•,:.•% . ••-• 411iners' jOirrid. POrrsvILLE, -irI7ODAY, JA.3IIIIARY 30, 1058. ~... _----,--..---:---:-% -- -- 1 , -=: . : - . - .7 ---.. ' ---- . -- - = ogrei nof the Mores' Jotatrat. I e equal 'to tat &agre a r l O ui 'alien et any THREE other k.baliab !AV; th ll* to P le ot entl,-4 11 Li It r i g: p t o; TI the ia pu a On, an _ et 4 columns is of course. Tonga. much : 1 0‘ el te t ln :lAe te n t' ea If published In any three other pa per'. In our cities the rates of advertialug are &brags gm ded In price according 011ie circulation of the I•apet• T , .- O Ottft strascarezne. We return our thauks to those of our Selmer!. hers' ishO.have'been prompt . In plying up their kubscriptionsl There is nothing 'that cheers Edi tors on in the bird 'path of duty and Sight in this fallen dud wicked world, tus prompt pay on the pare of subscribers.' They feel that -their services, are appreciated by. their readenf. dad we i will take this occasion to remark to those hi ; arrears, dint we are now ertgagfd in ire Sewing oak -subscription list; forr the dist time!sit ten 1 years. We will send lasso all those,sibit are in arrear l a, in the course of the ensuing' two or three Rorke—and thosa-ho do not respond, to our call; sad pardeularl, t3toso who are in arrears over two years, either by ; sending ue the ; money C a or giving us . souse , good-r ; 'son why .the d emand Is not honored, tey ma t not s complain if we place them on a list, for urther use, 'which w ,, are preparing . These tint e affect the newiPapere, quite as much as other anches of.besiness.— Our Paper hills and labor are all cash--and the amounts due by each bil i ngounfil, and • 'clattered, I Ile our subscribers are, 'lover the eduistiy, it if impossible for: us .to co lent these sumOrithent co expenses, equ I to the value of the bills 7 -and therefore we lie it to depend .in U great measure on th'e honor of those Indebted to us.— There taaY . Tbe 'some instances in which'ittere is inability to pay us. We hope such will Inform as at once, as we do not desire to coerce or ;enforce any who have imenrietortunate, and really have not the moans Gipsy, even so small a sum.. 'OUR ADVERTISING Cousins.--To the new ad vertisements inlto•day's JOGRNAL, we ask atten tion.• We and '►t impossible, in consequence of the crowded condition of our columns - , to notice each in detail, as we desire. , COAL As LiwomoTags.-Reeently l in an editorial, we noticed briefly, an invention of R. A. Wilder f 'Esq., Engineer of the Mine Hill and Schuylkill Haven Railroad, for coal-burn ing locomotives. It is termed "A Raker," and is used for clearing the grate bars . , when the draft becoMes obstructed by the accrimu • lation of ashes, etc: i At the time tie 'penned 'the noticetialluded io,'we.stated that we'would at some future day give the ,Imiirovciment a more extended notice.' The matter has at. tracted much attention abroad r and the "cut" and explanation which we publish ta-day on thekFirst Page of .the- Journal, will 'we feel confident, be read witf interest. 1 - • • IMPORTANT TO POSi•NARTERS.—The Post - Master 'General has decided that when a pa •v per is not taken out of the office for fire weeks in succession, nolesii he shows the cause, and it is not returned to the office of publication, , the Post : Master,becoines liable lip. .the sub ' scription of said Paper. Several instances have occurred recently where our papers have been laying, in Post ,Oflices for six ! months . and even .a yeai after the perion had left, without the Post•Miniter niitifying the publish. ers. In all such cases the Post-Master be. cOinek liable for the subscription to the pub lisher. Of course, When the Posi-Master knows. that: a person is temporarily absent, • and•he has reason to.suppose that he desires the papor on his be would not . ..become liable for the subscription' by not giving• no tice within did' time named. THE BRITISH railway profits. for lastryear were about 413,000,000. COL. FORNEY wit lecture before the mem 'bars of the Legislature on the 9th .proximo THE funded debt of Philadelphia on the Ist of January, 1858, was $20,008,784 being an increase of $537, 7 07, during 1851. UNR,SPPY 3issico is in a state ,of aim. con; 'fusion. States and towns are 'liro'nouncing against C9monfort. 2' To maintain himself will require hpr'culean efforts. THE TAMAQUA GA2ETTE.—We are please to see our cotemporaiy iu a new tireps—loots; s ing quite ‘.sprueeish." r , The .gazette has Oir best wishes for increased prosperity. Tub.% eheine of a southern route . fOr the Pa cifio ailroad has been voted don in the Cominittee of the Senate having thei matter in charg. Senator Douglass in Cotritnittee re corded his vote in opposition. . - • WE'learn from Harrisburg, that a Bill to :establish Free Banking in this §tat4.will soon lie brought before the Legislature hi:a deo• untie medf ni l;er. The bilt will .be similar in. its details to that introd4ed by Mr. Ball last year. SENATOR MASON from the 'corrmittee on Foreign affairs, has made a report that the • seizure of Walker by Com. Paulding, was per. 'feetly justifiable. Among; :,thoughtful ' men there are not two opinions on the' question. They coincide in that view. DEFEAT OF THE Fat; REGIMENT BILL: The Administration project of•raisini ',five additional Regiments to the standing ituy, was defeated in the Senate on WednLsday last by a vote of 8 yew, to 38 •nayif. f.Jetter writers state that this is regarded as s; ;very severe blow to the Administration. - TOE LECOMPTON CONSTITUTION IN PENN' sYLvANta.—Varney's PIVAS says that oi the 38,000 men in Philade Phia. who I voted for , James Buchanan, there lure not one thousand. —no, apt o'ne hundred—who spprovelbe'pol icy of forcing , the LecomptonCinstitution. .',What thinks the President of that? A Qctsriox WELL 'PCT—The , AI. Lc4lis rJ ader (Dem.) in defending the'. anti•Filibns ter policy or the President says; "J'o Senator Davis' we have but one word to :arc one little remark, You propose.to strike .the shackles from Central lAmerida; Garrkdn want s • to do the same for Mississippi. If you can go filibustering to Cuba, why shohilti not•he or Um Seaytirti go to' Iduisiana." C A I.ly RNI A --7 W e are in posktession of, ad vices to the .sth inst., per new steamship. _ Moses Taylor at New York. •She brought 41,500,000 in specie. ' The news IS unimport nnt.. Mining news fAyorable... Business dull. The official vote at•the late electiori in Oregon sbuivs a majority of 5,000 tigaiust slavery . The - greater part of the town of E i townieville. w' Oregon, 'has been destroyed by ;;fire. -Lois $ . 500;000. • I .•1 , ae DIS?L¢TER or 1856.- 2 3'ec:ording to ssrs.Tratt k Co., oPjultimore, , the failuies theßrincipal cities cf the Uuiori during u ye:ir 1z? 5 7 were as follows:. ..Yriiiiet• of ittlavu. doirt Lido' 015 ' 8135,029,000 • 72 • 4,000,000 253'' • .41,000,000 "s•"+' tr 52,054,000 ;f, '6,572,000 . • 3,820,000 '• ;, 6,285,000 5.522,000 4,000,000 3,206,000, err York. City. uffalo, otton, 11 1 2 1tIptia, h ea:ln, Or'tan 4, r, Lorrio. 'roPultnce, Altiulore, Tniflt!onagers of the Philadelphia and reading Railroad, at n meeting teld'on Wed lesdav last, resolved to issue no porn Bonds , ITAer the six million 3 fortgitge f lUtely execu ted, under 75 cents to the dollar, in conse quence of the floating debt of the company been provided for by bonds :already "Hd. This certainly looks well for the I :`"lkets,of the company. A Billet prudence 1an•I toll J et 4 tnangement of the to If of -freight 1 85 R, will place:the Company in. bound Pr.°ll,etrisa. situation.- k'he :Company is ._ t° rttoyer this year, a large pot don of, not all, the Coal, trad e she Jost in 1851. The parati New .Fbr Dry t Gen., Tti one•h Expo to fo uary AnOary 1, $1,930,587- 1P',d;15,488 , 11.904,031 ~.exporta of'eppeie from' this port for the ending this diyiand for the year 1858 were au Tots for the week,. - Yreepusly reported, - old]. men, Coftol Flour, Corn Rana COM:I Bret, Pork,' $4,6 doll Ex• sboni, any edit: whic Eng Gil Mat IE Courier and Eiupiiret thus "hold the 1 r up" to those members of Congress Free States whn are now urged to uteri themselves on the altar of the Lecomp- Swindle ; . . . "'lf the Tinntaint Northern members of the Sen ate,. ho voted for the Kansas• Nebraska bit!, three yea and a half ago, but Fowl n ow hare seats in that &Os. These tour are, Senator Stuart, of laic igen, Senator Jones, of lowa, Senator Doug. Ini, of liiinoiti,'and.Senator Thompson; of New Jer y. • This, only reason why the three first of. the hasetuit lost their cents is simply Vermin thei :terms hive notespired, and there has been no portunity to elect other men. Of th_. FORTY. itro members, of4he. dome from the Northern Stu s who' robed far this bill, but vanes are mem bers o f the present Houle. Those are J. Glancy Jon s and T. D. Florence,. of Pennsylvania, and W. . English, of Indiana. Upon all the other thir .nine, the waters of political oblivion hive clog d forever. Ngw the Lecompton Constitution is y t more obnoxious, to the great body 'of the peo le than was the Kansas-Nebraska bill." L 8 49 *V 0 15 SR.. 101030:12 0010133= N. Y. tribune of Monday gives s corn state merit of the Fiireign brip3rts at • PliC fc.r the 'week•and 4nee . asx - 44 1836. ligie Ills. 8 1 8 03 ; 81 4 1 0 2001 1 50 k 225 Nerd =Wm, 1,41474 1,020 01 -:1111735 1411 le Week, $1,239,666 F 4 66 6 ,441 2 51,34060 ly t *doll,: 10,041,640 7 • 663,3+W 3,746,6116 - Jan nary /f $13.2 64 , 294 01, 106 1 811 .4 5 , 085 , 6 “ :aggregate, it wfil be seen, is leas than If the aggregate of last year. e linez a comparative statement of the s (exclusive of szecie) from New York ign ports and for the week, since Jan• • . , 1850. ~ 11137: , 165E4 • ills via. • 8899,848 $1,145,194 $1,244,472 .iy reportc4 1431,039 1,180,M 649,459 • • $1,244,368 44 • • • 3444,175 15 E=lME=!t= following is a comparative , statement value of certain exports fro m the com• meat of the year to Jan. 21: 11157. 1658. Alm , : Dee. WV.= H-- $224,742 -- 858,445 391011 467054 eel, • 10,318 13.839 53.521 635,091 116,984 ----• • 516.107 1464782 . 67,127 • • --- 79,653 17,748 89,864 41,116 92,493 113,804 21.311 , $2,313,604 $986,943 $66,448 $1,396,10 as continued with /857. - . $1 I orts, ss,oBs,644—Exports of Specie, 1 8,543 almost a dollar in specie for a I's worth of goods imported, while the Iris of Cotton'and American Produce la decline of more than one•balf. 00DRIIFY 131ILLETIN."—This is the title first number of a neat little sheet we ,eeired. • With the motto—:-"indeperi: all things, neutral in none"—the But. r nforms us that itis "printed and pubdish ', ery morning,* while' the boat , is under has pareand parcel of the regular equip ot the St. Louis and New Orleans pieiu3 and United Slates' mail passenger James E. Woodruff?' The Bulletin can claim a larger number of editors than they ,sheet in the coantry. It is by the officers of the boat, the list of is as folloisz—Chas. S: Rogers, Mu ibeo. W. Ford, Clerk; E. Spencer, Clerk; trt Smith, Pilot; Robert H. Smith, Pilot; n Sweeny, Mate John M'Clain, Mate; Fairchild, Engineer; John Hardesty, netr ; Henry Speilmen, Carpenter; John rson, Steward. The yditors in their sal ry, promise to make the Woodruff Bul one.of the institutions of the age. FF t ICIAL ' t QOORTESI",-OUT readers are •of the handsome manner in which . Gov. ack behaved towards the Governor-elect, Packer, on his arrival at Harrisburg, mmediately calling on him accompanied the 'heads of the Departments, and how ially he united in giving efficiency .to inauguration of his successor. In con. t with this the NorristoWn Herald states, at the close , of Bigler's Administration, gentleman saw ft to act .in a very dif nt manner. "The inaugural procession delayed, because the then retiring officer persuaded with the utmost difficulty, by friends, to enter dui carriage and take part he•ceremonies. The Biglers are rather ':mall pota4 o breed, and have not reflect. uch credit on any station they havdheld. ttaßOAsir.n FREEDOL—In referring, the other ,th the new. proceedings avlllobile in the ease Siiiekland, the bookseller, son time since gilled from that city for the crime of having a cepy of Uncle Tum's Cabin, wo felli it a ' title a slight mistake..lt was not Mr.! icitlltial's partner, WOW. Strickland himself! .... latidy visited Mobile for the purpose of set- ! `g. iipl The business of the firm and collecting j debts due to it, and against ywhom a ner den= t j se of.banishment, was promulgated. Bat the !gnaninious and chivalrous citizens of Mobile o nut stopped there. Mr. Strickland, it seems, gain tlyinglor 'his life, left his wife behind him; Strie lank in t ls Mr.q. since the presence of her h d co Td.n t be tolerated, and as probably, no else in.th city:would haye dared to undertake p.ppli,ed hellelf to the collection of her bus d's debts. This has red to a new.publie meet ,in which Mrslotrickland has been ordered to ye the city. Here ie a new lend Femarkable .eituen of slaveholding gallantry and 'courage, shall soon lienr, we suppose, of üblic meet. Tailed all over the South to aplaud the ac• s in this proceeding, and to } , reset them with table . badges' of honor.—.N. 'Y. T bane. . •:.......• - . nn Southern' Senators have Agreed, according our Washington correspondent, to Oppose the ~. firmation of Uov . . Wright, as Minister to Ber T , partly on account of his Temperance princi- I s, and'partly out of spite toward Senator Don . --Exchange. -. . "llum and Slavery," and 'Temperance arid eedop," are selfevident truths, which the nduct .of these Senators only tends to, engthen in their application. ACCTMULATIOt . OF MONEY IN A FEW ANns.--The papers in Our cities are boast !g orthe rapid accuniultitiottof.money in the I nks and in the hands of capitalists. It onl i l Ows the total want of confidence and tit . eat. decline in the bnisiness of ihe'country is is rather a matter to deplore, than to at t of,. according , to our ideas of busiriess. KAN SAS.—The Kansas correspondent of the Louis Democrat says the free State peopl that Territory have decided not to memorl • tize Congress for an enabling act, but to pass 1 e themselves, anek, frame a Constitution', i, ich will be like the Topeka instrument i r bmitting,it for acceptance or rejectlon. Eterrosux.—A politician at Washington as recently wondering how many people oughts would carry , with himin opposition theAdrniniatmtion. "You are all wrong, ," replied Benton in hie emphatic manner, ouglas wilt not carry the- - people—it is th y : .ople sir, who are carrying Douglas." yr:V..ln New 'Laren during 1857, there were anutaetured seven th onsolni 'tro ,hundrrd and phiyfive carriers , valued at $1,613,150, mart Ahem Fold at the'Sonth and West. During the tne period, 906,000 bushels of oysters, valued riy 5724,800, hare beery disposed or by those in th ado in that town.' INES ON THE KANSAS IitIESTIO • 'Shell tron.beeQi oppression pind t - The eon', the body, end the mind; _ Verge chaltie, end fetter* for the freet• Justice, antwers--..1.i0 Eir•ree!," • Shall Free Soli intret the Se hate door, - And plant his foot firm on the floor, The toilet welld, till traitors Seel" ' The people guntrer—u Yes Sirree!" LITTLE ,- NOBODY. • - Whim the tempest files • ' O'er the cloudy skies, :And from crag to crag the frantic iligoders tide; .When the lightning stroke. ; Hes deal/wed the oak, 14 ' 8.4e1y down below the lilt violets hide. In the Art re appal • . When the proud are Illo' Little men can rest, or watch animals:el by; • Blow, ye atoms of Pato, ' On the rkh and greet, I'm but Bute Nobody- 7 -1164mb , am I. • Pebbled on the shore Dread no billows' nom • But the 'nighty sblps, deepladen In the bold, • With a thousand men, Steering botne . • . I Pounder eftentbars.with /al their men and gold, ***there 4U but slowly, And the poor aad lady • • I ran and are naturt-riebile greakam talkie gill Kingsweed , wake tooughman weep. dal ' WbUe noir pl deeps • "'re. , [.. Whivonld bell llowebodyt•-Nobed,tioat 4„°,' • Pficar.—The Richmond Znisireti "Shoal.' Douglas and thinethat/Oink with him desert ns, we may be insured Auit" there is a political - earthquake coming, which in 1660 may leave a fissure of fire as the divid: ing li e between the North and South." „. . biffir tacisurvaz—The proceedings of this biKly so far, are not very interesting— but little business of a public character has • I transacted been, find in fact, perhipsthe less I that is done the bettei for the people. . • I '.Billshave been reported fora change in the place of holding elections in porter and Hegirs townships in this county , Which tkay be of interest to.the citizens in those districts”. We are pleised to see that the Senate has pasia a resolution relative to small note cur , renci, authorizing the Governor to open a tx)rre` l spondence with the Executives of all *ither States of the - Union, with a view of adopting some plan to agree upon some Tsui form law to abolish small notes, etc. There • is ce i rtainly, enough gold in the country, "to' . render the use of small bap bills obsoleted and ore hope that in order States, the! 61118, 1 note law is not bvforce,it Will be.adop4 .A. l ll ted, it orderio push on the work of refor9l4 • number of petitions have also beeri.pre z r • gen to the Legisb liars:for s t! change in the. pieaent license system , with h.view of ieinov-i ing the only feature diet is considered effeci rive', so far as selling* conceined,) , nd that ii the imprisonment clause' for. itzt,_ - violationi t ,We hope this clause will not be repealed uni leas something more effective is substituted is its stead. 'A piopositcon has peised the Senate( ou . firs. reading, by a large vote, for creating a l 1 nei lot of (Armenia the counties, to be called Liquor Inspectors. The bill provides for pay;; inf i their salaries out of the License fees.- W have not seen the bill, but it strikes us that such a law would be pernicious in . its' character—and would only increase the evil; And besides , the In s pector would only become 1 a rum-sucker him - self t if von could get a sobpi i • person for such a business. If it is •poisoO 7 oup and pernicious in its character,-why not prehibit its sale as a beverage, the . same as other 'poisons are prohibited for such a use . 7 ' Why tamper with these marderer3 of the h i. 1 - man nice, and respect their vile trash? WIO I not send the manufacturers of it to the Peni,"- I tentiary, or hang them, the same as yo 9 would any other poisoner of the human race! Those members who ism not "Rum Caskj! • themselves, ought to seethe folly 'of such lei. islation in connection with the Livor.Triffif r 'ln connection with this subject, the edits t of 'the Honesdale Democrat says: • ‘Letter writers from Harrisburg State that the Dlemocratio members of the Legislature, a large number of whom belong to the Liquor League,ln* tend to repeal the present Liquor Law; and sub stitute one which will give a freer Bow to the "ar dent," and also intend to repeal the Sunday Li quer Law. They hope by this means to add 40 their party strength. .In this we think they-are niistaken. A free flow of "strychnine whisky" would cause them to die off like sheep with the rot. They are bent on destruction, howertr, and alay,as well be allowed to have their own othing else can use them up faster." .1 KANSAS AFFAIRS—As They Nov Stand.; • Gov. Denver and the Presiding Officers of the Territoriid council and House, have is:' a ed an official Poclatnation of the result Of I ' . t e recent elections in that Territory, as fol lima : . , • ::ii -"Result of the Kansas election held °Mho 4th inst. to pass upon the Lecomptun Constitutibe:;- the vote is given by Counties and officiagy shunned up es follows : •IL: For the Lecompton Oonstitntlon'with Shapry, ..168 For the Lecomptou Constitution without Elflavery,, •'24 gains( the Lccotopton, lfi*.ti Majority agairist the Constitution, • 10.*: At the Election held'under Burder•Euffian 'it,. apices on the 21st ult., (when rio vote against ihe Constitution was allowed,) the result Was official ly declared by Calhoun as follow t s : -,ii yor the Lecnmpton Constitution with Slavery, . 043 Par the Lecompton Constitution without Slavery, ')1.09 Total vote, r MO Of this vote, no less th ra n 3,012 were thrown,!at Kickapoo, Shawnee and Oxford, on the Missonri border, where- it is 'morally certain that not Inqe than 6ra hundred votes in all can have been sdn bsti polled. T;4 l- At the election, held also en Cho 4th Inst., , lit• under the Lec4.3ropton ConstitutiOn, to chase Sta.° otlicere, Members or Congress and it Legislaraile the veturos were made to Regent Calhoun, boa; invited the presiding officers of the Territnryal Legislature ltd meet with him and officially *- vase iho voteX. This they did on the 13th. bpd 14th inst., and though the regular orkanizatiok s of the Free State party refused to recognize or vo te 'at this .electiim, it appears that the Free We bolters who did vote at it have succeeded. The presiding alters (Calhoun not concurring) report .the result of that election as lollows: Free Mate. Democratic, Gor.--Geo. W. Smith, 6,876 Frank. J. Maralmll,o4s - William J.Mathiat.o.446 Sec. Si . Qochuyler.6,B67 W. T. Spicely, 6.566 Tye:lL—Andre* 31ead.6.335 1'..1.11. Cramer, 0,014 ,fiu(ifor—Joel K.000d1n,6,313 Disko 009 Nem. ons.—M. J. Parrott.7.26o J. B. Carr, , 6474 Free-State *Majaritiri—Smltti. .3241 ; Roberti, 011; Schuyler, 301; Mead, 371; Goodin, 304; Parrott, 514; They also announce the result of the Legis s la. tire election as follows: • .ante—Free...State, 13 Pm-Slayery, ti house—Free•Stato, 29 Prot.:Lavery, This result is secured by what we may e9n... sides Kansas practice. The result hinged ois Lei vgnworth county ( which chooses three Scri;terti and eight Representatives.) . The Pro-SinViiry . party supposed they had cheated enough at Klika poo to carry it, but they learned some time after the polls closed, that they were short. Accord ingly an emissary was dispatched to a little Demo- . cratio nest, known as Delaware Crossing, to:get up a bogus return, from thaj hole, which he did, swelling the actual vote of SO to h bogus vote; of 500. This would have carried the eounty,etected all the Pro:Slavery State ticket but liathinSand Carr, and give a Democratic majority of kw in the Rouse and ode in jointlallot,'secniing the D. S. Seintors. But on his waj back ficm Delaware Crossing, the bogus emissary waslar rested under the new law against Election franiids, and taken to Lawn:Mee, where there was evidence prepared.to convict him, and ropes ready-to king him if that had been deemed necessary. ;Bat Mr. Jack Henderson—tor it was no other than that distinguished individual—concluded not to? preacot his bogus .re us ; BO the' result bitthe face of the returns is is above stated, thoggh nobody aiipposee that anything like half the Rro- Slaiery foie was cast by legal rotors.. •; What XI. John Calhoun will do in,the promi see remain, to be seen. It may helot some!eon ? sequene4 at Washington, but very little in Waal. Sileech of General Lane., 1,.; • v - The correspondent of The Boston Journal eldis4 his report of the meeting at Lawrence on the 14th Inallint, with the following amount of Gen. Lane and his rti4ch: Several stirring speeches were made. Gen.Laneiwu so ehararterlidle—so Lane4sh;—that I am tempt 4 to send you a few of its leading points. Leine le one of the most effective stump orators I ever heard, bait be can't be reported. To realise the effect of his spel4es, you must see his little eyes gash and gleam—wlizess the gesticulation which throws his long, wiry forMilnto all aorta of contortions—and hear the deepontiftve gutturals (you' can hear them if you ire within lilt a mile of him), in which be hurls denunciations deep peals to the &Hags of his hearers. And. last, b 0 not least, you hunt see the irresistibly comic manOir fn which he tells a story, or "iota out" a 'pique eipr4lon. But here is a rough sketch of his remarks on this or ession : •- • • Ladies eta Gentlemen :—I recollect well the find'Party I went to when I was a boy. I felt awkward a n d. emr barreved. I didn't know what to do with my hand. I thought threugh the whole evening, that everybody was looking at them. (Laughter.) how that - le:pre elsely the position of the Free-State partj at present.— After being long depriied or our political rights, 'rears suddenly and unexpectedly clothed with power. It is ,thrust upon us. Ile are unused to It; we aro at 'Ai loss to know what to do witb it; we feel awkward 'and em barrassed. First we have the Topeka Government. It Is a Government legitimate lu its birth, symmetric In its form, and stern in its manhood. LApplause.l.% It is in the bands ot,the Free State men. Then we bite a second Goveranient—the Lecompton Government: Its origin is illegitimate—it was conceived in hand and brought forth In villainy. [Applause.). But it also, is • in the bands of the Pres State party. A Voics—Uow do you know? LANS—That's& categorical question. We know( tbat we have honestly carried the eleetion,emd I bus My statement on the knowledge that an Indignant and out. .raged people intend to execute ca It ishment upon any infernal scoundrels who a &icier@ otherivlse. [Lund applause.] I say fart and I say lt with': that characteristic modest w h I hope Always to maintain (laughter) that r tea are given to out enemies ellt that Laglslat re,Mad they attempt to exercise btdelet 'functions, mum cies sti/l immediacy occur. if eriihay.4 lone Free State an 14 - the Gauss and one in tbe Senate, those' two men II Constitute a—working mojortiy.— . What care we for Calhoun? Wo knew our-map are elected, and with God ror our leader;we will hAve every branch of that Government. • „..Voicts—Ayer the tin:oiler action has come. , .; Lase --C ertainly it has.' Why, the Teo . ehildien In the greets declare that the time Is here when tyranny and usurpation In Kansas must (*see. I/Ipplameki met a friend to-day and asked him, 'What Legislature are you a member of:” Well, he began to count them. over, and be hadn't got through when I elms arerty.. Ile said, "I beloncto the-Topeka State Legislature!, and the Territorial Ilitleinte, and the Lecompton State tegialature, and— ' there I left him. [Laughter.] There are many of our friends who belong to all. *bre* of these bodies. But now we hue theme goderntitents, what shall we do with them? That Is the question. I. ore, heard a man remark to-dap-acid I think if he bad. • said it to me I should have spitin his faett—with all due. respect to him should If the Lecompton Con stitution ahould pas* Congrots.didn't know • but we ought to take that government and .lite undbr It until we couldchange it. 0 rest Gods That a Free State mut should say this, In the fitee of the retolations of the See. and of Dectimber - IvresoinUous panted by stern and on. Oeldlng men—the dasaandauts of stern and tanyiekt• bag aneestoral We then entered into a solemn, league and covenant. pliAglng belie God, our Urei, our property, end our honor, that we • would mow permit tbstsovuument to go Into gibes nn Kinn soli. (lad again's.] But to aury.satt the emintion I bane just alluded to, ere mist break that brshtt our banor,• and VW& Plighted • With stith* movement I bout no sympatisy.- - tapplaintj Why re it !bat Kansan laulghl Wait tuemid'all over iwith slaves. Thins. biro la or bogus cab, reeognisod both by Ilthi ind the lainAdinhdatestlos s mikii birdie 'had neralati dare property hem 'Why ase Set tbdr -provhiptsi opxdad matt Simply bonnie oar lyinda *tee Wee veto no lairs; and rltia ive* bo nalbrooll• la Sanwa Eat Ibrdtdo.ourSaittorywooldillaresoareamb :with abrtia; .Itheenalent to linefer homed lanky tin lareeepton Ilhestitatioo,nly Wave that Kansas Is tad to freedom. 'We*y ha tronght Into the ihkice tiger Pastel bin (gates up to ditandia the .north); but tf ye ranalva It, the Fran and Shona Stow an equelhed es the &mot the -Vatted Rata. Senata, arid no Tree State will OW again be 14014 to the Union-unlaaa, It la hand and hand with a Slave Stataia Whet•exeuse le there Mortar backing down from oar position of the Sd of December? .11 we had taken a differenterot of swears! it. the reserorold beehanged. 'We'sticAt have pledged our liras. our triunes and, our honor, In a solemn oath before God, theism would net. : *spree& the infamous gavernment. Vigo Inteyetfeet— =lam we should elect all the officers a ader It? "[Laugh ter e' Butnow we bacre , ,tust as much exemie—ond no nne--az our fathers of the Resolution would l id tar backing down. I think I *a "Old Par favoring tneh.a policy! Well, hereto the Topeka Orinstitation and Government. It was born in great tribulation. but • „born legitimately; it la the child of the people of Lan . eat. They cherished its childhood; they love and es : ;meet It hits manhood. [Applause.] It has keg been our cloud by day and our pillar of fire by night ;now It seems likely to be the Irk of oar political Safety. "But Lino" saysollille '-why, you don't propose to meth into rebellion, do you!" Rebellion! Why. I melt.= Wal• • ker to-day. and he geld, "I've got a writ of heiress toe pus from tYto, for John B. itendersair Sale - didn't And Henderson, though . , and I suppose that , was rebel,. , lion; but feel my heart beet any quicker on ree count of it! Whet do we CVO far rebellion i ' What do we care for writs front Cato or Perkins? However, tore. Bess our sensitive friends, I will say that 'we don't de sign to go into rebellion—just yet. But we do proper to get the old ship ready—to frame a °code of laws by ' ' the Topeka Government—to organize townships and ' counties under it—to have everything ready' for start ing at a moment's notice: And then, if the Lerompton 1 Constitution shall pier Congress, we expect GanCharies . Robinson to lure his proclamation as Chief 'Executive of the State of Kansas—we expert to unmoor the old ' - sid p, and Ad her pa. ['tremendous applause.) 1 - don't is rebellion in that, but I do see consistency and mar:- 1100 d. If it is rerbeUlom for us to hoist on one right to Jive under our own. ment—e treverommet born of the popular will, In, the blood of nth' martyrs t iff and indorsed by the Weenies. then Ite ' are ready *it. [ Applause . ]. u I differ from gentlemen who ' cell this rebellion. It wastot rebellion when 'dome by odr brethren In Michigan and Callfrerols. oh, no; then .it lip the people exercising , the rightret mitlialreclumat. as won by our fathers. Sat ere Weals° the Territorhl Government; whet shall vs . & with filar S It was tbe• distinct underdanding. at the Conventions in Topeka and Gramitiopper Fails ' where we resolved to go Into tbe Territorial election of October last, that we, did so to pave the way teethe People's Constitution and Grown meat:, "But," Aye one, "there ire some Free Statesmen opposed to the Topeka Constitution." I deny it. When we shall peas it, through another ConstitatlonalOonven rentlon,'as tbi Territorial legWature wiji provide tbi, ..not a Free State man In Kansas will oppose'!. That Convention needs to sit but a few day'. It may dooth. log, perhaps, but adopt a resolution like this:: r - . "Resolved. That the Topeka Coosittution is,:med bee been, from t the day of its era subudeskro to pen*, the Constitution of the State of Kibille Our old settlers—ourpioneens—need no suc h ration; best by this rneaseuvall our new waters will bs estistied, and Congress Will be either satisSed or stultified. Then I venoms every Miter under the Topeka Constitution will . have the magnanimity to 'reign, and leave the fled opentibr all Flle Statement , It isagoodCotirtitutlon," says one; "but It owes .hundred thousand dollars."— This is a-mistake. The whole debt of the ,Topeka Gov ernment is less than $9,000. Well, that's an enormous sum! 'And if there is any trouble about that - 1 Par some the "old line" of the party Ire ready to assume it. , Alnt if this plan is carried out, why should the Topeka Legildsture now pass a code of laws?" Simply that it the last emergency does come, we may be reedy, at $ moment's warning to redeem our pledge and put ttia - Government In motion! it isof the utmost Importance , that both Legislatirres should act together=should act harmoniously—that we may present nn unbroken Ifrant to the enemy. The simple bet that in the Territorial' , Legislature half the counties of the Territory are dis franchised, is sufficient reason that It should do noth log but repeal the bogus code. or else should legislate In concert with the Topeka Legislature, which represents I fairly every locality. Let us be re .dy. then, to put the People's Government in motion; tat us preperethe ves sel. trim the se/ls, and soon Kenna will be safely and triumphantly moaredin the harbor of Freedom! [Ap plause.] . . Since 1 the above was in type it is stated that conspirator Calhoin has rejected the return sent to Governor Denver, and also counted the /mudding returns, which gives the Pro-Slavery party the - Territorial Officers and also both branches of the Legislature. If this is truerand it seems to be confirmed by later intelfigence, Calhoun ought to hang as high as Altman, and be will if he is caught in Kansas. A - gentleman from Washington, writes to the Philadelphia Bulletin, under date Of Janu. ary 26thi as follows: • "I have had an interview with Acting Governor Stanton, of Kaunas. He is of opinion that the people of that Territory will settle, peacefully, their owe affairs, If the President and Congress will let them alone, and not insist upon keeping them in an eternal broil. lie says they will do it in three months. lie thinks they have taken the proper measures .to do so, by the passage, in the 'Territorial Legislature, of an enabling Act. lie expresses the opinion that -Calhoun will withhold all certificates from the persons elected as State officers' and members of the Legislature, which bare been • carried by the Free State party, until after Congress passes the Lecompton.Constitutjon. In connection with this statement I learn from another and valuable eource, that this is the pro gramme of Mr. Buchanan, and did not originate in the brain of Calhoun. Indeed, it is the settled .opinion here that the whole conduct of Calhoun in Kansas has been the result of dictation from the White House." . . Another letter from Washington, under date'of Jantiary 27th, says: "The President insist' upon forcing the Lecomp ton Constitution through, and snubs every body Who ventures to, urge him to abandois such a do. termination!! . . PoOr "ten cent Jimmy," hal become one of the most abject Sievee of the South: THE COAL TRAIiE. Pottsville; January 30 ; 1858. The quantity sent by Railrod this week is 11,- 903 02 tons, being 1,074 tons more than was sent last week._ The train remains as dull as hereto. fore, and the continued mild weather affords no hope of its improving much. Some of the Factories.are Starting again while others are curtailing, ust as orders come in and are filled. The business of all the transporting companies, has greatly diminished, and the mild weather-"has not subjected'them to the usual ex tra emits:uses of winter transportation, and the receipts compare favorably with the business. A meeting of the representatives of the differ ent Coal Transporting Companies *as convened In Philadelphia on Tuesday last, at the instance of F. Palley, Esq., President of the Schuylkill Navigation Company. The object of this meet ing was to increase the rates of transportation, in order to increase the revenue of the different 'Companies. We doubt the propriety of inertias ing the rates beyond last year. If any 'change takes place they ought to be diminished, in the ' same ratio with the prices of merchandise, pro-, duce, As:, which, of course, decreases the working expenses of thillTransporting Companies. It . is .notorious that the different Coal Regions can.produce more Coal than the markets will re quire this year, particularly if the prices are in-' creased, instead of being diminished. If the con.; somption is thus diminished, a fierce competition, 'must spring up among the producers and sellers ef"Cpal, and the competition will, ruin the re-, Mainder of 'the producers in the older regions; and th k fis impoverish and diminish the trade of • these regions . T hese Companies that mine and yell tb4ir din Coal, of course, can arrange and control their business as they please, bet the car. tying companies In the Schuylkill and Lehigh Regions, must consult the interests of the produ cers also in arranging their rates—and we hope _they will take the necessary stepv to be represent ed at the next meeting of the representatives of the Transporting Companies, which is to takd place the last of February. St..ays - Pluxisu Series.—We learn that Messrs. Frick k Esterly are manufacturing Screens on Si new plan, which answers for Screening the Coal anglaise separating ibe Slate and fiat pieces of Coal. The plan is to make the meshes of Abe Screen -long and narrow, which answers all the purposes of a separate Slate Picker, and prepares the Coal equally as well: Several persons who bars them in use are muckpleased with these Screens, acd the manufacturers already have orders fora num ber from our Coil Operators. . • ,\4e ha v e yclo change to note in prices of Coal at Philadelphia, New York Or Boston. '4lha , trade is dull, and prices are barely tnaintained.by the cargo. . • -4 - BY . TELEGRAPH. SIIIDAT, 6 O'CLOCK, P .11. Freights: frost Riau owns-- Washington, l 35 I N e w Y or k, • Boats Sod Tassels, about um* u last week, Coal Trade' by Railroad for 1937.88. ,Sent by RaUr4l'for ths'srseh ending on Thursday mains last: . .rte. • 3,366 10 • 891 14 , 4,812 14 • • 038 00 •`2;14101 • - • 11,903 02 - • 402,993 07 Total, • - - 174,890 ,00 To same time last year, - ..1= • `116,6(..16 01 Decrease, so • • 40,708 0;1 Rates or Tpoill !aid Teilaspqrtation on Port Carbon, • • Pottorrille • • Schuylkill Ilayrf,. • Auburn, • • Port Cliutori, .' • Total frir wooti, - Previously thin year,- . .. I - 1LU.. ,. L lOU FOR rer timutrr. . • ,' - /front . Pro" • Fro Prone A_ fit _fit Jli.darbox,ol. Haws. Pt.Clinton..Ainburn. Tiimond, 1 $1 75 l To I.llllad'a i s l'Bo 1-70 ;1 1 6655 g 1 80 GO Spring Mills, 1,66.1 60 . 135 1' 140 Reading. 410 106 .106 , IOS Sokuylkill County •liallroads ISS 6 a The following Is the quantity of Coda tranfported over the different IladWads In Schuylkill County, for week endlngou Thursday evedlaqg last: •tku,. TOTAL klinallillanda Salon a:A.; /,40:09' mass zdt.carbou, _CB 14 • 1,145,14 &bnylkinTallef • 1,1011 17 631 Ilt.ilarboa4PL CIAO' 4,459t13 ,11,51211 Itlll Orwk. 3.670 15 ' _12,1111 16 1,302 Ol .16 0 111 06 • 1,404 salt Tinatapartattlest , el Itsa Pawl tatalsaus sat" - so rrnstoni L•- • • • 2 00 - ' alliaabstamort,a at 2 22. 4o North Cain! Had PldlllpsbwgOil I . ,•- 1.18211119 Valiey R. B.' • .• - • Irakesilcisdial 011 Salardaylasis , iL1it..6116446' (Avi s . 11119.404..) - 1,194'19 - 81,06 11 7 a A. emper Loof,(Paelaw* Co.) .- MI 1* 4.246 It .N.ltork & Lebl (Twat & Seim) AA ON Vira CA !. Coandlßldps, L. & ON) 414 16 VMS 14 GIMIUM NNIAII4 ___. 1A 00 C41.411.11:,(1402 ,112 0hn0th) 1 tr2B 02 10,14/ 01 114218686. t yk. hooks & 04-) 1,361 V 10,49413 N. 9p. Vt. 1 :S. life:nun 1.1304 , 31: I[7 . Ott 13 'B. 89,14 Dolbliii Album) , . -' • 1,089 14 Mount Pteniant, - , &m it Lehlsb, 0 • ' ,rl5 27 II L - • ykes** Vslley t Coal Trails Ow less. I . ?MAL Lykens Who , Cad Co, . .104 10 • 394 04 Short Mountain GoalSo; 05 ail at Total, ,I • • • 276 12 712 07 liceight, and Pl lllllengen to illeltiasete, $2 10 • " - oegrove 2 10 it ears are detstued 24 hoer* after the rata are 12 seats additional to the atom. Scranton Coal Trade for 1838. For reek en4lng on antlarday last , IllappeiNedb, • 1,113811 ealpreSenta, 6,2cala BtOcJ AND OTHER SCHUYLKILL CO. STOCKS ,~.• - • • Mdfrilaaa- : Phlladabhla: Raiding 41[Ille - Mae UUI and Schuylkill Raven - - Mount Carbon = . • . . Ilannt,Carbon andPott Carbon . Mill Creek - - - - Schuylkill Valley - t-• Lorberry Creek ...... Swalara- • Canals 'SchuylkillNavigation preferred - Union Canal • - . . . . . . . a preferred - • Dbl.& liud'n Coal lrraimportat`nCa' Railroad& Coal Cseaspaiiieisi LittlaSennyl. Nay. R. R. t Coal Co. Leblab Coin k Navigation - - Hazleton Coal CO.- • - ,AL -•- • Duet Mountain Coal Co. - = . . Pennzylvania Coal t R. DaupbirrCoal kR. It. Co. , • ,- Lykens Valley Coal Co. - BOWS(' Meadows Coal ft B. R.Co.- Likens Valley Railroad & Coal 00..- Coal Composites s Forest Improvement s o - • - North American Co., preferred - • 44 , " 44 common Delaware Coal Co. - . - Cumberland Coal Co. New Creek Coal Co.- - • • , Dilsoellansioass Miners' Bink•. •' . ... Farmers' Bank . . Pottolllegas Co.. - • • - Pottoille Water Co. - - der She gloat of all Coal Companies the above llzt when farnidied by, those publication. 10%1%0 sRikii nig; DidWWI t I r4l>ta b It e ad..aded Needles. JOHN EN ISH St . CO.'S Patent p P Helix Drilled Ey Needles, decidedly the beat in the market. of difficreot see; from No. bto 12. always to be had wholeeple sad 11. at D. DANNAN 8. Pottsville, January 30,'88 - 8. . VALENTINES! VALENTINES!! ' I.OW READY-1 large•and elegant assortment of Villenthies from the Carious mann setoiiee. i Also,. Motto Cards, lime Paper, Envelopes, Ee. Storekeepers and others supplied wholreale, at manufac turers' prices, by - BENJ. BANNAN, Centre street. BENTONtra the Deed dean Case.. . HISTORICAL and LOGICAL Ex amination of the Decision of the Suporoi Court of the totted States, In the' Dred Scott Care—by Hon. Thos. 11. Benton. This is deCidedly one of the most pow erful and convincing reviews ever written. For sale at • B. BAS. AN'S Hook and Stationery Store. COAL LAND! FOR SALE. HE subscriber offers for sale 230 scree of Coat Land, situate near the CWT.: It Pitts. Ras road, Bonneville, on which there is a mine opened and in tirst-rate working order. All the improvements and fixtures are of the mot 'approved construction.— The land is underlaid with 3 reins of Bituminous Coal of superior qualify. The mine open comprises the cele brated Strip Vein, which la capable of producing, at pre. sent, 60 tons per day. 100 lons could be mined daily with a little additional outlay. The subscriber. will sell all or the part on which Ho mine is opened. Yor fur ther particulars address JOHN THOMPSON, Salineville, Col. county, Ohlo. , January 30, 'Hi frame - .LEBANON MALLEY RAILROAD. MAIMEM I NBARINI -NVAS OPENED FOR PUBLIC TRAVEL between Ending and IlArrisburg, on MONDAY, January 18th, Passenger Trains leave Reading daily, (except Sun days.) at 10.10 A. M., connecting with up Anddowti Morn ing Trains on the Reading Railroad, and" arriving at Harrisburg by 12.60 noon, in time to connect with Trahni for Pittsburg, Lancaster, Chambersbnrg, Trevinton and Met:rove. , RETURNING, leave Ilarriitting at 2.45 P. M., (after ar. rival of Trains from places above named and from Rain. more.).and reach Reading at 5.30 P. 31., connecting with the Pottsville and Philadelidda Trains panning Reading the same evening. Fire.. ! • 'Between Beading and llerrisburg, $1.60 and $1.30 Lebanon, 85 " 70 " Lebanon and liarrisbug, 75 "' 60 passengers VII procure their tickets before the I Trains start. • G. A. NICOLLS. Gen. Sept. Jan. 30 '5B Nov. 28,'57r 48.1 THE DIVEAP AND LONDON PIRE AND • • WE IN CB COICPAIAT. A.irruoinmem CArrrAr,-22,000.000, oe $10.00,000. BatdsrpCapttaB,sterstbas, and Itsservcci Pinder, • • 54,000,000.: • Nearly $600,000 Invested in this country. Liability of the shareholders unlimited. , The income of this Company in New York, for 1857, was upwards of $600,000. The onderslgned having been appointed agents of the above Company, are prepared to receive applications for Insurance against Fire, on every description' of build' Ings and ' property , including coal breakers and the arm . tures connected with collieries. All those parties re quiring Insurance are respectfully invited to call at the office where particulars will bi given, together with the Company's circular, and detailed 'statement of the con dition of this well known and thoroughly reliable come ! ration. In case the amount of Insurance desired same& the mks of the Liverpool and London. the undersigned are antbirized to obtain it In other reliable compenlei. Reference is permitted to be made , to the, following gentlemen: John Tucker, Erq., - John Sbippen, EM. James Dundee, Esq., Mee W. Snyder, Esq., John It. White, Esq., James. Campbell. HORACE P. SMITILAnd II NRY W. POOLE. At Office Of 11. W. Poole, Engineer, Centre et.; Pottsville. . ,Jatt. aO. • P hoto UTERARY BUREAU. A N EXPERIENCED EDITOR, a successful Author and a thoroughly Educated' Lit. entry man, weary with twenty-live years of the drudgery of Daily Journalism, has determined to hire out or sell his brain at retail, to those who marrequire their sersi. eec in any honorable way. Dlerchants, Business men; 'lnventors, and Dealers of I every kind; will be supplied, off-hand, with advertise. silents, (poetical or otherwise,) notices, cards, circulars, or any species of article desired. 4 Politicians will be supplied withspeeehes, reports. res olutions. letters; toasts, pamphlets, 'editorial articles, cominunkationi, and every sort of brain-work, which they may find it Inconvenient or troublesome to do for themselves. Ladles and Gentlemen of every rank in wieldy or oct. cupation to life, can have letters written on any subject, Whether bual nese or sentimental. The advertiser will also.conduct or translate coma . pondence of every kind. either English, Trench,Spanish, German or Italian. Poetry, Acrostics for Ladies' Albums, Notes, Billet. dons, Monodies, and Oornpceitions of the *east delicate and confidenattaicharacter, incident to every possible elf. climatal:roe or event in life, will be furnished in Melo*. tile confidence, b writing to the unisendglimi, and ex plaining their w ishes. • Orders by mall, accompanied witk rash, will be stdetly and promptly attended to. J. THOMPSON, Literary Bureau. Box 22d5, Philadelphia P. 0., Pa. I 6.6 m Jan. 30, II LIST OF LETTERS REMAINING in the POTTSVILLE' POST OFFICE, January 30,1858. ' A Evans Jas Moos Thou 2 Aswan Saml , Earns tWm Montgomery Th os Armstrong Mary F Mardi Tuner --- Allen Mfs Morrellilaicher John Marlin Wm alb Atkinson Jos shlpirluny John . McClure Wm Anthony P Fiturendd PatrlekMerear Band • Anderson Alai: Freeman Sarah' McDonald a Albert Anthems "Der Wm Dem Albert D Oellesteellrm Brotberlek Mrs Aoeorte War Dreams Mies Anna tenor Winfield Beecher Anjaline Othee!a Mewls 801 l Graeae Jon - Bailey Eder Grace John ship Biddle Folkado Greiner Joe Brown BUs Chanter John Bradley Edw .dlbbaDrJ .W Bickel Franklin i.recn John .61ar1 Haw/ Weary Elhabeth Rau'Wirs lksicOarmtt BitIOUD Buckley Ju BoothJu Baratta Jai - Rommel &Mine R Beide Jas ship Helebner Sarah 'Rodney Japob Bennett Joe.. Malay Ban& Itlnebard Joeeph • Blesaine M 4 • Harty R M Refine NkhoLta , Berner M Hadesty Thoell Reed Semi • Beinieler ttlehaal Ettoward John Ittly Irm Bloom Mary J• Healey John . g • Boil Idiehael • Hejsen Isaac Snider Beni Ban Mary " • Hamel Jer • lilmpoinv Kate Berry Bw Attu Hayman Jonas; Belleau Catharine Bart Mk hsel Hedge Fanny Sindiebinder Em Baumgarten Petarnodg Elisabeth Etarllag Elizabeth Bottembel.,m Ileith R R Sterner E R Bendy fm Heebner Abm Sehnert' lb- Dames W T t , Haupt A 0 &harts, Geo Britton Wm ßroca Jac Brecker Wm Iriin Bat &turd J c • .1 !tinder J P Carrot: Strands Woken Cbsa &holly Joe Clymer 114 w Jones D It 2 &Pinner J C k.. Coony Mee Men Jenkins Enos sh Seller Y Mrs Crosby E II ' Jameclohn ' 4 Sanders L Mrs Cannon Bernard Jennings Pat . Smith Lissie lOW Camber( Bridget Johns Theo P Beide 31 Mrs Conner B ship Jenkins P P A Co Mier 11 Mrs Ctroetbam A ' Seder Mary sin. - Collins Jao " Knot toss . Stine ilmillfflod Chides J Alder E Sharp lildlael Geh l Jos Kandy JIB Setaolll Mltiboll ,Cooper. Juo Killer John , Sterns IT Mrs Calughran Mr Manistee Mrs Si Sterner Nolan -Carroll Mrs 2 Kirk illieh or JaoSterner Maria r Ctim Mary ' Keen Miss Mary Smith Peter Convey Mary King Maurfae Skeen Samuel Cassidy Michael KeatimPat • Sehrhdeler Wm ;., - Comber P ship • Milan Robt Steel Martha ' Carnahan P. • L. Cornell A. M DLen David rn Tuey Mary Miss Ools,lileharil Long J . Tolley 'Lawrence Cummings Rees shLewis Josephine Thema Jamb • Corry Susan Lekely Maria ship Thomas Elisabeth Corby Moe ' Lodestone Mr Thomas Ben( - ' mark Thomas Lem Mrs- - w Cleaner Thee Langhlinlntria Cummings Thee Laird W 2 Weds Wm s. Codling was It - Wirdsek Wm , . Cason Wm Mats It letare Williams Thou Cirter Win ship Kroger Annetta Walker Thos Mersa A Wilicloson It Mrs . Drum Elko - ship Moser Chas Welsh R W Mentor George Mesa Chas . Williams Thos 'ols Jos T Marts Dal Welsh Patk - Goo Jao T ship ibrdietal E Wholiman John Dark John:,Meilden 'Wen Sit Weil% loofah k Co., Masao Jos .31Lompe&V Mints= *NM ISt kiektiaorer fin! Minh) itAyinidir paid . :w4Jairs. Metals Pent* Myers Jeerer ,1 1 11liimsBeei • Soketool _ " 'Wismar Jas rrarilitry : Morgue Jam Wilitakseam !Mum. Wm it ;' Ilermm Mos Wili2 Wary 2 - *sir Meier .I(Uterllli ts uecTerejt plligneek W ' ' ' r aireineas iikvitithit kW al" Mors Usk WI sevenfold. One mak klekkerd 'lnt ys • • JO= CLAlTQl42%iseib: • - pornivaxt POST °MOE.' '..'. Arrlvsl itsd D•paii , Storo otillI•llo: , a nd Iladolokto. Itoodlor. - 1118005 . ns: AT. .Yaalt and Zutais sad South*** iosA ttai, Cake daily.— Claw at 7 A.ll. aad 3% P. 1111.1 An 16010 4 334 sad Of i Ntoy ma - egormin , main. s isa PhisokipW' an:. Goma at 63f A. IL; Airdrie at P. P. IL Wattles, WUksidorro. Davao, 'Moor and imp, daly. goaa at 0% A. 114 lamina at el P.Y. . - Port Cotbon.Toseadota, and Magus, dui 7,, Maw at 6% A. a:lves-A 43; F. 11., trot poet widalt Oloporto mid Mini Well 4111 . Clam at= 11= Anion at If A. Xi all IL 11. - ll* Truant aad Dealidaaa.dapy. CIOOSOM um A. jf.: arrive's/ 11 A. X., l :34.lllaatsvilrbieli 361161t 1 tabs 4111 7. time at 11 A. nand Ti T. X. sad inioos 3 Mimi daily, at 7 IA. IL;and P. IL loontata Ettiu,..6.3hataattni Sunbury ant Sorghum turtandolaSti, vtuno at 1134 ,li. K.: veins at W I P.N. . Cantinas :UM dole Olivia and 19111 atirominmatb. Enrosoon math ekoo on Tolosay and Friday air oub teat. - Mee oven Prom 7 A. 1106 9i.. lif. EmndaytromlSX. to IP. IL " . ~I%;' . Ram MATSON, P.M. Port Oenon n Pottompo./lazrith um , I nouns) 11,? , 114 00 MASS 111 MISCELLANEOUS. sow. . cab 04 "3,540 is 11 4 / B " tt e At i gN4# E tt i Sijk, - besiditsll7 tthisittididamd duty ' Ft I MASONIC CILIRT.I3 .. • , rAor kb at Rieniaars 11 !4 3141 7 Sifilkr• N,191. 02 'Lamas , WORKOARREIR, OR ' • BEAUTIFUL Patterna--- , ,Liglit and Durable. Also.thigaullort Flowei Daskets. just received sad lbr sale by 1 . 11111NNAN. BYTHE bIi TRIBUNE Aj e llllAtlAlD. ...I. o race , i a ree nd 0 . ; k r t r y ice 112 B l N C N ents. Also a fresh supply of Poehat Diaries. sill sorta kinds sad shah for 1536. [Jaa-16,- , 35 3. ) 50 60 b 5 100 , - • ta PE/R..IIMM. 1 P PA ATENT MACKIN E-MADE Paper Baits, to hold from 1 to *I po Ands. fdrothweto.Drog g and others, for Bala by : IL GamaGur.s. i Cottro street, PottsvOle. I 464 f Novirathier B, '56 • _RAND iIIAW R : D'"'FONS, Cresson 8, Spear Jackson's Hand, Panel and Rip , Sawa; the best assortment In town. Yor sale at low priers at the Hard• ware and Iron Depot. •lIRANIC POl7. . Anon I,'V/ • • al "OLD DOMINION COFFEE POT." A GOOD CUP OF COFFEE is a •LA:desirabte beiretage—tbts can sbira3ri be bad tl acing thci.Old Dominion Pot," tbr Ws at the Itardoranc and hen Depot. E IittANIE POTT. Pottrritle, January ;, '6B 1- 1 . 50 60 25 18 be .4 QAPIA oh N AND API' . NDAY, JAN UARY lith.lB3B, Nisi Sunday Tripi of Panylkill IT by Passenger Train wilt to dbmatbasbd until An ther notice. ' E. IL 3311ZELElt, Oriperintendent. . Pottsville. January 12.'58 .. : 3 et ANOUR two couln. A- N ajourned , Uourt of IUUMMON puraukutana for the county di Schuylkill will eld at Pottesiffe, ou MONDAY, the Met day; of ffeb num, MS, at 10 Mock IO the forenoon. to continue orie week. • - i-. U. !SATS, Sherif. Sheriff 's calm Pottssillit Jeuristy.l6th, 186)3. f 1 ' 341 f Me / %VW D:F i b''' . S on othr Quaker $ O Lo 41' John A ward Corderoy A C 0.,., London, and on the, Belfast Banking Co. of he. always for sale. in soma from Al vs pto IWO, bY the subscriber. at his Bookstore, Pennine. These firms hare nothing to do wltirtips INIPSOCItIff 1 Lines. and they are considered the safeetikitniset in this country and in Europe. . .1 . • BESJ.BANNAN. PACING : MACHIN . . a HE subscriber Chas adde d Paging Vachine to bloc Bluing and fa nom prepared to page Books, and number Tickets, de,in large or small quantities. All kinds of Blank Bo oks printeCruled, paged and bound to octierg-and all kinds of Binding ers-, treated at abort notice. Particular attention paid to oiling Banshees, Pampkiets, te. J B. BAN NAN. "June 6,'67 1161 Bid and Book:Mir RELIEF: FOR-MECHANICS. TUST issued anikreceived by the Beb escribers A Pate* Gunge • Atte obaneint liandnas i w, for entOws anything.. nanny • rennin depth is required. Among the many purposes to which this tool van be applied profitably, the most prominent are Tenoning, IllbouOldeeisigo Dovetailing, Cog - entail; all itindS of pattern matting and cur ving Call and sea it at STICHTER A THOMPSON'S, 0ct.17,'57 42- Oirner °mire and Markel streets. PUBLIC BALE, • Of FurlsMiura and Viirnalug Mtook. WILL be sold Public Sale at the Farm of the subscriber residing at Auburn, Schuylkill County. on THURSDAY ; FETAL:ART 4th, 1858, Four Home, two Mares, ?one Feel, six Cows; Helfer& Collies, Sheep and Epp, ITagons, Cart, common Subsoil and Side Hill Plows, illwrows, Moore's Patent Grain Drill. two Thrashing Machines, one of which is Wheel. er's. Patent, together with a variety of other Farming Utensils. Alm) will be said at the same time andplace, a variety of HOUSEHOLD and KITCHEN FURNITUttE, embracing a:gene:al asaajtment. . . Sale to commenee at 10 o'clock, A. M., of said day.— Terms and condition will be made known on day of sale, bAuburn,AUGUSTUS SCHULZE. Jan. 161 h, 1848 34t 13 Y ORDER or THE COURT • Of COMMON PLEAS (011 SCHUYLKILL CO. .• ' unty of Philadelphia, ea. ~...., ?he CommonWeslth of Peurriylvania AO the 1 8cal f Sheriff of filhoyikill Counts, OreetitiV— Wucaus, THOMAS AIM:BONE, late of your Count abeeonded from the plate of his usual abode In mid county, being justly. Inilebted to the President, tors-and Dira c of the Beek of Pennsylvania; with design to defraud his creditors, as it la sold. ' Therefore, we command you, as belbrs we did, that you attach all and singobir the geadiegand chattels, lands and—tone, moth., of the gild Thomas Aillbone, within your balli-' wick, in whore hands Oripossesslou soarer' the same may - be, for the benefit of the' President, Directara and-Com pany of the Bank of Pennsylvania, who sue this writ, and of the other creditors of the mid Thomas Allibons. We further commandydn, that. you muse the goods and chattels attached by virtue of this writ, thrthwith to be secured and appraised, ind an 'inventory thereof to he made. and how you have executed this writ, make know to our judges at Philadelphia, at oar Court of Common Pleas for the County of Philadelphia, there to be held on e the first MONDAY of March . next, antarave you then', there this writ, together' with the said Inventory-sad sp pralsement; and 'we further command you, as betel we did, that you summon the person or persons to whores hands or possession metier the goods and chattehylinds and tenements of the said Thomas Ailibone you shall have so attached; that be. she or they. be and appear before our Judges at our Court of Common Pleas, there to be held the said first MONDAY .of March next; to ' Abide the order of the said Courtin the morn mew, Witness, the nameable OSWALD THOM PEON, Presi dent of our said 'Court at Philadelphia, this 12th idly of December, in the year of our Lord, one thounand eight hundred and fifty-wren. For 'THOMAS Pr 0. WEBB, othonota The above is a true and attested copy of a writ. t ry. o me directed, for execution, and which I have caused to be published in pursuance of the directions of the Act of Assembly Id such cass made and provided, and of an or der of the Court of Common Pleas of Schuylkill Co. Wit. MATZ. Sheriff. Sheriff's Office, Pottsville, Jan.% 'SS • [4.73t DO °Y,OU wish to find, gdod employ- mint, andomake money with little or no !Omit meat, and withoot interfering with your regular nett if you'd°, read this advertisement. C. E. Toon 0...0f Zll2 BiTome street, NOW York, ara manufacturing and selling massive: Gold Pencils for $5 &Seth (which are cheap at that prick) and they throw in a gift or prim with each Pencil, Worth"trom $2 op !c, $lO, $l5, $7/3.525. $3O, $5O, $7O. $lOO, $2O O, and 000.— Don't cry out, "Humbug I Lottery I i ivs no such thing. The Pencils are sold at their cash value, and the pro. fits over the first cost are thrown Into the plat, which actually cost the purchaser nothing. 'The prises are distributed on a simple plan of drawlnt. which Would fate too vouch room to explain, but which has never failed to give complete satisfaction. -We have drawn *advent topurchaserslB3EkddVl4llol°7 various prker: 74 panes of Gold Dollars. 238 Lockets, 850 Gold Chains, and a torrespondloit ber of other wises t within two months. =BRE ARE SO FLANKS. Rut every purchaser dukes a pelt. worth 112 certain, and it stand" thousand. °taxers" to Lea higher emus. We want a good agent in story neighborhood through out the country, to solicit Miramar& and any agent, to be succeeded, must haws poen end prim to exhibit. We pay agent, $1 cute for each piunbaser he obtains, and the dret person in any neighborhood who annul !be she ncil sad gilt, will receive the agency for that 10 eality. Should an spat obtain a valuable prize to ex hibit with his 'Pencil, he would have little difficulty obtaining scores of purchasers, and making It a peyieg businem., • A-NEW- IDEA, IMAM! REAM . - We ask nobody to send their money Uhl they know what prise they draw. Any poison wishing to try their luck, an tint rend as their wane land address: and we will leaks their desiring and inrrees them by return mall what prise they drew, when ibey Oin woad no and take the Pencil and prixe,or not. whichever they choose. We give this privilege only once tri a pu rchaser. After the fret drawing, every purchaser will ge required to send in advance, through the antbosised agent. We will send with each dniwingthe nimbi" taken out, with fulldescription of the plan of omb St drilitql. Address . E. nom CO.. VI Wreet, New York. Jamiary 9, ' i • 2.2 m MeComsat 1114 MeMurry Mrs - McGovern Jobu 'McDonald Danl McCullen Mary A McCord B B Nock Wm N Nicholas K Nob= Edw Nolan Matthew ah Nielson Robt E. CIAERICUEB, P. tsvme. Pa n s AGENT for the elle ol Ir EVANr a WATSON'S Phitaddpkia Jitalurfadired SALAMANDER SAFES, N 0.26 South Forn . 4 Btreir,tade/pkier. 4YDonalll4triek O'Donell John _OltMonitor =n9M==M . • Report of the tteninetes- appointitl' fe 'etietend the ktraing tit _the Den a tit • mbenary 2701, 01.57. RIWOIRO,Narch, 41A.. • - 'lThe' undersigned!, members of the - - - Soiumittes, do - nmpectfitilly. report, `out we ;WOG two Rada orialeally —; wt upon by finale it Herring ; -cos k atom, pieced side by ' : furcate, vial The safe in Ale by the Paytnastei of the Plata• delph ta k Reactluit 'Ea II road Company; in bloodies at Reading, manufactured by garrets& der ring, and the safe in use by U. A; Lents, In hie store. manufixtueed.hy Evans I Wataon, a cid put In badman& papers predoely alike. • The WAS started at o'clock, A.31.,a ad kept up until four eonliof green hickory, Iwo cords dry oak and half chemist top .wood. were entirely 'consumed. the whole under the sunetintandenee et the anbeeribess, members of the committee.: The safes were then cooled di with water, after which they wen ned. an d the books and pepceitlitiPM out by the committee ani mot tO 11. A. Lantz', stfte tbe public examinntion, atter they were first examined and marked by the eonuult tse. The books sotkpapeis taken from then% maoutactured by .Evatni & were but slightly *fleeted by the in' tense heat.mbliethaes taken from the safe rasa ofartured 'by Parish& ihrefont were, in our judgment, damstrt d fully fifteen per cent, more than those taken from Relic watand's cats. We believe the above to hate been a tpir and impartial trial of theiespettive qualitiosOf both safes. ;JACO!' DYEIIIER. • . • DANIEL O.7 . N I ZERv eo. Having been absent durlug the burning. the Welds with theabove statement of the condition papers and books taken out of the rano:dye air". - 0. A. NICOLL& MIMILDNDERO. . 7AX1123 KILf3OLLAND. . . rcalollog named itiettioThst - treestdie ts at Reeding and I 4 tic-101M wbo saw the abet, tW,luteparchaeed 211 safes trots Inas £ Watson , sines the bomb* op to Mrtti l o 3 7: ► 'colts; it tepid u l=aseßuth. 1; Kirk alletster, W.H.Mada heel. Ana" W. Ilindwr, 711, DT.Was. Moor* It Soloittaa I; Lod L. We, IA& A cm*. i; widiaffek.ll ipluttsits tam. iseisn Own* .1: Naomi; J.lL'a G. W. Hasnlnelt, I; ligns 1101•41; Jima Jambi:o,l; J. E. & A. Warner, I; Jacob flehtanclier, 1 ; Wm. T. S. tlrlwtlenbe r~sr 1; 41. R. Company, 1; H. A. Lints. 2; W. Ct: * P. P. ftwastarat. l ; 11111unier, Palmer a CO; Halton. I; J. P. BeldeilthlS 1. - I 14011! WAteON - • Atitew as110314,0•000..or ei the gots ip arich aqt Pietas en Saltation' nay Ohs egattekiiTt t* Mad pica. wo7 • • AGENTS. ATTENTION! MEDICINAL BOERHAVE'S HOLLAND BITTERS TEE CI:LIMB:Mtn HOLLAND ' . III:Atr.DT 701 i : STSPEPsra, .. . , DISEASE OF THE KIDNEYS. ' LIVER . COMPLAINT, , WEA_LNESS * OF . ANY RINI). .• . FEVER AND ACUF.. - cg • VERY FARMER AND EVERY I "Wan' has its pecullirßitters,lAnpouoded m eg to some favorite recipe, handed dome from dither to ton. perhaps. The principle that a Ennio stimulant is coat =I; Ve r tilral il i dro l flon tid oo ' n y ttra be Zients =it I neompatilde and Inconsistent--sornetiroso Positirie. ty hurtfUl. We here oder to the public. in a highly COD. evntruted term what will snakily supply this want, Pr,. pared utkoe scientific principles, compounded aiding's. acting Id harmony, yet each MUM; Its own remedial . Mica To Ina Pgratcua I. bees *med.% • convenient gem, yet perfectly safe, au Incieutt which, acting upon the circulation. imbue the Wind Of the system to the stand ard of health. mpecially after any debilitating attack of disease, after depression from heat, or any local or acci dental mufti 476 A Nti.dparatedie, Which. with a general stimulant nower.acts with a peculiar influence upon the nervous trystent. calming nervous Irritation, *ben taken _properly, without the least tendency to the train, and without that distressing reaction which le the bane of most tonics--often catnap; mominjurythati %heartiest disease. , , As • Tome. moderately and permanently malting the mas h i e an parrs of the flume, pemluelng weresserity a healthy increase of the action of the various Organs, chemically changing the acidity of the stomach, and act ing ticrinally Iva the liver in regulating permanently the billiary seetetlous.: , 1 " -11017CIL—Wboeve eitcts toned Miss beveram wlii 'be dipippointed; but to t itch. weak and low4pfstted. It wilt prove a grateful aromatic eordial, pmesseed 'if singular remedial' . 0 antlidsoarbe=yalafity et tbls delightful Aroma has induced many imitations, which the pallid should guard againstag. Be Damp tosied to • buy any thing else unti l given ROgLitsf al UM. Lawn sirens a fair trial. One bottle will convince you •how Into itely superior it is to all these imitations. ' WS OI4 at $ 1 Per 'Mtge, dr da bottles for $5, by the. • - SOLE rzoinxicEons,' BENJAMIN PACE . , JR.* CO. x♦aa►ACTU*lNa '‘ • • Apt_ itita - ,llhannateuttsts .110.1gril $ PA' . . . • ' . For Sala to Phltatielpblaiby thirageste—aoffmaa Morrig.offie• of the Desseiret; John Johns, 222 flare . street; Dymt A Sons, 133 NOrth illeothad street. £lllO. in Reading, by Ritter t Co.; Lancaster,. by John F. Long A Co.: Pottsville, John O. Drown, J. C. C. Hoghes and C. W. Epilog: . Tamaqua, by LI. Fry.; alinermrille: J. K, Batas, sod in • Sehuylklll Haven, by Dr. B. CIO. ebsiguif. qiovitatber 14,14 Ale. • . . i A CARD' TO THE LADIES! DR. DIIPONCO'S FNMA:LS GOLDS STILLS ItE INFALLIBLE:. in remoting 'stoppages or irregalairitles of the measles: these t A.,,,,,,, nothing new, but ',been used'by the'Doctor for many years, both in If nee and Amides with un paralleled success in every . and he is urged by many thousand tulles who have them. tO"make the Pills public. inittilealleviation or those suffering from any is 111 regularitkw.wh aa ,as Its • preventive to . those ladles wimps health will n patOlit an Increase of Ilimi ty. Pregnant females,or age supposing themselves so. are cautionedngainst u lag them -.Pills, as the Pro p'rietor assumes no respons bility after this above admo• ninon. although their mi lt ess would Prevent anfinju ry to health; otherwise, these Pills sire recommended.— Directions accowiroriv eachtioa: Price. P. -ffold whole 'sale and retell by C. tt.EPTIND, corner Norwegian and Centre streets, Pottsville. Pa. : ' - • All orders must be addressed to the above'Oeneral Agent, who Will supply the - trade at Proprietor's prices, and send the-Pills confidentially to ladles by mall. by their enclosing $1 to CMS.. W. FPTINO, at Pottsville, Schuylkill county, renna.l • . - Sirledisiguaturio,..l DirroNoor on NO' boa—nose othersgenaine. ,- , i - Pottsivillei Jane 6.'67 1 [ll] immmiwommisamewssiesms REAL ES'aTE SALES ASHLAND•FAR • C HIS valuable aria, iituate in Mita helm township, Schuylkill 'manly, adjoining the borough of Orwigsburg. la bfeted al private sale. .pXehe - farm _contain 5L244 acres of land— ahout 73 of whieh ye thrifty young tin. • r. prinelpally eh out—the balance is chiefly valley land, divid into convenient •flelds, and In L 13101.1400 of cultivation. The improvements con sist of a large Itrirk Dwell ng house, barn and' the naiad outbuildings. The Can rp Turnpike pawns through this property. Persons d strong of purchasing Would do well to call and see this perty. as it, is seldoill - that such a desirable farm Is ered for sale. for further in• formation apply to the su titer, residing thereon. Jan. 23, '6ll 4-40 • W. C. IRWIN. • DAIRY & TRIM FARM Peg SALE, A FARM OFT f' It. SIR ACRES, divided into seven Ids of jive acres each: front. g the rued from Pettey, to Ilinerivitte, and bounded o,p by the Mine 11111 Rail R d, ten and a half miles from Pottsville, and one milefrom Minersvllle; thirty acres being clewed, and' the lanee in young and thrifty timber, and all under post and rail fence. - This farm has been u a dairy and truck farm for the last fl ee years, and i In a, high state of cultivation, with large double Mouse Barn and Shed* and garden I enclosed with pale fa and full of various kinds of choice fruit: trees, gra , de.; leveret neverd'ailleg 'storing' of water. and w li of the best. of water at Abe Rouse This farm will sold on reasonable tirms, and possession given immedtely by applying to .1 ' • .M. W ETIIRRILkor-,, if i TRW. R. DANNAN. ~- Sept.l9,ll' 384fi • ihrtsvilk. . ' O,RPHANS COURT SALE. 13IIRSUANT- to an order' of the -Or.' 1 phans' Court of the Comity of Schuylkill. the sub scriber, Adminlierator of the estate of Frederick spoor • man, late of the borougti of Plnegnive.leithe eounty„of Schuylkill. demised, will expose to seleThy public Tem.! dae on Saturday, the 130 day of February next, at one , o'clock In the afternton,lit the public house of Kennedy, Robinson. In the borough of Pinegrove, is the county of Schuylkill atbmald.—All that certain one story frame dwelling beam, lot bard and tract of land situate in the township of Pinegrove. In the Schuylkill*, to, witr—Bounded by lands of late Frederick Rudy, de s creased, church land, land late John Stolid** Co.. lands; now or late of Jacob Minnie, containing seven aereaand eighty-seven perches Illlfl allowance. ' - • - Also, Al) that certain pact. or piece of/and situated In the borough of Musgrove aforesaid, bounded on the ;1 north by lot No. 12. on the met by lit No. 21r, on the South by other land of Frederick' 8 u, and on the West by lot No. 23,, being lot with , the number 24, and eonteiuing throe germ and twelve perches, with ' the appurtenances; late the estate of mild riscened..-4 Terms and condition* made known at the time and place agile by. CHARLIES SPORMAN, Adminletrator: r By order of the Orphans' Court, • JACO! Ilan. Clerk; - Pottsville, January 15,117 , . --: 441 t -- ' • ORPHANS' COURT SALE. URSUANT, to an order of the Or; L plums' Court of the county of Schuylkill, to the monwealth of Pettniyhmtde. the euhviribrini admfn istratdre of the estele of Mob Faust late of the town ship of Wayne, td - thel county of Schuylkill. dammed. will educes to gaiety public vendueon Monday, the 15 tb day of Sebinary next, at o'clock la the afternoon, at the public• house of Jolt. M. Peter, la the Borough of rottawille, in the county of Schuylkill aforesaid,—AU that certain Truct Of toil And situate In the township of litaneh,in the culinty,offichnyUilll end Staked' Penn• sj tennis. to wit: • ; Bounded by landanf tVlUiam Parks*, Martin Weaver, Philip Clowww, John Clouser, anima A Co., and land; of Jowl) P. Sand, containing two hundred and MAI ty-fouracres and *lateen paash neat measareand narked No. noel* the Ipgaisltion returned by th sheriff, and Bled In the Orphans' Court of Schuylkill minty, with the Improvement; consisting ot• one he bonne, one and one ball story high bank barn, two Or' •shards, sprint house, ;and admit 'one hundred acres thereof tieing cleared And, together with the right to use a saw mill on the adjoining tract in common with J.y.•Fausti lite the estate of said deemed. Teresa and • conditions outdo known at the time and place of sale by JACOB P. FAUST'is DANIEL PACIST. Administrators. . Blonder of the Orphans' Court, Juni Folga, Oak. Pottsville, Dec.l9,'s7 i 634 t _ .._ j). RITHAILIir. COURT SALE. • , U S A Tto an order, of the Or-. .. nbans' Court of the County or Schuylkill, in tba comonwealth of. Pennsylranis, the satmeribms. Ad. mini4rators of the estate of :Jacob Faust, tate of the towneNp of Wayne, in! the County of Itebnylklii, Me. realod, will atomic. We byuublie 'endue out Bator. day the sixth day of February next, at one o'elock in the afternoon. at the pibllc house of Cheeks 1111MMOli in the town of Trkdeniburg. Warne township. in the County of Schuylkill afore/1410,- 111 that certain tract of tie., of land situate to the township of 'Wayne in the County of Schuylkill Slid State of Pennsylvania, to wits Bounded by landslip( Michael /tits 'and other*. contain ing one hundred akd 4hlrty4ls Acres and twenty-two • perches, strict toessbre;l ipp wrolit. banks.igk urtsnauce consisting of a two story lot!. the g house,. sn barn and orbard, and marked fn the Inquisition pawn, No. 1. A.. i / 1 G 1 Also, all that cote tract or piece of land. Musts in the township of Wain° aforesaid. bounded by land of Hoary Stein, 1. S. Sterrr, and otbers,containingeightY7 tr tar res and seem you° perehes, strict Iner.fi t are. and marked [nth ;Inquisition purport ,No. 3, Q. with the aypurtertiooes cod improvements consisting-eons two story tog house, ktable and orchard,. ,Also. all that eertalk[ lot or piece of groukd. tit wail le the town or Tchlookkora. in the County sod Stale RN...mid, and market!: the gecoltral Ulan of said town; with the number n. unded by Busb alley Ceti feet, by jot pia. 36 163 feet. by th 'tree . etc fret. by liiekory Street 165 feet, containing . 40 prom perches; late' On estate of raid - deceasedl Term. and conditions Made lumen et the time and lelsee Opals by • i '.14000 V. FAO? A. DirftiEL SUE:di .. .Administrators. • By order, of the Of . bane Witt, JACO) /Din, Clerk. yousville, Dee. 19,'S I . , 56 at • -, oßptos : ' COURTRAI. , . rußsu AP I to an Order Of .. he Or phent* Condo! t • e county of Schriylkil • the sub: ber. Admi niot rotor ef the cetera of 31ICLIA -. 81:71114 PER, late of Wayne Winship. deceased. will t •.. to sale try jublir *endue. tat SA tUItDAT. the 20th day of eenreary nest, at la