4 GLE Journal. parTsvii.LE, PA. gA VIWAT, Jatil ent circulation of the 31 , 4 .s' Jorrsat. to equal to the aggregate circulation' of any liltEß other knitllsh papers imbliebed in the County—and as It circulates anton2 the hest trillion of the puputstion, an advertise ment insertedin r ' lamas is„ of course, worth as touch to the advertiset It published In any three other pa per In Inn' cit.fre the rates ot advertising are Oran' eras tied I n print acconllng to the circulation of the leaner., RECEIPTS • r .1 , Or anbacriptions she Miners ..rottrarti vac* ( fl at pub licat ion , Ihreler, to Jan. I. 15516., n. Woriati, to Jan. 1, 1858 Heit. Hadesty. t tJan. I .1859 Z. IL Thomas to Sept-13, 1858 i s atztwarter, to March 19.1858 Jithu C. Staol.rn, to July 1, 18a3 paph Aitutcht. tO uly I. Dec. r Thos. noterwirk. to Dec 3,1868 Hoo. W. L. Dewar(; to Dee. 1, 1853 Hammond k iallyers 10 Jon. 1,1558 • fir: H.ll. Vol.. to Jan. 1,1858 Jesse Turner. To July 1. 1857 Chas. Ilenelerson, to July 1.1858 • Wm. ; 13 - ausldeon. to July 1958 John 51rFarland,.to Jan. i ' ,1 859 E. Strour. to Jan. 1.1858 • W. W. Thotiuts, to Jan. 3,185868 11, Van Embergh, to Aug. 1 Jos. Berger. ° Jai ( 1b.57 Darla Willson. to lee. 13, 185 T, H. P.. 8 W. C. Taylor. to San. 1.1850 Dan). Drlttaln, to Dec.l9. InsB - John D. Price, to Jan. I,IBLB • Henry C. (Stray, to Jan. I, 1958 C. B. Itertollette, to Jao. 1,1858 51. Black Co., to Jan. 1,185 S Juo. Drelbelbis, to Slay 1,1858 - .• J. S. Bast, to July 1:1553 Sam'. II untsluger, to Jan. 1.1868. D. 8. Heebner. to M,rrh 1,1858 . ", • 'Wellington Jones:to:lune 1,1858 Uriah tient,. to Jan. 1,1659 Win. 11. Johns, to Jan. 7,1 88 9 Dr Robt Westcott, to Jan. 1;1E9 An 1. Bucher, to slne 11, 1858 - C. S. Wh it more, to Jan . 1, 1859 Thos. C. Williams,. to Jan.!. 11158 C. H. Ebeling. to AOl.l 5,1851-. • J. s. Roudenborb. to Jan. 1. 185/ D. 11. Stager, to July 1.1857 11,1 ry need, Etm., to Jan. 1,1858 Jno. 1 1 00 1-11 X...t0 Jule 1.1558 TlinmaSTlmunta. to Yob. 9, 1858 lien Armstrong. to July 1,1853 . Ilyerly. to J.nly,l„ 1848 P. 11. Langton, to Jan .1. 1858 . 1 1- . C. Harlan. to Jan. 1. 1858 - • Coot, to Jan. 1. 1859 Danl. 11,mh. toJan. 1. 1858 Lott Lnpriiptehi; to Jan. 1 . 4859 • Jared ' 4 . hoets. to July J,1653 Jobn Wenner. to Jan : 1. 1858 k Raritan Contd . Co., to .Lan. I, 1859 Win. Hoary Ita'ale. to Jan. 1,1859 - H. W. Prater, to. Jan. 1, 1859 Jane Allison. to jA I). 1853 18L9 Win.•lllnd to July 1, Dr. A. rhults., to Jan. 1,1859 John !YR Boy, to July' 1. 1818 , ii. o..orge. to Jan. 1859 , • . Jos. DePretm. to Jan. I. 1859 Sam Litton net to July 1, 16511 11,1Iai,1iate MrCarnant, to Jan. 1. 1859 Dlre4.lora of the Pont. to May 1.11158 • Wm. Mllncet k Co:. to Jan. 1, 11158 . John Byers, to July 1,1853 I'mM. Letter. to Jan. 1. 1859 (Joe. P. Reinhart, to Mac 1,1858 Altai Hoak, to Jan. 1,8511' Them. Couch, to Jan. 1.1859 • Matthew Whom, to July 1,1858' W. 8. Reynolds & Co-, t.t Jan.l, 1859 John `Corner, to Jan, I. 1858.. Jas. M. Hadesty. to Jan.l. 1869 J. A. Toni., to Jab. 1. 14:18 Enoch Thomas, in Jan. 1, 1858 ' Rae. Wm. Yen, to Jan. 1.1869 ..F John Mull, to Jan. 1,1858, Nathan Evans. to Jan. 1,1858 Re., IV, O. Mennl,t. to Jan. 1, 1868 Sari. Doman. to Jan. 1, 185% • 7 ? John:Shoemaker, to'July 1,1858. A John Jones. Jr., to..luly 1. 1853: Myers. to Jnn. I. 1569 N. D. Cortright k In Jab. 1, 1859 I Van; tk•ak. to Acl, 151.4 Forrer. Jan. I. 1850 '' • itoh.rt Ring, in Ja .1.1853 ' ~John Toniple. to Jan. 11a11.&,Sharplets. to Jan. 1. 1859 311a* Mary Ann Walker, to Jan. 1, /819 It. Peale, to Jan. 1,1858 Clarke B. Wood, to Jan. 1848 Joa. S. Sil ter, , t to in. 1, 1355 John L. Minntg. to .tan. I. 1851 Joshua Bock, to Jan. 1. 1850 'John Smith. to Jan. 1.1855 J. E. Miller, t0 .. .1m. 1.1858, MOrrlson. to Jan. 1,1859 Joseph Hammer. to Jan. 1,1859 $2 40 200 2 0 0 2 00 ;•2 00 2 14 1: . 4 00 1 CO 1; 200 oo ), 300 2 00 2 00 2 00 . 4 OD. 2 0 0 ,• 7 2 00 4 00 I 20 0 4 Oa 1 1 2 2 00 '.2 00 4 26 : 1 416 22b' • 200 1 00 4 00 1 00 1 76 200li , 1 ; 200' • 200 ' 2 00 it - 00 11 2 ocr ;! oo 2 90 1 3 00 • 1 00 ;i 100. 1 OG 2 00 ii 460' - oo 00 Too eo • 1 on 0 00 • 2 00 2 00 •4 00 1 00 • 100 ' 2 ' - 1 00 o 30 • 2 00 • 100 ' 1 00 2 00 • .1, 00 • 100 200 4 00 30. 2 00 ' u(1 2 00 2 00 2 00 ' 1 00 . 1 00 • 100 1 00 1 00 • • 200 I 2 00 2 00 • ' 200 201 • 3 00 • 200 • 200 200 ao 20 -- 2 00 6001 .200. '2 00 2 00. 2 00, 2 00 SErneix advertisements. We lia4.no'apade to notice each in detail: . HENRY . S.llAoliAvt has been elected State Tret.sure . r. TELE Spring Trade of Philadelphia promi• ees.ta open briskly &Rosa efforts *relining main to effect an increase of chaplains in tho FIVE. cotton Mills of itlanaytOk have aus 7 . pended 'operations in consegnenee,--of tip . high price of cotton. . .;. iiltxrzea's store, 131 i North Thi street, Philadelphia, was destroYed by fire o Tuesday. Loss, about $6.0,000". Is the Sense at Wa;hingtoyi, the ?atrengt of SiiiibusCerism is believed toft be proportiou ally much greater than it is it:Abe country a it large. , • THE Phihtdelphia Ledger thinks the Leg lature should pass a law. reqringßal dea ers, in the city to weigh coal pt the . place . , I . delivery. . Tin legislator a * having pi a bill piopriating $1,0;040, for thel purchase 4' house for the Goernor, lir 1"olock sign, , jt, and it is a law.l t ;1 i: . I ,014 the Bth inst., in Archibald, Luzerne - fire houimi were destroyed by fire. Fran Achilles, a German, miner, aged 32 1- yea • perished in the. flames. ' • GEORGE KENTON :HARPER, nearly.forty yeais was editor! Repositoiv, died . at the 13th inst., aged seventy' .• 41.• STARTLING r e tc-r.—Thlthere are m ri murders in Neiv l York city n one-week at • in England and Fales, with,;their 9vergr, Rt 'communities arid pauper 'populations, i • • Ir is stated that. General Itiralker has El ad. ed the South with 'ponds oflone hundred: tars each, issued in his (Wtilkert.s) name, un ping twenty years, paya* • in .Nica'ra ua . • _ _ 11 • • L. : JACOB IlEnioo a merchiint'' . of Lance, to committed suicide on Sutiiiny. He . ,wn 'the time under bonds ch4ged - with ?co ,p 1 city •in the robbery of 44. o; 41 Pennsylvania A Nem school h. destroyed by fine, on ; Tdesday. Five' fiui dren children' were' in tluP - edifice, when tt fire broke out. The scenWas they endeal ote • to escape, 13 described 'as: haring been en Seen children weni killed. . - ' Tire National Si•ciety i• hold ing • it's sixth anti nal meeting at the tai sctnian Institute, Wasiiington city. T. en film. States and Territqles are repre en by numerous delegates. proceedi interesting and important. President '' declines a re-election. Tile Surneme Count of PENNSVIXI 'IA. The Judges oe.the SnprOne Court of Pe ,sylvania have ad&essed ja memorial , Legislature, in relation 0 the propos; n abolishing the several lii4riets'of the and filing its aesiions, for the whole, at some aecessable'und convenient poi 4. RIPPLE , the Omaha NebraskiXia, extra, p. Jadhary . i.he Bth, that. Orntory. is d. by the. vioieucii of pages' parties,'' Legislature,is broken np ani divided vision organizing anot4r council at The row appears to' have originated i 'mien to re-locate the ' THE GIIEIT EAsremle— s -An attemi ba made month 'at' Tenehwall the Leviathan. The're 4e 1 8 r eluding an immeniesonl) used ,in raii Britannia tam. All t / ie buttresses strengthened, ns well d the mooringdoubt, is entertained of, j sueess, 11°,1 eeeessary power is employed." 'us Sr. LrifitENCE 1107E1. TEUGtj j Tnesday, TFOIS. YC:t gOlith, on trial deiyhia for the•nturder' of Richar d this County, was acquitted. Stith Mary, after the rendition of the re Wined that her brother might be to her care. Tbursdnv Was fixe Court to consider the application. ton the propriety of like. verdict i " cue. It is a bid precedent to eis ' but whets thaasseisin'e knife, - All it too attire.' 1 '' ,tu .I.3"faelts, in Silinytkill . counit, are well w ktla ineorporating.---Pottstown Lcdger. • !Trill.. ....Ind if with them could be itcor• -pomt , , , the — Means of making them some 'what "ore profitable to the hard working opera it would be an eicelletit incotpom , don,. lend Ledger. . ' t East Wauctra.-4odgment was ren• on the &th instant, against Gen. Wil. taker and his surety, 8. F. Slatter, in irCuit Court of the United States, at deans,. for $2OOO on the recognisance former to appear to answer for s breach neutrality laws, ,and which, i iecognis; wall forfeited by his . departure in .the W. in November. 7 23. 1858. ham the New oft`' of tit. noelF, ooLs is MaseaOucserva.—Mr. Banks, message. to the Legislature of Meatus.; i says the aggregate expenses for edul . 'al purposes amount to $1,410,989 land penses included, about $l2 is paid for pupil. The number of children between a filleen.yeers of age in the State, is 78. Of thisUumber 203,031 have been ndence upon the schools. . , ' i. . we predicted, Mr. Alliboie, .ex-Presi of the Bank of Pennsylvania, has re d home. That this much abased gen i n will prove his entire innocence of Fes affecting his honor, we firmly believe, the first we' have believed Mr. Allibone , less 'of wrong. He may have .erred -1 of as does not?—but that he. is 'guilty, I saltation, we will not believe. ' ' . run:rest anOgaratifill , story going the ds of the press, of onff of the women in know garrison hearing, in advance of the le 'besieged garrison, the pibroch of the hlanAers Coming to their i eseue [need spairons. 'Ti. a pity , to spoil so rming a narrative, by revealing. its nii• hfulness i'hut history demands the said. and we yield to its imperative behest. x s statement published lad week of the chime paid into the State Treasury by oylkill connty, in 1857, under the . head, Its on Writs, Wills, Deeds, Ac.,",wirgai , e . amount paid in by Joshua Boyer, Begis , ace., at SB•1 90. It is an error. By ref. • co to tht Auditor General's lleport, page e find that the amount paid in• under t head is,j $1,314 34. We atako the cOr ion in justice to Mr. Boyer. PLICSNIXPII,LE•ROL LING MILLS. -.-With real tisfaction we note the fact that all the mills Phcenixville, are now in operation itv.futi, ... e; They are rolling, besides Railroad on, large and heavy iron girders for Gov. ntnent buildings. The Governmentin adopt. g the iron girder system for its buildings, ot bnly acts with strength and durability in t ,-- tew, but encourages a most imiortant briinch I , f American industry. 1 Lo wE LL.--This modern Manchester in' i liniature,is fast recovering , from the dtsas- i fere of the late panic. From the statistics of Lowell maunfactures, justpublished by Messrs., W. Huse & Co.. we learn that the number of !mills in Lowell is fi ft y.two, the eapital stock of which is $13,900,000. The average wages . female 4 clear of board, per week, is $2 • 'of males, per day, clear of board, 80 cents.— The increase in the 'populationpf Lowell foe the last ten years wag, 12,580. Tim fir ' in — or More & Williams, Philadel• phia, wasl dissolved on the Ist ; inst., and the I Oil, Commission and Miners' Supplies' basi- Hess is continued itt.lol South Water stvet, blow Chestribt, bt• Mr. Jan A. Moore. In addition to Oils of the moat approved quali ty. Mr. 400te's supplies for Mining purpoies are complete. We arc not aware that there is another store of the same character in the country.: Those engaged in Alining opera= tions hero would do well to remember this fact,: when they wish to purchase. For par tieniars See advertiiement. , . : Putbansunta READING RAILROAD Coaiani.--The annual-meeting of, the Steck holders, apd election for officers, of the Phila• delphia and Reading. Railroad Company, was held on I Monday at the 'Company's office in Philadelphia, when the following officers were unanimously chosen foi the ensuing year: . :Premdent—R. D. Cullen. lanagers—Samnel Norris, C. S. Bolter,, G. W. Richards, John Ashl;nrii, David 8: Brown, S. Richards, of Reading. .75vaurer—Sainuel Bradford. •Secritary—W . H. Mililhenny., FtLLIBUSTERISM. "We must not maitei scarecrow of the kw, Batting it nit° fear the birds of prey, And let it keep one shape, till custom make it Their perch ind not then" terror." •' Measure for Nature, Esq., who• fal of the Frank ersburg, Pa., of mine years. 112=EM!tIMMMI lucky moment. se It teems likely to add fuel to the tires of sectional MIL party strife bow racing In the country: It h 'sheen very differently received ..,y the tr i o untie°, into which this Union Is beeclinint more and More divi ded very day. In the South Walker and his crimes are '0 •rdefet ded. and ho is applauded as a hero. ertillet'•Cernmo dere Paulding', who arrested him. by orders of the ger. ernment I• denounced. The lawlere adventurer is sus• talnefi and praised with enthusiastic arelatnation—the public officer who, clothed with legal authority. perform ed his duty, Is made the object of furious etmeration. The grounds on which COM. Paulding Is attacked are - strangely inconsistent with any reasoning by which Walker can be justified. The former, it Wald. violated the law of nations by making the arrest on the soil of Niesraena. !tut so did. Walker. In Al much greater do- greys by invading that soil with hostile purposes. Colt. Paulding. it is Alleged. exceeded his instructions . ; but Walker was a fugitive from justice, who bad been attn. ally held to hall. In hie own country, for a breach of Its lam!. 'Row is It posit ble.then, without violent mane , diction', to et:Stein Walker, and at the same time con., demo Paulding/ not popular pueblo is not very logi.' i cal. and the thinnest reeling of plausibility Is sufficient 1 T, to varnish its designs. Walker's plans were Southern a t plane. In which the South has not as yet been able tete.' cure the avowed co-operation of the government. Wal lj(. ker was the clan deet ims agent of the South, its adventa i ems pioneer, -who was to open to Southern ambition a! IC new geld of enterprise. and secure for it a new source of i power. 'Renee the Southern aid in men and money be! received: hence the sympathy In his behalf: hence Son.; them admiratiott of his character; hence the fags of I a 9 dirappointnatint it his arrest hr lawful authority; and I hence the torrent of abase poured forth 03 Cont. Paild n. log At politic ineetlngeln the South, by the Southern , prem. and by Southern members of Congrees. he - Per different is the sentiment which this event hag O ! i!' railed ortk In the North, Flilibasteriem! does not Fulfi l the 1 r ? tt al tone.of our people. It le regarded as 'crime,; ri. and as beengenerally felt to be Inconsistent with our (*Mutton. end disgraceful to our stational character,— ' What support it has received has been for party purpo ses. and the result of party dieelplion and has been feint end feeble, not hearty and derided, es In the South. The CM 1 suspicions relations of the government with freebooters., L b. its cumbrance at their deeds of rapine. and the covert aid and comfort It Is supposed to hate given thine. have' ty- ! never been cordially approved in any part of the North.! - Dr the great majority of our people °Pali parties these !uu !hinge have been witameed with feellagi of *egret. in ' _di:batten and Alarm. as, public shame and calamity.— ire ' When, therefore, the news came that Walker had been ler. arrested; Walker, the notorious buccaneer. whetted been I recognised by the President of the United States. as the Governor de facto of Nicaragua, on _the tiretemporary success In his previous foray into that ill-fa ted country; whew emba.gador was formally reetved into the died°. math* corps by the same President; who was permitted to n. openly enlist men in our sea ports at the very moment when the Minister of. England was rent borne for doing he the same thing; who, when at length defeated by the ex ! stepamted people, whose omntry he had devastated, was resumed from Merited punishment by our govern ment, and brought home in a pablidlehip, to make a tat- ! usephal process' m through the South: whe was then . received sea guest at the White HOW* by the President who again, openly, sit It with tip of drum and blast of trUmpet, Was permitted to collect another hand for an otherr,piratical adventure, and who sailed amid the ebeentilf the Southern people oa.tbat expedition, in de tente of law, of straw hail, of ostentatious proctama. !ions:ad paper.opposition; when It was known that be wee arrested, that be was actuadirin New Pork, the in. telligente was Welcomed at Scat with incredulous stir"! prise; and when found to be true, with a spontaneous ' expression of satisfaction throughout the North. We i had become gradually aceustotned to consider till ibuster bin as part of the national policy, and to despair of be fog ever agmlo, re-instated in our former rank as one of the civilised nations of the world.' Both Parties united to prairies. the President for what was ecaddered a bold. umult.and derided course; both hoped. that past' dhe Resew would now be wiped out. the obligation' of me. rainy enforced, the laws executed, and the Ratat tau" Ned finirrof the country redeemed. • - . These hopes, however, turned out to he premature.— The news tame that the President 'was displeased; !that !he, too. mouldered that Corn, Pan - Idleg had exceeds his • instructions, and committed a breach of totem:rational law, by anemias Walker on the soil of Ntearagns.! As mon as Walker reached 'Washington. in custody of the Narebel. he was released. which could only have been en the ground that the arrest was illegal: and it! was amid that Corn. Paulding was to he tried_ bya_court rams Ord. Afterward/. the minor wastfiat he was only [tide I reprimanded,'althnurb' the President really approved the sent with which he had carried out his orders: and dick not hesitate to say so. ' Privately praised, publicly censured: the release of Walker, and the centime, to ate Mime the lialnit Indignation of the South: the private pntem to sithdY the moral sentiment of the Nertb. l It is Important that the public should form a definite ithinceut as to the conduct of Ma. Paulding. Was tie raspy guilty of brew+ of the law of nations. or ef the tree and fair meaning of his inetrucUons. and have the Interested clamors of the South any, eves estbolell, toondatlsot • It, Is unpleasant to feel constrained to ap prove illem4 acts, to find the dictates of cOnseleuen and humanity at variance witb.the titles or law... 1 • , it It universally true that customary issraectirdrettb Mora! tight, because It has its origin In the - emit:Don ssassaod feeling oft en, acting on their relatloai sod *Wm through a lost- coarse of Mein Joshes It goes evolved and estaldlabot. bends*Judie* is pommy to hernia tall . Mentors; Lord Oats said that the entatooo law is' be pordoottoo of rbilletle that to tbs plorhelleg proems' of ressoo,itaided by sxliVes Ind *polled to th e_ government of th e Stale, lin o - all cheeped Itistnioglrbt Ilse gal° s tradlttobal._ ding to Oiehel , turbed ne. the one di orenee. lauaeh 12119, in log the will be . "No hat the 7.—On •Phils. arti , r of P s sister, iet, p e . confided Ve goes. Bmithis lish. It 'ahead/ al4 tion €4 , 4lllll Setre kti rr illi alege n of t. l t t l a rs h disitie* littory. In ill iertra ild ten tlo tti tell e le a :i 2 ; I "Sewhersi:iirrlsrl""elt efa uSs itnil uu t ussu *Sak " pop isilk ieL aa r n aur r ik" cifili the common a:engem:try law of nations., and Its rules 1 Ity-4 t bare been adapted by emeriti consent, as founded in I d•e, ne ! ier ul ou do re it ent '"ll ll.4.'sest " ll :tire I the ran relH 'r an ufel 4n. rag .lan or a truth.jast Ice and humanity, ri.eesoiry ta rep le o either Meat Let pisseis or wer and to mune the rights of all It h t ". Us Use' WILIISI are Wen"' 'mull PreArtim grown with the primes of the world In no hue oiel the "phi our rarSP"l"l"Y'"r hatred ri eiliution. and its ruin' tend to ptctoote bort! an d.;; nlyng and tyranny, at the mama moment °I" aid ' th a r i n d a t if f re t, ilieagntithLne h t ir o w i rru a a nd r rt . lY o a r a n n d w d el het l 7 B :t r u ilt n i l t s: I al postaPrdel,t'alfe, nation - l; b a y y:e an e .. " t i lLa t f b e a u w Il' a nm a th r ew i e me tio lulevu rdly Y a sead ausalleir lovil anenua tsu °f r a bital malee n:lbinati b a y dian ma d i blie "enwill ate rf nen moral Person etissble, like en individual. or doing r d if ' beatin t. thlea all Ccoll"leb to "Mu": with llThif r lltbt or venni: illesetslot e will and a =seism and bind tying g mul ' arli "" ry a s Ivingt`g Subject to and religions: eisllettlons. A nition hotears ar bfthan ov pi er risey, harts tae far Th ou ta r fetnialanniaanted Deus re has duties to itself and Writhe?'" Whilst It should de humans, too. tor the people whose territory we covet; Sand its own Indepeedenee, safety and boom, and seek br they would besubleetectio the lava and unarm of by worthy means he own prosperity and advancement. civilized war, Mirka et the rapine, relate' and oPPlrre It should respect the rights of all other nations, and is shin of vulgar assassins and &hem Theme Sir e mono bound not only to abstain from doing them Injury. but thy OW for any dellited iltate, ‘ and we sbould be to contribute to their prminration and welfare., that thee ashamed to rob In their Company. Atpeedve war fee happiness of mankind may be Incresteed and itself exer< the sake or mamma or pure. friendiblp and oral will deed In deeds of benevolence and virtue. This code It Jo all nations; open. candid, coustalllforid wardeciamd Mediae on the conerience of every government, lad ire, Or Conveys, or sincere and nal pates; not war *tiered therefore, of the highest obligati/on. It has. however, a by southern demagogue, and earned on by Domineers more eelelent sitnetion than,that of mere voluntary Om. and red maces of the sea, with the secret connivance of dlence. It is under the prof eetion of the pubilt opinion the government : teepee,* which is no peen; tod alying of the civilired world. and cannot be vlealed without profession; let Ilalsitsuebemadeupanefelrlymetultted reproach and dimmer. It forms a bort of the municipal ' to the American penile. ens power to ash, war Is eon law of every civilised State, and a breach of it renders fitted by the constitution to their repreeentatim in Con the polity party ULM* to war by theatre agerhmed; and gress, not to the Beath Or to the President, and it is Ike a habitual disreprd of it would just* all nations in „cause these do not dam to submit *equation of epee, making common mum to pun t i n th e og on d en eper n el legal war, or real, slums pram, to the retitle, that these as Vattel says, "all have thb greatest Interest in musing base suliterhigess ant resorted to. The war against Next the law ornationx, which la the haste of their tranquil- en, purely s=ressise and waged wholly for conquest. ity, to be uutverially respected. If any one openly was made. not h 7 Congress, but by 'be , . Prattle' and tramples it under foot. alt may and ought to rise up by the South, and without any previous d ec l aration o f sislagf him: and by a satin; their lame to ehectlse the War, which the etmelltutiett requires Though afters common enemy, they will discharge their donee to , wards ratified by congrensmademducted undercut , own themsehres and to human society, of which thgy are flag, it was eatemeneed wienoutsueli metion. Theme lumbers." against Cuba tarried on by Lopes; the two warseminst It would be a strange thing, should it turn out thst, Nicaragua, carried on by Walker. were utede by the by preventing* crime, by thwarting the purposes and South. Mad either been menaced. the deeds Or them checking the career of a buccaneer, engaged at the very heroes would have beep ratified and confirmed, and their moment himself In a violent breach of later•ustioul booty appropriated, a measure easily carried by the law, end by melee Nicaragua from hie marauding Incite South nod the President, and the northern Democracy glen. Com. Psulding has also Infringed the same law, A vast aequisition of political power and of It kh laud founded as It Is. on right reason, tenth and justice.:;would thus hare been gained jay the Pouth. and this The first charge is, that he trespassed on the rights -of was the objet of theme three eats, es it was of the Mex Nicaragua; the second, that he exceeded his Instrt to. lean var. them , . This purpose was not avowed officially. On the cosi ne principle is well established that 'every nation has teary, it me Ifeavowed °Metall', though loudly ex. *lanai/it jatitaietbri and soverelgutymer Its territory, premed by . v•Ty often of opinion In the South. At. end absolute property in every part of it. it , soil is t e mpt s were se en misdeal:ld still are made, to repeal the sacred, and Its law la supreme over all persons withhitts neutrality act, talegalise piracy, actually to give the limit% except atntimadoni and other privileged pars is, sanction of law to predatory enterprise; to clandestine who carry with them the laws of their own mantel,* war, made, not by Congress, but by a section and a par. Tits immunity of a na me s t err it or y I s violated by a ny ty. fn defiance of the Isw of nations and the constitu ent:lmm into It even fbe purposes which, thotiglemot Non. One of the Chief prerogetivee of government. the hostile, may injure its people. endanger Ile repose or in. power to make war, hale thus been wrested from It anti terfere wlthtbe exclusive a ethority of Its law. Timm. placed in the hones of reckless adventurers agitatent fore, belligerents rennet lawfully ernes the borders of a and demagogues, to be wielded by millet ambition. en neutral State to pursue an enemy, or to trumped trOops Why, and sectional passion. A signal example of the Or intillitlong of war; nor can 4 foreign pewercrose Uwe= e ase with which the defences of popular rights may be to execute its own laws upon fugitives from time lews. i mediae:ly undermined and the substance. of the con' Ail these principles are very simple and perfectly well stitutken destroyed, leaving nothing behind ft but the settled , and It is also just as well Wiled. that the hoe empty shell of form. When we molder the nature of =unit . theijiym In toed to guard may be released a nd war, that even when just and nominate, Its attendants withdrawn cones t, end that this eonsout ma y b e ex. are death and suffering, calamity and crime—when we pressed or implied I Is express: wheel given by tootyt think of the fierce passions it nuctisine, the woe to the or on formal request, for the privilege of rearchin; art Innocent and gentle , that it permit*. no precaution*, by oaks emus neutral nd. It is Implied whenever_the which the Power to wage' it may be surrounded, an set Is of a friendly she rtes and beneficial to the elate seem too careful. Thle power has, thereto:, by the tint • whose territory la rate (Wheats:lea International venal practice otaations, been confided to the supr eme Law. 114-116 ) apthority of the State, slut, by our eeneltatkm It is The analogy, ltljthh , re , toct, between Is nation and an hedged in by terms that may prevent rash and hasty ele• Individual le complete hot only la every man'r helm tion, and future the calm dellbenttion imitable in a toe an w d ith n o n n ex t peet a / i set; n his castle, but he has exclusive property in his laridoind slam so grave and raomentmes. Congress has pewee to r t il e tknl the . dominion over it, which is infringed by any entrant* on ' w d l ecl o are ut Ir d m isett '" tio t n to , Ret ina dd k en e ly it It. without his express or Implied permission. Another th mat not cross his line to do him injury: this wank; he people, and with no notice either to them or the enemy, a criminal and malicious trespass. Neither may be for sate the actual clang of conflict; not to permit the Pre. his own convenience or advantage. But if he event on Admit to mats It, still less to permit It to be waged by load ten deem or to make a visit to the owner of the irresponsible Men, without even the pretence of legal an land—still more, if to do him a kindness., to protect him thorny. A government that makes an unjust war. is from robbers, or to extinguish a fire to his house ethane guilty of is heinous. crime optima humanity. A govern t—his flueseand consent are Presumed, and theurpur• meat that allows Its prerogative of making war to be poses made apparent, wore especially if accomplished. If usurped by a section or 1 party, bra political clique or the robbers were driven away or the fire pot out ? come caucus, or by Ignoble and reckless adventurers, has ate plaint would become absurd. i , dialed Its pewees. It Is no government worthy the The object of Corn Paulding's Instructions wal e two- name ; it can command neither obedience at home nor fold. First to execute our law by arresting a crtroluat respect abroad, and though it may pewee; for a time, fad thin been the only thing intended, the arrest made the title and outside chow of a political State, It cannot in Nicaragua would have been a •lolatien of its Soren preserve them long, but is destined soon to fall,amid elgaty. list it was not the only thing. The protection ate derision end joy of the world. of felmegue. the defeat et Walker's purpose, were also It has become a matter worthy may grave considers- Intended. The object of the act of Congress forbidding tion, whether we are not approaching such apetition. the enlistment of troops and the fitting out of Vessels Three wars have been made by a mil= of the country against any nation with which we are at peace, wee to and its demagogues, foreeetional putm, upon peace. pretreat surmises and depredation on the territories of fat and unotrending nations; predatory ware, tarried such nation, for this lab duty which every nation owes on by outlaws and bandits, attended by atrocious out. to another, The preparation of troops and vessels was rages and bloody violence, by dattructing of Ms, pop the mates used f ran unlawful parpose, and netted le Prey and bun= happiness At this meAnat the leader prohibited for the sake of defeating the second. It of two of these wars Le in the country. Us was legally would, therefore, be a contradiction in say that govern. arrested in thevery act of hostile aggres.lon and brought meat has power over the means; but that Its power ces.. home to answer for his crimes. Ile was received with see the very moment the purpose is about to be executed, courtesy by this government, and on a frivolous pretext utile'' , that power meet with some legal bar lei this larned. hetet/ reletzed fie hot once eolrerfed into • mete the only legal bar Is the right of Nlearego tlo the hero 'I the section end party whose champion be is. Immunity of her territory—l right which, ate the act of lie bolds his daily levees In Washington ' under the our government was a benefit to bey per ple. she May be eyes ot the government, and la Inconstant In Mu coarse fairly presumed to have waived, fadWalkereseeped to with his friends and the friands of his sotto prise . and come other country, he could not hare been arrested those friends , members of Congress, are endeavoring to there, because the consent of the government et that remove by law all obetacies to future enterprise* of • country meld not h eve been implied According to the similar character. What a spectacle few a civilised age Southern argument, it was the duty or Com. Psi:adios and peple! li hat a shameful display or imbecility, or to wit note the perpetration of the (rime b e sea . boot to still snore tibomelul proof of corruption! The govern. prevent, without attempting to interfere, and to temain merit triumphantly Worded Ire its very citadel, and be an unmoved spectator of violence and outrage, though a freebooter stained with a thousand crimes; receding every breeze bore to him the shrieks of women and chile from its position berme his attitude of bold defiance. dren. and the flames of burning homes and villages red. his insolent 'audacity cheered with acclamations by a dared the midnight sky. Had he been without ; orders, powerful section of the emu :try. and supported and de be would have been justified not only on the icore of fended by members of that very government who are humanity, In going to tire assistance of these etched aalorn to Maintain those laws which he hers set at ded people. tent In Meeting Walker as a pirate by the laws anee. end openly declare* his determination still to vice of =tem and of the United States. "Pirates are the late. , enemies of • the human race, and the most atrocious yin. This tree. drama of misrule has Its fitting and ha Wore of the universal hew of itoritty. Every testi an hes turd acconatetnimenta. Power Is everywhere leeviug a right to attack and exterminate them," and although the hands of legal authority. The government cannot Tinley. as defltWelly the leer of nations. is totailne k d to execute its laws without a resort to military force ft robbery on the high seas, yet, br set of Congress; Mny dare not at thee moment arrest Walker. There Is rebel. person landantid commits robbery on shore ugh person non in tltah and Kansas; there soon will be rebelilos shall be adjudged:a pirate (I Kent Corn., 17 fi) . In Louisiana should another attempt be made to thwart . The second charge aeainst Coln Paulding bethet be the enterprises of Walker, • sporadic civil war springing went beyond the Instructions of the Pree Mont... lie met up In the midst of excited passions—jets of llama on a could do this by amine beyond the power of the Prost. dry prairie. dent, Ss however studiously otteeure and Indclinite tto Asa consequence:of these and otherevents, the Amerl-1 language of the !attractions may hoe beep, metope can name has lest credit abroad. It is execrated by our they were expriasly limited, • bleb Isnot pretended. the weak ueighttore south of us, to whom we have been not President meet he presumed to hare ex arted, teethe our. •friends and benefactors, but rapsolounand cruel moronic piss of executing the law, all the power lee possessed,— Our power, our progress and our civilisation bane been To suppose that he meant to exert lout than all, where felt by them only In acts of injustice and oppression, all was nommen', is to suppose that be did pot Intend sod instead of exhibiting our superiority in protecting to execute the law, a supposition which It ermethe duty care and offices of kindness, we have arrogantly tumi d Coin Paulding not to make °Mann r, whatever he or Fed their weakneie, plundered their people and deem other, might think. The instructions of the erestdant, toted their territory. In defiance of the islet of treaties, therefore, must be considered es co e itemise with his the laws of civilised nations, and the obligations of ern authority, and tbe only question is. he ww far did that au. Inanity. In Europe the name of America no longer in thorlty extend in the particular easel Old Itreach Wel. spires respect. The friends of liberty, of political ante ker after he landed in Nina eaglet 1 : len Won,•of social progress in knowledge and the arts, The jurisdiction of a government or et ite own eitisene lu Christian and moral eirilhaticn, do not now look to or subjects; In not limited to Its terrine y. le is stopped us with boPee but with doubt and dread fast changing only when it meets with another jui•ledientin equally to despair; whilst the enemies of republicanism •point exc lu s iv e and supreme . The authority of fli nation to with triumph to the failure of the great experiment of , protect and to punish fellows its people on lathe ocean, self government. It is not necessary to cite the cases of which he the highway of Melon, open end 'esprtos) to ancient Greece and Rome, or modem trance, while in all. (Wheaton 116,1 Kent's Com:, MI.) ft *flows them us they have * living example ofthe (Imagers of demo& on desert blends and Into the tanitort is of Imam andracy. We are turning every' where the cermet of en barbarous tribes : Ile these are not rag trded la within llgellemeentdoeaPenztelerinatotkeetandairongth• the pile of ciente Mon and though to le treatedalways opine the bands of despotic paper. with humanity and ju stice, Sr., tact out' tied to the ben. it Is more then nate that • tills downward eater dl" efits of inter national law, which iv all sAllletal system; crime and thtly should be checked, that some guardian the remit of civilization and commerce, end which tier of the night , should cry the hour, sonic sentinel on the canno t und ers t e nd ar m will n o t o b e y oil ins l a ve alp, watch tos tn. soUnd tho alarm. The great =Silo( the the jurisdiction of a government is in ma ny MeS eget. people are loyal and just, and tbe force of honest con- OKA within the limits of soother State Public Minis. servative opini m among them is strong enough to save tees. with their household and servants are exempt from the country, could it be roused to action. But they are the authority of the place where they retitle, and are too busy in the absorbing. pursuit of private ends, in governed exclusively by that of their own outantry ;to building railroad% mining coal, mauagiog hanks, ma. also are ships of war, their ;Ahem, and crews, in a tor king money, and power has thus fallen into unworthy eign port, and a prince or potentate who eteete the court bands. -11 le difficult to make them believe that where or mu ntry of a friendly power. There are exceptions to there Is so much external prosperity, there can bt) any the general rule that thee law of each State es , supreme tenger. But material wealth Is a weak foundation for and exclusive within its own domlnione b seamy, in the stability of a government or the security of civil mach cases the consent of a government to webers Its ex. rights When a crisis occurs It becomes instantly mad. elusive authority is Implied, ear the sake r , ,„...,.. g test that these depend. not on visible , but invisible Intercourse and relations between the civil red tuitions things; not cos property, but ideas. Railroads end of the world, beneficial to all. . banks are not moral truth, neither are totted and mai It appears, therefore, that the power of • goventraent and loon sound principles of law and legislatiory yet over its people ceases only when opposed by ant then without these free .government Is impossible and an wont power, and expands so far as this opeltiote Is, interests lu peril. As the peat master of Grecian either expressly or tmpliodlcovitlidnswn li ft does not. thousht. Indeed, over ease, b u t Is suep e ed e d so inel a s th e per ..NI. , how, wall inspired, the oriole pronoun.led son is within a foreign territory, and theerfore, eubjeet - Wiwi of men; from whose month tuned forth to its law. When he leaves that territoryf re attaches, Mellifluous meow that watered all the schools," w ea wawa meanwhile he has become a natural red citizen of and whose name's another name for the highest &Ilea I snottier State It rest on these principles hat our got- ophy—as Plato has demonstrated, tint only foundation erhmeet relied in the ease of Struts who wee taken by liar true happiness and prosperity, whether of nations force him the public °Mune of Austria, bl Daphne: la= or Individuals. Is justice, or moral truth applied In at, graham, within the innedictlon of Turkey,. notate was than. This is the basis of all law% human and divine. not au 'Menem citizen, not even* naturelleed one, but When it tenses to rule the life of a man, contending pas. had only taken a step" towards becoming Mich lie had Mons quickly destroy hie peace, big enjoyment, his use been, a short time before, a sublet•t of tustrle, and had fulness, and influence: when It reams: to guide the committed a crime against her governineen. Nevetthet counse l s of a corm omen; power leaves it, corruption Is - - less:Abel slight tinge of American natter:Slily was held euflici en t• by our government. to.exteod its power over =him, and to protect him from the authority of his former Mester ba 'a foreign port ; and the yeesoneglven by Mr. Marcy. to justify the violation of the sovere ignty of Tur key was that, in this ease, the government of Turkey ' was "dormaet," that is to say, made no complaint or re reoustrsneelee Surely Walker's case is a Much stronger one. lie la a native born citizen . ; he has violated the law of notions and of his own country f tae authority of this government, if it followed Karma to ;protect, a for lion would follow Walker to punish; andirts to Meals gaa, though not "dormant" in, the matter, It Is fair to presume that she was not offended by me net which sired her people froth pillage and bloodshed. •• ; •1 • rem s evident, therefore, that the art.of this govern ment, In capturing Walker.,was no treapbes on the so vereignty of Nicaragua, bemtnie renseet may be rea sorribly presumed. N'elthet *as Welkeriat the time of his arrest, out of thejerlsdletion of his oph government, for the same reagen. • The implied 'consent of Nieeragtur extended thejoriedietimr of the trolled States Into hah ter liter'', which Walker had invaded. Oct both points • the argument rests; so far as the question concerns Ni caraena, on the irresistible presareptiont arising from the facts of the ease, that Commodore Paulding, when he leaded on its theme, would be re:panted ;11iy Its govern 'mea t, not - ao a treeptetier. bat a dellreirer. This pre aumptlon may. however, bo rebutted ,14 that govern merit Should it complain thathe rights here been vi olated and Its dignity insulted, then it may be said that Commodore Paulding went too far. Probably, however, no such complaint wilt be made, and eilence in such a care implies se:Lulea:mem Indeed, it breery likely that the President might, the the asking, obtain from Marra greP not only an express ratification and approval, of Coin. Paulding's conduct, but thanks into the bargain. That government and its people. hammed. despoiled and outraged as they. have been by presider incursions, docilittees felt nothing but gratitude te: the President and Com. Paulding far timely Interferettee, fir defending' them from the marauding inv.aieu of a perseverl ng and ruthlesa toe. though the gratitude' weir probably min-. glad with no little surprise, at ref:dein aid from such ,quarter. both ale this goverment was bound to give by the law of nations; for every nation, as a moral person, is obliged to sbetaln from Injuring enoth4r. (fattet,2ol.) • This law la the law of the land which the neutrality art ir Intended to declare. and provide the; :means of enfor cing. (Wheaton's International Law, VAL) The party, therefore, that is now endeavoring Ili repeat the neu trality act: is attempting at the mate: time to repeal the law of nation', and to place this country beyond the pale ofeivlllzatlon., Granting. however, the argument cd" the South, that Walker, when captured, was unt of tire jurisdiction of this government, this would afford 'nil cause of com plaint to him. The immunity of a 'n'ation's soil Is the privilege of a nation, not of criminals raping from jus. tics. Internatinnal haws are tint intended to screen them from pardshment, or to make earth country en Al sada' and place of refuge for the Orley felons of all oth ers. Thopurpose of the law Is lb secure the indepeud ence and' sovereignty of each State, taid!.lo enroureffe crime: and, la.the questions that atter!, under it, oo par ty has any intereet who has himself eitilatedthat law or the law of his own country. - The laer et:nations makes it the duty of every goverement to arriert fugitives from joetlee within Its bordere, and deliver,' them upot the request of the State from wirleb fliery have escaped. a Kent's Com , 364. Though this principle los rot been adopted in this country to its full extent. yet It le per fectly wiped by all authority that each criminals may be returned to their own governments, whose hers they have broken. The diflculty is not as to the soindoess of the principle, bat it' application ex:particular crimes. (10 5.4 M.. 125.) The object of extradition treatise iii to define thoraxes to which this principle appliee. The-Jaw of rettione and the duty arising from it. remain the rime ,whether a treaty be made or not,iand. it Is obitbum that as they suppose the continuing authority oCe nation over its subjects who have violated its lane, they ere locomilet• eat with any privilege of these perseMeexetanting (beet from sorb laws a.nd authority. When; therefereoterine Intl Is seised h 'Norden of bit own envrmnent, within the borders of a foreign State, whatever cause 'of tom plalat that State may jnetly have. tea eight, of his are violated, faille rut acquits no rithta by a wrongful act, and as to him. the authority of his government had Ter retuted. , The release of. Walker, thereforejly the Secretary of State was a reletake. lie is a criminal, who bat boldly set at defiance the laws of his country and of civilised nations. and that be is now at Win at:Washington; via. lied, countenanced and supported public men ; that be his s party in congress suit in the South, Is an In. suit to the laws, en outrage to the Morel Sense of the people, and a disgrace to the cadets!. Com. Paulding in making the arrest did , hie ditty,. ' , Xfi violated nq Law, International or other, nor any - fare and reasonable con. ermetine of his orders. : Lie should be sustained, not out:Omani, or. partially, or faintly; but, fully sal em: phatitally. It Is the duty of the government, moreover, to alert ail its powers to secure thepuntahment of Walk ef; lie should be at onto arrest t. end, if it, can be avoided legally, be should not be 'Med in flew Orleans; or St any place where the inflamed passions of the hoar would wad 'um& ot jostle.. ;A „popular reentien.. a them triad. a triumphant against. law and. evidence, amid the applause.): the temple and the spa patby Of Court, bar andjuryoroulel awaiting' ; la any southern , 'these veould hiAblitreed by another maurand tog expedition. aided Sod_ !upturned' by pub. Ile opinion to toe floiltk.rshleb, betuar successful or net. would keep elite the eseitenunitost this dannesouis subject for en- indefinite Ises=und renew " q9eathere teat aOlllll4llOl, be ONO at „ and 'now. Ware Indeed, our Weston ult bactease ear poleissit itroatans—uot easfirring bee** onmws;bst 41011111 t bitigb,t.'but Wirrolit.libt •ay the, Whim* orpuusitiowetilltaooilh puce, 41b thii atter 1 loon tolionedlpy the strife of Menem., who , - "from curbed license pluck The nearale of restraint," liberty expires amid them:larch, of selfitlivielenee, and the ennobting political life and activity oi the people I are succeeded try the stagnent - calm ot - despotlem.— Neither material prosperity. fare'neeelai refinement, nor high culture in faience and art; the imiritof a brave or the genius of an intellectual people, could save France from this fater which she reached through terrible con; vulsions; nor will they are its. The restoration dour violated -constitution, retbria.ef the shameful abuses of govern:Meet, the firm read ginpertist Administration of its power, execution of the c laws, Ind the restraint of sectional treason and popular 'Johnny—these alone can save us. But whenee are these to WWII; from what Wan or body Of men? From a venal,Congrea. from a set 'tonal President, or from a divided people?' Or front hAisks and railroads, from the counting-house and the Shop? The dayi may not be en distint as many, in their dream of false Menrity and thoughtless confidence Ise net ne, when they shall be overtaken by ardlainity that will eonmemon them suddenly "like maybe traveleth." `"like an armed man ;" in the presence of which, banks and railroads, and questions of tariffeandeurreney, will shrivel up into iesignferninem When political corrupt tine and popular puniori reach a certain point. the tab i warts and defences of society give way. It government cannot protect, there can be no pmtectligirl andmisrule reigns triumphant over order and law, over - violated rights and liberty prostrate in the dust. A weak - ger ; ernment that has Left the tontidence of the people, that no longer inspires respect. the only foundation, except fear, for obedience, h easily overturned by a sudden at ' tack or the fury of contending faction's.' •Is this government strong? It is defied In Its replied by a criminal whom It dared, to make s prisoner, bat does not dare to bold or to punish. hit national t The President is the chief of a party and the representative of a section. le it just? It has permitted:predatory war on peaceful neighbor*, and by tyranny and mimeo. tion drivel a. port ion of its people to the verge of armed rebellion. le It obeyed? Its troops are at this moment employed to entirety Its authority In two of the Merit*. des, and its Masan- openly derided in one of the Statie. Is it pure? Corruption Is preying on its vitals, pour its i, poison I brough.alttlie veins and arterlea of its system, and tine its brazen front in BR Lang of lecialation. The 1 Forty which-controls its counsel* contains within itself Another party wbicho Is plotting against the 'Union. and its own officers are le league with a criminal who defies its power.' Yet this government, weak, corrupt, load ted. thnutened and resisted, Is expected to rule over a -vast territory, divided by conflicting interlsts, opposing Opinions and sectional pushes. It would be a difficult task fur the wisest, strongest, purest government. Yet this as now administered, le an impossible task. It can not ge tottering en much Prager, amid the impetuous life movement of the country, the rushing torrent of events, the eddying whirl of popular pardons to its ink - becillty and vacillation, Its plestsibliithe and sophistry. its hypocrisy and timidity, Its sectional exclusiveness and temporising policy, without breaking down In ut ter failure and disgrace. The only hope. if ledeed there be hope, is in the peoplo theruseires, the ultimate weer airplay, the tribunal of last resort, to produce a chance —in their moderation, prudence, patriotism and intelli gence.. . ... ' . . .. Their opinion, echoed by a free press, commands some respect at Washington, because it is the stuff out *f • which rotes am made. amid it find a i epresentattre Mani wise enough to comprehend it, and bold enough to give it utterance In the national tunneller it might yet torn the tide of affairs frustrate the designs of criminal ambition , overawe the arrogant, encourage the timid„ confirm the watering, and Inspire with fcesh con fidante the de fe nder of . liberty ,and Justice. of mons% wheel law and national honor. That opinion. the me- real indignation of an outraged pWe, is now borne on every breeze and Inscribed on everynewemmer from the North. It has slumbe red long , too long—in the total dente of patriotic a d fraternal feeling, which /autumn' much: soeketh not its own; is not easily provoked; thinketh to sell. It has beer) roused at length by in. Iktuated folly, wanton aggression, persevering Wattles end reckless crime, ['orbited party and sectional ma lion could not comprehend the spirit of the nerthin Its repose and mistook lisapparent apathy for donne/sand insensibility to wrong. Thils splrit shows now that It le awake et last, by Signs that - cannot be misunderstood, and whatever it may do or fall to do, thole signs are the handwriting on the wail, which, read aright. tells the proud and presumptuous Satoh that, like fielshaarar, ft has been weighed fa the balance and found wanting; that its kind= Is numbered and finished.. We have been governed too long by slavery. It has growls up to be the one absorbing, domineering Interest, into which all others are merited, and its bums bilk %a stride% the country like • eolossns. We Imo - bovine a black republic. your millions of negroes rule its, They We without the pale and protection of the oonatitutien, Judge Teller keys, Yet they alter it at phonon,. - They have no rights Liselaralves, yet they trample aunt under foot. They cannot vete, yet they control oar elections and make OW Jim. They 'ant Mere WlNlttandiaa, and they lave bought us end our inberibume. Ter them As statesmen thinks and tolls. the demagogue intrigues, and harangues, the hustings" ring wit* amdmadhld shouts. - Far them the Inlibustar ranks bie roMII. gang, • for them he fights, and at their a:harmed hie prison door* ilit'open sad the fettersoffustleettlithe his Mon arm. They wage war tot' W without the eoeseitateon• grens tithe traps* without insisted*, mod - - - ' . "'at their Welk , ' Lambed in like hounds. do fainine, nerd and ilrei : ,- Vratich for eurykrymentet ,- -.. ' ,_ .., . ' This African moment *s slot Kilt our MOO blood and ,rivilisatiou.< It htuqtramonAlo'Utti isillusemleol Christian' morollty Of tial - -adiar-. ite weirs) fee ank as viareAsioateatollwatinsi. lily.- It Is babstisis awl healSitikind It we 'Mishit Ai It esok io,rirtl;lllllllmoliatobariouvier.forkaclien Ugh: - . .,-- 1•-. : .‘,t-i_. , .... , ..: .. - .tt:.,--._ ! , .-, ijmuipW , .. 4r7 ,- ~ , , -.--,,,,-,---..-;..5%.,f,,'-ir4f,,,- .'l,-,--•-4-1-';', - - ' ':' ), - ,'---;' . ." - ', - A" , y7 , 44 0 ,-Ar..-fr;•. 1.".,....., IZMESTMEM I',I(4),COAL - ,.T.E. Pottsville. Jaaiiiikry 103, The'quantity seta by Railroad -ibis meek is 10,3211-tons; which Is 3,133 tans Wm 'Hosts the quantity Rapt tan waTG Tbe Boldness of the Riskin Is .almost emir* suspends:dist present.. At many of the CoDierim there "is scareel7.4 hand itt work, "swept minty to attend to lb* machinery sad keep the...Colite: rim in order. There: but few driving 6134., ways, and there is no 116qm/dila* manifested re make arrangements for an increased bosincerthie year, except *bent Collieries were Patti/WY As, •pended last year. This is' ntiquesansair. the wisest,"end ins fset the only policy that eaut be pursued by oar Operators in the 'absence of say demised for Coal, and the present state, of the market. This policy, it is true, bears extremely bard on the laboring classes, but under losienst circumstances, we cannot see bow it eats be avoid ed. Our Region is prepared to meet any detnead that maybe made on ir s witb but little prepara tion, and that preparation can be made whenever the demand requires it. The subject of tolls for 1858 is' beginning to *Slime the tradd. The general-imrression is, that the laferesti of our carrying companies would 'observed better by reducing the rates and in ens-sing the hotness to the NU +Pull,' of the transporting machinery now mina by the :Ranh toad, and the Beale ratinlng on and thus secure the saute amount of revenue on the Increased' business: The arguments - is favor of this plan are these': lit. It would prevent any further decrease of the population at the Coal Region of Schuylkill County, which mast necessarily take place if the trade continues to diminish as itl is now doing. The Coal trade fell l off:last year 398,018 tons, end it is admitted that the.population of the Coil Be, gion diminished sclera! thousand during the last year. The trade for the present year, which com menced on the first of December last, has fallen off preside of 43,000 tons,—and the Poffeteden of the ROgiOn mast continue to ; tii%inisit in the seine ratio. 'Of th ylieffatii the miscella neous trade, partienla* - of the Railroad, in the. 'diminished amount of merchandise : end Passen gers transported over-:the road, whihips the most profitable portion of their business. - Rd. Even if. the !emus received on. Coal would be the nine on an increased business of three or four hundred thousand tons, the Railroad Company would belaigoly the gainer by, the-In creased receipts front the miscellaneous trade, which would, of coons, tend to increase busineu by an ; increased detiehipment of the 'Region.— Large population and extensive developmentals what gives trade to iratisporting companies, and their business Wert:atm" just In proportion as this po'hey is encouraged.- We am nut the,pdvocates for vent low fates,— they are as Jlernicions in their tendency as char ges that *repo high. The Trinaportiog Com- . panies miist7teceive t 'sullicient 'revenue to furnish the best facilities, and to keep their works ingood condition for econo4tical use,—for just in propor tion as their facilities are crippled, so to. peopr lion must the intcalse increased hereafter to give these facilities, and the trade will, of course, be objected to beary`additionol expenses The erfmtion is,ithether it is ndt better fur the Companies to reduce-the charges so , es to run up the business to the .full capacity of the present. machinery, and receive tho.same amount of rev eune for tlibt increased business—and thin, in - - crease population, extend developtuents, and also extend their business hereafter, Weak of produ tlng the opposite results by higher charges, which most tend to lessen the value of their property just in proportion as the energies rof the people are ebeeked,,ind the community impoverished, on which tbeirlepend for trade. Thise considera tionv apply peculiarly to this region, where the transporting facilities ore already provided, and con bo used without any additional eisrienditure on the part of the Transporting Companies. ' SCRANTON COAL AT Auperoa.—A friend In New" York sends us the falloseink list of prices at which a lot of item:ton Coal was sold at Auction in that ally, on the 21stinst : -- - Lump, ~ -; - -:, -:$3"10 on loisrd. Steamboat. • Largo Broken, Small Egg, . Store, • ••• -Abut 10 000 ions .aslki. -diathesis...4w beard l aii Riiiihsithport Beta the witaimuief theteaapasy. Terms cash on ;delivery.—Unless the Company obtain their Cool for nothing, we don't think they "will be likely' to extricate- eheasseives from. their difficulties, but rather Increase them by selling their Coal at these rates. h•wiss ad mitted by the Company that the business' of selling Coal at $3 80 and $4 33 did not pay shots last year—thee. bow can they expect to make any thing at ' , oiling Coal now at least TO cent. per too 'less on the average. • s . . 'New Coil. Daltatraits . .—Messrs. Stoll & Rod man, wiieso 01191 r Coal Breaker we ' noticed aTew weeks ago, hail erected a model on a larger scale, which can be Seen at the shop of Mr. 'Snell on Railroad street. The plan is similar in eviry re spect tnib'e plan of* Breaker which'Sre suggested about 18 yeari ago, when some etperiments were made on a Breaker erected by Mr.' Sibetten. for manly of ibis 'Borough, and' befOre Mr. Bat:la's Breakers wore used is this Region. We are sat. Wed *lust BA Breaker will be' found ti considera ble improvement on Betties Breaker, because it breaks the Coal without grinding and rounding the lumps of, Coal that passes through it. • The - onol broken by this machine has the aline:trance lot that broken by band, preserving "lithe sharp edges and cornerd, which greatly :aids la its.ig- Irsition; -.espee6ity, whoa It used in Locomotives, Factories, &u., where- quick fires are desired.— Our itapressfaq is,, that the waste" le the use of this machine will be from 6 to 10 per cent. loin than in the Bettie Breaker. The ,model we ea-. will break about 30 can of Coal per days and the proprietors inform as that the ixpeaso of orecting•thli Breaker would be about one-third less than the cost of the Battle. Breaker. It can be-so arranged as to break , the different rises of Coal as required. We advise our Coal Operators, and also the; land owners, whore interest is equal • to that of the Operators, to call and see it work. AKOTAIGO. COAL linsooest 7 -Mr. George W. Snyder Is building a Coal Breaker en a plan fur ?, nished by R. A. Wilder, Bsti,;,firsperiatendent of the . Mine Mill. Railroad... l.: This machine con ' slits of two large 'iron wheels. revolving in - 611. ferent directions, filled with Teeth on the • inner side. These wheels are beveled from the outer edge towards the eentre, and are perforated with boles throtigh wide!) Teeth are -, loserted, similar to the teeth of a harrow when "standing on ed • . These Teeth are moveable, and the number can be multiplicfer diminished to produce the different kinds of Coal in increased or diminished quanti titles, as the market requires.' The. Cent 'is fed in the top of the machine where the apportare le lar ger than lathe centre and whore the teeth do notiap each other—bat as it nean the centre, the teeth lap and retvolvel through each other, nod will break the. Cosi without grinding it, and also without destroying the sharp edges of the Coal wbee broken. Oar Impression it, that the fracture of the Coal_ broken in .botit theSO me chinos will be about the same. The Important queries then arises--.mbleb Is the.zoost durable-- which eau be erected at the least expense, "and which willoutke the least waste? These Towles can only be &sited by actual experiment, New YORE COAL. MARES?, JAMMU 21st, 1868. The trade has been mars brisk by retail, and 6180 by the cargo. The stocks are believer ado. gusto, and prices remain without change. Butane at $6 50 @ $6 00 from yards 'Alio $4 00 @ $4 80 by the cargo. Per masufeetating purposes the depandla Ittereasiug. In Foreign 'Nal bat little is doing, and the prices 'hew a deelfae. to the Philadelphia and Boston markets, prices remain : without change,: • • ' . ' $1 TELEGIft.tPiI. isitar,So'cLocs.s.if t Jre forte i rola Attit*erti • Havanna, 25 Haw 2.5 Haves. ' • 143 f boat, and •a us I; about suss as its! week. . • Coal ?rode by Rallread Seat try Railroad for Ma week earthis oar litirada? f r a ll iasP ll4l - • , ' ' Port Carbms, Pottsville . Pealktikill navels; tanira, . Port Clinton, .* , Pnoitnisty fhi ppao,- Tt 4 gd• • • t •t02,910 or it°4s4 t l =o. l4 P l ► , ' 4 , .4. - 30306 13 .t i 42,41 asst. At. Ton, sail Trita l port o si irs Pt" Arairisei:4o4ol.4lthrff‘: -; 1 14; - . • - 4 41 -- StW, . ski ' , • - 0 - , ' .„ tSO 111, .t R*,„ 4 -.„ ja-y4,4 , • lekitirlkill Catinty Aattroalli. sass. 2114 at.loatag 10 the quattky at gag tau:aortal *maw dU Aat 11411(0446 la .5 , *87 1 411: e 0012 171 wark jading. au Tharadaravedlag last: i 11„, &MO 03 10.06 03 111.41irloa. . 19618 00 Schnilklll Valley '-'.. -AA , 2,356 06 3,060 16 Sit-Cuba PiClutaa ", 6415 ' 11.450 16 MU Cm** - • " as ROA ol Enbaylllll,_ :pa I Etaseas _ _ Nor *64 ending oa attsidaly Mot: t . loom • •to $ m. 8 31t iskiyoiiros.3fitoopeao•4 ,1,51* to. • 921 Oe X. Pope igagoicker xes„;) • •at Ot ;.; 14-19 N. fork Laugh, cmtgad. Xxii - U • 4,014 / 3 Coaaell Riegge,(Begrpe TL.acork4 , 5" CO annum Pawn.. • 147 00 kk , LaStart-MateltraJoliiiiily) !/.1140$ , /a Degbln k Dtwail„ I,oBola usiettati.Put. to • 0,0:0 la N. Bp. t. (S. 11. tteenari Ct 6.,) 354 if, Total, - 11,921 it eetoe 05 li44lllll; m o tra T zsin ta e alissi e vara \ri imin i sautasoa • rt i t. toy, , t 21:iineb Chant to Trogdon,- , ROO , to • 21 Inbetbport. 4 31 . 46 • Muds 00+11110u PillUpaborg, 114 Lykes** *alter Coal Truths flow ISIS*. vox: • etiou... Liken Whir Cad Co,. /42 14'• • ZKI 14 Short hiotostato Goolgo. •I: - f,ito Tobl. lab OS Z 717 sad toU nom illtarriaturt too ilalttiotorp. $2 i 4 4 tinegrale " 2 10 t emirs aro dotifood 'A boars atter antral, the rates an aosata atidttion4 to not above. Scranton Coat Trade tor 1015 S. ' Eh!Nadia= tar latio lawia: bof tracery, Lectern% - • 141141., Shipped North, . SPIT 2.701 23 • Shlppod South, 7,24 CO. 13= • to 21,045. 02 - CfCrasl.llll6oalimal. . ' . • AND OTUER SCH UTLKILL CO.'STOCKS. -, -- -.-- ixssict ii -, itiii.r, at irtriaoiiiloiiiisox , win& — 1111. IClff IV al/ } 2 . 2 St allsoSulls s ' 7- -- ----- Philaileiitsla. Reading A Pottsville-. i6O 51 Wi l ei Mine 11111 and Schuylkill Ehnen - - • i 50 NY 69ss Mount Carbon - • • - - - . •- . t 60 60 62 Mount Cartago and Pprt Cash= - • 160 60 52 61111 Crock - - . J., ..... - 60 60 62 Schuylkill Valley —. -• • - ,60 Lorberry Crlek- .--, ' - - • •.- - 60. 60 00 Swaim& - -- - -—.- 4 - 60 ;1 $ Canals s • buy' ISO 10 11 60 1 16 1 / 4 60 3 3% 60 3 6 100 110? .111 SehnilkillXavlsatton - • prefeir,ed Union Canal ..... . " " _preferred • - • - Del.k find's) Coal*Transporiarn C 0.% Railroad & CoolConapaniess 1 Littlefichnyl. Nay. 11. It. Coal C». • Lehigh Coal 41k Navigation CO. • • Ilasleton Coal Co.- • - Buck Sionntaln Coal Co. - • - -; • Pennsylvania Coal R. 9.C0. - - Dauphin Coal tR. 8. Co. - - -, - Lykerna Valley Coal Beaver Met.dosa Coal It. R. Co.• • Likens Valley Com ßann:o4oo*i CO:.' - Coal Companies a forest Improvement - V - North American Co.preferre4. • 1 • , " common '-.. Twe Delaware Coal Co. . •- • Cumberland Coal Co. • - • -) - Nan Creek Cital - - •r 1 . Uaaeowa Miners' Bank, • • I - - Fanners' Bank - • • • • • I. _ _ PoCts.llltWater Co. - - - -The stock of all Coal Comianies the libovoilst when furnas,bad byithos• pvibilesti. • , NE " ADV - 1 1 .1VINORTOR AFRICA. JUST RECEIVE f:, furthSr supply py of LlTlngatoaa's ray ea and ftevearabis In Booth Atrial, with nutaeroun pia*. For 'Meat BANN AN'SM2olt oatt 84stkotery Store. PAPER DOLLS--A Pkesh Supply'. ~ cDANDLER'S.PAPE, R DOLLS, - o thelatest Paris Fashion, miesprising "o. I. Carrie with her Drosack No.;. Alice with her Dresses; No. 3. Charley. t i____,--- --- No. 4. Little Fairy Liedtke . N 4.6. Iletty—the Milkmaid-41th all her MA . • NO. G. Jack and his Unliday COmpsninnw. . . ~1 For salty at . . 'IAN:CCM Bonk FrOrn. ASHLAND FARM A 4 Private Sale. fum! valuable Fart, situate in Man • het township, Seheryikill mousy, adjoining the borough of Orsigsbarg. Is offered at private X*bs term contains 344 atm el leads- , • oat 75 oT which are ll:witty young dm. r, principally chestnut—the balance Is •chlatly valley land, divided.into convenient fields, and inn high state of cultivation., The improvements row slat pia large Drlck Dwelling house. barn and the usual outbuildings. The Centre Turnpike panes through etels,property., Persona deslrons of purchasing would do well to call and see this property. as It Is seldom that lucti a desirable faint is offered for sale. For further in formation-apply to the subscriber, residing thereon. 31113.23. '5O 44t* . , W. Cf. IRWIN. JOHN A. MOORE, Oil and Cerra:WMlop Merchant, AND DRAW!. IN WAS' SUPPLIES,, no. 104111:Witer street, PhltadelpOyto, Land - sp. etnoteattY to hatatl - Eiperat,Laid. Stlanielopbiat, Matched sad Backed WUUolll,Bparia sal llatitaisattaa Candles, NaridwardOnsiar Ott, expo*, . .• ' . Xftotratre. Why Oa" inapt Challis, • ‘lllMOlor Powder; &WY War. idatl Leather Boallag,.Fasea, tricking, Ar. • • airArlat tia• Doebniem 'l;elabra tad Wine Rniat at the Maznifsatirete price/. Pan. 23. WI 4-1 y 3 20 " - • 3 40 " - 300 " ta - 3 43 " • ORPHANS' COURT SALE. • E RSUANT to as order of the ;Or ' ptuins' Court of the County of Schuylkill. the sub , Administrators( too estate or Frederick/Spot. Man. bits of the borough annoyer.. In the county of gebosaiii, deceased, will /apse to ma/e by public yew due on Saturday, the 13th day of February next. at one o'clock In the afternoon. at the public house of SeOnedy gobl o oao. In the borough of ?negro"... In the county of (Schuylkill atimessid,—All that termite...ono story frame dwellicm house, log barn and tract alma situate in the township of Plower.. is the county of Schuylkill, to wit:—Bouaded by lands of late Frederick Rudy, do gamed. thumb laud, laud late John Stoudt k Co.. lands now or late of Jacob containing serer) seressnd eighty-seven perches and allowance. , .4180, All that certain tract or pleceialia . nd situated In the borough of Musgrove aforesaid, bounded on the north by lot No. 17, on the 'east by Jet No. 74. on the Booth by other land of Frederick Sporman, and on the' West by lot No. TS, tiring lot marked with the nunalmr 24, and containing three acres and twelve perrhes, with the appurtenances; late the estate of mid deceased.— Terms and conditions madb known at lb* timeandgilace of sale by CHARLES BPORMAN, Administrator. By order of the Orphans'. Court, Jacob Ftelca, Clerk. rottavidaJannary.l.s„ 'B7 • 441i' M. W. BALDWIN & CO., Engiiiieri, dread god Hamilton streets. Phdadd/bia ;roe WOULD call the attention" road Martagers, add those Interested In Railroad Property, to their dystess qf locooktioe Rapines: Ism which they are adapted-0 the tortleubm business for, which they may be required: by Abe ttek of one, two. three Or four pair of driviog wheels; and the use of the whole, or so mach of the weight La ,may mid desimbk fbf adhe. don ; and In amommodsting them to the I:lndio...curves, etrength of. auperstntetion, and rail and Tort to': he done. By these means the maximum useful effect of the power is smeared with the least expense for stiondsore, cost of fuel, and repairs to Brad and due De; With these objects In view. and as the result of twenty.tbree years practical experience to the tobelaess by our senior part• ner, re manefacturefirddifercut kinds of Espied, and several classes of sizes of each kind. Par tenter &Nets Lion paid to the strength of the machine in the plan and wortmenship of all the details. Our long experience and opportunities of obtaining. Information. enables as to offer these engines with the assurance that economy and durability, they-wilt compere theorably frith thaw of any other kind In use. We atm furnish to order. wheels. axles, bowling or low moor tiro (to dt 'centres without boring,) composition castings for been ingot every description ofeopper, Sheet iron and Dollar Works; and every article appertaining to the repair or renewal of Loxonotive dogittes. 31. W. BALDWIN January t 37. LW, MATTHEW BAIRD. . ORPHANS' COURT SALE. ~ RURSUANT to ; an order of the Or , phant.' Court of the county. of Schuylkill. the sub. bar, Administrator of the estate of EICUAEL SCUA, PM late of Wayne township. demoted, will expose to valleby publics vendee, on SA tIInDAY. the 20th day of yehrnary next, at 10 erloek in the forintoon, at the pub. lie house of Charles Hommel, In the town of Friedens• Molt, the following tract of land, via: - lio. 1...A1l that certain bras and tract of land sit uate in the tp. of Wayne, in the countyy. of & buylkiti. adjoining lands of Jacob Schafer, Philip ft a caned, John Sweigart and Iluntaloger A Brown, and containing eighty-throe acres and one hundred and fortponit perch. es, strict measure. The improvements consist a large two 'atoll tog honor, weather boatdsa,sod is ., stone kitchen attached, and a log „barn. About sixty acres are cleared and in good gullieatiot; the remainder is et' ,eellent Umber land gir nate, ie. There is an orchard of 'good grafted apple trees upon the tam containing ten acres. The tart is welt watered, there being springs or rivulets In almost every geld. Tbe ihnn is Matted about one sag a quarter miles south of triedensburg. No. 2....,git that eertala tract of (Armies •land, sit' elate in the tp. of Wayne. In tbs county of Schuylkill, adjoining the fotero, Ins tract, lands of Iseob Schafer, Daniel Heed. John Swinged and Samuel Schafer, Can' 1 taming thirty-flee acres and one hundred and forty-ono perches, neat measure. This tract Is In excellent con dittos, baring been well limed and manured—the whole 1 being druid land and veil watered. No." 3...A150, the undivided one-third of a tract of I woodland, situate in the fp. of Washin..ton. ad-- Joining lands of Thomas Morgan. louathan Brown and the New York Coal Company, con taining in the whole sixty-three acres and twin- ty-sorea perches, st riot toeseuro. Terms and conditione made known at the• time sad place . of We, by • DANIEL /MAVEN. . By order Admlnfatrater. oi the Orphans' Court, ham Pia*, Mork. ir ORDER OF THE COURT OF! COMMON PLRAS ot noturrisuz co. , ' ... 4 "A'bUidilPhia, is. Is ed 1 Thiecetwoonweelth of Pentuhrivan is to the t Shedd of delluylkld Count', Orseillic— a.... Wont" UMW; MYRON R. labs of yolarCountY'l obsemided .fitm, the place of his usual - abode to law fn ufdr. baled ittaftikindebted to the President, Direr. tots stud enamor& Ofthe dank of Peotpxylsonla. wil'h &apt to defraud Ilifered Mrs, as It is said, ' Therrien.. we command you. as Nine we did. that you attach. all wad• singular the scrods-and ebatiols, lends, sod Me' itlelits, of the add Thomas Aillbous. within sour bid 11-7104 71 0 4 la whale bands or postaisiou parer the same may mann time brown of the Presideitt, DiroeLea and CM* patty of the Rank of Pennsylvania. who sue ibis wit, eel at the other oneditors of the said Thomas Aillbone , i We further commend Ton, thatyou rause lb. goods and chattels attached hi thine of this brit, forthwith to be I wool and appralsed,and an Inventory thereof to tw nada and bow you bayearaeuted this writ, makeirnown to our Judges at Philadelphia. at our Court of Common -Plan foe the Omits of Philadrdpbia, there to be held on the drat MNDAY, of March belt, add base you thou Merit O ibis writ: trwellwr With the said in and sp. pialseatent ; sad we farther command you. as beLre we did, that you summon the potion s°spaw n tels, lauds s to whose hands or posreselon mem the made od chat and tan/manta of the said Tironuto Alliborte yoliaball phase en attached; that be. abe or they. be and appear l bedew our Judges at our Cowl of Ooluessu:Pleos, iberw itubs bald Um mild lost MONDAY of Match wit. to abide tho order of the said Couet in lb.. promos.. Ifßams, the iloworatdo OSWALD PROMPISON. Prost. dent of our mid Court at Philadelphia. thle ldthilley of December, la the you . of our Lord. as. lboremod *Xi bo Plod lad tlftyworna. Tit O. WZSII. - , ibr. eroOtntrefutg, The Awe his trio aid itteehot OM at la writ. to me ahead, let elerettalii Pad ',bleb I ken ousted . to be Pithiteheil to ete'eliesee at tbe..4llretkioes et the Ad of ainatir I* rich elks wadi sae peeeetodi sad etas or. Aone et . tiot Cleert et Ofteetee Mutat Sehatthill (To. .-, •.4. ,- - ------ • - - NIL 11114 n. aent , 1,;;Ilt eate,rothielnkles. 4l ,ll l . : - lON ~ , j • . - - *-- Th'fiA•l - 4...:- , 5' . ..--' - , . • ' •:- , A:11 . 41:! , - ..: . • ,-, ' , . ' ' VIM; -ages OD IBS 10 3,9T1i03 510;04 ~8 00 • ' 152,104 d e I WM • ~ :....tiopty4Avwsi J/01:141V-1).:1;ITTERS, - at:MUTED rip BEMITIT 3KM 'SP Orit, DISEASE OF. 411 E KIDNEYS, LIVER COMPLAINT, WE-At:NESS 6r ANY' KIND, 're.VER AND ACUE t . EfiVERY FARMER AND 'EVERY 4A3ltLif bee its podgier illtiere,eoutponaded to some "1: 1 Pe, bandod down trembling IQ son, perhaps. She prineiplo that a teak etbastiant Ls neennu7 la every house, Is nudispdted, yet, befog COUP p 01204114 by unskillful hinds, often =sins elements incouipatibleand inviresistenttnee positive. ly battle'. We hen etteri to the Pittale.lll a Melton' eentosted germ, whit will !exactly *apply this Wa nt, pew parerapott scientitie priotiptes, compounded of simples, acting in hanneny,}et wit its own remedial ogles. • To via Trmattsi Is bere ottered.ina eouranient anne, "et perfectly safe, an bettlant. wbieb, acting 11 1 011 Abe el:natation. Maui the sake of tits systole to lho and' and of health, wepselalty fitter any debilitating intuit of disease, anew depression front beat, or any beat or art+ dental atoms: on Auti-Ossimartia. *bleb, wines geoetal atiusulant sower, act* wlth a peculiar Intorno* open the bertous systems. ealming:terrods irritation, whit taken ' IProleetat, without oho twist tendency to the. brain, and witoont that diet rsesingreacttort which be the twos of met tomes--often eansitignsorelniury than thiliatighlai disease. I , As s Tom. nsodarafely and pannansiistly exalting the awes* of all parts of the frame, proluelog weerssarity achealthY terming the action of the various mom, elownleally chanting tba aridity of the stomach. andso Ing orrnially upon th e tires bs mulatto; pannausully the socrations.!• BOTlClL—Whowriss6orts to end thts a beverage will be disappointed; but to;the Ark, *ask and lowArpiritad. it : situ rove s, grateful. aroosatis cordial, possessed of rlngular remedial propartlas. (Mut* ou~The pest popularity of this daUghttul Aroma has induced many koliatkos. whkh .tbo public 'Mold guard asalo: a tundutaing. As notersp usitad to bityan)thlng alas unti you hare sk oin Bossaar Hoy LOD UM/1:111 a fair One bottle irlll amylase you kersr infinitely supsi4or at is to all, then italtatkasa. '40,144 at $1 per bottle, or ale bottles for $5, by MS aote ORB, BENJAMIN U PACE, JR. &CO. .g•Wraornittso , - 2S 25 25 AO 60 10 25 00 00 0I isk plyirmatonfais anb elgmiats, For sale-In Philadelphia by the agentir—floirauin Morel', odes of the panocnri; John Johns, 722 Rare, strait; Dyott & Son 133 North Second street. Alan, in Raiding, by Ritter ,k;CO4 i.aormater, by John P. Long Co.:• Pottasille,,john V. Brown, J. C. C. Buena and C. W. Epilog; Tamaqua, by E. J. Pry; Illnentrithr. K. Barns, and in Schuylkill Haven, by Dr. R. Chi cheeter. November 'l7 45. 410Dinf.1 DR. DOPONCO'S PIS 51 A LE GOLDEN PILLS A t) L RE INFALLIBLE, in removing stoppages or Irregularities of the maws, These • are nothing new., but have been used by the Doctor for many pers.-both in francs ao4 America,wilth un paralleled success in every case, and he is orgedby many• thousand hollee who;have used them. to make the Pills public, for. tte allieviatlon of those suffering from any It. regularities whatever, as well es a preventive to Dime lastles whose health will not permit an Increase of Oust lyi Pregnant females, or • thole supporing themselves so, are cautioned against using these Pills, as. the Pio- Motor 1111$1:1102111 nn responsOlilly atter Ow shove admo nition, although their mil , Mese would prevent any loin ry‘ to health; otherilre, these. Pills are recommended.— Directions areompanv each bog. Prico.sl. Sold whol e. sale and ratan by C. ‘C.. EPTlNg t oorner Norwegian and Centre streets. Pottsville, nu_ All orders mast bo addroard to the-abbre General Agent, who will supply the trade at Proprietor's prices, and send the PIM confidentially to ladles by mall, by theireaelexinggl biellAS. W. EPlTlliti, at Pottsville, Schuylkill county. Pentia. • ' frit•Seestruature,".l Duronco," on each box-none othersgennine. . - ' • - - Pottsville. June 6.'57 KJ -- MISCELLANEOUS. - no YOU wish to find good employ ment. snd11110:1+ money with little or no invest went. and Without interfering with your. regular but Luau t if .ou do. read this advertisement. • C. E. Ton a Co.. of . - 02 Broome street, New York, are manufacturing and selling massive Gold Pencils for $5 eiseiLlethich are cheap at that prices) and they throw in aAM or prize with each Pencil, worth Imm tg.: up o $5, $lO, $l5, $5).925. $5O. $5O, $75. $lO7, $2OO, and $500. Doo't cry out... Humbug! Lottery r' It's no oath thing. This Pencils are sold at their cash value, end all the OM" fits over the drat cost are thrown into the gifts, which actually coaCithe purchaser nothing.., The prima arts distributed op a simple plan cat drawing, which would take too ninth 'room to explain, hut which. has never failed to gist{ complete Satisfaction. " We have, drawn sad sent to purchasers 133U01d W*te kiss or 'various prices. 74 purses ofiGold holism VS Gold Locket'', 850 Gold Chains. and dit. corresponding number of other prises, within two months. But every purchaser draws a prim worth $2 tertian, and it stands thOnsande of chances to be a higher true- We want ♦ good scent in rimy neighborhood through out the muutr7. to *Whit purchase". and any agent, to be successful . , must have* pencil arid prize to exhibit: -We pay agents Stretch for each purchaaer he obtains, and the first, person In any neighborhood whO applies tbr a Pencil and gift, will receive the %gluey for that lo cality. Should,en agent obtain a valuable prize to ex hibit with his Nadi, he would have little difficulty in obtaining sozree orpnrchasers, mut Making it a plyteg business. 1 A .1.47,W IDEA! ARAD!! REAJMI We ssk nobody to send their money till they knew Irbil prise they draw.. Any person wishing to try their lurk, can lint send us their name met address. and- we will Make their draWing and intorm them by return mail what prize they drew, when they can Send on and take the Pencil and priset,or not. whichever they dome. We giro this privilege only once to a purchaser. Atter the filet drawing, every purchaser will be required to send In adrauce, through the authorised Agent- Ws will send withaash drawing the number taken outorith. full description of the plan of drawing. Addien C. E. 'TODD g C 0 .193 Broome Street, New York. 4souery - 9,18 " 1204 ENCOURACE.THE, ARTS! Without Taxation! COSMOPOLITAN ART ASSOCIATION SUE MANAGERS of this suceess- AL rut Inatitotlou 1111301317te that tbs amuse. melds tor the FOUItTif YEAIt are being completed on . the most extensive scale, they having purchased Pow er's Statue of. the Greek tibiae, at au expense of $6OOO. as one prise; and the splendid Dusseldorf Gallery- of Paintings. for gassmo, which will also be distributed la various prises. ' ' ' • Terms of Subscription. The payment of S 3 coustltutes soy person a member of the Association, and entitles bim to ' s • First—A large and rutty Steel Engraving, worth $5, from the Picture of Sokonoo, 10 by U Indies. tailed "Manifeet Ihntiny," (or, if prefured. the Engraving called lhora's "Cotter's Saturday Eight." worth 04 a. copy of the Quay tarty Art Journal. published at $3; a free admission into the Dusseldorf Geller yeand a chance , for that Gretl.l3lave,tog,ether with about 400 other works. of Art; Paintings. de.; Ssmad—Aoy one of the folk wing $1 Magazine', els : Emetion's 0111 Putnam's Monthly. Iferpee's Maseelae• Atlantic:Yew Monibly,tinthem's andOoderaiisrastote, liniekerboeker. Blackwood; &others Literary' Messen ger, Littelll Pautwouts. Edinburg Rules., North Dritbh Review, London Qaarterly. Westminster Review, and .I.lttell'a Living Age (weekly) at sefor two memberships, together wh a chance to the Drawing: and free ideals. - elm to the Wort Gallery. sine Thi il — paging g $5, any sane of th e store magnate/us and Gni 4re Quarterly loarcter, together with TWO' chinas lathe diattibutiou althea BY Plying A they will 104 a $3 Magesine, Ail, Journal and' either of. . the EtutratOup, with TWO chape . , we in-the distribution. 'of prise*. I I . . c ' Peorta—llipayingALs. (6 Memberships.) vill I titled to sit chancoSin the drawinst sad art extra copy! of either of the Engraving, together with frweadnabnioq, 'to Gallery; Ac. t The tilsttibufkoNrill take place On the 'Pith of Janti; cry, 1858,4 y toari6h time robserietbme will be received by , . BKNJ:littliliftli, : ~ 113rtorory Semidry for Schuylkill Caney. • *One IttilTarittgr, 4.3lanifeat Dealing" and ••Sator: day itir e r Ns also copies of the At tJournal canbe seen at one iodate. ( • 0• . I Dollars persons at a distance . 4ettioing, Three 1 Dolling toms hpusli, and designating what they desk! 1 to take au hare a rertlfirate, Ac, forwarded to them. ; 1 'Petterille. July .23, 'ST . iX6 , .; I _.....:.... i • E. CARRIGUES. Poeta , ll/*9 Par AGENT for the sale of EVANS' j s WATSON'S Phitatielphiis Nantifaitstrvi SALAMANDER SAFES, No. PS Seed Fourtk Street, Phi/cute/ok. _ -- • . :Tray in nighty, and Must Pretruitl.rt —• Report of The thetvoittee appointed-to suporintaj * as 4,- . ~ berating of lAc Iron & f es at Beading, • • ftbreary 27th, 1827. . L • . • Itessele. March Ith. The undarsigned, womb. rs of the ~ ~. committee. do respeetfully report, _.,... - - —..... test we ssw the two Safes originally —I:1u. --, surged neon by Panels A Herring I •fl."- 1 7 5 ... hod EIXPII lk Watson. plied side by ' 1 side ir (ammo, via : ~ffhe safe in . L., I 1 owl: the Parma:stet 'dr the Phila. - , delpb sk Readies RallroadCompany, - • In its odic* at Heading , notaultsetared by ferrets& ites ging, sod the We la use by U. A. Lents, In his Weir. nthenheitored by Mani IS Watson, and put In booksand papers precisely alike. The ape was started al $1 , 4 o'clock, A. If.. and kept Sip until fair cords of green hickory, two cords dry ask 4,4 hole e n der the ut top wood superi ate . wensnds entirely consumed. the oce of the sabseribi , e, members of the committee. The mks were then cooled . at with enter, after which they were opened. and the books said papers taken nut by the committee end.sept to 11. A; Lants's store Tor public examination. idler tbel • wens drat examined and marked by the committee. Tba hooks and papers taken from threes man utactorest.by Ern/ k 'Watson were but . elightly aiderted by the in tense bead. while t boss taken from the safe CAD 0 fliet tried by Varies IS Herrin! were. in one Judgment. damaged' fully,Mteen per rent. more than those taken from *yaws IS Wahine's saes • - - We , Zliere the above to have hos a fair audio:partial trial • the respective qualitlesof both safes. i . JACOB 11.DYSIIER: DANIEL 8. HUNTER., Having been absent dodos the burning. we roily to . hieldehith the above statement of the condition of the papyri and boob: taken oat of the respells, safes. • i.. . ' 0 - . A. NIGOLLS. • .., - - 11. If. IfIIIILEIVIrCRO. - -i' • . JANEWIFILI/OLLAND. , - , ....—.... , Thafbllowing named gentlemera.residentaot Iteadtnt and Its vicinity, who saw the above the. have purchased , Se Wks from Evans &Watson sinie the burning, tip to Hay Ist. 1I37: . . 0.41. Media. 1; Lipoid Hltah, I s Nuke Huth. /.., -kirk & Webster. 2' W. ahead. A Son, I: Henry W. Idb:singer, 2;Ili; Wm. Manes l; Solomon Ilboade.l: Levi 1.. Budtb,, 1; jitah A Crain, 1; Was. litrek.ls lianftnan A Baum, I: Wm. Stelfarlies, ls, Gearged. *Amt.': 3.11.111 O.W. Ilsasandt, tr ton Mem i : Jame* Amboy. 1 : ...Y. B. & A; 11; Warner, 1; Jacob Belnalatat.l; Was. Illegr1; Y. /I.**hollenbenter,l; Lit. Company, It H.l: gauge, 24 'it, G.* P. P.-Xesuratsout. I ; Mlisueyer, Iftdisme is Co., "HMO i .1. - P, artkeSknOr 2: i' ' •• • ' H. ' EVANS JP: WATSON .! itialtriett as heel 30(0,0*. #oslnde toteik:nbeni ak Vart, stAkb thate *rib , was ate muff tena Mks way till e I r 7 : assilpeturir as Rs rititad Skeet- .7 ' ' 11-Iy . 1111, 0 - • . I' , . I MEDICINAI, PITTSBURG, PA. A CARD TO THE LADIEBI AGENTS. ATTENTION! IMRE ARE NO BLANKS, 11;;:i1;u:mi retist lir UMlash ,;, This !sadism, - diisitse is snaking 'Owen ler New Yotk'ofty. Petition teas. Diverse. Thews* iVoshinstusi _l3uAth ton petitioned Obi Legislature or divorce him from hts wife. of The entoitet ,E of z rold port sad sliverSpode. eartfett out by the. etfriee,.; for' Liverpool,. on WWll',fib' it $1,244,000. Doilloloothrou Jai. Ilf..Tookor, Os taco Woolliest o( the Mies., :al BA ok of iiatylood, to a defoultor to tbo amount of $150,900. amide*. Thou. Oo wedne/day, a bum 'winked to ■ bagra t via driveit from ibiniabiwg to Lanctiater, a dia. unto of *illy -sore* asitcsiirf ifiro bans and Irt ogautes. • • Musical. Roteonf,.the greaten tenor now 11'1114p twit in Phllideipbta in Fe irentry? The troops will be, Itenegol,Antodie, and Ramos: - • , The Vials, War. It Is eanteeeplated by the War Depainetr4 despatch Lieutenant ()emend Scott to tht► Goan, for : the purpose et orirestains • toms against the' Motintras front that quarter. illiemay Market. Money hi plenty in Mew York bat suet la Lira stagnation of general mu* that *We is hardly any demand Mr it. - "In Philadelphia, Mvidand. paying stocks and dm MOTO reltspb avenrities keep up in pries. - ' The Tie* State Vizier/ Ia Mums. WAstittioyosaanuary 211.—.4. despatch nests e 4 here rune .Aetlog Governor Dearer, stmentooln the eutoOtte memos of the Free Efts% pert, le Kalmar, hp! 'elite - ell - greet' repair% amen go Rept:11)110es sod atilloottapttoeV Deoecertstr. Suporiano Court. On Tbaiillay,aon. William 1. Porter of Phi l adelpbta, took bti itiol one of the Joel* of ths thaPrinto Coort of Pennsylvania. borhog Woo oppoinmai by Our. Packer, in the plans of Jades Knox, who ban been appointed Attorney•Oonaral otjbe Shtte. - • " • Italioso• The fit.:Liiels Democrat has remind the edictal returns of, this eleatious bald in Kansas en the 21st of December and 4th of Janeary;tis published over:the signitnres of flbiercrot Denver and the presiding advert of the Territorial Lesrialeture. 'The rote on the Lacemptoo Canalising.% Qa the 24th of December, stands as follows; With Slavery,- -6143 . • Wi th out Slavery. - - - • - • MIR The edictal Mores of the eleei/en on• the 4th 'thew the success of all the Free State aarididatee • for SfatiVoilloora by an average majority of 415. The Legislature will be mitnpoled as Moos t Senate. Horse. • Ifree State, 13 26 Democrats, - 6 • lit The majority against the Leeompton CA:silta tion st the election held on the 4th. is 10,336. "Fit.tranwricatsm."—An article With this caption, published originally in the Pliiladel plia•lforth American, will be found in sue etheircolumn. It is a powerful review of the important question. At this time when a sectiiin of the country, in "connection wiir those high in authority, connive and wink at piratical expeditions leaving these shores to wage war upon defenceless neighboring no• tions everything calculated togive the peo ple a true appreciation of the fall extent of the Outrage, should be published. In that 80.4 therefore; we auk for "Cecil" an atten tiv,e perusal, and approval , Of hilt sentiments must follow, as surel,k , as night the day. .f Mr Ccase Restoven.--Womenhood every. where Is experiencing the evil effects of the curie indicted on her sex, by' Eve's disobedi ence in the garden of Eden. Ever since our ancient mother's first effort to hide her shame, for violating the expressed will of her Crew= toy'; by sewi ng together and Wearing fig leaves, her daughters have been dbonted to "stitch away their lives," in obedience to the 'sum. bittint • demands of fashion, ,i 6 the modern adOrnmenis of her'sex. The only relief they can ever expect from the drudgery of hand seeing, most be found in the introduction of a Grover 4 Baker Betting Machine ietoevery bonsebold. By its use, every wife and I mo. that will have ample leisure to bestow ellen. tido to the edtication of her children, do,bet ter sewing than by hand, and have better health and rrtot comfort than she can liciesi bly have without a Grover Baker • Machi ne. .A ,GEISAT MEDICINE PON FENIALES.-Hun deeds of stimulants have been invented and purporting to be specific in the various diseases and derangements to which the deli. rate form of woman renderi:ber subject.— The result of all these stimulants his been to impart momentary actirity to thernervons sys tem, and false vigor to the muscles; bat this relief has been succeeded isy a depression and prostration greater than before; sad the repeated attempts of invalids to WM :thaw Selves up by these isles remedies, item flask iy ended in destroying what fittleritad TniihtiOn was left. Bat in using Bastiiave's olland Bitters, you will find no finch disas trous results. It is a:purely vegetable cont. pound, prepared on strictly scientific princi !plest after the manner of the celebrated Rol land Professor, Bcerlutve. Under its Mu. 'ence, every nerve and muscle receives new strength and vigor, appetite and sleep return and finally, perfeethealth. Bee advertisement in another column. TNIER:III72 CONGRESS. • ' Watinnorrox,. • 13. 1833.—Seaava.—On the question of Hannaairs, M e nal ( l. IL) made an able sp!ach s - in the course otishich Mr. IL said, allusion was tn • ' to.tbe remark of Mr. Baiderick that President Bochum and hie Cab inet were to blame fur the excited state of Kansas. He climatal from that opinido. He though; nether the present Executive, nor his predeees. ear, were the men ts 'guide and control public events, but theyworo vanes, set In high places to show the direction of public! seatiment. Mr. Hale read an abstract from one of Mr. Buchan an's former speeches, In which be declared that "all Christendom is leagued against the South on this .question, of domestio slavery." -Of coarse, then remarked Mr. hale, the South can bare no Allies except those who are not id Christendom:— (Laughter.) Set what does Mr: Buchanan any In the next sentence "shey have no othernllies to sustain their constitutional rights, except the De. woerncy of the North I", Tberes a fight for ion! All Christendom on the one side, and Democracy on the other. (Hearty outbursts of laughter.) A bill was passed nuthorizing certain officers and men; who ware engaged in thafAretie Expo- dition in mirth of Sir John Franklin, to receive the gold'medals presented them by the British - Government, Hosea.—The Speakerimneateed the fallowing, special couitittee, appointed to investigate the charges against members or officers of the House growing nut of the expenditures by,the MiddieseX Manufacturing Company, in relation to the tariff of 1837; Messrs. Stanton . (Ohio), lieore (Ma• barna), Kunkel (Penns), Wright lakorgia). and Russet (New York). . Mr. Zullirotter (Tenn.). offered a resolution in. hunting the Committee on the Judiciary to in quire into the expediency etre/porting a bill to regulate or restrain the itomajtratteo or•-insporta lion of foreign paupers and criminals into linii United States. Adopted—Teas 137, nays 33. ... , forrChariss Moron, President of the Erie Rail road, her gone to Europe, fur the purpose of in dosing the King of Prussia, and other foreign holders °retro bonds of the Erie Company, to sob: 'scribe four millions of dollars toward s fend to re lieresbe road (rem its embarrassment. Tba Preach. "regardful of old as:nes," bare lately pieced upon a house la Versailles a tablet with this .o , w:rip:ton : - Here • . • -Jesi de Le Brayer., , friend of be Princes of Conde,. • wrote his to* ilk of " chareclere." We knew not the place of his bletb. but he Heed long • where be pun his thought' to rasa and rendered bit soul to God, Slay 11tb,,1695. _.,...., QN AND AFTER, SUNDAY, JAN- \ luny lith.l33N, Ow Sunday tips of fittaylkill If ley hessearer Train will be diszostamied gatli fon ther wilts. L IL WIILO V, asperintitsdist. Pottrriltc hum, 12. 't a st, • ApJOURNED cour.,.__ AN adjourned Court of CO M MON et PIZAS. In and for the county of bilflllll *Bl old of Pot:WU% co MONDAY. ttaa Int day riCht, nix?. 1168, at 18 o'clock to the &moms. to ecolloor BMyolk. . XATZ, It'a olkee. Pollsailla,l 11W AWN". . ' January Itth..lk3ll. 5 " Sat PUBLIC IE •or Vorattate aa4 var n* * Lg Steak. AT ILL be sold -at Public Sale at the V- Tana of thee sabsetibar seuldbit al Auburn. Schuylkill County. oak' TRVIISSAY, fIDEUAB2 1s lb& your Ilona, two sates, me Soil. six tows, liettere. Calm, Sheep and Wes. Wag**, Cm. roam* Sulte4ll rad Side 11111 Plows, llamas, IS eare's Pabst t train Me Übaldo, blachlseei am el *bleb I. 1tb..1; do, tediret, toptber with a, variety of °lbw rariragi, IlinteUe. Also will be Mel at eases thee .we *AN a" variety ot 11100/1/01Dralar11, t*, esabrachte a seeprelosemboott. • 'Sale b teams** at 10 °blade. A. If., of odd day tomcod beetles *ill 1* sob boom oe day of sale, blr_ •_• AI7CII7IIITS t?CIIrLZL 1,. kebob, Jai. IStb,lB6ll k•st