be found on hand led told cheap for QUIZ Coal Shove* Pain, Iron and Tin Pansy Water Cool ere, Maid, Cuspbeno and CHI Wave, but German Nora Stsetlng, Mrs Bricks at all id=s,br Staves, Bangee„, Clay Cylinders of aesortal else, dor Sheet Iron Warm • Mao. Tin sold by the box, dbeettron;by the ponno4-' cheep far cub. All the abote goods will be said at Vadueed Wyse, tbr CASH, and boar In want otakteleit foosora44,ll:wir will find /4 tothab . 9 9 l9o4ll* Zma eon* • 0 11 19110nt:linCUMI.:, Aron nom ti 1e is iseba !s it sof stares 4kdreenderllboat *beep., _ - P0tter1114114 . 117 , . • .4 1 1111191 • MANUFACTURES. SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 16. 1858 idoetrg. • LOVE'S SEASONS AND REASONS. •••ar CIURIAN ItACZT, lore mg km In Spring time, . 1 - Or imaui, fresh as For Cheeks like early mei ' • • Plareyee bried as (14: Tor breath like bales of llilas, - • ../or smiles like sunrise dear; _l'. I lots my lore la Spring time, • And love her all the year. T love my love in Summer. ' ; * For promise mum and tine; •-• • Far truth like noonday throwing • ; Alight on old and newt is ; FOr wealth of bloom and treelihe And Andy somS3rt neer; .11oveany love in Sommer, . ' • 1; And love her all the year. • • • ; I lore mile,* In Autumn, ' For fruit of gentle deeds. 11 For wisdom to be garnered i -To serve our future needs; - for virtneb ripening ever, ' : Like harvests full in ear; I love my love in Autumn, And love bar all the year... X loni my lore In Wilda. • , For eharltles notold i , • I For warmth of household welcoe, For looks that thaw the sold: ! /or harmless mirth and pstiate ) " ds slab as Christmas c hee r; !: Flora my lore in Whiter, : , And Jove her au the year: ; - - - potilical ,Ccoitomi)-. I , - TO Tag PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. I • # Letter Fourt... • Sinanuthes and regularity, Mr. President, are the!ahiracteristies of advancing civilisation. In :stehility and Irregularity, those of advancing har t:arum. The first are found, at you have seen, and in °ree that is quite remarkable, in the hair centary3lnting which the local 'authorities controlled our banking operations—there .having heen;as has been shown,no instance of Poem) suspension, in that long period, except in 1814, and- then,_at the instance of the central - govern meht ; whereas, in the Aye and twenty years, in which the local authorities have been, Jo so greet en extent, superseded, the -auspetutions have been three in number. Need we wonder,ihen, that "a state of grills may now," In the opinion of. foreign journalists, be regarded as "the normal condition of the great republic or the West I"...As suredly not! It is the natural result of a central ising policy, that at one time urges upon the peo ple,the creatiod of banks, and at another, denoun ces such institutions as wholly unworthy of credit —of a policy that, at one moment, squanders the public property with a view to the extension of railroads, and at smother, urges the passage of a special baokrupt law, with a view to secure to the tentral government, the exclusive control orboth banks hnd roads. . . Instability tends to Imam the which of the lfel who are rich—while impoveriabing the many wbp look to the sale , of labor ior the means' of ob taining, toed for, their wives, their children, and themselves. ' It impoverishes the active and use: folmembera of society; but if enables the idle and the useleis to accumulate fortunes, at tho ex pense of those who make roads, build mills, and open•mines, Mid thus increase the productive pow ers of laboring men. , inetability bas been, sines the central government undertook the regulation :lc the currency; the essential characteristic of our policy, and hence it is: (That, notwithstanding grants of land by mil- • lbw, and tens of millions of acres, for the con sOuttion of railroads, and dotwithatanding an in creasing effort to promote the carrying interest, at the expense of the producing one—railroads and canals, that have cost 11,004000,000, have fallen to less , thin s3oo,ooo,ooo,'and their proprietors ere rained. • - . ; That the factories of. the country, too, am in s stale of ruin. For ,years they have struggled against the tide, but now the tide hart overwhelm ed them—reducing toe state of , poverty, tbqusands Of the men to whose unceasing efforts, we" have eyed the intreduotioe and perfection of the most useful Manufactures. limadreds of millions he'd both expended upon the crestfoirot rangelleeet trorkti, 'whose value-might now be counted by lit: tie more than tens of millions. - • ,That the machine ahem/item are closed—um entries not being required when mills have ceased to work. I That the mechanic is now, everywhere, turned adrift to sock in scratching the soil, the means of inpport that his trade will not afford him—be and his country, thus losing the use of the capital, of knowledge, he had obtained by means of, a long apprenticeship. , r . That his daughters, too, are deprived of work, ithdoot unfrequently, for ced to mike their elec tion between starvation on the One hand, end preen - mien on }be, other. , ;That mines nro closed, and miners driven to seek employwent as common laborers--leeving• their wives and children to suffix for want of food. ' ; That hundreds of little capitalists, who had in basted their all in the creation of maehinery, for facilitating increase in the supply of feel, are now In a state of ruin—the sheriff selling out their St.'. tie properties, which are being purchased by the glen who are already rich. That furnaces capable of yielditt . g eundreds of thousands of tons of iron, are closed, arid their ptoprietors ruined. ; , That mines of ore, endless in quantity, and ea 'palate of supplying lead, iron, and Copper, to the i iworld,—mines, too, that have required, vans lamontits of capital for their development--are 'idle; while the men by-whom they had been de veloped, are reduced to poverty. . • . , That rolling Mills, capable of supplying half the • iron required for the ,Union, are closed—to the 'utter ruin of those who own them. That ships, wholly unemployed, are rapidly ne mituulatir.g in our ports, while the ships Meet selves as rapidly declining in value. ... 1 That while the commerce of the world tends, everywhere, to seek the aidof steam, and while 'steamers are fest superseding sailing thine, the 'people of the Union find themselves obliged to de pend, almostexclusively, upon the ships of other nations ; and are likely, before the.'4lose -of your I administration, Mr. President, to And themselves without a single ocean steamer. engaged in any trade, in which-foreign competitionls not; bylaw, prohibited. • • 'That, the trade with California, upon which we have heretofore relied (or supplies of gold, has so far passed away, as to require from us little more than supplies of butter, shoes, boots, and agricul tural machines—that being all the commerce now :resulting, from an expenditure orlabor and capi tal that„had they been applied at home, would ' have yielded nt least a thousand millions s year. - That railroads and ships, mills, and factories, mines and furnaces, are, Abu,. involved in one common ruin—the depreciation in the .value of all this property, being, at the smallest adman- tion, $1,000,000,000. That, the trading interest—so long the almost :.'exclusive obect of governmental favor—partioi- Pates in the !eneral ruin. . . , , That, the owners of homes are unable to collect their rents; and that their property declines in 'mine, while the taxes are increased. That, the farmer Ands his consumers declining . i An number, while his competitors are as rapidly ,Increasing—the system of the country tending, as ' 'itlong has tended, towards forcing into the 'work 'of cultivation all who thus far have found, or , should have found, employmeet in mill,, machine, , ;shops, miner, and furnaces; and that, he has now • before him, should Providence favor him with lib era! crops, the prospect of seeing flour at a lower 'price than baa titer yet been known. Thtit, the planter has before hint a reduction in "the Home demand-for his commodity, to the extent of 250,000 bales; that, almost simultaneously -- • •with this decreased demend, hle -crop is likely to be four times as moth increased; and that, there- , fore, should be be favored in the seasons, he, too, is likely to see his staple reduced to a price lower i .. CUAVIICIL L-7 -than be bits ever seem*. - ' EM T ASZIOIOO3I.I 11111103mr. Taking the probable reduction in the value of I geadte g . s ir ea w ee k s A we , D u e 01 D a Q u i a ,,,,,, pa . land, and in that of olives, at only $1,000,000,000, pers --,, ehreektanoratdeituraers,"-reralled tomy toted and adding it to that in railroads, mills, mines, , the °Tr ettnith ithl" l .,.._ t__ _. t °Us ar t b , WA MYsterious Ind furnaces, we obtain thesam of $2,000,000,000. ~d cee_ e et„ le e e t te : All,"ler 'el? the jaawatiltff af sun, :Adding now, thereto, the 'reduction in the vela° — iiin eea uti . of a n „ ,T ory marblratl*, of ib a w u th i at of real estate, other than farming and planting, sad aval.pfetureauto rodeos of the Old Dominion, land, we shall obtain a tuns of not less than $ 2,. _ where the bead **tore of the Itappahann t cut wash the 500,000,000, as tho total amount reduced; and it boleti the Blue Rid . . may be almost, twice as much, ~ iu T t hipretse spo t t wne Is elublimeLand handl, Somebody profits by all this loss. Who is it? e Meow-at abi=l,°,;l29fu'uutithte Theme rtgagee, who enter* upon possesslon--Brst At the inteeseetMe point of them ridgei tinned a in setting out his poor debtor, whether th e little far- tlehamlet, *steed, trom its Canted pontion,Attatturat. met of the West, or the great proprietor of Mills, At the poloist which one open, the font to mines, or furnaces in the Eas6—Tbe usurer, who re''',.4l"l mar's i r etthe htett,'Maaatainotoss, obtains one, two, three, or even five per tent. per . .. tie eastern bu m , t o e d pl a d i a z g anwas au li b , arm , month, until the poor borrower is ruined.--The ger; - aryl ,. of Madame daftly, a V tidy of tii, Ord manna official, whose solaria/and perquisilmt bete " Nagel- __,,_ --: " ' `,- •:! ' - , ' been already doubled, trebled, and quagrupted, , The W "" r o Sad 01010 Tofu* oststs was Um /Om and will be- now ineteased in value ; nen, the lteLeat=eite Arteot ame Ir t hew hattoOkittatt‘daugh- Lt. ' . • - working area around - him suffer, if even • they do Ttte northern aad amelleoec er ee , ex il e d, max an t not perish, for the want of food .— Tbe member` of deepest rate °fine faar—ilae's Hole—waa th Norms, Whose salary his been donbled,_betanse . of elLtiegh„_,. ll Atus 4 _,_____lthiewLw of 0 0 =7 ternmr,ltersl• of the rise in the price of food, and will too rinnate, 1 ' trams' ''fL,'"`"l4"4"ewetteLeicaw„,_weti,_,____th -I.'mtmow that its price Mir allen.--The nomproduain •. o f th*T ectil e mitud os i — '"" ° ""'"'""vinte° 4 . are Geis - enriched, while the men of enterprise, - and IdOlternanamted hkulteno, width had absorbed nod the laborers, are despoiled. '— . • the means ot the. late owi g rtar te • i lx” IL 0 ...VIII ' • Turning now to the Treasury, we led it already . • ~_,__„_the hast ily twattimitad___,._,Matonj Godfrey mutat I I bankrupt, even at . be seinutencement -.of this Li="i„ ; igir si lira boson at d - „ nair ao., 4 , Bl ...ildslcr,..4_,_ooot downward movement. • Irredeemable paper being : _ y gt Bui s b o o t t o sb;biriag ed " . 'Ar o .' now to be substituted for gold and silmr, the I n inNedfaamethisbattere bombe womb,— 110 tin • flux of foreign merillindlse, and efflux et the Pre. • In% Pooh* Theth Howe had bought ii Id a err la clone mends, will be math pree:fled; and thus - _vvvw an Vi t_ ekka teeieettheatateoffareideestolly , will the way he smoothed, towards total bankrupt: - — T'-"'P lanr "'" 4 Ibnieb°4o B l44l t* mirilskietn . • cy, such as was witnessed in - 1841 and 1842: '•- .-.- Itti, unhappily thiiilkii, ind - see At ofeadae.the • Such, Mr. President; being the malarial etmdi. despotic °id maa i t eridng me aerieniteral tlik set tin, present and prospective, of your ibilow:eith o= d atis• 4 414= 0. 0..4 Musk that . . . itens f .we may now for autionteut f Wilt to their mo.- • Asidisais. rat ob i. , • .-,:. -•-, '- . -- , hold • , ••• . old labitMerinsueguy, now Commeteing with lite eentrat ' overnasent And_ • Pm" wig. MIA* eteeniebee, been mew; Agee; id ViPtivl..villudWallsoitisteridliabdo94llllPtion. • QuEse,si Poll_ A . _,,.__,,,,,• ~ : ;,.. -, ... -,„ ..., ~ . ..-. _. sot moods& 1a the weeld b amide of Abe feektsli. vierlurrom; ovr:AVrive iliskiltell i ' 1 . 05i,...t...tkviii".1.1. • Mniplllo 6 tbe alibi ef'tbayillen_pAse,l34 .. ..„,li - ~,fire". ... ye,01,0 4. 14 . pa il* , „ .... j 44 , 0 *,,ivorivg 1448 40 ..._=rialkas .. ~ : ,•. nem •LlMgritprosigapriguil-Juitiii viii to thi Prgt vf V ..1 40 !a 1, 4" -. A .. -4 1 °,4 4i : '.,l Bl ,o l ***llstislilillinie ' L- - - " - :ik leiP' 4 :Q:"i. , .. - ',-•: -, ' , . ..: - L;`1 1- .1.-, ,-i - ,„, - ,e,.: , . :. , i , ; .-, -..:-.:-.,..,-_--,..-,,.. - 4 ,. ..i .. ,.- -z .-..,-- : ,,,,-,, ", -r ' ' '''''''' -- :; - ' 1 . 4"- i;;' - j: , :' , ' ,(, . ''' and net with referenee to the interests of the pen. .Passing, thence, to town, 'city, and coon ty edministration, we find • - a- \ continually growing poweron the Part of the central government, to control and direct their elections, with corn:spoil. dent growth-of fraud and peculation. Turning Moe to tbe - oommertial capital, 'I find eination thus described in a journal of the day; and unfavorable as is the description, none, as I think, can deny Its truth: ' ireertown 1Q Christendom where,'ln `prop/ratan tolhe'population, an equal amount of crime is annually committed. We do not go touch beyond the inter of the feet, when we say that murder is a thing hang daily Vil- I lainoas and dastardly °deign are nightly peeps. trated in the streets, and sometimes in the open light of day, The city 'is the head-quarters of, the rogues, thieves end pickpockets that are nat. tered throughout the country, and be the main the. atre of their operations. Nowhere else in this country dues vice plant itself so , tinily, andd• with sea impunity. Nowhere is so winch countenance liven to rowdy gangs, that keep quiet people in 'terror. Nowhere have things gone OR (rem bad to Winn so rapidly, Until it is at length apparent -that unless some speedy change tomes over the police inamigereent in Ne* York, and the admin. istration of the criminal courts, a state of anarchy will ensue, or honest citizens will be driven to or. Lenin, and take the law in their own hands." ' • Passing outward from NO, York, welled ntap. id growth of rowdyism and intemperance, with corresponding decline in the security of peewit and orproperty—fnuids, peculation., seductions, murders, and crimes, of every kind, increasing With such rapidity, as fairly to warrant the suer. don in a recent Southern journal, that "the Uni ted States ars fast becoming a very stench in the nostrils, of in enkind."t Such, Mr. President, is the material and moral condition of thopeople, to the administration of whose affairs toff have recently been called. 'De. siring to find its parallel, you will be led, most naturally; to loolreo the closing years of the free trade period, which preceded the passage of the protective tariff of 1842. Seeking , its opposite, von will be led, as naturally, to look to the closing years of the protectivetPeriods, established eithe tariffs of 1828 and 1842—years, is wails the country presented to view a picture of painful and quiet progress, such as the world had, here toren, never uen. The tendency towards the establishment of a sound morality, Mr. President, in every country of the world, has been in the direct ratio of the steadiness and regularity of the 'societary move. ment—the gambling tendeneleit'of the ibarbario ages then tending to disapPeni. That principle being admitted, I would ask you to study the se am of the central government, from the day on which it *named to icon trol the monetary -move ment 'of the country, and satisfy yourself as yeti readily may, that to Its vicious course of action, and not to error in the local government, we oils the demoralisation thatnow exists. Asa member of the old Federal party, you will, I ern lure, re joice to find this fact established. That "ea may do eo, I would beg you to look to the argent recom mendations of 1835,, for the establishment of Btata banks , followed by indignant denunciation of both banks and whet, and by thentabliehment of a depurobent in the national treasury, for the superrisioti of local banks, from which is imbed, annually, en enormous mass of figures, arranged with the intent to deceive their readers, into the belief that those who place confidence in banks will be defrauded. Look, next, to the speculations in public land', which always foliate die adoption of a policy tending towards the etortiag of our fan. tories and f 2. and thus enable gamblers and speculators fo acoutnuiate fortunes, at the expelse of the poor emigrants who are driven frno the older States. twain, to the enormous changes in the value of property of every descrip. tion, - resultipg from the three suspeueions, ip time of peace, tang lave fonowed the-eentralisatiou of the monetary power in the hands of the Federal executive., • Look, then, to the facts, that "free. trade," the control of the central government over the currency, and the doctrine that ''to the victon belong the, spoils," had their origin at the self same period. Further look to the fact, that an ad valorem system, offering, as it does,. bounty upon the perpetration of fraud, drives , the honesenier chant from the business of importation. Look, I pray you, to the gnat fact, that, linos the day on which the centrilised system waradopted, the ex penditures of the government have been, cahoot 'kit—arid thit nearly sieventy-istillietie of dollars, . per enmesh, arecrew, at every election, put tip to the highest bidder. Look at the ,enormous chan ges in the prices of all on staples, consequent upon that exclusive dependence upon foreign mar. kat', which it is the object of the centralised eye tem to establish. Look at' the gambling spirit, and the recklessness thereby ,engendered, and you will be at no loss to meant for .the demo ralisation that is in progree—a demoralization whose growth tishein the last few' years, been more rapid, thanin that of any country recorded in the history of the World. Having studied these things, Mr. President, you will, I think, be die. posed to agree with me in °oleic*, that while the central government than continue to pursue a course that, in effect, offers bounties for the per petration of frauds end• villainies, there can be no hope of change; and that unless then be a change, the day must speedily arrive, when the people, in their distress, will he found calling upon Provi dence, in its mercy, to send them a dictator, and • thus relieve them from the oppression of that worst of all despotisms, a centralised democracy. !Toping, M. President, that, under reforms that you may institute, the State authorities may be come,re.instated in the possession of the powers of which they have been deprived, and that we may!thus be enabled to retrieve our reputation. I remain; very respectfully, your obed't servant, • • I =NAY C. CAREY, Philadelpilto, Decoder 28, 1857. - *to the four years which followed! the bankruptcy of le4l, when speculation had ceased, and when all went required to work, the cotton crop was grader bya total 0f2,000.000 totes, than 113 the Our previdtts ones. Nine Years ithice, the crop had reachid : 1 ,800,000 roles: and now, with favorable lessons, there exists no reason why it sionld not attain the quantity of 4,000,000 balm. The land is prepared for it, and the people are there to work 11‘. The crop must largely Increase, and the European demand must lessen, because with the decline in the ;dm Of food, of which ourpolicy wit/ be the cause, the ability ot•Eniapean far:aerate purchase cloth must decline. • t "It is Useless to wink at the fact Villainy, in every shape. is celebrating its horrid gala day throughout the Dulled Slate % Details of Murders in our cities di) the columns of the jonrnale. Otis reads - of butchery until the very letters in the printed columns appear blo o dy ; of arsons, until the light of conflagration teem to throw its lurid glare throughout the apartment; of fraud. until line of sleek, hypocritical. would-be-re spectable men range themselves Were us • and of crimes vit fouler and more bestbd, until we tremble lest the lightnfogs of offended Heaven should deseebd from a cloudless sky. and overwhelm the earth, ill ruln."--311- acne Anima "O cal roguery has been rampant. There are cur tome prevalent, established byprecedent, and endorsed by long usage, *Web, if now done for the first time. 'Auld be d semed jemmy. The eagles are gatlaerips to- gether today at the federal capital, and the jobbing, peentation, vote•i c oirselfsprise system, will soon be in full operation. moo usage has given to certain doubtful practices stamp of legality. nil would b** regarded as very verdant, end exceedingly unsenblatlre. tad. who shonld presume to call things by their right' names In Washington. or to hint that the private gen. tleman who bed so wasteful en array of serreets, ufhe servants of th e people at Washington, would forthwith' discharge the whole set withoutaeharacter. The treaty ry, onemight think ls replenished annusity Mr the benefit of th ese geolleMen... That they theMselves think im, is palpable. Pram this centre, the idea of ofilcial honesty, In litotes and antnicipalltles. seems to -hays taken a like lalltndinarlan rangy. The finances of some of our cities are managed In a mad unaectsuntabletnanner—therally unaccountable. for no accounts are rendered. Immense sums disappear, taxation annually increases, and the deficit keeps rues with the semi assessed. The public credit Is shaken, municipal snideness of debt are dis honored, neeenutry public works stand still, repudiation is prat...lolly attempted, and all this- thus, enough is squandered, and disappears by peculation, to keep the treasury more than - reed, for the lawful demands upon Asseriecns THE BRIDE tOF AN EVENING. BY tlfelt& In E. B. sotrrarvitu. of Altamerust, In lbeThe of eiteitement , Soul feet that the ceisheated tudreas, Min honors hale, hag Ind stopped them, and paned throughonhara t e or . - Those who had been so happy as to catch • her bee, vied with ,each other ha plain of her mime charms, wells Moe who had not, Waned with aria, nesm and bolted fervent to lidentalefing thenteeirm ansing bar at thatch the next imraug, , • The next day, Godfrey Duke& attended chntehimbere he saw and fall to We with the most beautiful and in trilateral-looking girl la bad ever beheld. From the ' cheapoess and am Bats of her attire; he supposed bar to 'bet some poor *Pendent of Madame Anderly's, in whose pew she 'sat.. Godfrey% was completely captivated, and be resolved at ours to woo, and, IfpoWble, win fhb levely. befog for his wife, poor girl though therms. I He was old she was poor, because she could tar that reason be melee easily won. Won secompanying Mr. Willough by,the clergyman and his brother in-law, Ernest Heine, home a ft er arch, what was his astonishment and dile may at being introdamd to the supposed "poor girl," whom he found to be no other than the celebrated Miss Homes Pante, the greatest harem and toile, as well as the best and noblest girl In the State of Viniinia. Sire Vested him cordially;and ine few minutes the comp any were busily engaged le'cotiveristion. The Weal 'cap. Rid puoishments baring been started, Godfty Wined toIIOOIOIE, Cud add: • , • ,‘ , l tate an medal peremalintered in having espltel pluddiment 'abolished—Visa Paule, do you believe .fts astrology?" ' - • • Honors started, fixed her eves intently upon the gees timer, and then withdrawing them answered— " Sir, why did you ask me tf I believed in astrology," • "Becae. Miss Paula I was about to relate for your amusement a prediction that was made concerning my sele by a professor of that black art." "A prediction," exelaimed Mrs. Willoughby, drawing mean with eager interest. ' "Tee, madam," replied. Mr. Demote, smiling, as , pre diction which. If ! believed, would certainly &moon me to favor the Abolishment of the death penalty. Three years sleet, while I was selonrning the a" abort" time in the city of Richmond, on my way to the University, I chanced to, bear of the Egyptian /fends, /tablet mho was at that time marine quite a sensation In the city. Ills nouderfni reputation was the theme of every tongue. "Idle:mils and curimlty combined to lead me to his rooms. He required a night to cast my horoscope. Me demanded, and I gave. Ms, the day and hour of my birth, and then I took kite, with the proud., to return In the verging. The next day I went—" "Well?" questioned Honors, earnestly.' „ed! • "M horoscope Walla nolurna- le ed tor y me—exhort seope and stormy life, and a as datp and su It predict d . - den death." "Good Heaven! Butz-the details?" 7 ' "it prophesied Par remarkatda avant', the Stit of which be; alranityl*me to past" , ! I "And that was—•l" • • ' "The loss of my patrineralal 'staler _ • "Singular colneldeeeer Interrupted Mr. Wilkeigbiffr as he rove and joined his wife and torotherin-lavr at the other end of the room, • ' "I thought so when the prophecy was re plied Godfrey, - "And the other three Granter sottlyineuked ;Mono. ra. "The other three events; if they follow as predicted, must happen within the next tyweararee Were reach my twenty-eras anniversary. he first tithee, is to be the unexpected inheritance-of past wealth." Vpon beaded this, a bright mils played around the lips of Hollers, and Unbind the clouds from Per brow. She waited a few minutes for him to I proceed, Ms find ing that he continued silent, die said— eWell, Mr. Dubin* goont what was the third pre dicted 1" "Do you command me to inform your 4 , "No, dr; I beg you. of year enuteo, to do eat' "Vary wan," he mid, dropping his voter to a low un dertone, "It was to be my marriage with the wan, I should warship." • .1 A deep vivid blush supplanted the bright smile that quivered over Menika's - variable face, There. was • panes. broken at length by her voiceoss she gently in qqind— • "And the fourth f" j I The answer came reinctantly, and in tones en es to meet only herliep sThe fourth add fattpredletion was. that my hondy ; fiftA birthdaereshoutriperieh an the." A law cry broke from the Ups of Honors a7ge7hande flew up and covered 'her face. After a • minute or two she dropped gam, and leakiest hint, steadily in the fac e said with quiet firmness— " Yon 'doubilmi wonder at my emortra.. Now bear, me. On the autumn following the summer Izsierhieh that. prediction was made to you,l was in Baltimore with my grandmother, and with Mrs. Willoughby, who was then Miss Helne. Curiosity took us to the rooms of the Egyptian, who was then practicing In that' city.— A n d after some each preparltlana es he bad used in your case, he cast my horoscopes/id read my future.! It was this, that before my twentieth birthday, I should be a bride, but never a wife, for that the fatal fermi etc ehe rase/ to arose between the nuptial ben edi ction aid ihMirt dal chamber. Such were the words of the propheey."— She spoke with it solemnity that seemed to oteeshadow every other feeling. . ! • . CHAPTER 11, ; . • THE STEVE ,CPCCIX. • The next day, Honors Interned her grandmother, Madame Anderly, of Godfrey's presence In the neighbor hood, end the old lady sent het only brother, Colonel Shannon, to fetch him to Pledneent. Godfrey tempted the the invitation. On his anted. he !mud that Gene !rat Sterna the governor elect of Virginia, and. Ids son,' had put taken' up their quieter', be ward dais, with Madams Austerly; and the old MAY. in Ids hotter, at Once sent oft car dos of in to SINEUI of the nelehhors to visit her that coming. • When tea was over, the company adjonnare to the drawing-room, where, soon eller, the guests Wiled for the evening joined theca.. r I Pint came Father O'Lonherty, the; pariah pried of St • Andrew's Church, at Crossland. % • • The next arrivals were air. and Mrs. Willoughby, and Mr. Heine. • Immediately after them came Dr. and Mee. Benny Havre—the &dor, a man of greet fashion and Idegatoe; the lady, a delicate, pensive woman, with a sort of sad, moonlight late, beaming moldy out between her Seeley locks of jet. And, last of all, to the astonishment of everybody; came old Hugh Uwe, who had been Invited aen matter of courtesy, and was not in the bast degree ex .to Make his Appearance.. He came not done. ! On his arm be brougli a young girl; Uninvited, but whore, with grave courtesy, he pre sented to his hostess at Agnes Darko, the daughter of deceased friend,and now his ward, who hadarrired only that morning, and whom, presuming on Madame Ander. toh w eitknown kindness, Ise ventured present er. • Madame Auderly, a raider of faced, wu certainly at tracted towards her; and, after a Mile talk. that too. finned her first favorable impressions, she took ghe hand of the orphan girl, and conducted her to the grseap eel by the Mimes Andeely, Me, Sterne, Mr, Maine, Mr. Detente, and Masora Paula Under the auspices of Miss Bole Auderly, they were just about to form what she railed a Sybire Circle, for which purpose. Mss Heine and Sterne wem dispatched Miming forwent a round table. Miss Rose went to a cabinet to seek the "Sybil's Leaves," which ehe present, ly prodnced. All-then treated themselves around the table. • • A dead silence reigned. Rimer shuffled the fords, DM* ad them with their times down, and then, addressing her right-band neighbor, Mr. Sterne, Is • low volce, the de manded— , "What would you withthe Sybil?" ' • "I would know the tutees partner of my Life," was the formal answer. "Drawl" ' The young man hesitated for a white, stalled, and, re jecting all thole cards that were nearest himself; put his hand ander the pack, and withdrew the lower one. "Read!" be said extending the card to the By Tear!" she exc laimed:' . 4 "A widow, beantllnt as light,' . • , will be your lot to wed— With a rich-jointure, wlikh shall pour Its blessing on lour head." I , - • „ There was 4 peters! clapping' of Mends, and shoats of laughter. " It was now Ml= Jettaide tarn to test her fate. Sling Young bay, she would' not put the question in the usual corm, but merely inquired what should he leer ffw ture fate. The answer drawn war— • - "to dandle fools and chronicle small tees." a 'linty that nearly extinguished MIAs Jessie for the evening. • "I delvenem le not Mr. Hugh Miami " exclaimed the lively Lily, as the old miser saunteted deliberately to the table, and stood looking with Indolent curiosity upon the game of the young people. "Cuts. Mt. Bane I declare, your than hart your fortonatokll " .4feil, well—the manmade of "young ladles are notl to be disobeyed," replied the old man, plenty, a be extended his band and drew a card, which he passed to the SyblL • Amid a profound silence, and i n a Mane ink; she read— , "'Thy fate kenos fall of horror I Prom false Mends, Near at hand, perdition Ihrettens *eel— .. • A testful sign stands in thy house or 1184—; ' An enerny—e Send lurks close behind • The radiance of thy planet.-oh, bi warned!" , aPshaw !what serious mockery!' exclaimed the old num, scornfally, as he turned swap and Sara Placa to hitnephew, who had all-the rails been posted behind him. peeping over btashoulder. thu o ttl e re n l a t o p i e r rig&e aw to tett nty *Oirier inputrid "And what would ran with the Sybil?" ' eras*, r,. sPonse. "I would know the future." : 1 "Drawl" sold the Sybil, in a tone of assemed sterts. Smiling his graceful but most sinister= Mei Um doe. for drew a card, and Tossed it to the iroader..' , reedi ,_. "Me ng rl " esid the latter, lifting the table nt .fste,-and - . . - "'Mew thee /—thou theta* the solemn WOO' ' With berpierclitg stare, and her deep *lade might I-- Thenes a tom in her yoke thou hie would's! shun, • For It asks what the sense ecialludh done( 1 , dud theist—there's* weight on tldnel—awa7t-r - Beak to thy home and pray!" ' ,I 1 "Look! I declare how pale the, &octet has grown r 'exclaimed the .11.1ppent Jessie, smOne would really think, to look at, him, that's deep re. mom. for mai ntmeledurime preyed in Mtn." ' : "lionse4el Jugglery I" mild the latter, turn-- I leg sway to meal his agitation, . The erse of Roma Pude', followedl, him with the deepest interest -them Wit that upon h 4 brow 1 that she hed•aerer seta before. • i • . . The Don itt :urn west Ago& Turning to' bet, . I 4tese said r ' ~V iflult seek -you in the magic cirri% lady? " -"MY deutiai, ouswersd the 140104 tones. , eret' the knowledge !" ; , Atm drew a tablet, sad pasted it is en n ui, to the Sybil, who read- I • . ''Ob, ask tne not to speak thy fate! .. . -•• Oh, tempt tile not to tall j_ I •' The doom shall make thee desolate, , , --- , The wrong thou inay'st net 9Weli t * Avery t away 1.-f o r deed& would be Brea sees matey ludo Lies r O - dimes' akuddeted, and- covered ter Otaa with _ fist heads.- • I ,', I, L . • "Pat !Li the tablets' 'Thiy are, groBBllkg fat al !` Odd Row -.' '' I•I:,- • it • ,"Not for th e . world t . -noie thafeeelt Wr d_!' Wet . Theri le _a couple yet to. be disposed o ft NW Paiale;dMis,taarr said Mr. iloins. • The theelt ,oflfiWou Paola ebanisdi jet stri a . ring with $ Wing that th e Oat to J° o " 1 ""1 .. . the smiled; reached forth her 'band : 'sirs a Or lit isiss .V ie ,. bor pass re iL ti : t r A lhLtliyb i l a y to w in h y oLi.: l l:de7 - • resiosibrkte-ell ripened with dowers oat =dna& •• - - As la elsants,ea the Malt •• I • - • ,•- stu ehearemetilthoutrteleeP r: _ . _. , _ . Amen) •beard , le 1118weei ,b1,12t1 It" *Osage oomwspmettente. of lb . - . : volieS• to 4/1"1". 1411141.0 "riS is" - - -11111 r. onto. 5e119105104.90. Mit Akirh , , sobsiddeessr.saultabArtfiltatit4 so 4l! tier _f bodlegot harbedit...4 -- - 0 904/bdoitr Sea iliphis •• Sip lbws ~:• distal 0016' 041 e , - Rachel Dantly, the lovely daughter of one of the richest nverobanta of London: hayloft married George Hoffman, one of her father', clerks, da ring the old man's absence in ,Inditi, he on his re: turn disinherited her and discharged (horse.— The latter belagoverwheimed by disappointment, took to drink, and in a foWyears became "a habit ual drunkard; his wife supporting herself and two- children—Richard, now a tthe boy - in his thirteenth year, and Mary, aiweetehild of slr— by selling, one after another; the remnants of her once costly wardrobe and jewelry. On the last day of December of the year in which our story opens, Rachel was( without food; light or lire, and that very day the rent,tonst be paid. Little Mary waa moaning for bread, and crying with cold. ' -- • - : The drunken father was at the dram-shop.a The agonised mother had but one more article -of value left-'-is locket containing' • lock of her father's hair. She had hoped to he able to save this, the last memento of her once happy home. Bat, goaded by little Mary's priOe for food;; she seized the looket, rushed toe,pairahroker'l • ; oial tinned a few shillings, put bg the! amount of the rant end with the reit pure hated a little bread and milk for her children, and then set out, with them, to visit the old confidential clerk: of her father, Peter Mangles, who had ever been kind to her, to consult him about sending 1 Rrottird away, from the contaminating influences with which he Was tut-rounded. 1 ., • On returning home late on Mew Yea A ere from her fruitless visit, for the old clerk leas net at home,. Rachel discovered •thiit her I 1 nisband had m been dome and stolen the su she hutput b for e, the rent from the place where .abe bed cone aled it, and gone oft, again to "The Crown and 4lag. pie" tavern to waste it in drunkenness, adults Mary, chilled and hungry, began to cry for rood, and the Battering mother, in - holies of regaining a portion of the moziey taken by her husband, set out with her children to the.haant of vice w ith er George Hoffman bad gone. There was a great crowd! at the bar of 1 he Crown and Magpie." The. landlady-.a moot, vulgar-looking woman, with red ribbons in her tap, a profusion of false curls, a heavy gold ihain round her neck, and .numeroas rings on her fat fingers—was busily engaged in pouring out gin fur her customers; the regular ones she was treat ing -4r it most not be forgotten that it was Me w eve. . 1 Such via the scene of vice and dissipation *bleb met the eye and sickened the heart of Ls .chel, when, with little Mary in 1 her arms, and pro tected by the priaence of her; eon, she ventured, into the house. "Is Mr... Hoffman here 2", she inquired, ffilnliy.i The question had to be reptutted several ;times before she could get an ansiver,' "Can't tell'the names of 'any of my customers," replied the mistress of "The Crown and Megnie/t snappishly. . ; , ' . ; • "Perhaps you will oblige ma• by ascertaining." - "Too busy, ma'am i !lot ,water Sally i Three and eight-pence, sir: _ lialf-and.hatf directly I • "You can't go In there 17 sheeted the landlady,' as Rachel was making her 'ism towards• the par lor. "Mine is a respec table house; .1 allow na fe males beyond the bar. [ • • "But I mu Mr. Dorman's wife," . . "So they all SAT," answered the woman with a sneer. ._ • ' ' I . . • • There was a coarse, mocking laqgh from the ; crowd of half drunken wretches standing VW,— The *eyes . of Richard flashed angrily; bat the; voice, and still More, the imploring look WI his' mother restrained him., i . 1.. ' "Let us return tuane," - she slid, In :despairing tone. "I feel faiiit and sick at heart." And leaning on !boar= of her son, thane happy wife tottered rather than walked from the place. The keen,' fristy' air partially metered her strength; and Reeks! proceeded with her, children till she reached the thoroughfare leading through St Margaret's churchyard' ttiteardethe Aliffeery, when a faint moan from Mary.aboto she still carried irs her •atins, '.arrested : bee.. steps. She placed her hand under the thin faded shall w tteb covered her; the.eltild was veld as ice, and hie ering, MI If seised witkan &pant. . "She is dying!" groaned the terror-stride pa rent—"dying for the want Of rood!' • 1 The heart of her bey eouldjendure no ranie—it was breaking. The cup of mise ry and endurance bad hien filled tiovertloWingi'ilia brain Was on firaL-tears could not quench IL ; "Um her home mother!" be cried—utake her home! never fear bit TIM bilogyou kanti Ma ry shan't: dil l ! , rn ber..?beg," be "Aided; "any thing to liar beer" - I , ' "Richard Richard ido not l teare me !"'shrieked his agonised parent. "Let ate not Imo both my children! if you love jour ;mother, retarn—for pith sake return !" The ppeal 'came tot, • late. Ifcr son stung, madden a ed beyond endurance ' by the sufferings of those so deer to bins, hadbro,ken from ,ber feeble grasp, dined down the thormaghiere, and vas al ready be. dud the reieh'uf her voice. Rachel eittne Co the railings of the churchyard for supPOrt,:tilt a second moan,. still faloter than . the fleet, sent a pang through her maternal breast. "She intik not die in the street!" =armored Rub el "Ilitteit—betue! if I havastrength to reach if.", "Oh, Clod!" she eried with a sudden burst of anguish, "protect my hey! Shield him from crime; gaard him against vices and the hideous snares which 'in a thousand fortis assail unfrieuded youth ;'or take tim," the added solemnly "take him in Thy =arty." I , It was a Christitte'liprayei strung from a:moth er's heart, uttered in faith, id agony; and tears; and atmels,bote it to the matey -seat on -- hlgh: • Chisping her perishing child yet closer to her aehieg bosom, the drankartpewlfe hastened to her howl,. • -; .- As Richard Iletrotati reishod . along ,the .street, 14311140 knowing whither he Went, and only intent on the ens ides of getting, bY sown meant,. food for hit famished mother, andjister, be wqs hailed by Jack Menders. /so, lmpilb acquaintance who lived near Richard's Some, eon te whom be told the desperate slate in itbict be bad left those so dear to him. Jack listened with much interest, and at once proposed to Riehard to help him to pick the , pocket of an old igeutleman, whq was . staring into a window - en the opposite side of the street. Richard refitted 11th horror, although Jack urged the necessity" otat once getting souy thing to save the life of bir mother andlittle Na• ry, Jack then endertoidt the business alone, arid just as belted relieved the; id gentleman f hie pocketbook, a policeman stifling Nis 'a dooreay 1 0 arrest him • but Jack mode good hie eyespot.— Not so Itfoha;di who was st . C, ones Weed by the po. lioeinan u an accomplice tit the escaped pick. pocket. • "I am no thief, sir," cried Itlehard, breaking from the strong grasp that held him, and throw ing himself at the feet of the aid gentleman, who bad just wane to the • spot, otbattgh poverty and banger tempted me to' Ineema one. My mother and sister are starving." ' Thefolide Watery and trials of Ibis -cure boy' trill be given l the New lark Ledger of leasarY le, which is for - sale ac ace-bookittenta sod news offltsa. - Uom. Paaktiost Cogan honestly iv. kis skill la emoting watered esheditleas; We tether war that eelebrated John lieektiatetke Peekskill tarsals, who was ens tbk three septets of Ma. jos Andre.: t ' - "IPA man 'named Bonbon &alai wee Coned dead on the 'Beading Railroad Dial Port 0115.1 ton, on Thutsday tacautnk. It le in:pipped be sae run over by the up pump? tots on Wed needay evening;, * • sir The Nat Mal :grit; ant!-alavet7 pork Panama it Wellington,. D. C., says its patron age bAs Allen 4 bati•tbfki Aare ate dommenee- Mewl of. the Snancial Iroltder. Ilinrepepere re Mt* pilule* iertuely it and a = ,0644.411 . Vag lb* Ada • er , ttM d rug Itensferinsitts telieheny, et Ifeetnav - ABOst •i their tePeltte dia the .CoeiDeny paid- out - iditlikratmea Oteemmul dams In the mummer °O SA, tik and in Isinp. ins tits plop *Like wilimerTiann4 ,f tollotr' nisi u .ta lie Pasted. -- • t - ' • .`The Sybil took it, and a thrill or trugiefstitioue tenor shook hebo-franse eke theg. :=1411.k , 'And shasarfal ars weer4"lo ,• Aa irrepressible lete'to , ztrelte bat the pallid lips of Honore,: , Throw up thu:airlia she melds .914 wicked. this tampering with.,' the mysteries of the furore r - The above bithecommemmusient of Mei . South wattles great story, which is noir being radiated Joample gm New -York Ledger. We giro this- sa. & * but it is only the beginning of tbispoet nter atting. becirlaties and 'heal:Uhl ate—the •,Dnitinee. or ookithieation of it, eau Oily be found in the New York Lodger, the great Tamil y P&Pers for which the most popular wert itt the country contribute, and which can ' bee f ound at all the atoms throiebout She city and eottutry, where PoPerk are sold- Remember and ask for the New York. Ledge,, of Jumeryld, and la it you will get the. continuation of all story tom. where It leaves of here. It you- cannot get a copy from any news office, the publisher of -the Ledger will mail youu-a copy on the receipt 4K iVe . The Ledger is milled, to subscriben, at $l, a year .or two copies for $3. Address your letters to Roberti Bonner, publisher, 44 Ads street, New York. 'lt is the handsomest end hest family ps.. per in the eilentry, elegantly Whammed,- and characterised by.a high, moral toned • The story is, of iteelralone; worth the price of the Ledger"... To peruse' the history of the lovely heroine, lase Peels—how she came to be a bride for only au ironies, and all the shims* and ab sorbing particulars connected, thereirith, will be a treat for all who take the With* to pt the Ledger: , ' ' 1 UST SiDUS 60 Sta, her heart so kind, . Her voles for jaws tones so 64 414010,k her woman;—but berated - 1 -. uftlier where buds and sago sit. . • RICHARD HOFFMAN. A TA= os: lone LID zqtywirunos. CIEZZZ ErgdA lN G OMB NPRInIN ',.' 1 , I . ' .' •:•'' ..' • i li r '' ' ' II - 1 1 , .. 1 ' •••' 1,. rl . :, o 4,z 4 ;:i. - ; T ~is ~. • , . `ilia‘g Ittocloolltholo Pcsaawias art law ip oppasoit to inestonit sod BOCK PitIIIITIG oltatts7 dotrliptleti at ut. cliik• *nu aviserehiava, caes: thaw 0 0* Imagoaaat a aJothamtabtialuaattt hi thaeouat7;strab a I :. Booki,Peropak :B fs, • . . M tottamlint; ..ittrie Pootoro s - ''' ' Rai/root Watts, Rawl .11114, . . Paper loots :-. X piiiirsestes, . Ties . Sakti., . : -Mil ihtida, .• . . - ' Order Boob 1,1141. At titemory Wiwi:at meta: Chtratotk atION WM la mon extoaslta *ma that tam other Aro 15 We aas eon orthe 341 i, luta TS teelotamit 00 1 6 3""Prel 0 7 torJobblog. itelaia prattlesl relator aotati4 Ira will guitaitterioar work to top as ant as say teat ow b• tom/do ltii Ott Mies. "!itlNTLttttiN COLORS doss atittaattartad notice , .. . • .. • •• BOOK BINDERY. 4 'liooksboasul ill ems misty of Meek boots *tenni bleriptkus iits4,bousd tat Islet z to eider '!it diprtgotleip• NO. 3. .21r ass Serkkiders 'sad topmhaiders V Ohs ith,ll/.11 - Tba Bard or Itaaapro! adult the Iblloirtim, Mato. ' mot of tks bottoms sadottoreonearss stake Oondpag for tip roar 1841: : • Ilto Image at Arab/mita coat baa antatated imam* amok and that of at articles, todedlsot touts to and ttom Ito Union Canal, to 01 9 .1ladionsosak.- tior a total tomato of 1,595.421 toss. The tatlitadto mat thump bas totoamod MAU toss, mid tbs ab.s down tempo MOO Isas, toaktag a total taarsam cd' tradoOt 144617 toast. The two* or Os Comsat brae Voir btat sastastio dto $647,1546 117. deiced Cod tits tollostsgssuaretet.• Tats era antltradlo anal, • 11611,1117 Ultimo intseollmmose ortlel44 • ' •• • Skollllelt -Tolls on Velma Canal Sods, - li 3 Oß{ OR Roots of rad estate lad costar poor, ' •• ST di • Rots of Otto baltdltter • • • ••' • • SAX./ Intermit and dlscoantsrsoolvad, • ' 11,E1W014 The chum against this thaws waft iss INN Cost et we and insintananas iglisa works; • ..... . . ran mai% ilte., u par &taps its tha mans 'at um, Mat . ftinsary '• ' •.•- -,, ' .4 -; . V.VI I : . 4 ; inusbeets. • ',''- - ' • ' 03 , Towing tassels saginiatS in sad oil( le qt 1114 . , hooka ibis.; ~, .. - - - ' 100 " 2 . l *The of gettulioutistgora and ekrits, : • ' 93,010 no Mats 1.1112 on wagon* antenna's stub; 8 ), 1 , 134 Ituktaokssa as rot auntikand altetbas eni. - . tank inattirstal alums. -- ' 1 ' : 30 i 3 , 01 ! . 10 In 04 bra; tannStann saaritaM aid ...-...... all esturobligations at' tita Carapaay, ! assr. , au . . 1 _ _ - Balsam at lama - lb, tits year'. , MAU Tbe stab of- get 44 and too saedeast: &Wei iPt Mama of Ul.O. as per bat isPott, $12411011 . wafts of inane aa atm% Ix Ow year 72,04&1111 $193 0 161 SS • 1:6100•41 on *bend stock Mr 30fe, $111;00T 00 IPninhuni to Mame fpn. 101$0, ' teat N tgislito * ned OVA - n - Y - -----e-. lialene• to the credit of this mount, pllkaall ge Altheaget this result is not as satisfactory as V. hat Mon to =peat heti the state of trade attd busing in the , early part of thei year, yet, when we etatilder the ensbarrannients and diameters that we have witnessed for the put Aar mouths, we may ebnifilanbils you on en aseape from steatite logs. - Per the, anniag yeses more fresittilld condition of tradnese is iraticipated, and It is begird that all =gam in the awning trod, of the country, beingarnesellsited of the thiamine' of the eharg, hitherto made far the we of their respective works, vill ibrego all ruinous soap• petition. and adopt rata that will make rearonable re. mantra_ tiga to propriebiro. For such rates we hate al-' ways bosh acrd's! advocator and tbr any benedelal change in this respect the cooperation of this Compialy ', kali loe.= ahemfally be given. lIIMMEmi OP UM ISTATI. • Dlib lug the peat year the Managers hero made the kd• lostiSk purchases of property: Fink A piece of ground on the western bank of the Seltnyikill, a abort distance below the leeks at Vair• meant, enntainiterabcest 13 arms, at a cost of 110/4100, of which sum $15,000 have been .paid, and the remain der la ;aphis July 2,1860, with' interest, Med is Awned , by the Company's bond. with mortgage of the premises. SThs kipllprdty h a h s a bse ea v th a ro a u b v l e e d w by a e th r e tr e e r n ec t t i.onn the et a llbitinltlal' 'wharf and pier, and an trottenstv• Ilya 'of, piling, which tornish, with the property owned by the t..pany on the test side of the river, ample w tottne accommodation at the boats now eogaged i tilt • trade by our works, in Optet to avid to these aecoMtno• , • dation', the purchase 'woo olds, as the possession of : whartege room under the independent control of the Company, is absolutely necessary de the prompt der pateh ot our large and constantly increasing hush:net This ploperty ha and tailabe ftont of ithe het ea Ilridireerktcr street.front is new laid outfit building tote of - snitable else for stores and drainage. and upon any improvement to badness will oom ataad tenant, on ground rent, or purchasers, at Fie=ther will reimburse the original cost of the propaty.-- Second. A pleceof ground containing six licrenceutilse river Schuylkill, near Mt. Carbon, late the of the North American Cbal Co., for the earn of' • property Is so connected with our works, sad cur advantages for the p ro per maintaining° of :7; ' ,' Lion at Mt. Carbon, that its possession et a estimable price bee fora long time been devised. Inheste. the dual arriongestenteuf lbe line" are made, a large portion of . this property may be laid out in building lots and sold at geed prices. ' ' . ~.. Third. A lot of greened with a plat and' am ntillt, and dwelling, he., thereon, vitiated . on- the Otrard Canal, near essweencerille, at • east of MA, Ildayropmly is located, at a point near one of the dams , alter would be damaged by any increase in the height of water in the pool thereof. This his hitherto been done 'wider tete- Ff,•itry arrangements with towner of the property, bat as he had determined to sell the estate, it was Absented belt to become the owners of It, and try ratite the - dam psnmanentiy at some d, and convenie time. Tbme ro inlres are now rente will;fro nt ne the location, pat ' ways commend a 'rent nearly, if not quite equal, to the I teitereeseesthe parchthe money. The tuna -of 3000 dol. lan; remains unpaid on this property. - • • Fourth. Sundry lots of ground !n' the' borough of Sehylkill Haven, tat, the Property of the Feirestimprov ' meet Company and O. A. lleettschei,Eoq.,at a east of , , 114000.! Thla property has been porch:me with a view- toe 'rare Advertent Orange in the arrangement of the works' at Setheriktil Haven, "bleb will sonnet, at a " . reenkrate =peeve, the whole of the pool ct dam' It into a dark, sad harbor for boats, and by a than of the &booths of the west branch of t Sehayikil • , Ilene the docks and canal. effectuilly, f ro m the deposit= ' of naitand coal dirt , now Drought down the stream by every-freshet. The cost of tide property has been paid - in cash and loan of 1884. Fifth: An undivided interest of nearly the whole In a piece of land and lots, near the town of Port Carbon, at a wed of !lA% to be_pthl with interest theme, on thephst day of July, leett. . - This has been purchased mainly for the purpose of Arming edam for intereeptlng the coal dirt brought • down the stream on which, t Is located. • The dam has been constructed, and not only' avers its Wended propose, but also serves •as a reservoir or feeder dam. for the head et the navirdion dueing-ker stages ofwater. ' Sixth. The completion of a petrel:aro mAis in the year - 1840 from the Delaware Coal Company, he II lot at Mt. Cutts, And carotin easement* for the nee of the darks end works at that point. , As the CoMpany has 'bee Ibist been in parietal= of the property, and arse of the satd easements, ft helot necessary to tiro a more' par tleribir description Of them at Waltham. The price paid is 11600. to A hough throe porehaies hare coat a ironsiduable roan of money, It is our opinion that the, are so emu t lel the Waimea and interests of ther tkinpaay, that an failure to secure throe could harebeen an tiniest!. dt a brea th of deur on the part of the ' Board. mu or tut eatt_eit,. ' nee the last enema Report, the auesagere have sold three of the building tots laid out on thesdece ofground purchased Irmo IL J. Williams and other", situated cm Colombia stnirtnenr the tainnoent bridge, - rearnwhir . therefrom ground rents 1111100titiOr to 137 8 let annum. To enable them to do this;ind to rent or sell the re. matador of the lot front on Callowhlll street; they We, by the payment of ten thousand dollar; obtained a re leans eta. paramount ground rent on that portion of , the kw, Bete for the financial crisis of Augrut last, there h ilitle doubt that th ei whole of the front would . ` harabeen taken up, and the original ant of the proper- ty boo the* reitabanold. • Aisle of Inch parts of it tract of land In 3thaylkill county Ihtl ar he e not now. occupied, or will be berrofter 4, needed r tWin:ism of the compa has been mai - • to Many. John and Edward Gaynor Ir the mem 0410,• ea). ,This propertr was putebased in 46 from Ilr—Ubn Gayene,tor the parpote of settled a chant ltit damages done by the enlargement of th e works , andkunow been re-sold, with suth reservations for any farther alterations as 'Qt effectually bar any futuro chime o r datuades, and for a price beyond the original cost. While on this bead, it may be proper to Mate, that the h ewsexpiencef the company affords ample demenetratian of t propriety afmaking absolute purchases of any land threatened with met or supposed injury by any cheap in, or enlargement of the works. The advantage' of =eh change somber:owe apparent; the property peer. ally rises in valise, and it then merely becomes a quer Lion as to the time whoa the company will pert with It and valise the profit. . The Company now holds a large -and very ealetable - body of real estate, and snag,: other examinations, of its present sate sled ara now in proems, nadir the direction of the and Chief daemon, which will speedily piece the pro. . party betbro (120 Managers In a form for nth disposition of It aa may be moat advantageona. OF 111 W COXIITEIICITOXI. By the detailed , report of the Chief Engl. neer, it appears that the coat of new work done, under - his special direction, bas been - • .. - • • • $18,074 xi The mat-of the dame, at the had. et the - - works, and other matters of a pmeauesat eharacter,leoestructed_by Mr. Chariatßre , . bee, under the direction of the Med Magi- .. neer, amounts to 4 • • - • 113,34 23 ! The mist of emote( log the arrangements In the shipment of coat AN:Maths two wharves odginaily leaved from the Greenwich • - Land Company, and kr the steam engine, machinery, and other fatures, . buildings Se., on the third wharf, Is • •..; •MO 12 On the estate In the Twenty-3=lth Ward of city'. western side of Schuylkill, the ~. '. meal= of the wharves, pier, dredging, piling. irod nitintrup, hare coal - • SUM 12 And claims tbr darnapa to Mode, Ac., have — been Intl or settled, axonal:lg to • ••• $5,434 43 . : 0) M - I 710411X0 Mr. . Pince the obi* of the year 1853, large and valuable ad- dittoes hare been made to the real and peromeal proper ty of the Cowpony. The cost of them reaches a total of mss than s7ooe 000, and no Fashion, other than portion/ of *Prat% . has ever been inadeby the litoekholdenarLeatiboldere. , (the latter being now equally interested with the former Usti that concerns the real interwar, of the Cbethanya for payment of the Adana of the debt Mae beamed.— That Wane', when the mount, ere elated by the gffil• sentation of some outstanding amounts, will probably amount to the tam of !bur hundred thousand &Ilan: nearly the whole of which is now carried upset incon• eatienes, and at a large annual thins !few tatered, by temporary borrowing.' ..., This debt Is represented by the perenito earntsew the Praddent, with artiliestes of the loan e ISO se I collateral security. Repeati(Bng bmywhat mai substantially stated In the last annu.o ra , porf : the acquisition of the property resented by the floating debt, was abeotcWy for obtaining and defying a Widest menet of ton nage, to pay she Intend ces the funded debt of the Clow piny, and to giro some hope to aloe stockholders: Own can be now no question about the propriety of liquid*. Caw it, in such ClMlller 111 will gradually secure its pay ment. and refine those , whom the Mulhouse It now falls,tant thefriklly roam and pelli. Forthlagtespomethe Ft , and eekm- Dein Fan for a ban fro the et int-40e Wad ies debt, which A Imendlit an tied for your Wilkie • lim• It ietnendeutteroutire and adds la Ds illetane. and will Paid, every Stockholder and Loinholder to .' therein Iteast ay rantemskyrkUe bet Dere Mistier interest B s he Con thro w Aces entheereasnerow. . • • . y envying It at/et* and by coemetang with it, . as we tropmen lame= of the 'Urge At kele dating the Far DlRlAbellineudal emend= of our edam via then preen the gwymeat of dsrldsade la ash. The sr. 1 esagerogatinmemadetbehrothemaadthampleitafiati equipment of the works. will aid sill hereallee he sae Important addhloss try Uri Bugultgeßod sonmint, amid II oughts theroduerwror to big mehatihned es enbatetetlatiy of lark o Fier WI tote full v Vroornstolooill m tondo Minalke th at % eve fitatithebsero, .andlellilllieth° Patt lef TAW= tote* it to that ex- ! lent s perolded, mob tbaltatioo be ume, by Wall ASP* 4 - aims wegatpd In the ease branches of heft i ly • come. 'pardhllgadltsMallectt Of Ilitahroetatedthergea. • ' 0 .- -• , '- Areir flea tenthinumt BUMS. '$ . • .. W • • ot , Ad LP* eandlesida ha. te ta ^ dee4.• Tie brrusboonfa of II are sllo,9ooeiseen, Med $8,280 wind ilovossom,lotataldily‘tho oemploskor o , 'wood to. Crape:
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