i~a~, :,1 • 114n21=01.4111D1113111muume cifsem In: vari ous mediae, of the country, fattorien again resu ming are work; but they cninr,tfee operations again 'tinder an entirely new "Bye tem. 'The times which ere yetpinthicelisid, compel the manufacturer to commencli:ciu tiously, or be will sialtagain in .& brief riod, rsed as he did but a lawmen** einacket,t, by, ill-advieed if not corrupt legislation. 1 1 . w ma terial li falling in'prici,!and the works periencee a reduction of 20 per cent.l el Wages he received a twelvemonth autcc i oven at this reduction there are 0160, 'workmen who seek in Irak for ernplil There is something radically wrougini condition of things., , Still capital will . 1 . until avenues of rename:adv. inve s tin! opened to its and the pica of labor i m until business is in , thit healthy /hitt the workman can di ehe i e to his emo ratan at which he will furnish his ~ , , ! 1 indestry. ,At present capital has lel Pletely at its mercy; and labor twilit it until times grow b,righter,, .• I,H This is unfortunate for both. Ce ; til and labor are not, at last should not be,' niritical in interest. The 14144 state of ,p' , •Perity and civilization is nutting, when ~' , move harmoniously.. This fact we think, will not be denied by the niost, ultra defend • 'of, the rights' of workrnet not by the care •t. ,The present 'stagnation .is not th • remit of a struggle between, capital and . la, , ,r. It is owing to.* vicioua tirstem •of pert legisla tion, and Pr esidential administred , ti,- which having in view i but self-aggrandi , eat and the spoils of office, citing aside the interests of the workmep who ereated the Po, erwhich is turned against theta. Mien , mefully they were deceived wk. Pennsyi nm rang with the cry, "Polk, Ilasiind the Tariff of '42," our workmen !now keenly eel. Yet that was butnne of many tricks erebythe dominant power attained its endii. l , Sipce the repeal of the - Tariff of 1842, thial „,. , entry has beentributary to' Eniope fOr ~ of manu factured goods, the Iraw li materiel for which was , exported to England. A? •ug com menhir, upon the i ntter folly ' i f legislation accorded workingmen•by the men they elect, ie the fact that, ii ton of goods can • , • brought from Europe to New York, en; 14 sold cheaper (it is-true tbatthere is li i t + sionof high tolhi, r on the route,) t ' similar charact er' can- be mane • Pottsville and sold iti that city._ li stance the goods l arn transported! O . ' thousand miles. In the other I' l hundred. We have not only , - 1, r - enmers of foreign felines, mannli l ~ cheap labor of Europe'; but tit system our worlcmn have ben; support, bas made us-debtors .• the • enoromons amount of three lion of dollars, andlat last reused • realise the tbecri of Jimes D . ,. Cents a day,wasen for die itnert man. ' •Ij Notwithstanding our.work ~ ing, they have in their poeseeiti -of correcting the evil. Distri render them apathetic. ~With•t; power of nsseiubling .in mass ~ - preparing petitions to Congre attention of the tiovernment to of affording protection to Ain factures. =Already have the . Philadelphia • .taken the initiati, • met of thii character. And for a regular organization foe ration, they called upon Dr. the Most talented writers andl political econemY it} this Conti them, which lie di& on Thera This. is a movementmovement in . the l and - vie hope the workmee , , . country will.join their Pb ren, in posting'themselves a ..1 • of Protection, and then ant! 1 reform lists wilt them.; -if ill ' . 4I i ' ert it with nitinimity and , can meet crOwn their. effo • Another task which the Wo theinselies, and discharge fii` is to throw overboard the p(4: , whO bang uponthe skirts of begging their s pport while l ' much they love the "deer peo down. They Ire, paraaittirt growth and , vigor of-the n/ ever humble aud setimirtglYl when in they i miiireP"ent, este and legislat e for self i ' I are morally an i , ntellectuill c sent the Intern.a of the weir ,la village cOun it chamber,- to dignity then placing th tions in lookin down frcint i . , pear small to t1; 8 7, and men. 'This e of poll i • ground in' various poitio , ,1 but nor halls of legislation' I I hy too many oh them. S ingmen to lop them off, root, Failing to do W 'Which they, I • 1 the hands of 1), liticiana wh , f folly to dupperi a man'ii :1 . 1 when his part is in pow opposed to protecting di, workingmen.l Let the 1 . men wash th , ir hands el craft of pot-house • politiei I begin- to ice day bre,' -nought. but darkness ,- il l Pensioner 1 BIICHL • having a atanding arm; it appearkprehable thr The armi l bili which become a Jaw, girea regiments; or seven the cokintry need i ihe incr try is. at peace, and . - . wrong is to be curie. thousand bayonets are one grew object is tt bloaked patrobage of t istration. 1 Inllndia act ing'a cake which the cat out rovinC r p e to the scie military leaders, and et this cake , is field boutir soever the cluef of Oast The eidatini+ationneefh ' l to enforce the, Lecompt Wires some more tools l e distribute" , the-tcheygdfer take care,4t. it places* hands, of f s in!in willit.T . stands aim the recordq ry pror - I 114 basil wbicl . COI AMC/ Beef were ,dolls NW pier l i no the ix II ..........-....--,-----:-----• irea Ow Phamliphisleivn Ma'am abewiug • the dist ...4 Rom probe to lib IRON PRODUCT= POI m R MT= 11. O. . branch of Industry,road alio the mutat it on the . ,In following out the inte - the produe- .•- p ar t oath- 3 tt eeneuient. - 2' -.; ~ . tioo and milnufactstre of tree Inquir l 7nderut for this . • 0242 , 12 4 10 . ct. Irwin berellen. Ae.Zsg Mee rain*. , IV city and its Vicinity, we have been fed with " • X. T.Miniai. the materiel for the following extudad,statement .• ekwhole '' ,-- YlWilliont Prdootlia. • '• :. of the entire production of iron for --e , _ . _ _„,...,,,,. - . 2 021 1 1 eetuuy, which wilt be found die, _ enwat _tho_ s ron_gb . 1474. •-. wupww.. , witicirattetisz ~ iv and reltabla aver sive° to 'the peldee, _ .34 I Moor ni , .14,100;10 . WWI , g . we are able to say. moch':".l6 o74 f oomost°l de UM. 8,221.004 '' - WOOL 84 2 T up then the British statements sometimes given isse, „ 10470444 12.261434 . nu A i to their trade circulars. For the purpose of this 1637. ' 11,666,156 114707 7 . statement we may distinguish three principal de- gadnethra of 30 sa t */ pr e pt .. a m m r ri be pertinent* of the iron production,' the Brat repur • - the Mitt nay 10. seated by the blast gamma; using either antbra- M 136, 10,041,650 ' '` 11 )= 1". 85 all cite, charcoal, raw or coked bit u minous coal; the 1 law• 1047 0 344 ' 12,061.508 23 83 11141, 10,073,700 . - 41,760.199 ; 4/ Se " second by the bloomeritts or mountain forg% . , • Dut i e s w aw a di e ux athe i m u which turnout or east iron into blooms or mane 1544 8034,940 ' 8914;424 •so 2: able iron ; and the third by the rolling mills Which I , 1642, , G a m = 4:08.966 .27 23 convert these into bar, rod. sheet , end nail Tilde . Tara' of 1642 took offstit is 1114 S. iron. Beyond OAS point the panufacture ramp' utft, 8481,,463 1.902;868 24 07 a flecipto an intnqe number of branches among all I • 1844, , 1r.12,10 0,,315 101 ; 42 62 V M 422;464 •2666 , the mechenio arts. • • PM. - 2 0JM 1 8044,8 ".. Bile, . 23271000. 7,635,632 80 42 Of these dui* kinds there ere about 1100 iron i via, ~ 23,56000 , . 8,11'452 7946 works in the United State,, via:-121 anthracite , mg, = wow • 12,52054 29 81. furnaces, and 500 charcoal ' and coke, 300' forges bet of 1848 took effect la 11148. and 210/rolling mills. • 1849, 18,133,10 12,834823 The fontanel produced in 1856 shoat 787,958 4 1 6 0 ,- - 12,66,923 14338,144 . - .. i. 11A1 11 124,038 tons of pig metal, from the various ores. to gaga.. i .,...' ~',,,L „,, 17,306,700. must be added 6500 tons , produced from the 'cm !. - —"" nst""•""'' • 18 4 147 5. 1 by the bloomery forges. The entire produetloa of'l V' We invite particular • eitesiion.- to the above iron in 1856 was nearly 800,000 sew. - t figures. The tint Protective 1 Tariff was passed The annual change inthe amount or Iron pro.. ! duced is-not io great, on the whole, as was once May 22, 1824,vskieb put a &Bid $lO 00 per ton thought, or as is the case at thepreseet chief eau-' on Pig Metal—on Bar Iron $3O 00—anio n other tree of production . There, were produced kinds $lB 00 a ton. Under the oper . ation or. ' f this in 1844, - 'v l ' '''''' 713 ' 366 tons, ; Bill (which was increased in isg.a shadebigher, in 1/155, - : • - . - .706,745 , . id 185% . „ :. 1, 782,3534,0„. tow, and lowered again in 1832 toe rates of 1824,) Yet the local fluetelatiots are very great. The the product of Iron in this country annually in anthracite production during the three years raP• * creased from the value of $2,984 ) 250.t0 $ 11,663,. idly, increased , by' the enlargement and .Lotter the die handling of ofd furnaces and the erection of Dew 156 in' 183rwheo t, was $ 9 22 on Pig, $26 . v . . on Bar, and $l6 64 tut other kinds. After 1838, the OWN. In 1849 it was only - - 107,256 - tons. duties began to decline rapidly under the opera. I n 28541 it was . .. - ' 307,610 Woo- Non of the COMpromise Bill, until they finally • - ' - tD ex. n the And ads of 3rment. each a idle nt are tat fall • when yer the ill and r com• ecumb, In 1855 it wail - . • .343,105 tons. In 1858 it wag . - 393,509 tons. There was, 44 course, a proportionate decrease of the manufacture of charcoal iron. Where thli has taken place will appear by the following able , • Anthracite Furnaces. • • 1854. 1855. 1856. TO Pennsylvania; 208,703 855,326 306,968 Out of Pennsylvania, 99,007 87,779 86,543 Charcoal an 4 Coke Furnaces. Hist Pennsylvania, • 62,724 60,596 5 1 ,77 5 N, W. Pennsylvania, 78,927 59,388 59,587 LW. Pennsylvania,, 11,052 18,217 29,400 • Charcoal Furnaces. Rut of the Hudson, 30,420 30,926 27,837 North'n A Wesen Iv. Y0rk,19,197 19,736 18,847 Bout h'D N.Y. 4 Jersey, 13,435 7,901 6,683 Maryland, 35,658 36,309 30,998 N. Western Virginia, 1,930 2,312 1,467 Bast'n Mid.Virginik, • 5,880 6,926 5,73 d North and S. Carolina, 1,820 1,830 ,956 Georgia and Alabama, 3,604 . 3,682 4,302 Tennessee, • 38,596 30,000 80,000 Missouri, . 5,213 6,000 13,201 West Ken tuckj, 5,000 5,000 5,000 East Kentucky, . 22,830 15,580') 21,160 S. Ohio, (chat. A coke) 58,081 47,182 59,505 N. Ohio, " " ) 8,289 6,025 7,901 Millais, Ind., Mich., Wa- I conies Minnesota, .Total tons, . There are ten,prineipal centres of the iron man. 'future in the United States; J. Northern New York, once including Ver mont, and using the fine primitive ores of the Ad. irondae mountains. Hero arc forty bloomeries rind three anthraeite fornseee. • 2. The Highlands, a narrow belt extending through Berkshire, Massachusetts, into southern 'Vermont, and through northern New Jersey into Penns, finis, containing forty-four charcoal and twenty-two anthracite furnaces and sixty forges, Using hematite and magnetic ores. . 3. Eastern Penna. and northeastern Maryland, with ninety-eight anthracite furnaces, one hun dred and throe ehireoal furnaces, and one bun tired and seventeen forges; none of which last, however, produce iron from the ore. This great iron region is itself divisible into distinct smelter areas, some .of them using magnetic, some hema tite, and some fossil ores. . . • 4. Northwestern : Virgin!' and southwestera Pennsylvania is a distinct re "on on the eastern Virgin!` and of the lower Foal ovules, with, forty- two charcoal furnaces, an two or three forges, 'and using carbonate of ire It includes the Cam- brie iron works, which ac unts for its apparent grolth. - . 5. Northwestern Pennsylvania and northeast. ern Ohio, with sixty-six furnaces, using tke ores of.the northwestern outcrop of the lower coal - measures. The charcoal furnaces of this regiop, are all going out, and the coke and raw hittuni. nous furnaces are increasing in number,' size and 1 1 efficiency. All the forging of this region is dune I by the rolling mills'at Pittaburg. 6. The Hanging Rock, Or Ironton region, cros- , •ses the Ohio river as a belt of charcoal furnaces • about fifteen miles wide and one 'hundred Luigi forty-live in number on the Ohio side, and seven teen on the Kentucky side. Its ores are all from 'the lower coal measures, andmt:its northern end it is beginning to use stone coal for fuel. 7. The old manufacturing region of middle and eastern Virginia is a prolongation southyard ut the eastern Pennsylvania with the same ores, but using charcoal exclusively as a fuel.. &stmt . the Blue Ridge are, sixteen furnaces, only one ol which remains - in blast, and west of the Blue Ridge thirty. There_are thirty,-five forges. 8. Northeastern Tennesiee and northwestern , r liorth Carolina have nine furnaces and forty-one bloomery forges' inai compact - area. Along the base of the. Cumberland Mountains, five furnaces . and fourteen - 64es use the Dyestone,Tossil, upper' Silurian We. In the southwestern corner of,Nocit, ? Carolina are five forges, and through the middle' of the State runs a belt of live furnaces near twenty-seven forges. This whole country posse' sea incalculable resources ,fur iron 'making, anti i Must become at some distant day one of the great centres. • . " , . 9. In western Tennessee and Kentnetiy, around , Clarksville, and Eddyville, lies the principal,and, • at present, only important iron region of the far . West. It contains forty-live furnaces and some forges. • . 10. -In Missouri a beginnings has been made 'with seven furnaces, which must 40410 into a groat iron , making region around ttoitlren Moun7 fain 213 ii Pilot Knob, when fed by coals from west. - ern Missouri and Kansas. '" The Lake Superior iron region has been opened f as a mining region only within two or threo.Yearhi ,though it is worked with ghat success at, various points near the copper mines, in Michigan, and 1 on the Western shore in Minnesota. Most of the! t a niece. n goods of attired in the one,in• ly three than two made con-, ured by the beautiful. , i.dneed to' a to tlndred lus almost to hanan, Tea n working are sutler. ti'thitneana should nqt m reBLB thA: eetings, and calling the he necessity man mann- workmeu of m a. move in pfepanng effective ope- Elder, one of plakera • upon • ,to address evening last. fight direction, I d roughout the . elphia breth- . i n the question The . power of .y will but ex- inatioxsuc kmen must set and faithfully, use politicians, e workingmen, ey protest how .le." Cut them destroying the le oak. How- ore is shipped to Detroit and Cleveland, for., the use ofiherolling mills of the West. The total production of Abase ores was probably 15,000 tuns in 1857.. This will at no distantdity be a prinepal iron making region. Tabulating these regions on the scale of their importance, we bare— ; it out of office, • people's inter party. They unit to repre- Ogmen even in 1. East Penna. and Maryland; charcoal, ' 1 87,773, authrecita 341;928, . - 429,701 2. Ironton Region, S. Ohio, 90,765 3. Highland Belt, ' 70,672 4. Pittsburg Regiori, ' , , 67,488 b. Clarksville and Eddyville Region, 33,0110 i • 6. Adirondoe Region,, 34,464" 7. Monongahela Region; . • ! - 30,867 B. Missouri Regioo, .", 13,201:1 9. Rut Tennessee mad Ceiolina Region, 6,8001 10. Virginia, , .1 5,730 . , I , 784,958 Bloomery Forges are small open blast furnaCes, or very large smith fires closed in to hold a guar. tor of a too of some rich ore, which when smelted le booked out in the form of a ball - of inalleible iron and hammered round or Oat under a tilt hem mer. All the forges are adjuncts to the blast fur naces, treating their pig iron in the same manner as if it-were so much ore, and preparing it for the rolling mill. It it a great geographical feature of the manufacture that the forges are to he , found almost exclusively east of the Allegheny moun tains. The geological reason for which is, 'that here alone are found the magnetic, -primary, or high per cent. - ores. Lake Superior and Missouri are the only . western forge regions. • The West once had uiany forges for blooming pig iron, but these have all been abandoned, and that work is I now done by the puddling furnaces. soneesers and initok rolls of the rolling mills. There is a third! division of forges which use either trip or steam hammers for turning bloomed and rolled iron into various shapes for tinehanizal purposes—engine cranks and shafts, ear axles, &a. Rolling Mills (commonly with nail factories at tached) are divided into railroad and merchant mills. The principal railroad mills in the United States are' given in the following table, with their; Wake in 1856: _ , , Bay State, Bolton, : 1 , 1 7, 871 ' Itenselner,Vroc, . - 13,512 Trenton, New Jersey, ! about 13,000 Pboteis, Pennsylvania, _ 18,592 Pottsville, 1W.. , 3 021 Lackawanna,. ` do., 1 11,338 Rough and Ready, Danville, Pa.,`? 5,259 Montour, do., . i 17 ' 538 . Safe Ilarbor, Lancaster county, Pe., 7,347 • Mt. Savage, Maryland, ! .7,159 • Cambria, Ps., - • f'7,533 Brady's Bend, W.; Penna., . I . ' 13,206 Weshingtoor-Wheeling. Va., , 2,355 ; ' IdeNiekle. Covington, Ky., . , 1 1,976 Railroad Mill, Cleveland, Obi°, ,1,800 Newburg Mill, " "' OOO 1 Wyandotte, Dear Detroit, @Alpo How dejogatory m is lofty poaii hi& all then ap- are mall to al chins is losing of the country; '. re still disgraced look to the work• trunk and branch. ult suffer stilt at rain them. Ilia in proteisioq, aiicUnotarionsly iotetests, of the %prima working an of the entire as, and they will g, wiser() now is woos of id, and 'erhaps Oready admin. If send- /rough- Indira awl all the i ' , -one who uric!' of amply, to do what rovince commands. some more 1 power n • each:ldle. i lt de- long whom it may, Congress should extra force, in the Ike Mr. I Buchanan .having broken eve ' elected, 1 0.nd as The Fairmount, at Philadelphia, his boon ,re. cently adapted to rolling railroad iron, end the Palo Alto, It Pottsville, rolled shout 1000 tons in 1856. The Newburg mill commenced 'makieg roils late in 1857. Most of these Mitts 'are new topped, 'end a ameba to be'erected' in the West; a -Indianapolis, Chicago, St. Louis; ko., will; be. I obliged to' alt for better thrum. I. Ilia western mills chiefly re-roll old rails. The secession' of this bailee's in the past four years earl be seed ' from the following Sieves:, . 4 , 1 . R. R. Iron fade. '1 lioportsd, ~. Consened. 1853, . 105,000 toes , 298,995 , 403,995 18M, 121,000 • L , 288,266 409.866 t 855, 134,000 ' : 127,914 - , 261,915 1850, ' 147,507 : 155,925 i 303,502 • Xi Connection with the above etatement which , is from the North Alon'erferia, 4 PhiredelPhls, MI . ,1". , will take occasion to state - 01A there Was not a 1 ! ' tingle Rolling Mill In the 13 Led Stake, erected i . : for the turning out of Rall d Iron-4hpu the . Tariff of 1842 was passed—an in- lead than four, ysara after its passage, a sea cien. namber hid 1 been erected to tursk.uat sullieleht 'Raiiroad Iron ; to ley down &initial doy. ' ' ' Wkalict tippled ii statement cribs veins of Pig, TWA predated le this aountryier II Will of illartt i from 1124 to 1852, together With the valise of Iron 1 06 01 44 in the same years, together with the sr!_ oils Welts In Om , New 'York , Market' wader: the, 4116toreet Tariffs. -,Tbist le au IMporlant statelnaits PROM:CMS or . IRON ET 5 1 000 ' 5,000 50,000 fell to 20 per centin June, 1812, and the vildi of the annual product of American Irina also fell down to s6,26o,6oo,lesithen the product of 1831 which eras $6,05,000. In 1942,•-tbe Bill known as the Tariff of 1842 wail poised, and took.effeet in 1943, when the value, ofßeer annual product began to inereare, and .yon up in value from $B,- 260,800 in 1842 to $23,569,000 'in.'lB47-4 pe riod of Ore yeses only, under thlroteetive pol icy. In 1846 the Tariff of 1842 w a repealed and the duties mimed under the Free Trade eystem to 30 per cent., and the American production be gan to decline annually until it ran down to the valueof only $11,115,000 ita'los2, less than the anntiai product of the yearllB37,. although the population of the country had increased in the intervening period of sixteen years, at least eight million souls. Reader, now look at the Value of Foreign Ina. • portetione, end you will ohms that when the American Production declined, the iniportationt increased, thus destroyingeer own industry,fabor and capital. . ;! • But the most important feature remelt:a, to be tioticed yet—anr) that :is, the . prices of Pig Iroti'during the periods of Protectiun and Free Trade. In 1841 and, 1842, when the duty on Foreign Iron was-the lowest, about 20 per , cent. under the Free Trade system, Iron was higher on the average, than it was under the high Protee tire Polley which prevailed in the Year, 1843-'44 -'45-'46 and 1847. The prices of Pig metal was also highef in the following yearn under a duty of 30 per rent, than it was at any time under the . high duffel of the Tariff of 1842: It wasulBss, $34 81 in the N . York market. .. ~ 3 88 4, 38 88, 44 44 n Id di 1888 . 31 IA 44 44 id id " i/ dd 8 58, • 32 38 di {4 id 44 et " " 1857, ,32 00 " ' The . average price in'thl:l aboye years is Consid erebly higher then , the tite years underlie Pro. teetire Tariff of 1842, wlsleh' proles conainsivet, that the assertion made by the friends:. 4 Fred Trade, that by inmeashig the antics for: protee :ion to American Industry the consumers are taxed to the amount of Ole Increase, is not true. •If the laboring classesof the country 'Will cry Democracy and vote for l Free Trade,—and thus vote the bread out of their own moodier, they must take the consequenCes, and submit. 'with as good a grace as possible' to the stervatiott wages of the old country. With Free Trade, our Fac tories and Workshop's most Clue—or litho, must be reduced to the European standard,. in i ,order to • Compete with the price rif Euripean goods in our market. , The large marni'of the laboring clones suppOrt Free Trade and the lsay Pot•Boase Fon ticians, against the Busiest; Comminity who give 'them edeployraent by. 'opening. Mines, building Factories, Machine and Work Shops,:. l l B.e., and now they are reaping their. reward in return for •r' their votes. , ' . • If all the suffering °Maid fall on those only who 'are guilty of sqh a suicidal course, there would be but little sympathy thern—butt unfortu :, reately, the innocent have to suffer with the guilty. The above statimente Ire taken froth the Of ficial Records furnished to Congress from the Yreasory Department. • - • sloxacto Conoxvoai who on the 12th day of last July Was eiec r ted President of 'Mexico is now a fugitive in the United States. He had fallen, anirwithihink has fallen the liberal Constitution with the success of whidik be bad identified althis political fortunes. I lie was I the sole reinainfog stay of liberal principles in Mexico—rand was unquestionably, better fitted, both morally and intellectually, than any,other min for the work of: re g enerating his native land. A.soldier in defence of Con. stitutional Governmentat the age of twenty, he has been from that time to the present, when he is forty-five, in the fields, is the leg islative hall; in the cabinet, and in th * 'execu tive chair the unchanging champion of fiber alideaa. It was : he that euccesefully sus tained the defence ; :of Acapulco against Santa Anna in 1854, and carried the pronuncia mato of•Ayutla to its triumphant issue. He has been as decided a friend and admirer of - - our own country as Santa Anna has been its hater, and his • great, ambitiori ha's been to model Mexican institutions after our own pat tern Si far as practicable. He has specially endeavored to diminish the overshadowing . influence of the priesthood, and to weaken if not absolutely destroy, the connection between the Church and the State. It wasl upon this rocks that rte finally split' The clergy united against him, and ' though long baffled, theit, open and secret hostilities finally prevailed. Even . the . conferment upon him of supreme power to meet the exigencies , of the occasion, did not enable him to thwart their hostile operations. He held but bravult 4 but had to succumb at last. ; lie left the Presidency of, the Republic notninallY fathehe,nds of Chief Justice Juarez, the .successor',derignated br thu Constitution incase of tha:resignitiOn or r disability of thekegularly„ elected President. But this power oiduatezis hardly more than nominal, thOughhe has undertaken to- call the'Congress together at Ouanajnato. He is of Indian blood and an ultra radical; and .it. is idle w suppose that his administrition cen' be anything - elsa.ihan a fl eating shadow.— Though, Vera Ortta is firm, against Santa Anna, we have ,fittle doubt that' that man of .strange vic i ssit udes will not long hence find means to effett en" entrance somewhere, 'and to again resume the dictatorship. It mititers little for there is absolutely no hope - of a ra tional, moderate, and orderly republican gov ernment inMexip., W hat Omonfort with his antecedents ? and 'his capacities, and his honest purpose tae So utterly.. failed in, ,we may Safely set', down ad morally impossible forLyears• to There is no medium in Mexico between*er anarchy and caterdes- I 14707 SC/Mial*:l4Alrll3.lTlOS CO. MllLCitiillt DANAOSS' FOIL Nsowttscs Tot LnAN 01,31 the District Cooit ai Harrisbug on Monday of last: week, the trial of a suit . 'against the Sclfuylkill Navigation' Company by Mr. John Gwinner of Port Carbon, this County, was commenced, and ended on Thurs. 414 in a verdict for the plaintiff. 'llr. &Sin ner's claim wais for damages arising from the Company's . neglect to clean out edam, where. by his cellar was overflowed. Damages skee awarded from& time the snit was brought, which the of one hundred dollars , i kt year, for dues years amounted to three hun dred dollars. It will be recollected tbat the suit of )IcDOnough as. the Schuylkill Nan. 'gegen Compsiny, on a similar acOen, resulted in s similar eerdict, the Supreme sustaining the decision of the lower cosiyt. There are we u*lgstand,nineteen'similar OM in Port Carbon, whialisince this decision, . wit farce the Company', to a 'compromise or settlement In. the Owinfser case the damages an& costs will amount to about sBoo.'. Expensive work a ICI ILUII • The question may 142 , askall, as we ;esteliPresident Bochum's career. .:'With a stubborn determination, by the a of the gull. Wino on the one hand, anditilltery on the other, to fbece lEnintas,rough Congress with the I t ecoohkton dnistitnticsi, he presents al t.her the * pitiable 4itetaele of an in old man, or a tritsbling, reckless-knave. The more r ciaritable constrWetina would be thit beiti insaniu The' • ognvictiOn however, that roma net is, that he is engage:4*(lllly, in a knavish piece of york;under the triwar of the slaVedriver. President Burial:see poli cy. in this lEansarbusinewt,.:baa been vire' Cedellt*.bol4 and Eels a - ready reaping his reWard t The-:North dis• owsuibitn t while the conse{vative portico of the South, with Gov.- Wise leading the van, declares emphatically, that, .to force the Len , compton Constitition upou the people of Ban sae, would not oiklybe unjust, bat would; tkrt act of tyranny unprecedented in our. is toti! • The resnk of Northern Democratic oppo• sition to the attempt is summed up by For: . nay's Press as follows : "Efficient Representatives of the Dement , * cry in Congress are 40 be read out of the. Democratic church; and with them twenty! five of the most influential Democratic pa• pent in the States.; a host of able , Democrats in the different counties of the State—young and old ;a nn bee of Democrats in the Le. gis' Ware, AN TIM RANK AND rug QP TIM PARTY TSRL May wa no ask, is he mad? . • Lrr Inattoo;-;'--A bill is before the Legia lature authorities a sale of all the remaining canals belonging to the State to the Sanboq and Erie Railroad company.. 'fros /00111111.1 • • THE MllllllBBlPPie lIT TOE. It Hesse hi the old tlwaheand flow; The low, busy bum of the world - It oder know, lot ',wail only diterbel by the rip ling goy; That daneed.la the wake otitis Indian rani*. Its 'bona only echoed the red warrior's cry, . Or the murmuring low of the WM) herd; Its mirror of waters reflected the sky— The mos sy old tree•tops, and mein wheelingbird. , _ , • But now, as ericiarranelt through itsprairte beet eonses, And divides like some giant's brad sinewy band, Bach one paw a state with Its wealth, and its homes ..v...And binds MOM In union, the pride of our lend. And fast on the ghee.; en ancient and OM • Abe hand of that randal—the bold pioneer—. Is*liking the adman—The roar or the mill, Ring of azeand of hammer, now . MI on the ear In =Bayamon, as It 411a,0u its coulee. , The angles now labors with bellow sod scream : From bluff and from valley, from gulf to Its mum, Xebo eblmlug of boat-belle—the bluing of Moult. Yet calmly It tioirs In Its tonrse to the no. Meths throbbing tide from the fountain of life; It dreads not the tempest, but fearless mind free, It lions mid the tumult, It stops out for strife. 0, would Highroad branches a voles could poesetel And eaeh tell Its tale of the tlmerladen.past I The secrets of ages, their tongues would confess, [blast. And worlds catch the wan& when they mat on the They could tell of ywonders now lost in the years• Could tell of the moss grown old mound on the ' shows, Could tell of Its builds% their warriors sod seers— ♦ race once existing, Dow gone erertnoie; Could tell us of changes in earths solld form; Could en in, years, u the ages prolong; Laugh at time an' at changes, defying the atom, ' • Andt,chant to their flow a murmuring song. • • Flovron f,, 0 1 d father of waters; Stop never thy comae. nor cease in thy flow,; Thou .bearest good tidings to earth.* POD, pin d daughters, A bleieng on all thy broad waters barn. Mow on Surer! in strength never ceasing; lleed not the tread of the army that comes To thy smiling valley—thy riches increasing, To dot its brood prairies with cabins and homes. Thraratera a nation's broad bosom enfold: Thy power nought resists. and nought can o'rwthrow= None but lie who chained thy vast waters of old, Ands,' thee the bona ds Which thou chherautst Oda,. EDITOWS TABLE. GRAtIAM'S Maciasma for March is out, fresh in its beauty as the Spring Sowers which will follow to a few weeks. The contents of the Mink num. bar embrace many charming and i - ureful illustra tions and much choice 'literary Matter, among which are, prominently, a heatlful tint engra ving, entitled, "Please Regime r the Grotto; die colored Pashiot, platr.A;' "Se, Alibi's; or, a King's Love," .. hy Joseph : J. Reed, (illustrated); "The Bride of the Mad-Roam," by Mrs. L. 8. Goodwin, (illustrated); "The Montaguet,!* true story. of Long Ago," by Lydia Jane Pearson; Fluwer an Garden Uinta; t4ltor's Easy Talk, And Ladie i' Department, (illustrated.) . Graham's Magazine needs no potiltig at the bands of the press. Its merits are sulid;substantial and recog. nised by myriads of readers, in this and other countries. Under the editorial charge of Charles G. Leland, Rm., Graham is the peer of any of air , magazines embraced udder the 'head of light and sparkling literature. Copies of the.illkrelt number can be obtained et Banns's% Tux Lanfs i ßooi for March Is indeed, a num her of which our friend, L. A. Godey, may, well be proud, not that it excels, tabu as a whole, pre-. Ilona efforts of that gentleman; but that in one feature it has never been surpassed." We allude to the sapurb line engraving, entitled, "The Moth er's Blessing'—s beautiful design, and - we must say,Most artistically and wary, neatly exeeutek We haurd nothing in saying that thbrengraring alone is fully worth the fries ofl a single copy of the Book. • Let Mr. Godey elways,publish in con, !merlon with his Magazine. such works of-art,. and there will be no fear of the popularity of the Book abating one jot or tittle. In addition to a large Number of engravings, a perusal of the lit. erary Matter convinces us that in quality and in tercet it cannot be surpassed. The Lady's Book is rapidly increasing Its circulation, Ind it really .merits Bastions& Copieg of the March number can be obtained at Barman's store. • Tani JOVILIAL op 111111 FILISELIIi INSTITUT a for February Is on our table. It is Published by the Franklin Institute at thni/Ifall in Philadelphia,. 1 / The subscriptionprice is tire dollars.. The con s tents for February embrace articles a Civil Engi neering, American Patents, Mectinnies, Physics, and Chemistry, and matter in onnection with the economy of the Instituti. An interesting anus! bee. The Journal has a large circulation among scientific men and thou whose Mimesis are iden tified with the mechanic arts.. . Toed Wiserktriann Rnetzw.—The . January buiabin. has been issued by Leopard Scott 00.• -Fulton street, Neir.York. The contents of muse, ate Myth} highest oilier of Magazine lit erature.. Tni Dlithrt fdarrtao.—The proceedings of this meeting:held on Wednesday evening last, Wen re ceived yesterday too late for insertion. . focal Afairs. ACP The Good Moat Fire Company gate a ball at the Towit nail, on Tuesday ovealnii - athich passed off pleasantly. I 6' fillfThere will be a regular monthly meeting of the Young Men'a Chrtstigln Association held on Monday evening next,'. F4ruary 22d, at their room, in the Lawry of Matters Offles Building. :limning attendance is requested, ai business of importance wilily laid befove the Association. jtill'Hory C. Baird, Esq.„ lactated before, the Silver Creek Literary Association on the 11th Babirt— . "Protection of America; Indisetry." We would be gratified lithe Asaoeistion would furnish as with a copy of „it, u it is- Spoken of in high tenni. ' . • ; jlllll"Onliisy.;—This invigorating and healthy apart has bees Indulged in both by taillebiusd!pn tlitioni during the weak. The dams at Tumbling . Ruti growl out two maiult abeam oi - lea, ul t ich at thaw, Wi th tbi *timing tiara Opott,iturint piemitt quite lively seem. #ll°R. D. Schosser, x eels street, sod J. Schooner, Centre street; ere agents for the Isle Of Peter blaisoe. Biscuits, Cakes and A cailtal article. Groceries of all. descriptions; of the best quality; mut it reasonable prices, can be Obtglaeld at their afore. _Call and patronise Orris following gentlemen were remntly 'ected Borough ollienrs of Port Nth - Bergere—Bop Hill;. ausea--Cheries /14irbei l Ben. Oniteromn and•Jeah D. Beessinger; &tool Dirseiore-8. Berke, Jose& Bala and B. A. fiss slept r .4meeM4--Jobn ; Automat Ammo fors;.-Abratia.m Heebner:and A. Peti; Constable— Thomas O'Brien; rain Teripllm jurn. pima licikary ,91" bsir estsbn s ed a braoeb; le sble Borvesb;Srbeie large rod fresh lesiva of tabloid are sold at outwit • lost Nil thes the old Our, Wets will be eompelle4 to salergeibe else of their Rotes, _et MINOS 010 priOla it ibeo hope to eissisYste "la the anterpil*' , Tbebeii4 Wed by Use pbtleashabiastease beiterY le really Pod; Tlwsa Wes i sratc Medi of its cattity.• • Ezlislificit es -Piasgrces.—Mt. 8.1 b. Joneslices netico that be Will give, with his; scholars at Ida Reboot Teem In Ploatitove, its r 4 "•', day and 13atarday *mins, March4th aisd 113560 in Ezbibitioo. On the occasion (beps* fkliosa will be spoken. There wfll also be WikWelo; The Exhibition will commence, sash irelti* 4 “ o'clock. i„Pries of admission to defray inehleetal. 01 1 41 " 1111 11 12 4 Nate. _The ritiseas of PlgetlAvf sad vicinity should stip& as ter& 001-1%. Jridsrr.--The nn nilayarKaf the birth of George Washington. on Monday nest. bi observed appropriately M this Borough. Burins the day the First ,Troop, Sebnylkill County Cavalry, the' Washington 44- 1111 . 1 7• Wasidagton Yeager* and Scott BOu will. luttude;and in ,the evening a' gamut baß,will eoses og At the Town Ball. This is rigid. While we re'rere ttito asive of one who was' 'Ant .in flirt in:pears.and drat to the hearts of his Mentlyr men," we 'should observe with spirit the annivit— eery of tie day that ushered him into ekistaitlie; •• 11117 The lee Clop.' ; Dc the week hi addl. lion la beery look sqnslis ; we hare bad pereMly cold weather. 94 Wednesday - wonting 'list. Rill mereary in oar tbirmomitar marked at 7A. M.. •enly *degrees ab.tre sera. Roth dams it Tutbb• Reg Run are (roma tight, and the ice men taking advantage of the feat. hare been during the week; busily engaged in tiling their houses With an 'ex cellent nriiele, freelrom impurities, and in thick sou ranging from Scala Seven inches; All fears of s failure in a fall 'apply of this almost bilis peusable article for the 'coming season, are now remoirod, for which walui duly thankful. I jrii`Tresiallet Literary Socidy.—The exereisu of tart nasally evening were, opened with *xi in teresting Lereun by Mn. Jacob Oraber. subject --"Mappineire" -- The question, "lobe reading of fictitious wilting' injurious," wu ' debated by Mesire Walker, Pinkerton and Drake in the af firmative. On Tuesday evening neat the Luton will be delivered by H. W. Pinkerton-. Reader. C. L. Pinkerton. Question—" Should Hansa' be admitted with the Leeompton Constitution Affirmatire--J. Foley, J, R. Balliy, J. Orob'er.- 31egatire—C. L. itirkertoo;.W.' H. Balimrt. Williams. A unanimous rote of thank's was ten dered to the non. Wm. L. Dewart, for vainable public documents. AP* Old W„isiter ha • burst upon us with, ichar asteriallti bereeneis, adding alas, to tba sufferings of those who -even during the mild;weather of January experienced the pangs of want. tester day sail► fell during the entire day, aid wen sere ial inches drip when wo went to press Jut night. Lying as it does upon frozen groom!, the sleighing 'during the coming week will be excellent 44 Our meteorological record for the week is as follow" . : P.. R. it P. Tamura Ormt:11. Thsiurytoartia HaU, lbandUe. 8A.21. 2 P.M. 7P.3E1 Bat., lob. 17,40" Zr—lnow. moo., " 16,-30,28 22 —1 " '•16,-24 - 34 113 Wed., " 17, 8 " 18 'l6 —dear. nun., t 18,-12 26 22 , , " 20 ;16-- - snow. - Niddkport Lyeererc-44 soelety met, as usual. The exercises fur tiaArening were, a Lemurs by F. W. Mattel, a Reading by. Dr. E. K. Weber, 'and the queetton,"which caused tbagreater ..destruttion of human ltfe, war or intemperance," MU ably direnated, and decided that intemperance Was the most powerful agent in the destruction of lire. The exercises for-the next evening areas fol. lows :—A leciure 4 by Rev. J. F. Bayer; Reading ty A. B. Balliet. Queiitir for discussion—"Woul4 the annexation of 'Central America benefit - the thiltek States r Afilrmativa--Jao. R. Porter sad Chas. liessioger. Negative-:-F. W. : Bechtel and Oliver Bechtel. The society return, thanks to the Bon: Wm. L. Desert for A valuable public dopur e ' it. jar Pottsville Literary Society. n 'Tuesday evening last, a Lecture wee defier y Wilson Bartz, Esq. Subject, "Influence of matt: 'C. Little reed Mr. Seismal Welleee Valentine, as appropriate to the season. The selection wee good, 194 was well read. The audience very properly, :appreciated it. A debatnthenenstmd on the vies •tion--" Should . Congress "reject the Leconipton ;Constitution!" with Messrs. Bartholoinew and :Potts in the affirmative, and Sef heti and Bunt in the Negative, The qiestioir itAt decided id the affirmative. • - ' • The order of exorcises for next Tuesday craning Is is follows :--Leeture--Dr. Carprver, Jr.— Beading—Bit Bowen. Quasi ion--7ShouM„the American authorities have pardoned Maj. Andre?" Affirmative—Messrs. Heron and Mardi. Begs. thy—Maim Marts sod Milne.. f ' ' ;Sir Slyer Creek Literary Associatioii—On the 11th inst., John J. Oovey . was elected President; James Scatty aid John O'DotroeD Vice Dm/- dents, and John Beach, Jr., Secretary. - • The attendance on last Tuesday eyening was large. Reading. by Win. Winiack. The discus. lion of the question "Would the United States Gov; eminent bejustified in interchanging Ministers and Consuls with Haiti, on the same terms as those of other Nations," was participated in) by Griffith T. JonesAtichard Winlack, and :Win. Rannie, affirmative; and Wm. Winlack, John!S. Dovey, Negative. Dieisido in the negative. • Question for next Tuesday evening "Was the execution of Majo; Andre justiflablikr ' Richard Winlack, Griffith •T. Jones and• William 'Lennie, affirmative; Juba ; J. Dovey, Wm. Winlack, and Charier Taylor, negative. Reading by Richard Winlack. Dr. Wythe is expected to lecture before 'the' Association on Thersdaiy evening, the 25th inst. Or Deplorable Occurreuee—Lon Of Two Val uable Lida.—Tamaqua mourns the lois of two es teemed citizens. Mr.,J. Edward Bathes, General Superintendent of the Little Naviga tion, Railroad : rod Coal CompiinY, and Mr. Ducat: Wier, its Mining Agent. ' . 'tippets' that some explorations in the Com pany's mines 'being necessary';; Mailers. Barnes, and Wier donned their mining disos, and left Tamaqua, on. Monday, Febreary 15th, about 3 o'clock, P. 11. They proceeded to Slope No. 4,- - descended am ladder &boa oni hindred and sixty _yards, and- Waimea d sod 6' , o'c4ock,/ entered the tit al gangway, traveling w e stwardly. Mier pas silgalong about 400 yards, they encountered, a brattis. -This is an air-tight partitiim, erected in this cue, for the purpose of confining the gas in jected into the mines, when an effort was made to extinguith tire. They passed through the brai.- tis—passed along about 200 yards further, and found a acqud'one. It was here their:hay cocoon. bred the stream of eel which Suffoeated them.— Late at night' both. bodies were ricevered.' Mr., Barnes, was .40 'years of age. i Mi. Weir, 50. Both leave families. The (until' took phis* on Toksday afternoon Wt. The bodies were hostel side,by side in the yard of the Presbyterian Cbarehi of Tamaqua. During the passage of the funeril, church bells more tolled, and business of ill kinds was suspend. t. AfirSkeriff'S Sale of Real PdatO.—Tbe follow ing !awed propel:l:y will be soldon Saturday, Feb. 27th, 1858, at • the American , . Moues in this Bo roogh, by Sherif Mats :•;•-•Lat wItS appinterianees in Tamaqua, tbsji property 'of:David T. Hoideman; lot and blinding in Yorkville; • proplerty of Thomas Yercol, ,owner or reputed owner, and William Ty . sok, contractor; }and and applartitninces in Nor wegian township; Mary Armstrong; lots In Potts- Tills and Nortl Manheirn townehip, and , house, William liradF; lot and bowie, Pottsville; Garret L. Vliet ; iand and appurtenan. 'Deep Creek, Michael gushes O'Conner, deed; lot and appur tenances, Tamaquk . Nathan kvanso p boas. - wo4" lot, Auburn, irateutina. Schollenborger elot, with apturtenatiees,Liewellyn, Menry:Breselei; house, Tamaqua; John SiMsi lot With appurtetimeet, Port CAbon t Kaufman Herter; lot and building, John boaaandlot, Ashland, • Patrick acd James Lally, otiniri,..to., and George Carl, contractor; iota i witb Pottsville, George Jr. Matey; hind with appuito : name, Diana, and Schuylkill to;Msibips, and Port I Carbon, Cliiistion Belay; *Midland with improve. . mental Botler- township, Merriet Smult, adminte tratrlx of John Staell;4lo, mud . Elihti . Pariah, Terre Tenant; nye- lots with appurtenances, Ta- Inagua, Peter Itowmaii farm with Improvements, West Penn township, Charles SeiteL The tenoning wand pr‘ertiwill be sold 'at BhAyHf'eSale, on Satorday,March 6,1858. at the latieriesn Mouse, this Doreogb:—Two _lots with improvements, situated in port Clinton, and tha , property of James Lyon ; lot with appurtenance's, Port Carbon, George C. Leal lot' with apporta lances, Cressona, William 1. Kitchen; . soJ lot. Bt. Clair, John Race; land to Pinovoie, Barri, Porte n t and Desna townshipe;George Gor don ; with. appurterianees, ;Port Cathon, Mot. its ; lots with appurtenances, mills and Pottsville, °Daniel Edwardsl` e ollkt is:Twomey, dshiud, H. lisantost ; end • lend With 'apportantiono s iiYist . Pan ,townsittli t Will lass r. lot with appi . rtininowilkdht: vii3o;'264id BBaiter. :` , PlFlf Pill* AND SCISSORS. • - . lifir•TbW•Aneen ofl.4:hrtie :died at Part en the 24th of Janiwy. Pflrishoppore were melt in Besitiooority, in January Init. -;•• prillotrat'Conis on* of tho highest of the Alps, U b•ing tOneleik • .;; Dauiel kfacitecier,' . nl Berationnt* t wad bonnie* Ostia last *lc. • It hi - sala that Mi. - Yeinti Resselitowell is the edlthr of Tie Mastic iflisVg. -- "lrSi4ty cos hunters -wets recently fined in r lidantgoasCry noway. for hooting. illegally. JEN`Atn need sale of books in London, a copy of WiekliFe's version of the New Teitament soil ler s72lt:; •- -; •• jilly , Afezaoder & E mmy has taken' stops to con,. test the election of Henry 11:. Sibley; as Governor , of Mktg*Seta. ~ . JlMPlflowhat everybody says is trite," the Mon , tear rolllig mill and Donates will be in full blast ,: 1 k 'before thirty dare`. - - '• • - 4 1/41"Diennie Bonner, aged . iS years, was reel "botany 'killed in I,onea A Cole's slope, at Buck- Ville; an Viands) (whit week. -The coil pf newspapers 'and gooks foithe members of the bialtsachusetts Legislature for aka last five years has been $36,125. ' 'or-There are tifty.sir.tnanufacturers.uf tobaes to in Riehmeted,Vg., wham united capital amount' to four or five millions °Cdr . :diem. - '" '' . •• ,lilleMrs. Catharine Sinclair Parrest has per. • Amid' an estate lu Scotland, for 450,000,40 se-' ' rings of lei shortbeatrical career.. . ' Par Barbie - Jot nary $225,000 in gold and i $205,000 in silver as coined in the New Orleans mint. -, The depot* reached $417,231. prof. Avoids believes the present mildness of the season leoccasioned by the heavy rains] in of th e last SuMe hating the earth. • bl PlfrA vein of al, thirty.eist inches in d la me.l ter, is worked by M. B. Reis, in Cherry Tp:, Sul livan county, fourimiles from Dash*. , . -. " ilerJohn Philips, a miner in the employ of the Forest Tuiprovemtint Co., at Forestville, was seri ously injured last Week by a fall of CoeL - jihlrTherst arefitow one hundred and twenty eight ' counties in the State of Texas, twelve new ones having been !named the.preseut session.' -The Borough Fathers of Tamaqua have jest completed si neat and substantial bridge, egrets the Little Schuylkill' /aver, at Elm.street. I .ll44`Thiluigh tickets front Reading to Lancas ter, via. Lebanon Valley Railroad, and Penney). ratite Railroad !tut ilarrishearg,.are furnished at' $2 25 tech. ' , . . „ . jahrA distinguish writer says that "nothing is best achieved by indirection." The workings of a corkscrew woeldseem to be a refutation of that .. , plausible theory. r . • p 1 Samuel Carson, df Brewer, Maine, for ma: liciously killing is maple' shade tree la that town, Wm been jeeteneed to thirty days' imprisonment in the county jail. '. ,1 - Ai Now York. pap* observes that' Lolst Mums hes-made i bit since her. return from Ea. rope. Making hits is.a line of occupation quite to the lecly'l taste. • -. pl'lt is stated thet, to far, nineteen companies of volonteeinatid cadets have officially ; signified their - intention to participate in the ceratoollies of the 22d at Richitend; Va. . ••• .011*"Mr.13rowtt, 'you said yeti boarded at the Columbian Hotel cix months; . did you foot your hill?" "No sir, but it amounted to the same thing, the landlord footed me!" . 011-A rathliethick-headed witness in thehpoli 4. Court at St. Louia was asked the question sibs% r the party accused ''stood or. the defences." e innocently replied, "led stood on a bench." • jeltie-A gentleman having fallen into the river lee, relating the circumstance to Sir T. A.. said "Ton will suppose I was pretty wet.". "Tel," said the baronet, "wet, certainly, in the Retreated' -At Senators Douglas' late ball in Washing ton, 1 of the exclusives, it itsald, had small hoops in the legs of their pantaloons. They were made of steel, and gave the pants a very pretty sat around the boot. _ " _ - • • Pr-Governor Packer has sent * recluisition to the governor y of Ohio for the delliery,up or Fred'k W.. Porter, the late Secretary of the American Sunday School Union, who- proved a defaulter some months ago to the tune of 43.0;000. ' pfit - E. C. Delevan,Esq. of Ballsfut, ICY., has given to Cnion.Cllege the Wheatley cabinet 1 of minerals and shells, one of the most splendid in.l the country. It was •purchawid for . $lO,OOO, but , it it considered by good judges to be worth a much ' larger sum. , , 4 Or -A young American lady in Paris tineaten", to sue President Buchanan for breach of promise! she says that dining Or. her father's table years ago, ! he said toiterl--PMy dear., Miss, if ever I thould be President, you shall he the tuistrets, of the White House' jar Use the arygenigted Bitters,_ and yect,itill hese no cause to etanglain of lassitude, debility,. or tiny of theta complaints inseparable from our Spring weather. They are regelarly, prescribed by POlllO of our Most eminent physicians, in cases of Indigestion and General Debility. ItYlr•A•bratal prize light recently took place in York county between Mugh Bradley and Jack Miller, The, prise to: the victor was $25. The contest lasted about an hour,,and embraced fatty rounds, Bridley appears to have been the victor, and is reported to have beaten his adversary- In a . a must unmerciful manner. 43111-The Widow of the bite President Harrison has, been foe a considerable time confined to her bed, atthe residence of her son, J. Scott Harrison, near Norte Bend, Ohio, Old age, ratherAan any, particular dDetue, it is stated, has asserted its in-; tunnels uponiainaturally robust organizatiois. The' venerable lady is new over eighty yiutts of age. ' - pee-The Ogreeutent for the consolidation of the Lebanon Velley Railroad Land the Philadelphia anti Reading Railroad, which was-entered into _some timeii i nee jointly by the Managers of the its, will be submit two Comted to the stock-; holders of e Philadelphia and Reading Rallrged Company, t o t an adjourned meettng,,on the dth or March, at'tbe office of-the said Company, in Priilii; delphia. • 1 , . Or The ironmasters of Belgium held a meet , ing at Brussels ° lately, to come to an understand', ing on the subje4t of an order for a considerable supply of rails for the Russian liner;, which have been offered to BelgiuM. The: quantity would %mount to bout 170,000 tons, to be delivered in four years./ Belgium may now' be considered is one of the argest manufacturing countries of. rails in- Europe.l r- , ( • - i Mr - Till Bangor ( M et,) papers way, that the skating in that quarter, wits nearly destroyed 11 the hail and. sleet with **hick they were visite lust week. I The tlrenten'of Bingoi, however, bast e] gallantly Voluntiered to turn till with. their en gines andl wet down a sufficien t surface on the river to afford a skating piivilegi for the ladies Of the Mt), of whom them are shunt fifty welisk ed in .this.haulthfel amatimentil. . ' jg.frA.man named Risen has just' complei d the wretched fait of. walking , gee hundred succgs sire hours. Aklui. expiration _of the tiaie, 'he,' dropped 4 suddeialriii if abet, and bectime insert., sible. At:tether equally barbarous attempt is seen to bennade at Appleton Hall, Lowell, where T.4..1 Buckley, the "Lynn Buck," D Matched for $l.OOOl to walk one hundred and five' hours on a plank I forty feet hung, three feet wide, and elevated this, feet (rota Om door, without sleeping or resting only ten minutes in every twelve hours, he falling!er sitting dOwn or going to sleep, to lose the wager.. Alf-4:l4 , nainsl Havelock, who. recently died! of", desenterYbrought on by exposure and anxiety, rebellion, in the Ifdian is described 'as •having! bete a al ght, 'pare Ulan; about five feet five incites in beighti with an emaciated face and eagle, eye;ihe belongediamphatically to the class who have miter' to cente i r 'with .disobedience or mutiny. - As a G eneta helical the beat tactician they bare had in India ! and as an ofricer,lhgugh stern and moan— times exacting, his intique beroam made him the Idol of his men.' Ile was perhaps, the bravest man in his own army, aid wait nether PO eltittyl or 'agreeable si when under fire. Lord Gough said of him on One occasion i i Havelock never blunders, and his then are never drunk. '' , POLITICAL, • the Washingtoon correaponderit of the Baltimore Sire, says that Northma Democrats enough have pledged [sous, we fungal them/Wee* to MOO the . admission of Eartsae, under the Lecompton Con st Halms, fused thet.' Gov. Deavee or Ltoo l errox..—The ht. Lints Discs-rat says it is authentically, known in Washington thattlov ether Denver has written to the President, advising. agateat the acceptance of Ike Lecorapton Clastitetion.— Governor D. says that lta acceptance will undoubtedly brio; oh civil war. • ..Array wrier :us Wax. of en% Maroarri."—Xite Wash ington Nam has served the Lecomptonites until it has caught the true border ruffian tone. It couses,:t, with a bolder, flanker phrese 1— "Away the*, with the deleaffeffiet. *gab 1 1 0 ' i n" of the majority: wittawhleh the country s. w rife do the subject of Kansas.. • . This is petting the;Administiatkro policy On a per fectly intelligent bash. - • .l Devise 'me ur. , --Tbe letting of the pan in Il linois is distributed Amens seers steeling which are halting in support of the Adhatubtrat on the Lit• eompton question, while the Ottiaapt 71ara phiels.bold ly denounces the swindle, Is excleded.* HetesOlbre the lettings have been advertised isfeserpapers2 Is Michi gan the same ewers'purses&•The Detroit Freeree Preto rind the most inftheatial widitly-cheutatedlDemocretie paper in the State, 14 ly.umed, bathes of Mk 'asisunda. tion . of the Lecomptth swindle, and the lettings van timed In some sight nuinduential papent. I Be wean bribery and menaciug the beim:anion rein Is :to triumph. •• , Tie following paritgrsph frem * reeent men of , the 'New York Creaseerviel, is calculated roe ' tattles: Wa"have no herniation In affirming that ionkllt have :beau brawn that Mr. Duelereen's Admintstestion worth! lend Waif to each it scheme es that in which it Is now (. 114111141d JACO Heathen would not have Lbeen elected to the Presidency, for he would then have been letbee ' cinsfeely to a reliance upon the Smith and have been defeated. He was elected because he was regarded be a norraectioud pr national man; while his j opponent is. bored ander the disadvantage of a mediated reputation. It may well be doubted whether the Republican candi date would have preyed es 'sectionalas the' Democraticrandltbite has proved. Hon 'sectional he could not well have, been; and leddinghlumelf to the dkfition of ultra-Southern er proedevery men. litr.Buchanan ii steirestotedly, Omagh perhaps utteortetousty, preperlng the way for the defeat of his party, and ite nominee at the next Presideethil election. • Chicle= is making a epeeist effort to itscertatn whet matter; of the lid Congress received bribes fir their Toulon the Tariff% Would It not be as welt V they would ascertain by a Committee of Investisetkno what lumbers of theyresiod COngnme have teceired the' in ducements or 00044 or to other words have been bribed to vote the tbi views of the Administration on Kansas affairst Why were members of the Cabinet istr..busy amend the hesitating Democrats of the House whin Itarris's rescautions were on the carpet? What bribes Of tidneetnente or threats were employed? A "Commit. tee bf lovestWalon" Is needed: .1 • bays the Washing!** Republie: .Attoiney General Black,aod Beeretary Cobb, popes. ly Into the house to ,swam for votes lay the Kamm W. Judge Black was . sesn the other day, seated by Mr. Montgomery, re Penneylvant. etticulattog with, great vehement*. 1:./o stxth public indecency of Micedletbe ter terterence, has been witnessed here for many years. if we'pennet have honesty, lit us at hest bath drearsts.— Let member' of Congress be taken Into the priest* mops of the White Howe, and be ilated there, as was pastired ender the oweis Adnitstatra llob of Dew. Hem." ' ' . (in this busters the liltitsad Aderttiatt Tient would bare bees th ought to I t of Prod- dot Methinks, to him Neu. Lie Ca kJ leiter% Jolters*, Haan Re*, Neadalph eat Na= ac t "nests t4b. wity thsegh the crowded to h.& the seshate is an t teS Mem at rid" (*that fessere at the atbelaktniffett ovoid Miro boas thenbt la the Aiwa Itteettleitt Soma, le hate sea John (Sim Maws, Mtn C.Calhon, NW Iles MIMS]. setoben at hie Cabbie, enessi in the to t itstipti tomisse etteuvealinlne von to mutant an sums to the menet ltatteh alCostrNst Tra. http• hart tidbit at eat tlese, est wader us dart nto se felleesee el out inettousl Anientstrettos, we shalt • oiliest nets& sal a nweleteillen the ffaii,e." . Clam • . The Now York Urral4 sous Tl•arrOblY. John CLCalltatra, and trantrt iyabst•r- wow. Vat /.1. allettliarrawit assn"—that Wm. IL helmet is 11. part 1 1 r inse. bat ba Is Mallow , Weed's Vent mat ; sad Ma•kss 4.Dalgliaa Ilk • 'Nat maw. bat be Is Georg* *ands& wrist asiSsasral alit-wlth, the ezeeptenen of the crini Lbws all, - Weatawit as have no great NH mow. Thihlikratirl llll .l tame bit tba mark had 11- -ad tbaqieseallikitalwa laosoatt Is • great man, Dm le 441e—Jr".44.010n Desertt's trot man, lad as origi nal a t bassoon's Calltwri. . , Jadisil lIIN, Jairlar , Ditcinnutx Coot..—" Hare yon gui Any shirts? in - qoirod n countryman of a soiled looking dealer in orecOnd.band commoditim. • • "A ipleodid assortment—walk In sit." j• "Am they clean? . "Cettiiinly, sir—step "Then." i mitosogowstiywnsa, !•I think you'd better'pat one of 'eat on, for you toed it." The "dolled and sold" individual was so well pleased with this rot direct, that ha took. his customer by the arm and conducted bias to Amarillo Stolleer Palatial Clothing Store,, N 0,607 Clisistaot street, Philailelphie, and presente4 'blot frith a ha snit. OXYGSNATID DITIIIIIII.—, Bald the foaming let ter,from Caleb Parker; Stn. ' cC Concord, X. IL, man honored and esteemed by all Vibe know him : •• _Geettlemati.—With no disposition Aliotake my name conspicaous, I-telte the oportunity to - stite to the afflicted the benefit I,here. derived from the use of Dr. Gresn'eDawycisared Distort, and to re: cOmMend them to °there. For two years kharo been troubled with -indigestion and its attendant evils', iamb flatulency; - conetipaticin, severent. tacks of dianhosa,aetompanied with water brash iik the stouseh, which reduced '.me. in Sash, P . lFireastb, tad spirits, its low that I Was yearly ell fitted' for Witness. I I applied' to 4everal reins from whom I Obtained only univocal, relief. coneludekwith the advice of friends, but with. mire's least ' filth in tbeir efficacy, to try the Or. igenated Differs. Irian the use of which I Ifound inattdiatsirelief, tiering no return of weterLbrath after taking ',the bat portion. My Weight has in eisesed-sonse thirti r tiverpounds, sod toy health la terfect. teen truly •say that I consider the Or= • yymested Bitter* the bat tonic extant.. I have•ro sotamended,thein to several, who hire invariably found great lwnefitlrom their use. I • ' 1. :Foam ;respeetully; Carats PAIXIII. 1 Seth W. Fowls Co., 118 Warhington illoston, - Proprictont. Sold by heil ments(every iwhere: • , ,JOHN G. BROWN , ' Druggist, Agent for 4Sekill CountY; also, J. C. IiIIGHBH, I ' • ' / ..3140 • 3teTVOIS SUS A retired mini • i man, restored tolesith In a few days, after many yiiis of gnat merinos "littering, is an:Mast* make known the mimes of cure. wiu send (free) Use proMaptlon Meet the gorr4olll4 id. DAGNALLOto. 186 Felton street, Brooklyn, New York. - • 46•4 m Wok[ribs rammed dissever • o p t the invaluable 411aIr Itectoratlire." still lootinitsii to Moir Ito bailiff of, the *Meted. His seedkrimes are ashalr sally ipliattliod by the. American press to be farsuperlor, tout °there for sensing the Lair, omi the bud of the . aged,"6 vokr forth with as much 'tiger and Initialise , an when blUssed with the ads +stages of youth. Then eau be no doubt, if we place credit In the lunpMeiable testimoniale which the Professor has in big possession, ' that it la one of the greatest discoveries to the medical world. restore* permanently, graj bai's ore's. •I eel cm or, and snakes!it assume a beautiful Silky tex. time Wh ich , has been very- desirable In all sees of the siorld.. It frequently happens that old men, Marry hematite' and amiable young Media, and lot. entre% lusnLly_crusty old maids make victims of handsome, geo4°,eatured young gentlemen, *nifty whal . ,.prociiss it his rawer bees determined, until liteV I I , 11• 1 1 1 it was at- IWhited to the use of this invaluable flair Restorative'. ;--Lksalte Joanna. [s-14) . stlrliedlligestlon and Low of iapitet r lterse 11 .., It 1 the greatest Lily in the worid,for 'people to be was Sop 'bluing of Indigestion and loaf of Anylttite, when ' kb, seedy is so esey'of attainamoL aeory omit "mum italleht with testimanirds of Ihtkastraordinary eflowy of 4pekener's Sugar Coated Vegetable Purettre Mb, •in the iarious'ifisesees whirl' actinide' In i disordered' 'stale of the bowel,. Itany Ifinikters of the diospel, Pro foutors and stniteiits in our liniveraltter, Artisans, and Inninerous others Whd lead sedentary lives, hare ,expro ' steered' their beneficial aids; and ' are eoniilantly rot noteering their testimony In ita ' , favor. la Mt; the nuMberof recommendatory litters has arennintated so rapidly of late, that If it was neceenn , to /tastier: then 1- &lime. dlieheneewould he eoinpelled to 0441 a MP' did annottensf , for that purports: They sit however, endear in one 0 0 . olon, to'wit : That the Glfekruer►' Pill i La the most agreeable remedy they • iuee ever tried, and I the only one asisay, noisy which they out ant aith a ea , tainly of relief and without any iggrarattoti symptoms. 1:t this season of the year, especially, it is highly Im portant to keep the bona' In ahailthy co4ltiou, fuer ' der to avoid, or iiitteltorate at legit, the ntitmorous ail• mints which a rty induced try sudden chimes in the . weather. • -; ,-. .1 7' The Pals maybe had of all Drugglsta arid atorekeekr. ere; lo.esery.xillegeond town In the Untied States.- ~ JOSS °Anew* is Alight for. tbls;trlare. ' I V1.21.J ' —....— THE ORZA.TpiT ' 3Siteclicresul 31:111sockirerp OF THE,AGE • , . luta. KENNEDY, of Boabory has, direorored tn. one of our common pasture weeded remedy that cures. EVERY KIND OF HUMOR, • mum Tie Worst Scrofula down to.a Common Pimple. ile.haa tried St Witter eleven hundred mos. and never failed except in two mite, both thunder humor. fie has now tn.bls poweasion over one hundred , rertifleates of It. value, all within twenty tulle► of .noston. Two bottles ars wartastad to. cure:a fanning lon titbuth. -One to three bottles will cure the worst kind of plm plea on the taco. Two or ttirei bottles win clear the system of bites. :Two bottles an warranted to ewe the worst canker the damask - , • • . i Three or tee bottles are warranted to curs the worst kind of Itrystpelas. ' •• On. or two bottles are warranted to earl all humor In the eyes. - • 1 Twolcit_t4it are warranted to eure runt:leg of the ears and bhitchea aiming the hair. •, Four told" bottles are Warranted to eine corrupt and running nicer.. 1 . . • One'bOttle will cure sealy eruptions of the skin. Two or time* bottles aro warranted .to Mtre• the groan kind of ringworm. . Two dr three bottle' are winanted td cure 'the meet desperate Case of rheumatism. Three to krar bottJei an warranted to'eure saltrheutn. Fire to eight bottles will re of scruf f:lla.• One to three bottles are . warrante . d to, cure t' worst case of Dyspepsia. I know from the saperienre f thou lands that it has been ,caused by a canker in the Mo. _mach. • , One to two bottles taro warranted to Eire. k head- , pis to two bottles are wa rranted tii*.gulats a costly, • state of the bowels. " • • One to two bottles will eeolate all' derangement of the kidneys. . • Your to slx bottles has enred the worst eases ofdropsy. One to tone boiUes has cured the worst case of piles; a relief is always experienced ;"what • ; wavy to get re het is inch an excruciating dlseaset• No change of dlet ever Wecessary—eat the best you. can git - and enough of U. i. • - Diratiess for sait—Adulte, i tablegtonfet Per day: Children over ten yam, dessertgiotneal ; Children from live to eight years, teaspoonful. ;,ite uo directions my, tie applicable to all eonstitutlons, take sullielent to opetate on 04 bowel* twice's. day. • ." MAJEUTArTIUD . DONALD KENNEDY', • So. 120, Worse* . Street, ifozbetry, Mao. Pelee 11. irir-For sale by.drniglita throughotitithe United States. Jannaly 2 i, :68 JET 01,000.1 U WARD willi-ha'paid - for an Medicine that will greet PRATT L BOTCIISIPS MAOIO OIL. for the tollo.wlog diseases:-ItheumatiSti, Neural gia, Spinal Affections, Contracted Joints. Chalk- Pains; Pains In the Side or Heck; Meedache,Tootkache,Spreins, Bore Throat, tlnts,firtalsesißarnefand all Diseases of the Skin, Muscles and the Oland,. Norie genuine without the signature of Pharr/I QUICHE' stMcbed to MachlabeL. Principal ntlice, 206 Washington Went, Brooklyn, S. T. The.great number of persons that berg been immedi ately relieved in all thecitiesaind towns where It has been used, as well as In this city, sustain them is saying In all candor, that It Is the greatest curt In thehorld b3r pain. 1 . ' • • • J. G. Manna, wholesale, agent, Pottsville, and k, sale restlectabledtmggiststhroughnut the Unitediltates and Canada. - (June V . '47 .261 jatelligtict. • Elul ! tors llsvntatAs hilt' progress in Baird leg. .1 • " , . Tax isn•ui l on of Lent cohmended, 00 Walnesday* last, and Is observed in the Ephicopul and Catho lie churches. r • , Tits Paw BYATIAIGILI,II ..n..A 3 . 06. ety.hasAseen formed in the C hurch of. Begiand, the objoiet of which is to do aWay with the; pew systent And introduce that of fie* seats: It is not indeed; proposed .to abolishlibem 'in chorines where they now argil That would in must cases, be iusPessible. But the plan is thst lu sll new churches built for The aeelmmedation at the frollt4Paljsfloo of „England, the eerie .. .ball be 'now, Imo to all wotshippers; • Jar PRIMITIVE MET ItODISt CIIURCIt esirster 'of Lyon add 3il street. Divine Simko arayl Sabbath at 10 wrioek, M.,sad 8 o'doek,P. M: •. • Air SIZTUODIST 14PI8COPAL . ciliated, itoeond Stroot,lPottorUlo, itsj:WuAssui L. GIUT, Pastor. Dl irtooserstessirsry Sabbath at 14:A. M.aintat IT P.ll. itrittiOLlSU LIPTISERAN CLUIRCII, Marko Sq ape Pc 4 triln. 10, lbw- 4.1 1 . 00111811 4 1 , Pastor. Dirino air vise lu this Cblustb tegularly every annday. Morning, at /II Weicatiti trroulug, at 7 .ceolcrek.. .Wookly Prays(' Use lituteday teeloek. 411141MITITUURCU ILERYICS23 Dtrunsa LENT, 1135:! ' • ; 23i4.7etiittari-Vlrst handily ut' tesii-:10% &sloth, moroteg serstos-J•resstati vll end 54: Usu. I. 234 'rota( writeh-arreatiab Ix and,Koh.ly. 24th pobraary--21.. 51atthlas, tied Umber day-10% A. /1.1 1 - 25th Ifehreary-Liifith day of Lust --4 °Wort, R. Febreary=khaber Day-:sorvies at 7;4 &dog. , P. 114 • 211MI•brsag--Sebosil Sunday to. lant--Ess. xlr ti St. Like s. &skis' sysil, tab 4r. 3d Pillh-Wednanlay-yorrire at lON A. N. • 4th Usech-Thars4s3--20 -I k 4 al b °clocks P. 111 • 6th Marea-friday-sorykok 15.5 P. M. Ith atarstt-Thlrd &sods: fa .Lent,--4034 sal Trt"-- boatels*, 1-27 ; It. Kart 14 0 . Rae, 1 7 4 27 ao; hpb.'rl. 06, nth and 1210-Wistarl4s7 10) A.ll. Them dee it P. U„ VW, 114 P. U.. • tub m ie d h -routedhtsradajte List-41154" sad 134 - 111 h, um sot 1001-Wallassaz.ilo34,l3Sitiday ceett.o4 Ihloor Vir tlilesday 73i, • Valk. ' • __ loth and 16111.-Waisisky is}f o litared9. s'eloilk. Nifty. ~, • . Naito toe:. -Susisy laktellfsAst. Polska listolailysseisk, spa twin ostGood Friday. P,* . Uh l WASUIVI.S. Ardor, f h , ' °m.o. TFE.N,AR — /D this. borolagla, on At oodiy moroltii. Mary 1.414.1 1 3.54, of enalreilaPitt .o . MAIGAIII E. , lilh of 1 11 . 1 911 IX Turner, to the 40th per al ben ne. It ADSLitt—On the 31 inst. it COUtiril Vats, laws, Dr. Itarat Acumen HAMAR, pan of Dr. Cho r e And Lomita Mester. ut Potterhie. In the 7.lth year et Mt WANTED. • WANTED TO, RENT OR PURe CIILEL—aaI eanabldrird COEVILICED. &Aug fe„ buelneti of Z 3 11101,0 WO leas aselially. Mama t JNO:DAMSON,OrerIiebarIL February I 11,S 2.4 t, A active yam.; men, to alurata ho a Wal -1 nolo My, Whifill ad honorable, at • allow, Of pea per month; • capital at 15 only required. N a patent mall. On. or book buslarao. Pull part frigate, errs Ma low) • w h o am igo a pow gimp, or Hirer, and adderes DENNIff V. HOYT, Lirsufren, jr, B. January w,'lB 1 141 • 'TNFORMA TIO N is WANTED or • FELIX SD ITII. bile of Daley Diem Worrenernblre, :ngland. a Boot Make? by trade, and Alen One 61 the Boa reeifiles renervbere hr Sehirylk PI eersv- • ~r ' ty,--und If be will address a finder to Der underabraed, FIT InS Ms Flare of Troideu• IL it. rill •1110 the Ea. arriber, and hear fmtu were .If farads England. JOUN S. DON T. Silver Cm*, P.0,811my.1. Ginty Fa. February 6tb, , eat DISSOLUTIONS.. • ISSOLUTION:=The Partnership heretofore existing; between Jeilea dieto. Inas iller and Albert Hendrickson. etresitet In ties Plttun boating businees, under the Ann of STICK', MITA/ rr LER A CO.. in Pinecrove. Srhuyikill manly, Pa. is It. volved by mutual ronowt. All thoee Indebted to .1 d arm win mak* payment. and , those haritur riaitos will prm k a them to josana Steed. who le ant bosinol to ten tie up the boatman of the late Arm . . JOSHUA STEM . . ' ' ISAAC KITZMILLEX. . Jatr.3o.lB 60tol ALBERT BS BRICK:ION. t d ARTNERSHIP NOTICE.—The 4 co.partnershlp In the lumber hustnesa berstonsi , ea on between R. C. Wilson and Leeds Royer; nu this day (April llt., III 7,) dissolved by mutual consent. - t R. C. WILSON. LEWIS ROYER. The undersigned hare this day (A pal 27.1837 .1 entered Into co-partnership, In the lumber business. et the steam I kyh saw mill at the root a it Inclined planes an the 11. It. I S. U . R. R., undor 4 e tnn•IR.C. a JANISS WILSON.' fo All orders r luta promptly attencleAto. R. C. WILSON. JAMES WILSON. SI . 0 2.17 18-] FY HE FIRM of 111.A.KISTON, COY a CO. . was dteeolewl on Om let - 11310..11 i holt" - t ow. The 'Milano will be nettled by Jobu It. Illakiebwe and Wm. P. Cox, wbo an. atone tvottiortsod to oft the Dame of tbw lab, firm in liguldstloi. JOHN it. BLAKISTON, WM. T. COX. • ' Plaidilptii, :an. 19; 18181 GEO. P. NY.VI:i. Tbe Coal bullpen twill be continued by the seteert_.- tl.lll, lobo hive 'modal id together under the Ira of BLAKISTON A COX. JOILN K. IMAKISTON, W3l. P. COX. OVTICES-217 Ikaloot 'amt. Phltadrlobla; 4' Yav dreet. - New York. [Pbtlaora. Jae. 19. 'lB 41at FOR SALE &TO L • 1 - 2011. RENT=A Throe Story I Brick House, 'Basted in lbw °reliant. In Ihr borough of Pottsville. well Solshed, end In good no. 4ton fora fatally, nlth watts at the door, and all Mbar convenlenres. Possession given Itaiaadlataly. Apply to JOSISPIi Pottavllle..Febroary 20,111 8.3% FOR SALE , --The Tavein_Stand,l *sibs Lorberry Ralhood, %rawly kept by Ibirrey. Comelier srlth 10 semi of lead. }pa rts ableb Is cleared. Apply to CII4IO. ISIOLLY. Plnegrore, February 13,'U 74Izi o I R R T--L-A convenient el J : Dwelling !louse and Stable, Wasted in :Scr we'll= street, above Zeidnlik, Ibrmerly vernal kl 'cc& - pled lry John L. Martin. Porsessboa 'MI tA. / day of April next. Inquire of Jitztall POSTA. rents street. Pottsville. , (Teti. 13, r:.O TO LET-The Brick Store an(l4 : Dwoutor Houle on the coritarof S.etood and T 0 streets, le the Borough et Faint tr eat y eocupled by Travels Perri's. 14st isoderato, apply to tilltOltOr. IlltIGIVr at Bright t Lenit's Hardware atom, Potlnine. I , * to the lubxeribtr at et Clalr.- JOHN SEITZINGEIL, Joel. Feb 6. '6B • 64t. TcOAL MINE TO LEASE•I- Situated between Pittrion and Scranton, on th e KaWeed.— mine is ready to ronunenne &divining ecol—a sirtri to a great rein tering fini.heti, Deleting inlet:was/ twat. ker, with omens of the beat ereckledien,rwwetwil. Tin contortion with New York is very direct. The oilmen wai wake favors/ 4w terms with a , party bathes was means, either Waft@ for hit amount or theirs. Addreaa- . H.IINAIIRLKY, New York. - February 1:k la.:. 7-1 m Fyo LEASE FOR A. TERn• OF FNARS—A lied Aeh Oral Vein, from 16 to '.3) i.e. t ck , above water level. on the horberry Creek Refloat, having the advantage of three different 'hipping pint., tie: by the Dauphin ilkilread to Auburn obi thrice tv the Beading Railroad to Philadelphia; by liakn 'Di Schuylkill Canal to Philadelphia: aloe, instil by the phin It Suequebanna ftaPneid to Baltimore. lied lei to a good tenant. Ear further Information apply to C. MOUNT. Pinecrovv: or to J. 11.11AE&,44X1 and 447 Market it.. Phllsda. , February 13, '367.3t0 -----___ COAL MINES TO RENT:The Allegheny It.ll. k Coal CO, .111 receive propraild their oface.hn. tui South 3d Street. Philaddpkle tr the rent of their Bituminous' DWI Mines, oitadd the Alleglany- Tunnel on-the Peensylmela k. lLta Blair CO O l'a.„for one or more years, the premeds to state the prise pertinn, the minimum neater et feas to be taken gut.the proposed terms of settlement cod length of lease. Thee* mines hewn been rocreverstly Worked for two femiont by the Company; the oal been Sound of a very superior quality for smirk and other purpoeee and rommands a ready isle. V. win. hate aea picky equal to the produetion of WOO Tons ayear. are free from water. and admit of large ettetalen. Feb. IS. 64th JOSHUA W. Atilt. President __ . - rrO 'i,ET—The STONE STORE gi 1101131 , .' the bOtoligit of Port Carbon, no.ja occupied by Mattson I Babe?. Rent WO per atom.— Posansabn Liven on - the Ist day of April oast. for terms, .le.. apply to Jer.Boone, Port Carbon, or in the tab wither. at biz dike, in 01111110411 street, Pottsville. Jan. IZ, '59 4-10 T • g.,OVAM. HE UNDAHSIGNEh, in order to reduce their expenses and areld 10ti0n...4 rent. to as to enable th.m to seU goods at priers Fulled t 9 Ow tiuses, hare removed from the Stone Store Hone, of Mt. singer A Wetherill, to the,bullding adjolnlnc the bridge on Coal street, which wilt hereafter be known es the “One Price Island More'' where their old customers sod' , the pgblie generally wi ll Lind s general aimed meal ut ill Muds of goods, each as Dry'floode. . Flour. . Groceries, Feed. Ilardwere, eau. 1 . Queeer . rare; • . that. Provtaione. .1 Plaster. . All of which will be sold at the lowest priers, for cue; 9 nly. ' MATTSON k BABEII. Port Carbon, January 30, 't bly . NOTICES. ATTENTION, nioTos.,AlMlLLEßiti—.Tost mid meet for parade on Monday, February..2ld, 1858, at 9 o'clock., A. M., at your Armory. The tuy mill be called at 10 minutes after U. • By order Of the Captain, M. /CUOMO, Feb. 20.'68 Mt, ' • Order! 9ergaud. NOTICE:—The Ninth Antual.Mee- Hag of he storkbolders of the St/wheal& Seeing Fund Assoelatlon• of Penallle will be hold at the RP change Hotel. on Monday evening*, March 1.1110, at o'clock. The Annual Election for officera will be held. and other important business of- the Association will I. laid before the stockholders for thine eonithloratlon. A foil attendance. therefore, is earnestly requested. February:AL 'Mt 11.21 J AMEA YUCIIT. Mey. VOTlCE,Whereas my wife E 4-7 LEN, bait lan my battand board without any Just mu", I baraby Motion an parmos from trotting by na my icrount, aa I tri II pay no &bract' bar contracting after tbls /at*. • WILLIAM RYAN. Port Carbon. Feb. 1.7858 Utt• VOTIC.g. , --All persons having open seeriunts with me will present them no settle ment. No goods will be delivered to any person vs 07 aecoant without a written order frourGEO. W. LOW k\. .72i0. U.OtIIIORNNE, as nrefor QaaLake Relined , October 224 '1.7 Win CARD.—The nndergigned beingA, appointed a Nptarg ristdio for Sobuyl6lllCouuty. to reside In Pottraille, will attend to taking anknowl- WlOnnenta,nod all other busin•lot appertaining to bit *lßM Coultlialeing, runny. and sale of Real Estate. Agencies, lc. mei, In Market greet, near Third. Jan. 1"5,'68 4edaril ' :tag MA, MARTZ, " Where _lre Branch" We Root." CAIIP. No.l l l, of J. b. of A.. of ral ' T 1 eneetsevery Monday Evening. In third uteri Beebe. nice' Hall, S. it. corner Conine and Bartel at mete, Potts villa, Ps. Cotorounleatione should be addreeted to DA , . DILLIIA7I, Jr., Cbairntan Boer! of •Correepondeoce , Pottsville. P.O: LA lIAR S. BAY. I'. W. V. Ilvartinots, R. & January 16, 'l.e. 3.1 y A DMIN ISTRA'FORPS - NOTICE.- - Wheless. Letters of A dudolitration on the idly ot ANIEL Llle DERM VTII, decesseeLlateof New Coal , Schuylkill county, have been .granted to, the Ode persona' Indebted to - the raid estate l' hereby no r tifled to melte Immediate payment, and having el/aisle against the came to prom% them 100 out delay. JACOB LINDERMUTII. slohnittiorato New Castle, ehtryl. Qo.. rub. 6th 'l5 8•13 t _ _ ....- • !110 OPERATORS. and DEALER`. —The undersigned offers to receive Cell 4. Me rook on Morass., and defiler It to any part of fl' H" of Philadelphia. at a moderate ehary.e. t .vlll ale tend to the collection of bills and the solo of 0./ I commission. ' Address to ABU:WV Ell :4 rvb , 115th and Willow streets, Refers to Illotslin Rua, Ki Sifner.ll4.: 'hau l Dotrumpon, Esq., 'Lunation. t au. 0.".9 1 140 _ - ADMIN IST RATRIN'S N o TICE. :e.Whermut Letters of Administrallos tor. bee vented by the Betitater of Schuylkill omniy, ls Ole 16. orialfned,•Uport the Mate of Edward anal bold. late of the borotofh of Port Carbon, to unl" 141 " 71 kill, deeeased.—Notice Is Denby g 31,11 all P rot. aid iv debted said estate, to make immediate re; eat. vol . those 'lumina claims to present thrui ...Wooer.. without delay. MAST ANN ilitliAtllKAD. Pokt Carbon, 8.1111 .14 011 . 1 r u r ri ‘ P A 14 D EAGLEN (it•s COAL.—The Tangamootaek Coal 0 mfanY r r opened their . , mines and coMplvte4 their Balls nowpreparaigto matelot An• the 6.10 0( their raid t . 7 f gle Bituminotts Coal deliverable otter the , pentvr navigation oar the Pennsylvania IV.at Brooch COX ? , This Coal 141 volt adapted i for Geo. IP , uodrf , 'Pod " t Mean and Dom/elle use., for all of which par Itre too beep tested and aroved. References , t ose who have pe ed P. J. It. 31 D, ll "' mist of New York, analysed this Coal mot tr rtiEwr. It 16 free from sulphur.. A. A:Atilt:l O" "4,1 41 44t1 Si Z%r. T ---- t IFFICE of the SWATARA '• IV SNAP CO.—rottsellbi. January lath. I ;SA, At the annual meeting rt . Me atockholdes ff t.'` jam" CualPsfiy. bald at their older an the Slat all;P:z the %flowing perions were unanhnonOro.lecl.dr.. rectors Ow the ensuing 'ter "...Trodden% 11. 10 , :ct," SOW; Morton, T. W Washer. Otorge Piatt. Lewis '" Unit. Charter Tralley. Partin IV ,J. U. Cova.a..l. Gerrit tam and J. C. Donaldson; Tres; r. cannel 14r n • 1: il. Maslow , . Narretary- " . , Pottsville, February 13, 'ill :- .itlFfidi 7 WtitE —lftikii,D—CS(l). t„..7 IP PROFILIIPPT A RAILROAD PO —10).0 Of' ehante ItzebanAe, Philadelphia. Jaiseary bo 111.1gli. of At the anenal asaertin of lb. ofockfffons abava Costpriay, held co Turadory. the 12th flirt, 0 4 : lowing perens were elected Director , fortheea" Oar W. Doaaldon, C. X. ISpanglar.o '`:.. °Orem det W. r; Waparaller and Albot D. Wel. At a aree2 raid Pirortur ' s. b•l4 subaequently. W. DONALPSO r• aided Prosldgut; C. L Apangler, Tweeter, aral " 1. WAguisg 13 su• , s. 14 Etecreirry. febrear • :. I FM=