S OF THE UMW JOUZIAL. • ascii imisaurrim: lani . o i!OLLARe per annum, psyntilo In Iniratire— s9 kis if not ilildtrityn six ntouttia. , !iiid $2 b 0 it not pilti withid th e yea . TO CLVTO: - Three coptes to one address, klu advance.) vi 0 0 Sieren '' do! da 10 00 ypo,, ~ .do.' do do . 0 la/ Oul,suhreripannn court be invariably ppid in ad- Simms, and eons in one addrest, . , • TO COLITIS AYD OTTItILS: •• ' ' The 3 , 0 0 AT, will be urntshed to Carriers and others tat ex ^' too copies. each on delivery. ~ . , J cisfygesen and &tool rsochars Supplied with the J id;sl. in advance.: • . rug LAW olt ttOraPlenta. . . • If Fab al 'theta ortier the dlseentiti wince of their news. papers,vheNpablhher may continue to send them until all arrearttors are raid. ' ' _ - • 1 1.1 Falai:aim neglect or refuse to take their ne,wspa Ore torn the otnesto which t Der are divel•d- t • i. held reepotudble until they have battled the I re rnp oe ordered them dlscoattnned. If su*riben, wave to wiser place. without 191 the publish-v. and 'he newlapers are cent toil„,,b !„..r direction, they are held reaparndble ' Ai - • The cceirt• have decided that refusing to titre new, }a• T,44 from the Alm dr tvertovl nu ; and tearing then up iodine. ta retina fade evidence of Intentional' fraud. II OF ADVERTISINC _ope square of 10 I in es, 50, cents for one Insertion--sus *fluent I nsertion'. 25 cents ach. 3 lines 'One thne , 2 i 7 1Y----- ta . h-::::Oniwiertlonn.l:l4 cents each. Ail adeer tlselnente over 3 linos, for short periods, charged as a I ' square 2 e one.. TWO. VIS ES . trtts. l v *As?as. .. inrat lines, 63 , 08 $1 25; $2,25 $3 00 ! Q ui. ItheA, AO 1 23, 175 275 OU l• Swell ns, roo 150 2 003 . 900 tilt ur i4 .,,,, ,1 25 - 2 23 , 260 . 400 :":- r 6.. Hues, 225 21 . 0 450 .. . 00 i __. l Eight lines, 123 225 285 ' 500 r. ti oro I Nine line., / 26 • 2 3 20, 4-4° 900.' 9 . • ALL ovA; WS t.LSYS COVIS . TED AS s .6rsat If 233 trXis. • sll One rinspe, . .1 23 , • 2 26 •3 60 00 10 00 ._ Two ntiaees. 221 400 500 900 14 00 . I, l'htee squares. 350 500 . .7 15 00 I Poo, squares, 430 ; 4 ( t o 800 14 00, .20 00 lex I:o,,rter 1•01„ 600 900 .12 00 18 00 % 30100 1 •;litarger apace for short perlols. ail peragreement. ( ; ni• tusinessolotiees, 91 Mach—accompanied with an I advertinement„so cents earh. • ' ,La • 4dvertisernents before Ihurtages and Dentite„ In centti,' perllnehir dret.tteertiOn—subsequent Insertions. :Scents I . , per line. line wordiPireenuotedan alinmpadvertiang. 51erehante And nthers.adrertining by the year. 'with 1 i changers: And a standing edvertisuknent not exoredinals I Se lines. :4 %Jibe chArred• including wUbscription. $l6OO. 1 --`' Spieeto the timmot ofloutrevlnrel, with chin- , • fees and subscription, • ~•, • . , 20 00 J Without rhs ogee. at the rates dotignated abOve. .1 Adverl leetnents set in larienty.pe than usual will be 1 I e t,,,,y4 r,o' !we cant edvancti. on these prices ' All cuts I le ' VW be *hared the saute as letter preen. • i 1 Ns Trt•ie t tvertinements eet —leedicr,,,n, Advertising I 1 Agents abroad. except at 25 tier, centl.i advance on these P. - priers. unless by special agreement se4th the, publisher. 1 it Nt k srris.me I:3 , :t•TII 4. eael• DeatitsaeCom ponied 'with n0.. 1 -r• lice'. 25 ..elltS. Willintlinotlrep. no ette. '1 I All nntiroo.eacoot th ) lee of a relict ,us ehartireer end 1 „ for educational purposes. will be charctnl2s coat; for any ; nuotb..r of itUOIS under4o. Over le tines,' cents per One ; additional. ' l. !. Pc meedlno of tratetlitgtonnt of A generator P•ublic char- 1 icter, charged nt,4 cent C per line for each insertion. En facilitate raleulatlons' we will state that 328 lines 6 I j I make a c,ol wan -1163 lines a ball col u mi—and 82 lines a; of loarterculumn. 2952 words make neolumn-147 6 shelf 1 E, .oluirtn—attdf733 a quarter cOl unit]. Ail nti , 3 llnee. ricer i " earh gloats. charded at ther,rate of 4 centS per line, for ; ;47 ,one time, and 4 erote per line for three times. 'tae.Vastly Adv.rtisers most confine their advertising to i ( r own business. Agencies (..r ofhere.sale of ltral Et- • p., ke., or. not Included to lot.dneee 4,. ee l t r , r ,,,,,ta • ; . PAINTING, &C. ' MILEW.STYLES WINDOWSHADE&. 11 - USl' received, a large and eleg tit as- FOrtment of Windom' Shades. new and Lem:Offal de algae, in rinding Gold Itorddred. 4111 mi. Landstape,of Flo ral, Gothic ke., kc., cheaper L than ever. • :•• • • ASO Figured, Glazed Ana Plato Paper Shades. of every 'de scriptinn For .43.1011 ISENJ. NN AN. • Centre Street,oppOsite EptiLcopal Church, March 14.'57 • . • 11- JUST RECEIVED New Styles Paper Hangings, ORDERS, FIRE , - --:- 1 .. PAPS j'llnard Prlotn, Cuttaln Pa- ,•O(, -..- ---, • i per..,lnc.. Moots front 0 cent% to e a ... •IN ~ e. " 5. $2 W. which we are Prepnred for ..0..., ..w put up at.short notice. ._ House, and Sign Painting, Glazing, dr.. c . I , t Stained and Enamelled French and . American double t thick, Chryntal, Sheet and Male Glass. furnlnbed to or der. All orders promptly attended I. II MUM:Y . & BOWEN. • 111 ...Centre' street , 2 doorsnkore American 'louse. 1i March 21.'51' . . • REDUCED PRItrS. .- Waal Paper Cheap. • tl r. HE subs'critkr has a large lotTof very Oholee Pat erns of ' • Nn i Paper, suitable f r Halls., .CPA „...-r....- ..._O ll , Parlors. Dining ilontiit. Num- •11 1 / 4 %, beriand Publie.lluildiup. which • .`",: 2 .41,40113 4 ' .:.,_.., he will sell at gceatly rydured, 00 04. -- . prices. .The Stack embrace% the • • .4 . ....) Infest and most esteemed Patterns. Paper as cheap as 5 cents a. Piece. •. Now Ir'the time for Bargoldol for Pow Honglnco and ncedts at • 13. BANN AN'S i heap WhnPs;le and -Hrlnit Paper and itnnk. Store- Kr liA l' ER •lIANOERS SUPPLIED VERY CIIEAP. ' 'Dotobrr 31rt. , 07 . . INSURANCE. CHARTER PF.ltPrit" kL.I • . Ottik•RATED 114 1 S fo•j THE STATE FLEE AND MARINE INSIINANCEI Company of Penna. jETICE- 7 92 Market Street, Harris-; • 9ne_ burg, Pa. Carital 380.00380.000d011ai5. ure all the safer claip.4 of proptt t v agaltpt Lois by, Pire, parila of inland Navigation and Tntnaportation,, J JOIIIN 'P. nurugitroit D, PrAlden!. . a. Wkan r &eretiry. ' . . L. Norrini; rice Prefdent. • BENJ. BANNAN has been appointed Agent for Oda' Company In Schuylklll rounty,and Is prepared ta Insure all kinds of property at the lowest rates with regard to security. 'The rake can be ascertained at his Bookstore, B. BANN AN is also Agent for LIFF. as yell as WEI Insurance.• titre: b. Rh; 49. . AGNEW 'MEE INSURANCE AND TRUST C 0.,. Pottsville, Penna. ' 61PITAL$160,000-CHARTER PERPETUAL: •., HIS Company, chartered by the Fii I.eglnlature or Pennsylvania, with a capital of One ' I andred Thousand Dollars. is now fully organised, and ' has comiimucti business. The Company is prepared kr receive twin/plead other pr-erty.in trust, and allow interest on all moneys deposited in trust, at the rate.Of .the per rent. per annum: principal and interest payale 'on demand. For rates of Premium on Life Insurance, ,see the printed Tables supplied at the office of the Corn pauy,'Centre 'tree., Pottsvi(le. three doors w.uth of the Exchange Hotel. JAGOBIIIUNTZINGEII,jr., Pray. W a.uNcyrox littaa. Secretary and Treasurer. , April 1.'57 ' • 13 t 1 ANTHRACITE - listriiiitecniiiii i i, A.uthortsed Capital, 114•00.000. 1: • CltlAß'ltit PERPEIT Al.s. - 01r1Cito. .J Be. 91 Walnut street. between Mini and fourth ' streets, Philadelphia. -This Company will Winne againit loss or damage by Fire. Buildings. Furniture. and Mei , chandlie eunerally. AI«, Msaisst :Jewesses. on Vessels. Car,pies nod Freights. INLIND lasuaaNCL to all parts lif the Union. DIRICTORA : ' D. Luther, • ) 'Davis Pierson . Lewis Audenried, ' Joseph Maxfield, Peter :?Ilger, Dr. Heo.N. Eckert, [ i John K. Illaekiston, B. Hammett, ' .! Samuel 1.1.. Ituthermel,., Win. F. Dean. ' ', • D. LUTHER, PritrulenLi WX. V. DEAN, ViCt Presi.lnit. W. 4.14.ra1th. Sierrfory. • , - I • Wl'. D . LUTHER hai been appointed agent fnr the above Company to Schuylkill county, to ;whom peron* dealylng•lnsuranca esti apply. • I ' Jan - .*.ary 1.'67 , (April S.'S!, 14-1 1- IttENNITY. 'Fr HE Franklin Fire Insurance Corn piny. or Philadliphia. Office, ,N0,'163, , ,i Cheso l ia' streets, beer Fifth street. , r . ,f nutscrosts:' , Charles N. Stacker, , ' George W. Richards, Thomas Bart, • Mordecai D. Lewis, Tobias Wagner, Adolphe K. Arnie, Samuel Grant, David S. Riven. - Jacob R. Smith. Morrie Patterson. Conti n na to m.iki. Insurance. permanent or limited pn every description of property. in town And country,yat rates as Inn as are consistent with security. ~ The elm panf. have reserved a large contingent YUti it • whic h. With thdir Capital and Premiums, safely 'Avoid 1 Afford ample protection to the insured. Since their n corporation, a period of 18 „Veers, they have paid upward. of one /minion. two hundred thousand diglurs,losses lb Are. thereby affording eoridenee of the advantages of in, surance. as wallas the ability and dispositibh to mew with promptness, all liabilities. ... •Cil AS. N. DANOKER, President. • Cuss. (I.ll.ssccan. secretai-y. , The subscriber has been appointed agent for. th e abov.' mentioned institution.and is now prepared to make in. suratice. on every description of_propert v. at the Proves rates. • t • ANDREW ItIiSSEL. Agent. •Potteville-Jan. 11.1851 24( . 1 THE LIVERPOOL AND LONDON FIRE AND, - LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY. 1 st A CTIffiRILED CAP1TAL...141,000,000, or $10.009,000' . l'itld!up 06pItol.4urplug And 141e:y(4 Fundi,- 006 54 7, 000. .-' 1' . . NoOrly $.400.000 Invested In Ibli enuntry. j , ' ' Liability of the shareholders unllinltod. ' The Income of thin . .. Company In New. Yort. for 1557 vii upwards of $ 6 9 0 ,°00. The pnderahzned haring horn Nipointed neents of Ith shore Company, Aro prepared. to rereite a pplicationsl fr . • .e apppllcauo.._ i nmaranen azainst Fire. nn eery dewriptfiin of bulb in.acand properly, incsiding mat breakerannd the strut tures ronnected . All throw. part* re quirinz in.arante are mpertfully invited it. eNtilt •offire where, pert teulars will he given. togoherteith , tht 116'cup:ins's circular, and dealli'd statement 4 the 4ion; dltion of thin well known and thoroughly reliable corpd ration. twee... the amount of insurance de.trett rimede r.11 1 .* of the Liearteml and tendon. the undorahnted !air In Ottlttilt it in other reliable corm:l4oex. itrferenre to perthitted to be matte to the, folloMlnj gentlemen • John Te opu TuCkrr, 3obn Shippen.Evi7l Jame. Domino,. Gt.,. W. Snyder , 1:8.: John It. While. 1:11.. • Ilan:Jame. 11. Camp lIORACE P. 1411T11 and 111:Ntty W. i•001:E. Appar, 'At Ottlee.of 11. W. Poole, Engineer. Centre a. . Pot tpvlll .110. W. 'SA • L.l.f LIFE INSURANCE; THE Girard Life Insurance, AnHit and Trust Company or Phiivi . ..lphin. lHMrr I ebeiout"stkeet, tho first door East •of the Cuato . . CAPITAL S3OO,OOO—ti I ,ARTER PERPETCAZ, Zontinu , A to make Insurances on lives on the most Ire. - ahl, t.rot P. 'ae raidtal einZ paid up and Invested. tocet her 'WI It a Isr4o val ronstantly 'hennaing !esecced fund; Off:, s • a plrfectoecurlty to the Ineureit. ~ I ' Th.. pr....niuwaq may be; paid yearly, • half•yearly r .quarteriv. 'I The emmant add a Ihrtes periodically to the 'nen ~. ""`TL , tiii.. The &lit nines. appropriated in Decem r, 1 , 41. and the neeoriel nonus In December. 1840, an', ' t to an adiltion of s2n2 5Q to every $l,OOO Insured. um r the oldest oolletecnnklny 41.261 10 wit Ich , or ill be ipa d rhea it shalt beeonte A claim. Instennl of $l.OOO oifrr. • ally insured the nextoldsat .amotto tto $1,Z17 50;theare t In aze to $1.212 50 for Coors $1.000: the others In! t e carne pippyttonareardYng to t he. amonnt and flute f Mina I nz, which additions 'althea', averatte of Moretti 50 pie vent. upon the Premiumspaid, without inert - in.. therannual,preminni'. • I ~.. saatatat • . Thomas Ridgway, iti . John A. Brown, Amon I . Aon Davis. . D. Tanner. John J.iy Atulth. ' . Vrederleit Ilvonn,l I:Men Pearsallo . . . 4 ron;e rater. Jsorph Yeamtr. . • John It. Lat Irate,' Thomas P. James, 1 Wharton Lewis, J Jrneeh T. Miley . John It. Black.' i ' rh samhtutsmotalainz tableof ratelandexelanatin . n , fa.tmlication and further information nn h. !,, d at the nr•-e. TlMif AS RID3WAX, President Inns P. JANt.S. Actuary. - i. •I I,, l f i r Th. . 1 1 1 A^rii..r Iv azent Chi the ohm. elwripa %multi Counts.. end will eff.et insurances: • th..c "rolMry information 00 the suldeet. .... „.. .119 ti . . ' 41 ItANNAff —DRAFTS ON EURO_PE J ___ isELIe& SON'S DRAr.r; N,Q4 , l 4 "kluk e r Howe of John Meant Cord. • leanit on the tkgreetitanklng en. i4to.mh;Offe site in some Tem CI up to 11:4*.tly, t h3o. t ., t ' tt Ilnak.tore. Patterllio. Theo* flx teith Tr Ii nd erbii the i an.n eared houree•ln thle i•ottatey wart • pOLISEtED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING, BY DENJAMIN BANNAN, ?OTTSI4LLE, SCHUYLKILL 09UNTY, PENNSYLVANIA. OL. x_xxrv. II USINESS CARDS. I D. L. DODSON,, Den • IW. Mitikel Street.. three doors'idas Third. KM la wide. [Pottwellle, Jan. 21. '6B 01 O. K. .9.lSirrH, Engineer rdand Collleq Viewer, Pottsville, Pa. . 14, /7 • j t 7-tf 1 SEPH W.! GEARY,:' Civil and Mi- In g Engin e er.: 01Ve—Norchilinitnryggre!;_rotts• i, • w. SHEAFTE,R, Pottsville, Pa:, late or the Potittaylvattb..fitate Geologies] Survey, res land g. m Ink /le. ['October 13.'51. 41-tf F FORGE 11,ROWN, Mine Inspector, 1 ' Pottsville. inspncts Cnal lands and Mines. Partial. tention paid to rontilaikm: fauvist 1, ~ 57 31-If ENRY .PLaSANTS, Civil nd • Mlning PtYTTSWILLE. • a—Market street, north 'side, between Centre aud a. . . I[A ugust 6, • 32-6 m TEEffictit, - ET3 tcfiNskt).k aurgefil.n and Acconeher, WIG S G--Oppoalte the Arcadian inatitnte gnat 29, '57 , ' 3S-17 , T R. SYM 0 "S, Civil,"Topo , eographienl and 311ning Engineer. Centre Amer, tile- I's.. offerS his services persons eepnirina 'er rate eurveys Cud first char; .n aps.. LFeh.=. 7-Iy O [ - I 'l'.K I N'S 0 N 'iS , i' General Land •Ageney and Surveying Ofilee, , KANSAS CITY. 31 ISzipUll.. onsri 23, 'AS • . RANK CARTER, Chil and 'Min int Engineer, tiurvey4r, gty.tl to surveys nds. nes. town plot Office h Sarni. Lew Is, first door below Silver Terrace, Pottsville. Ps" — ti ay 9. 'V 11 s . LEAVER & 61..APP, Geoiog ' cal, g Civil and Mining thiglnetra. einiveyancar!, t and 1 EatapJ Agenb.--niiiinsite the Wyoming Hewn., SCR/LAWN. l'a. , . . CLAVER.) . .' [A. , F. CLAM'. .. ay 2. 217 • • Ig-ly . • , OHN I,IODGKISS, Mining no , • neer and Surveyor, CeO re St., Pottsville, Pa.. at e de to Surveying 40d, Exploring Coal Lands. Itirpect • n , Nines. &e. Agent for the purchase and oaletil Real is ate. eolketion of rents, Le. ' hitch 12, 1&6. • ri • iI, ENItY AY. POOLE, Geological, t Topo g raphic:4.lnd Mining. Engineer. Centrestrret. tsrille. Pa.. givel2ttentlnti to Purveys' lin d exnmina a .ns Coal Land!. to surreys of miner. requlrillir xpe -1 areurary. and. to the t.operibtendener and entire ante for prorirtoii, of esta I vs. Erbrusry 3. '57 ; I.luly '2'2,'1,4 '.27-trl TifitiT,'Y—' 'For the Purchase and 'Sale of Itea6istate: buying and selling Coal: ta li hg elintro of Coal Lunde. Minos, ,Le.,ltud collecting rl nta—frntn twenty years experience In the County he ti pee to give satisfaction.• office Mabantango Street, I' ,tlcellle. .' 31.4111 LL. ' A 6.1R57 1.14 . . IRON WORKS. tOU RY n & NLAC t f . SH4r, T. %VENTERSTEEN • annonni-; • . eadin ass. from the rompleteoutht c. ofthenbeve named establistrient. hump ..1131,.1., ply nil orders in his' , line of business., . such as fur Steam Engines. Unlined and it, Cars, rump!, Coal Breakers, Castings and Machine. r of nrery pattern. Ile warrants his work to gives:Oil-. f ction. and aceor:dingly solkit. patronage at "unite and it, road. Jail. 27.1557 FOUNDRY AND. MACHINE SHOP, Steam var Vactory, C. two. !NOTICK—The business c f the late firm _ SNYDER & be contin .. • vied by the subscriber to all its irarioua hinnehesot Steam Engine'huilding, 'roar • - "launder. manufacturer of all kinds ol aehlnery -for .felling Mills. Illast Euriniees. Ilifdlread tarn. ke.. ke. 111 will also continue the lywinree Cr.:llin ig and Selling the celebrated Pine Purest Utak Ash and and Sehn,rciss Red Ash Cals. being sole proprie or of these Collieries f ' driNtar. W. SNYDER. January _ . . _,-- POTTSVILLER — OLLINC MILL. int; tiUtzii.:loilEltS are con ' stantl • manufacturing various. sizes of tit M Colliers' Itnil4. welching •.:2, .2:4 28.30,32 :1 -...17.04',diut and 40 pctinda perya rd. 'Also. large. Rolla of the moat approved patterns. Matting 45,60:56 and 60 pounds; per yard. From the xperienre of the part the years. we feel' eonlideat of eking Rails unsorpaimmt In quality by any mill in the ountry. All busltiorts communlatatkma addressed to locsrs. YARDLET A Soo, Iron Factors. Potiloville. trill ret with promPt attention. JNO. BURNISH & CO. • J ane "10. '57 ; . , 25" • • T. CL I AIR IRON WORKS. subacribers neportiully In Ste „„...„ the attention of the libnineao community , to their new foundry and Machine Shop, pia In the. town of St. Clair. Sehuylk ill coure ty, where they are. prepnted • to ivild Steam Enginesi Coal Breakers. Pumps and macbinery.of every pat tern. Mao, Drift Cars, iron or Braes castings of any Mae or pattern. Doing practical Mechanica, - COal operator, and ntbera who . want machinery would do well to give them a call and examine their work. Orders thankfully received an &executed nt the ahorteat notice sod on resin - maids tenni. CATIIEU, GRIFFITH &CO. .81. Clair. July 11,'57 , PALO ALTO ROLLIN° MILL. THE Subscribers beg lenve , to an •. nonnee to their friends and the public, , M•nfigl generally .that their new Rolling 31111 at Pal 0 Alto Is now complete, and in full 77 . ::ym " .. 7 operation, and that they are prepared to furnish raliP of various Patterns. weighing from 22 to Valhs per yard; Also. different sizes of Sat; square and round merchants' bat IrOn. - Ordersfor rails unbar non are respectfully solicited, and will meet' with prompt attention if left either; at the Rolling . Hill: 'Bright k Lerch's Hardware Store. Centre street. 'or at their Mike. N. B. Carnet. of Centre and Market stieets,2tl story. HAYWOOD; LEE eq. Jan. 1. '37' 141 TO COAL. OPER_ATORAI di MINERS: Pioneer Boller Works. tr: The 'subscriber respectfully Invite the attention of tile' business community td •_ his boiler troarks.on Railroad street. ba. ;.; (l i g; low the Paseene.er Depot. Pottsville, where he Is prepared to man Uraet nip , . ROI LEltt? OF EVERT DESCRIPTION. • emoke Stacksi Air Sticks. Gasouteters,Drlft Cars, &c...kc. Rollers on'lmitd7•• ••• • Beina a practleal mechanic and havirrefor yearsdevoted I. himself entirely to this" branch of• the •business, lie Ant i Jere himself, that work done at his establidiment will give satisfaction to all who may favor him eltlf a Individuals and Companies will find It greatly to their ad '. vantage to examine his Work before en,loging elsewhere. Nov. 21, 'hi. 47-tf I , , JOHN T. NOBLE. _VER NKADOW • 1 'Valli BR 1 ' .Iron and rasa Founders. respectfully Inform their pa . . iff ; trone.and the public genemily, that (her es - - :•..cazzarefttlly prepkrod at the above establish. • , ment. to manufacture Steam Engines of every size; Pumps, Railroad and Drift Cam, and every other desert a ssn of Iron' and Brass Castings anitalde for i the Coal mit int or other business. on the most reasonflde I terms. Also. Blowing Cylinders for Blast Furnaces And.i . Machine work in general. - • Repairing of all Rinds diode with heat ness and despatch L at the lowest prices. All work furnished by them war. ranted to perform well. They Would solicit theaustom'ot those who may went articles In their line In thlsylclnity. A ,I orders will meet with immediate and profit ahem 11 m. . S. DEDSON. 31areh 4.1.5;;7 94y W. 11.. HUDSON j PQ _ t ft --- V lI L L E • • lolSaddre and names& manufactory. lI4REWITII invite your . especial attention to my very extensive stock of Ready Nfld. dlrry, harness, 0,1/ors. tfc..embreeing the largeet ASHLAND IRON WORKS. . Ciirlety of-styles and qualities ever offered' for stile In ' 'lli k: StitSCltlllEWare now fully • ,this manly, and at prices that will cranium favorably tr' Imp, prepared to furiih.b. at the Ashland litre .1 with those of any other house in the trade. e 1,,, ' Work's., Steam .Englues and Pumpsof any ilaving been . for snore years past. ..,""'''' ,•'-,;;;;.; power and rapacity. for:pining nod other •, -J., \ in the habit of marrhaslng. my A iiii `.l - - purposoa. Coal linakersof every sire and I t/ • Raw .11alorialezduticelLf4 Pub. pattern now in use. together stittrrastings and Urgings I of ~,y d,..„0-1 laic, , C„l Mid D r if t c,,,,, „ A • n il m ann , :I. , d myself now in the possession of adritntageri-trout ~ .thia eause not enjoyed by the trade generally. and fed . and patt ern a. large- Truck aild yore.. Cara—nil furniahe'd•-. •at the charter notice. The subscribers Hatter them- I that I man withronfideuce,solicit the trade of all claws • of Ostleta:: and my arrangements for the coming sea selves that, Inaatnuch as every member of the trot IF a : -son's tradeare batted upon seen 4 rover amottnref bitsi -0 prattles) tocAanic,they frill be aide to furobb miebb I 'eery that emit compare favorably with any i n the , nor than I' have; hitherto . (low! t You can theretbre rely ' glom,' All ordrradirested to L. P. GAnxitt k Pos....fah. , upon fading at my establishment everything that Is le (tired iu my line. . . lead. Schuylkill coon tY, Pa , will receive pretiipt atten tion-. . : . . ' 1,. It. HI AtiNElt. : q Orders he mail are reepeetfraly anlicited. - and the maxis - , ' • 311Cli AEI, GARNER, .ren e t , vrarranted to give aatisfsetion. both onto price and • I.EFEVER tromnsuniivr. Oppostle F.:pa:copal Caurch, Col re sire . 1!014s 11 . - . . . JOSEI'II GAI:NIV. ; Lumity ._ . •. , .. i . a - m _.. , I` -. March 7.1551 10-le • Anhlsind, :4,Tair 10; '57 DEHAVERS.IRerarOtN W ORKS, :. ALM Ille. eiassimes TILE Subscriber is prepared L menu_ . , facture STEAM ENGINES of ituy power, ."... Punt ps o f Any capacity. and Coal ilnutkrrs - t i , : Edi a of every description ; tot well so every - other kind of machinery used in Mines, _ . . Brea {tem./. tiruaens. 801 l hue itt ills. Saw Mills. A.,. From the ; facilities. possessed for manufacturing. and from long experience in the huslness.work can hoturned oqt at this istablishment,at the veryloweht pricesoed of a superior. quality. Penrone.desiron F. of putting up mach! n ery o f any kind, are invited to call and examine patterns and become:ie. intainted with prices before contracting' elsewhere. Orders of every kind are solicited. and strict attention will be given to their prompt execution. . WILLIAM DEIIAVEN. , Minermilie. December 9.1647 46-tf . WASHINS.TON I.RtIM WORKS. - i 1 inutility ille, Psi,. THOS. k JAS WREN respectfully Invite the attention tlf the businmw community 4 { - 1 „ lit :7 to their New Misehir Shepard Foundry it . 55a1;.„;.,,;„ erected between CMtut road streets, i ~. ... and front Intl on rilviwian street. Whet a r 1 1 bey arc prepared to execute all ortfirifor machinery of lleass and lion, such tut Stettin EnglpeZ all kinds of Gear , I log for Haling '31.1115, Grist and Saw 31ills, Single and . Rouble acting Futons, Coal Ilircolierv. Dili t Cars. all kinds i : of ilailretdCast lugs. sneh as Chafrifor Flat rind.T Rail; -,TSB • , • Frogs. Switches, kr.; all kinds of east and wrought lion i s . tha fl ing. Orin" , practical mechanise. and having made, .. . • • ! !the dem ands of ' the Coal Reg ton their study for years, . Atwell kinds of . Matthinery in their line of business. tlhey SCHUYLKILL _COUNTY'LUMBER , Ha t 1 ei. thentrelrev that 'work done at their establishinent: , • ' • ~. ' —Alio— will give malefaction to all who May honor them with a j MANUFACTURING COMPANY eat), ' All &piers thankfully received and promptly ewe, II Vit. on hand at their extensive establishment, on tinted, on the most reasousble tem ft. TWQM'AS WREN, JAMES wnEx. . a lt :d ul d oad ejer p i t p r rio t n , 7w g b rea kh t quanti t y tran of s l u u p ta p be ly. r t o o f e o v pe ery ra k to in n4 d N0v.:12,103 • • . 47-tt ' Carpenters and Sondem at lower rates than it can be bought elsewhere. They are slew-may .to supply, I !trough', lie means of theit eltensive business. and la bor saving machines.. mintafaitured articles in their lino al a saving of SS per sent. on former coil. . _. TREMONT IRON WORK , Tremont, Savoy!WU County,:renne. TheSubteribertreepectfullyinvite :4111111 vi attention of the boilnrsaroinnunity ; Their I;rde roikshope have been in intrectstfut owe. ~1• 41 1 to their ew Machine Shop and Pomp / lion for thermal year, turning out vast ollstititisder dry, erected in thrtown of Trentopf..itnd Doors, Window Frames, '"" under the annerintendenreand manage. Saab • s Panel Worki ___ • __ _, wentof Mtreera. Z. liatdorff ind Philip trlnholte. where • Plioulabailys, ' iieeieptesea, i i hey are prepared to overate all ordere for, Machinery of ' Blinds, Bannisters, . I Prase anddrosoinch ar Steam &mimeo of any palter. ",„ , ebtatterar t • .:- , ,• _ • 7 Pump'. of any, ospaoity. Coal Itrrakersof ierery derodre. 1 And ad Linke)" Framed. litta.thd oinmg:Toriwed Wert. 41 i ton. all kind. of Gearing for !tolling 11111 e. Orirt And t, Which they bass constantly on hand. They an. ready ; Saw Mlllr.Drift efirl.• and all kludge' ItellrratlCaatl nye. I• to !lento ordatv at the shortest notice. for any qtuintlt,y 'nal **TAW rr. for Flat and 7 Itails,T roweliwilebee. and i or quality of sawed or tnannilartund Ant: • : ; • - 1 1 i all Rind% of Caet and irrouch I Iron Shafting,. Mr. Ur. ' DM iiiiddroint linlithell, 01 all kinds: for banding pun. hone helnen prirtiraiMiethattle.and having had !heron. Poen& . Oak. Maple, Poplar, chair . plank and sinutling i lideOrrandeirerfrorrformanyynaraintheCoilneglon, ' brands*: Cherry, Walnut. filah4any, de., roi cabinet 1 Pet4nr doe' roue or 'miffing up Machinery of any kind, , 1 weork; White and Tenon Pine boards Int flooring, raw or ere invited to oall and exatnintour patterns and;roperior f madrktikordirri Whits Pin* plasik,3,ll3i, 2: i', 1 %, Ye . qnalite et *not. and hectmia acquainted with Parry it ; and % Inch P 4l ! /el ' illwaY4 ready; all"' lank mam a .., three Worte. before eontrartingsberwlltrre. Orden. efev. I ratio, winding, posts, shingles, latifi'eol log laikpall. err kind thankfully reoeived. and shirt attegtion *nit* i 111. *e.. &E.' even to their prompt I etoralktn. haring "Inns! U,20, dirßillsof sawitdititif said thing he their line' 30.40. and en hope Veen or on %and. ' ' en hand or to order. at the qhortest notice , . 1 in . ei. I o :4' i.iy . C. A. .1- A. M. SELI7.P.U. . rottrd.lle, Starch 29 '37 • • . • . .. ' ' 1 ' ; . ...•.. . . . • , . . , . . . • , ',......_ . . • • . i - ', . ~ . . . . . . • . . , • • . . . • ~...-----. MI - i i r t,....,__ • .• ' ' ' , : • • 7: 7- '. :- .1- ;; : . - : -..— : ‘-; - .::: 7, "..‘• •• . .'.• : : • -.' -- ' •i - • '-= - - --:2• , -•-• T FEE-, i' 0 .t•-,....,-- , ~.;,.-. ~,:..! , , .-i. ....:; ;Li -. , , • .. ! z i",= •i- • .-7.t.di`i - ..' , , ` .' B ' . 1 . - ,F 7 . 3 8 • • ! . —.. r • : ..•: •• . -_. i, _ _ -; - .. .. 's 1 14 . 111 iii..--... . . 1••1•• __,,, ' - f- - • -I.*.' ' " ' - - - `'s '1 . . - 1 • ' . . 1. li'l'"- ,- S I 4 % ...ilt s. K. - -.i -: ' . ?t.! ~...- - . '-' •'-•` 2 ' •k _ . . . , . .... - . . . , . . - . , , , . • 1.. • . . . I / ' k ' ' ! - . . -' ': '. , '' • 4. - t : •' S I: :: I J to "lTln t g . ..il ' 4: 1 ;4;0:1NT/ IF . :L 1 • 1 . , i . . .. • ' • ~ Mit 'RUN 0 1111 0 41 1/4/inclie• . 1 . 1 44 11, . .. ...• - • • .'• lt milkes 11 :19 61 . 11104004 9 141 .1 1 _i , . ~ . ,- , .li Asks, Atieptlif ;,Oraff .1..- . . . ' ? . • , .. . . ,• /14;iii, .• , . .. . -. BRP ' -- "i• *SW BUM • AND P O T rsvittlF - -'--" - - - ' . . - -it't ll %..' '-ii - fa il- ',7C - -• . '''' ADVERTISER, -4 ENERAT - i'' . .' ::-..' .: -.-. .' - .•- . :..., . At the abotoStßottes. - Oar stock —4 7. -•- • ‘.. 01 . 0 . -. 5 "..) , •A-a‘s , : . . , . '.' I ' - , .-, • . . ,• - , sons sttes Its tlslo3Mit Stifiy *Ow • ..._ • . , , . . " i floe of lb. Ite. aid ll.ps keep boas r . . .•. • - myOdin_ WILF,, GI VE irnig TSOlt USZDJI AItNEISCEJECT-RLI. RATERS TO 0 R USE An iIiREETRE.—Dr. Johann.: ' •• *a Td ' . ". •-.-- - ' • : 1 -En•Jobblo lietstil Masa Mote . . i RILL TEACH YOU TO PIERCE THE BORELS OP-THE EARTH, AND RETRO OUT , PEON THE CSTRUIPOP It OESTRUS, METALS.. _ ~ . . . s „i . . , , .... •-. .I. toaristei r work to b• *a ust is . . . .... . 1 - r 1 ' I I . 1 i .I* PORT CARBON SHOVEL FACTORY. Charles sustta, rroprietok. ATI kinds of coal shonas, spadosiposlridess, AC. The pahooare of the public h respeotholl)atiklted. . January 10.'57 Ztf WATXR METRES. THE Subscriber' having been author lied by the etatirefaeturers of Water Metres, will tut ply all orders left with them,nb l ir ty ees. it —1030.18 Augux, F4-fr r-APEICI_Acti_ • DATE NT MAC tiLmi t: ADE per' J.: Do" to hold from Ito 20 po...nda. forl3 oetre.Drag gists and others, for sale by 6ARRIOILTILS, . Centre street, Pot tsr ills. 44-If • Novemtw 8.'56 WOOD'S IRON ORNAMENTS. LIE subscriber is authorized to re _ cake orders for all kinds of Iron Vases ,Settees, I.h -1 airs, Brackets. l'uinte. Ac..tc..nutnufactured by Woon a Punt, late • Roam Won., Ridge Avenue, Thilsdel. phis, and will furnish them at their C. 4111 pima—car. riage only ad j4d. A book of specimens can be seen at oar store. toglUer ritith the prices of the different aril.. eel , . BENJ. BANNAN. RELIEF FOR MECHANICS; 'I TusT issued and receive by the sub e/. scribers. A Patent Gunge Attachment HandeSsivsi'for cutting anything where a eertain depth is required. Among the many purposes to which this tool ran be applied profitably. the noon prominent are Tenanting, Shouldering, Dovetailing. Cog Cutting ail kinds or pattern making and. cur ving ell I and see it at 'RICHTER A THOMPEOS'S. Oct. 11. '57 42- . Orrner Centre and Nuitet streets. EXTENSIVE MARBLE YARI2.O . Alaani °nig* street, rottsvzile, a. HE subscriber is prepared, at hi T s' old stand. to furnish all kinds of materials in his line, for huildinc purprisesplain and ornamental. tie in. +ilea particular at ten thin .to the tombStonesand Mono anon a of his manufacture. .They ran he had -in every variety of style. and will compare favorably. in beauty and tinish, with auy obtained elsewhere. and are offered at cheaper rates. JOIIV T. LANO. Jnne 0. VULCANIZED RUB: ER HOSE, Arllpdrants, Locomolints. L ire Engines, and other pur poses. rKnis HOSE has great advantages over leather, ag it needs no oiling. is perfectly t g t. will stand a wery high degree of hest without In jury. sod to ntr affected by the severest cold. It can be had of any site from 34 inch to 3 Inches inside disuse ter —larger sites made toorder. Also, Coupllnga ; Branch pipes. Le. For sale by_ n.nANNAN. Pottsville. May :XL 21, . NOTICE. , To Coal Operators and Schuylkill Conte. 'ty Merchants. . . (ZNIOKING TOBACCO, by Steam LI pager—fdetba a day, at Hamburg. Smoking 101 ac• et., and Sczar Manufactory. on hind and ready fa ode. :WI) barrele meet Accated Smoking Tobacco. .200,000 Half Spanirb Segal's. . • .200.000 Slxes,Spant , h Fecars. - I 11)0.000 Seed and Extra Segars. Orders thankfully received and promptly'aitendrd tp. Tellies easy. MARY ANN MOTE[[. qamburj. Burks County. Pei Sept . 5. '57 304 4._ PIANOS AND MELODE ONS Of the beet Manufacture...warranted, , FOR SAL.E•BY THE fri4 subscriber. All Pianos and Melt I? deans sold by him will be warranted—if nelwhat they are represented. they can be returned.— All kinds of Melodeons will be sold at Manufacturers' qt.th pricer in Pottasille. by which the la-ehaters nye the carriage and risk of transportat len. Pianos will be sold from $lO to $2O less than replier city priers accord ing to the value ..r the lustrutnent. -Those who prolertt by eallintt on us, and receiving a letter of credit. can make their own selectionsattheMantifarturera.ne - ertain the price.. and we sill furnigi the. instrument..seleeted at the abre rates. if - three 14 any doubt in this mat; ter l -all Wit hare to say is—TRV C. It. ILik.NAN. INAUCH CHUNK - Wire Rope Manufactory, _.. Simard. Manufacturer Of Wire Rope. for inclined planes., shafts. elopes, &x;, would inform tbe public that be is now pre pared to make ALL .KL.V.LiS, - LiNGTIIS AND SIZES OP FLATI AND 11017 ND E , • At the slit:Wiest notice, of superior qaality. and on the most fibroid terms. at lily Wire Rope Victory. Mauch Chunk, Carbon Co., Pa. Refeience can be made to Meseta. E. A. Douglas, N. P. Cortright and A. ft. Broadhead. at Mauch : Chunk : to N. , Vat lemon, Summit Bill. to Sharpe, Leisenring.it Co., Tit more, Lucerne county, Pa.. and In fact. nearly all the op editors IA the'itegion who have been athatida ropes. - August,S,:' , b7 • • ; - 'MINERB'SAFETY LAMPS.. A Superior Article. ,•:- PI`HE SUBSCRIBER has just re• r' Mimi. from' New Castle. England t a lot of Davv's Safety Working Lamps, made under the inspection of the English Government Agent. of t‘iie teat quality wire gauze, Also, Gauze Covers made ready for use. these Lsnipa. There are the bed Safely • lamps ever lb troduced into this County, and are for rale wholesale and retail at. about the cost of inferior Lamps. Also, Wire dense by the yard. and Lamp Brushes by the dozen or single. Also, the Chutney Lamp for Bosses and Mine Viewers. This Lamp is covered with a thick Glass, and gives an Increased light which' is oil importance to Mine Viewers. DEN.T.BANNAN. /SW-These Lamps can be put - into a box tilled with ex plosive gas, and moved rapidly backwards and forwards without any covering, and will Lot explode. A Uttust R. '&7 MANUFACTURES. MANUFACTURES. CARRIAGE FACTORY REMOVED. rIiHE undersigned , respectfully . ern-, . brace this opportunßy of informing, the public that they hareremored their, 4 Z. extenetve Carriage Factory, from Mauch Chunk street. where they have been " - -amilt"" sine* the late lint, to their New, Large and commodkins building, in likrrhi Addition. on the old site. where they are prepared to turn out CARRIAGES EQUAL TO rItE.UESTINTIIESTATEand ready to accommodate theireursomers and all those who may favor them with 'their patronage. An entire new and well selected stock of utaterisla and the same old handy will enable them to do work Inelegance and durability cannot be surpassed. They will continue to attend to the hnsineashereafter as before, with determination to give .general satisfac , 'tkm Sta , .Ail orders will receive prompt attention. I • drarltepairing 4nne at the shortest notice. July 18 fa ABRIGHT DURIIIIARLS. PATKNT COAL. SLATER. lA/ HERtAS, Leuers Intent of the .I:2lted State% bearing date the 24th day of No. Yember. A D. lik7, were granted to the undersigned for New and istprorof Machini for Slating Coal." NOTICE in therefore. hereby,.civen that goal operators anduthirs ran now nureheme •Mlights" to build and use the said :Mating Machines fur counties or sinde collier ies. ParOen interested in this labor.naving, useful sod Cementite/II inrention. can see the -Sist!e' in operation' at Trerorton , :Northumberland !want Pa. Any in fringement. directly or' indirectly, of ibe said Patent, will be pnweculial to the full extent of the laws of the United States relating to Patents and Patentees.' JACOB GASS, ti,EOII(IE MWT OON.I P4tenteel * • Treverton. NorthumNtrland county', Pa: 41a-A working model of the above machine may be examined at Wm. (.7: Smith's Machine Works, at POWs. villa., For terms, &e., In Schuylkill minty, apply to 11E01108 SIAR CZ, Pottsville. February 20:'58 -- ":" 7 80L0IVI0N HOOVER. ' • Wholesale and Retail DEALER in stoves,- Ranges, - liesters, Tio Ware, Hollow Ware, EH- ••• tanla Ware, Brass Ware. French Ware, and - entleiy, Range Boilers. Portable Itanges,Gas • Ovens. Summer Furnace, de., de., has added tu his fernier stock of Stoves_ a variety of new pat terns of Kitchen Rank.' of which he ran give the highest recommendation. . Ile calls particular attention to his new - ityle of Ilea ter which he is confident will make the besClicater that • Ims eves; been used in this part of the 'country, also a iiiiety of new patterns of Cooking,. Parlor, and limit St eves. Re calls particular attention to his sheet iron Parlor Stove, it is an improiCment On the Kistarbach, *bleb be is confident in the best stove In use. Ile has now the largest stock of the ab6ve articles (too numer ous' to mention,) that has ever been offered in this part of the country. Ile invites bits friendrimitt customers to calfand examine for themselves. feeling confident that he can snit them in pialitypnd price; heNtlatters hiumelf that be has had ninc)s experience in his lino of Liminess. therefore be feels confident that he cannot be .sOrpassed in quality or cheapness. SlPltonfing and Spouting and all kind at fobbing done at the thorteat notice. Cesare stmt. S deers abort Market, weal side, Fbiterille. . March 21, • . 11 - 0 CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS• S 4 iTtTRDAY MORNING, MARCH 13, 1858, • ririHlS PUMP is made of Iron, Brass, bronze. Or Gun )fetal mutiny', designed, and ex• teue'rely used for Steamboat, It'illroad. Factory and :111- 1 fling purposes. and glees great watisfaction as a Boils, Feed Pump. Tbey are very easily repaired. and. being less entapiiratid tae any ntlicr Steam Pimp in ate they are much less liable to get out of or&er. For refereicea and tettimonlais, with circular. Cum fie.. apply to • LITTLEFIELD k CO.. , March 21.'57 Illy Springfield. Ness. SAVE YOUR TIME. READY MADE PAPER BAGS, ' FOR GROCERS, DRUGGISTS, cos rEcTioNkrt S. BAK Kftficite.—The Subscriber reipeetfully Inform bletrieatts;aud the public that he ha. Men oppointod•Ae.nt fir OM NU of Patent Machine made Paper Hags, bears. lola B. Levan & Co., of Philadelphia. These Bags are of sites and qualities of paper suitably{ for ALL axa•ose who nee the article. and ere offered at each prices as . will at- once commend theoi to the con: sumer. There are many advantages In purchasing and atm ready mode Ergs. Where no tracts are used, It rennin" double the quantity of paper and etring to pack the semi , number of pounds, and more time in putting up a pack ago. Where nn extensive business in do to and Bags [tilde by .band. by buying ready made Bova. pile hoed clan be dispensed with. By using them, you will not only save, time and stoney. hut altraym.have , a convenient reeepte• cle in which to put up your goods. Whereveit brae Ba have been introduced, they -bare _given entire snd sidearm. For sale at itenafacturere prices by BENJ. BANNAN, Paper and Book Dealer and Stationer. centre street. opposite Episcopal Church. Pottsville. A first rate asiortment of WRA PPM) PAPElt,ab ways nn hand: • Fob. '2l. 't? 11.• 8. D. a. H. W. 8181 TH; ILLIIMACIURXRS ur Melodeons,. Organ Melodeons, and Pedal Pals ies, Harmoniums, tillWaehington St , , Roston.' TNE AT'T'ENTION of Clergymen, "Committees. Schools. Lodges, Lc.: is Invited to the new Pedal 601-base Harmoniums made solely by the 111anoriteturers. It is arranged with Two manuals or banks of Keys, the lowest set panning an octave higher than the other, and may be used separately, and thus get- In one cue two distinct instruments; or, by the use of the coupler, the two banks of keys may be played at the same time by use of the front set only. This connected with the Siab-Kies,..lll produce the effect of a large organ:and IN, sufficiently heavy to Ail a house that seat. from 1000 to 1500 persons. . I ; . - . THE OROAN.JIELODEON I' Is designed for parlor and private us e. - The eonstrne• non is similar to the Church Instrument. beta % arming• eat with two banks' f Keys. and when used together, by 'nexus of the coupler, in capable of as great volume, of power mei the Church Instrutnent, abed used' without the Pedalo. • Also, every variety of MELODEONS for Parlor now. Purchasers only rely upon instruments from our Man. ufaetory, being made In- the moat complete and lbwr ough manner. , Having removd to the spacious. build- Inv. Ml WASHINGTON STREET; we have every te'ea, ty for minufactirimuiltgosins, agalgooletwaiimifillill& the' MA sTeiperieneetraneltililliful wialtm in: -.. ' ID short, we will pmmlse ourcustomers an Instrument equal If not superior in any Manufacturer.' and, guano 'tee ENTIRE AND I'ERPECT SATIMPACTIOIfr. Scab TZACUEIta, LWOW or Counts. andUthers inter sated in musical matters, are respectfully Invited to visit our reams at any time and examine or test the instru• mention exhibition for male. at their pleasure. A a a 'dill rue her guarantee to the nubile as to the excel. ante of the MELODEONS AND HAIIIIONVIMS from our 31anufeetory, we beg leave to refer, by permission, to the following PIANO FORTE MAN,FACTURERS OF BOSTON. Who have examined bur Instruments and w il l give their opinion when called upon: ' ' McKenna A sons, HALM *pulsator, T. Glttigsx &CO. WV. P. Enrasox. DROWN A ALLIS. A. IT. 1,11/111*CO. GEOII.II HIVE, WOODWANDAI Itaftwx,NEwnsts. A Co. NelndeOnn & ilarenontanas Rented: Persons who wish to hire Melodeons add Ila monhams with a view of purebasibg at the end ' of the year. can have the rent credifedlts part loyment of t b purchase I money. ' This metier is worthy of special etc, its 11 enables those who desire a fair testyf the instrument' before pitrehasing, to obtain it at the expense of the manufacturer& to the extent at least of a year', rent. Ordersfrom any part of ,the country or world. sent di rect manufactory to t h e anufactory in Boston, with cash or e satisfac tory re rem*. will be promptly attended to, and ar taltiffially executed as If the parties were regent:or employed an agent to select. and on as reasonable tires , - , Price Lists Scroll leg, 4 1 ,6 octave, • - • - • . -- -160 Scroll leg. 5 octave, . v ' 75 Piano style, 5 octave, lo o Piano style. extra finsh, 5 Octave, , • - •n: - ' 115 'Plano style. carved leg. • , -' • ! ' - 7 ' 125 Plano style. 2 sets of rejpds, • - , • - 150' , Plano Style. 6 octave, - - • • -• 135 Organ Melodeon, t - 200 Organ Melodeon. extra finish, - - - - . 250 Pedal *Sub-Baia Harmonium, - - - r - 1 , 275 Letters, Certificates and notices from the ifress.-ftnnv ap parts of the world, may also be seen at our salesnxim. Descriptive circulars sent free to any . addrers. f , S. D. .t 11. W. SMITH. 511 Weelfaington Street, (Near Boylston Market.) Boston. June 27 '57 . 26 tr .• EXTRAORDINARY . . . Clhoe4l3 NicaoElazig. Both Water sod Fire Proof. THE SUBSCRIBER has - been ap pointed Agent, and is prepared to put on B. M. reu A Co's celebrated Fire and Water Proof Roofing, —it is composed of Felt, Composition and Gravel— it is more durable titan either shingles, tin. Sint °firma —requires no painting, and ein be put on complete at a little over onehalf the expense or other rooting.— The advantages of this aoaluvriay be summed up as fidlows: : 1 . /t is; both WATERlffiliTepd FlitrePßOOY. - It will not expand!andeoletract,:eith heat and' cold, like Metal roots. . One Inch to the foot is aft the inclination r . equired. The!roof can he walked upon - without Injury.' It can he used for drying purposes. . It is of great advantage to fi remen Tribizi adjoining buildings are on fire. It ii not Injuriously affected in the basil , y changes 1 of teteperatare. It la adapted to every climate. It is not affected by the jarring of meet& ery. • It will bear more than double the heat of Int., tin, or r vanised lona. without danger to the boarding beneath . 1 It it easily and quickly repaired, if injured. Gutters of the same material can be formed on the roof. • . .. . . • • ITS COST IS MUCH LESS TITO VIAT OF ANY OTIIER FIRE-PROOF ROOF NOW IN rst. Mailroom I yefferted at the aline =tense on bull/logs covered with other fireproof materials. - • • Hundreds of certificates can b seen at 11.,Rannsn's Cook Sly We append cue or two to show that it b. no g: We, the undersigned:had our Banking. Rouse rooted with Warren's lire and Water-Proof itooti ng 'about three years ago, and an far have had no reason to doubt its of fienry and duntbillty. nor regret boring used It, and should in building hereafter prefer it to any other root. 10,7. • DILEXEL tCO Philadelphia, 31arch.1.1.1647-. 'PHIL4DILLPOII, June 20, 1g57. Messrs. Worse,, if Ch.—Garrtsura :—I was pre. sent by invitation, at an experiment with jonrim, proved 1 Vireend, Water Proof Ccmposition Roofing, on thefilst I, of May last. The °Weft. I suppose. was to give persons not 6equilnted with the nature Of the toofingoin own , tunny to see it tested. I arrived on thp grontid about l rich:lel: and ot* the boards put on the reoh.tbity were In i rough state, the edges not jointed, or , grooved and mat', bed. . After the hoards were on they were fevered with three layers of felt, and then by a coating of Cone pos tine. and the whole covered with A quantity of combustible material was pissed within, and at the appointed times match was applied. ;A twit ens tire soon burst from all aides of the house. and en veloped the whole building In a Dames It' continued to bona Roy at leolt three quarters Of an hour. At that stage of the drit, I felt a desire to know how the roof .would stand if:water was thrown upon It, end Raked pet• mission to tryile experiment, which west granted, and. I applied three or four intelreta of water on the roof which tau Off—SA aweigh there. was:no ;fire under, or around it. Oentletnen. my opinion is. that an fir as fire Is eon. mined, it lett.° beet kind of a mocfrem the Withal its air tightness prevents fombustion In ease of afire In a building Where the roof la of your material, the fire would not be likely to extend, to the adjoining build., logs. I bad an example of this kind last winter. on the 4th day of January, at 4 o'el ick In the morning. A fire broke out In a tow of Prick Horrors. on the south side of Belted St.. weed of .22nd street. It bad a roof of your Comporition. and the ere was confined to the how. l ihare It originated. I hare nohesitat Inn In staying that If It had been an ordinary root, the whole row would have burned down; from . the fact that it 'axone of the'' - woideat• mornings we bad last winter. and the; wind blew „A hurricane at the time. ReYbert street Is north of the 'Girard College wail, and at that thus of the morning, .tdgether with the coldness td. the weather. made it a long time before we could get Tate' , on the building.- -Notwithstanding this, we extlogulshed the Ire without in,hriy to the adjoining buildings. II therefore recommend your repent to the community as a superior preventive nt ! • i Tem Itespeetfully Youre, kr. • ' 'ISAMU ift #."*Anow. -• dye, ragitucr of i 144 IrtireDepatlitrd. , Any thither irttortnt;tkn, with retard: toll& itortay eta be abtaltwai by caUlas on the sraberrtber at his Beek Mee, Potty!Be. • ; ;BIM. BASUN. we JOS. TRZUN. • Chejawakeis Qt OrdiarL•Asitiville, y.llllkor will pot or the Bk o OPist...bati Tor Colliery itatablbtaseata t lateota i houses, Bests* house!, Breakers.' We is this Swim; this la jest the tnof Matti* BB it h pool; &oil ao iphlpt Miss as It RUi petit attire, .; atioShittki• and its ribs& herriwid with the titabwill Ir the OA ismptlce Om Juh 4,17 - , _ r , 4 ~;till;ricit )iibiotrq.:-;--- ALS ar ADDRICaII delivered before . the ill: w Creek Literary Saslegy. Thursday Evening, Feb..ll, 111311., by Henry C. • Flailed. . . . Ms. PltelloSny,—Latille *Ma Gmertzurr: - • 1 , , • Loch where we Mai. tbreighout the land, and we diteover eridencra of decay and strigantlon-uprostnitton and weakness. It Is utterly impiesible for any man who : passives, In the 'meet remete'degree,,feelliiiefor 'suffering 'humanity, to contemplate the present obindli ion of our industrial in ' Trieste.. without pato and sorrow. Poverty has taken, the place of idenenee; misery the place f happiness. Our muntey;whlch should no* Le highly prosperous and happy, is reduced to a condition of misfortune and !tor sham*: and It would appetr to be the; dot of every? .eillSetk , whyttus ber,welfarr at heart,/ to lend 'ids aid in extricating her front her patient humiliating positi The people only require to be Made fully acquainted 1 „with the ranee of the Montt* tn be induced to apply the remedy. Solely lilt h a desire to lend my sid In furnish. toga solution ti the disorder' which is consuming ns, lave 1 ben induced, to address you Ibis evening upon the subj ec t which 1 have Ocean— American Industry. . • On the conquestof England by the Normans, in the year Ind& and in distribution of the spoils of us c, mope the rank of Baron by Tenure, the earliest order et En ebb nobility. Among the wer4 resultswhich followed in this !Ado. and now exist in England. are the law of voted and the prerogative of peomagenitnee, In this way the land hits from generation to genera tion. been handed down from thelatiter to the eldest son. sod thus have the masses of the people been kept In , a slate of poverty and dependessr, for century after 'century.. in uo country In which, it Is beyond Ibe power of man by industry and frugality and Intelligence, to become au . owner of the soil, can be be other•than a mere depeo dent of the laud owner and the monopolist. Hence is it happily in our owe AWL placed withits the ability of those intmeatedin any pmpertyreadily to bar an entail. ' In England, while 'we fitul large) racts of land devoted to the preeertatlon of genie, and used for deer parks, the movement of fond ate obliged in a mantra. to rely . ppin foreign.conutries tar their supplies.. This rand lion is an ling:aural one. and musk result, In poverty and want among the masses. - 't - he Almighty hat given beautifoliaws foe tbegovern meat of matter. and in his goddness' he 'has else Watt. -Belied great bufaimple lane for the ;Meerut:tent of man in his efforts to Improve his condition.aud to acquired*. minion over unpile. One e a st theft, laws. vadat deeply concerns. he happiness and well-being of man. Is the - tea 111O.provieion that the consumer -shall be allowed ....1, 2 , . himself by the silt of the producer. Whenever - this la • a nut teen complied with, it will invariably „ eachlnfluence and ery.vitilation of it. matches oft -. .. and must suffer, can he di nonrated t!ltyitlld Al questb.n. Every nee applicatlon4 steam is hut an additional evidence ni Ibis great anti important truth: and fur bishev,anothefill um ration of the efforts nf man to bring the eciusumir and the producer to the side of each other. To reduce the expense and ,ousequeut waste of power In effecting conversion and , 4xchange i, manifestly the oti . jell iu all great Industrial In no:aliens. The magnetic telegraph Is but an instillment' fie. bilnaithr iu close con . tact the producer and the cousumer 01 ideas; and In it vie hate a geed illustration Of the enpretuary of this law. '_. 1h drder more clearly to Mitnenstrate the inip*l ance-,-- for we wish to divtiortly impress it upon Tour minds we Will lay before you a few , simple quest funs and an *were, which tend to shoe the ueressity of a strict com pliance with ii, and the benefit thereby conferred upon both producer and consumer. wby is it that term land near a large city Is more-val uable thin laud at the sane quality at a distance from - coy city? Because the cousumes =of agricultural pro! duce is near by thy- producer. r ~. Why is farm land on the line of a railroad more vein able than that e st a distance from any railroad t Because, i'• by means oftlifed railroad the producerand the, counutuer * are Weigel t together. Why are railroad. generally built to bring lie consutn er audthe producer together? Why is coat more expen sive in Philadelphia. than it is in the Schuylkill coal re glen? Because of the distance there betnren the p'ro dueer and consumer. : lthy.do potatoes sell at twenty-live cents a bushel in NV {M.OII/31.1, On the same day that they pelt at seventy-five cents in Philadelphia? because, in tVigepriltiD the farm er is surrounded liv producers of potatoes, while literal, he ha. but *limit...di:lumberer cousuniouly enough 'to provide a market ter a small proportion of the crop produced. What would be the value of ten milliomeof bushels of Valera at the base of k'nemoncs-Peak Mille Rocky Boon t4ne. near the head watot a of the Yellow Stoma river? Na one dollar! Why Is We! Because; the gralti being e° far removed, from ...ny consumers; has inn value whatever! lo by i. It that the reamer in Wleconsin.:who gets bee. twenty-five tents a bushel for his potatoes, while lite mum are selling for seventy five cents in l'biladelphia, is obliged to pay a higher price for every article which betnanufartered at Or near Philadelphia, and sent to hint for consumption in Wiscousint Because pithy dia. Mere between the producer and consumer.: ' Vann the foregoing we ale -led inevitably to the con clude* that, as the consumer and the producer are, bnoight . to the side of each other, the ability of tech to buy, „with a giver quantity of his own wares,a larger quantity of that which the other he, to exchange, In. ,erecesw; wb Ile, an tlhey ate forma apart, this ability de. 'ramekin a direct ratto to the diaance: or more properly, -to the Wort neessaary to trorreatoe tint distinct. It then neeeesselly folloirs that if we permit the con. sumer and the producer to tattle by the elde °teach cite Or', we Grill impreve the condition of Loth. The highest condition of civilization hi Wet in which we And the greatestklivereity of employment. In such diversity wilt we f.ud prosperity—for here will the nto. Omni, be gathered tip and stored. The expression— . "Time Is money" haffahnost grown to be a proverb; and the least, time wasted the greater will be the store of wealth. /Jere will the farmer find a market for his pro duce. near his bome,Jor here lbe farmer must be—no • great community ever having been built, up which has ncl i biel near It so agricultural country. here will we find the consumer stud the producer brought in close contact, conferring mutual and reciprocal advantages, the one upon the other. Here the rude ratifies are ran vetted, by the aid of machinery and of labor. tofu fabrics which are readily, and at small cost, transported front place to place. (lent will be found a market tin the time. labor and talentrof the cotton•pinner. the weaver, the machinist, the mill:weight, the bricklayer, the carpenter, the shoemaker. as well as for the abilities o every work er in the great field of life. Here will be general activity ot business and of society, and in activity there is vigor and health; but in the apth which surrounds us on every side there is weakness and poverty. Thecae con ....quoit wee the present'stagnal kin or InduStry. can alone be computed by millions of dollars per day. 2,10 Mini* which lives by agriculture aloes can ever be deb and prosperous ? because of the necessity of send ing to distatartharketsin order to find consumers hoc its productions:, - When any man or community of men are so situated as to be forced to send or go to market. they and they aloes are obliged to pay the expense of going them- ~ _ • We bay, already laid before you the reasons for an Armature] condition of society in England, by which a few favored men hate the power to accumulate large for tunes," while the nutmeg are. and must eentinue.in • state of poveity. By wane of this large aceonsoleilon on the one band, and of a state of unnatural end mel ancholy dependence on the other, Sugland has tsrn en abled to undersell, at limes, every nation of the alild in Its own market, whenever kir could pin admission free of tariff—and.thus reparatinhe consumers, and the pro ducers of that nation. Let ua examine into the effect of this. We will fakir for instance the madutactureof cotton. In England t 68' cotton manuteeturer Is a man of Burnam, wait h. which he hie accumulated chiefly by the aid of cheap labor.- - lie con live for years, oven though he may be conduct ing his business at a great faultier, as Itis well toms n he often does. Indeed. for the }eeriest ended, in Eng land title business ban beenCirried on,Witheut profit.— Without the Intervention of any tariff. In three years creep coiled veil; in America will be closed. The Eve gild' manufacturer would, on the fresh revival of bust. sees. have almost unlimited metrol of the market. and would obtain his Men prier. Almost the entire crop of cotton !aired in our own country would tea-feted to Liverpool and Manchester for a market—and such a pie cen , ily existing, the expense. Of going to the' market wound have to be borne by the, prmiucer of cotton. A large quantity being forced upon these points. the price would of necessity be Wk. The ruin of the cotton-plao ter new follows directly tit on therein of the cotton-man ufacturer: This Mete ofalfairs we are at ti:present mO. merit approaching. Cot ton-manufaefu rem we have seen ruined, trom New England to Delaware—the ruin 'of cotton-planters will follow as inevitably as that the.sun , . will rise to-Morrow: It may net come within a wont h,- perhaps not within a year; but within two or three ears at furtheit. the esetton.plariter will discover that there is a perfect harmony of interests between himself and the enterprising man. who, by the aid of machinery and, labor , converts his raw material I olcrthe, manufac tured article, . . . Time and again tons it been urged that if Englend will furnish us with any article, cheaper than, for time bring. we can manufacture It ourselves, that ing toner interest to buy from tier. But the advocates cif ilds dor trine overlook many important facts . • • They overlook the fact that, making curatives 'depen dolt upon a' foreign market for our supplies, we are obliged to pay the expense of going to that market tot make our purchases—and that. being dependent upon that market for a gale, are obliged. not only to carry one merchandl4 to that market.but to be governed by every fluctuation lu price. In a word, we throw off our lode prinfence. . -r . • . . It is Inemeet` ible foetid any system at onceaosensltiee, fair and compensative as domestic 'comme-ce. Indeed, - perfect bar/Deny-Is the one governing principle of It.— While, on the oilier band, It is Imp:m.lole to find any t s ca t n ein t " ee tZe in . g In s less less = t i h s eje a= t m g ert ij o ti ; . :; faif astragal of hie'proeut‘tiniewbetber that renal:imp tion arises from his dallir, wants, or whether, by means 1 of ticetimplstion, be reeks investment in lands, houses, 11 or any other description 'of property, it matters not— When he it both a prodded end consumer In the earns country, any undue advantage gained in production is corrected In consureptien., The history of the manufacture trim in this coon. ' try will furnish valuable ifitistratioue of the effect of foreign competition,iputof a dependence Upon a foreign market for a supply: In IRO the total ipN)enct of Iron in the United States wait 616.10terna: but Wen abet donment of the protittive ViolfEk, it bed fallen by 1842, to 230.000 tom. It 'thin year, however. the prostrate cendltlon' of the cow:111*M the bankruptcy of the Goverument omitted a retort to that only measure which . an restore us to a state of prattler' fly. The protective System was spin Inaugurated in the tariff of 1842, and under Its genial Influence did every Interest ' , arm'', ton till, within four years after, we had altnoet for:mitten tha 1 severe and dearly bought experienet of the past. . . Trout 1842 to 18M, the product of Iron had Increased ' from the annual amount ot :10,000 tons to 706,000 toms.. On the abandonment of the protective pellet. in the en actment of the tarillofl64,ohoweeer ' .oar iron' intelest . was penetrated by Amides comp/this ' ll, and by 1849, we - tinithat the production bad fallen to 660.00 u tons. It will be well to' enquire bow title was brought about. Therailload mania In England inning, for wend two . yeasts alter , the enactment of thbi,tariff.sostehtedthe price of Iron in this country, the production was Minn- - latidonidlbr supply Increased. When however, the railroad. schemes exploded—by 1118--the effect' wan to destroy or prostnitte almost every iron manufacturer in our country. By JanotterY, /853 s the duslion had AG , len to 500 . 000 tons per an By t his time, hoarser, an active demand having taken place. prices tole, and theVensegnence was, that while by the new protection of this staple from the Inenebee et fluctationsored eels*" in foreign countries, the manufacturet was ruined, the i consulate was obliged to pay a higher prieethan if our own industry bad been protected. de shown in this ; particular ease so night It he shown in a tbounsed oth er*, not only with iron. but with neatly every amide which can be manufkeured in this country. Sam It . wilt be leen. by /WO annpetition and by inch nsees over which w 0 eoeld hare no sentrol:our own rapotures were crippled, at.d the producer seal the eostsumer wen ' gureedepari, , While one warrnined the otheitraa nu der the usargsity of not Oily giving to a 63reign market. and gottathl Seidl but 111 well obliged to Pay a higher priesthan nu*" ttot protoetito *vamp .lie yacht bats paid at boils. • Wi *DM *Mitt to boisiolikiied tea{ olikorigh we • lowa , *ink to Mks tat illuitogloos.tomit tic inwi • iradis. ll oS,S=GeTtli that. mortal legislatior likes! *UMW ono th hi tiotiowo. Ingrid: 01'14000i or. .',ash of the Opitilbefiltit War toutetr, treed devils derided boOrtlt. foss tit" pooh/tier of gliio permit - nip* Ire are sillUPool4l4ooll that glillideLPOlrPertria. /hue to be *Mee! fit ,b 1 intreknit tq all atirlotoohilhotrotoc: lihtliWairtitra tattoorbi hrtertary :Witt loolet:.: Stet '--_,',V',,r,",z- A he Z.:. = *I Nts . " I : 41 ot., R -4 country abraild Mewl maenad .11:films Intimate eu the mute principle as that which demands an army lied • navy. at to return to the spasitrout nab p.' we di verged. By • more thorough imanflaatlan Ma lber ken , bueiness, we will see what are the peactiel effects of re , lying upon a Iselgo emote, fore supplies, either hil whole or part. In dui year 1855 we Imported fGreat Britain. Iron in the manufacture of which empioyeaw 00,300 wilt. With the mond average per family, tit. employ, Went. than furnished, yielded a support to 302.190 men, women and children. Now I wont ask would it not have been something to have fern shed work at good sad remunerative wages, to 60,500 erasion in, our own country, and thus have enabled SO of this tames to it,, In comfort i Ilere however. la rat the beginning of this gnat queation. These people ould hare consumed breadstuffe and provisions during that year (tithe value of a 14.129.600. and thus have torn' ed to the farmer a market fee within a small fraction 'fifteenths amount of these produets shipped to Great Waits during that a li pall On this other hand the onnt 'eoneueued be those who did actually produce Obi Iron in Great. Sri sitin was bnly of the value of $173,1 8. i I Again, thew people who in our Own country, if *II ployed must be well clothed, mad from , them woldd .cts a demand for the various descriptkess of doetestk They mast Eseupy houses. rind thus will they pay rent ha the owners of houses and landit, or they will ~,e ome purchasers of the laud, and by forming • settle ments. add to It. value. Here will we end a natural condition of thinos-the consumer and the predueer brought to the side of each other. We can carry these investigations still further with profit and interest. The ameautof capital employed in l he mann Eliciting of the iron thus imported. amounted to $78.000 MO. This nipsl it most be observes. represents furnaces. machinery, lands. etc. ete. A system which would call for the inveetment of money in new furnaces and rolling mine, must of necessity, create a demand for tabor. Thus would masons. machiuletr, and in tact all description of mechanics either receiveemploymeut di. 'Melly front these ,optestlone, or f ro m those who were thus emplosid. 01 the seventy-flee wililons of dollars thus expended, it would be found that , nearly the en, tire amount would be distributed to those who labor - Haying reached Oda petit it will be well to make the following inquiriers:-* bleb of 'an the interests of our -country is the limpet, and confining the welfare of the greatest number of men, women and children? Labor! iS hitt) of all Interests Is nowt suffering most severely from the prevailing distress? Labor I Which Is the most perishable of all commodities, and require. ilk Put' chaser most promptly. to avoid being entirely and forev er kait? Labor! Of what advaotage can it be to the strong-armed and oble•bodied man to have labor for sale I f,he can find -no purchaser? None whatever I Labor being as we have teen, so perishable In its nature. we have 90 trouble in ascertaining why It is that the labering chaises are now suffering in so fearful a manner. lien ebb' have labor for sale may starve but they rennet lay it by. Hence it is that under the preeent state of affairs, labor for the want of purchasers le daily being wasted to an amount to be estimated in money, at millions of dollar,. . When labor la in demand It must be well paid. We , then are an arils ity and life which extends Itself to, ands I felt by all classes engageet In industrial pursuits-Pm ollpiodot - ers are courneetAa to tht Jun amount of Mar production. Thai, who labor are in no sense au excep tion to this universal rule. 1 Hat lug shown the effect of a dependence upon a for eign market for the sale of our breadstuffs and prtrri• clone, and for the narthex of our iron, let us further he vestigete the general results•arlslog trout this ilystete, demonstrati dby its advocrdee,..free trade." The sy stem which forces apart the producer and the vnnsuuter, and renders them both dependent upon ships. trades, bro• her,, and - every description of middlemen, who eau levy st tax upon their exchaugee. • . , Let us also ley by Its side. and Institute a competition between it and that system known as eprofertion."- fhe 'first ;unitise it will be found, looks outward, and disregards the comfort and happloesa of our owts people. [ The other desire', to build up , with vigoryour own coun try. and the Interests of our countrymen. In short. it alms to bring the consumer and the producer to the side of each other, and thereby facilitate their 'xebec'• ges.-to shut out merrexternal Patience w hi. h will in any way interfere with the stability of our Industrial pursuit sand interrupt these exchanges. Among there who have advocated the importance of protection to Amer lean In dinttry. may be found such mammas:Wash ington, Hamilton, Jefferson, Franklin, Madison, Jackson and Clay. Of,the importance of pining the consumers and the produeera by the Fide of earn other, Thomas.]?ffenion was lulls: sackli bed. when, in 1810, he said: '''rhit to be indepeudeot for the comforts of life, we must fabricate them ourselves We must place the monefacieree by the side of the apreeutferesi. lie therefore, who •is now against domestrc manufacture. must be for reducing us either to dependence on that foreign nation, or to be clothed In skins and to Tire like wild beasts In densand caverns. lam proud to pay ram not one of there. XX• per fence has taught me that manufactures are tow as uecesetry to oar independence as our comfort:land ifs three who quote me no of a different oplbion, will keep pace with me In purchasing- nothing foreign when an equivalent i f ilorinelle vliluo cannot be obtalped, WA. out any 'van" G. pr i ce, It will not be our fault if we do not base a supply at home equal to our demand, and wrest that weepo•tof distress friar -the band which has so wantonly violated It." ir An examination of the practical working of the two systems for thirty years, will demonstrate that every protective tariff dertug that period, has brought with it prosperity, and that irvery*lrte trade" tariff has brought umerriegly, the merse--rnin . and prostration. One would imagine that a system which could bring prosper ity and trim. mbar* befure prostration had existed, would be =lntel ned-but such has not been the rase. Under the tariff of 1828. which was a thoroughly pro. feet lee measure. and will hinted for tour years. the country tuade rapid stud in almost every department t t of industry. The public ebt was. while this law was practically in operation, reduced $53.881.3.72. A change took place innit., which though to a considerable extent. an abandonment of the protective policy, it was not until the compromise net of 1833 bombe fairly operative, that the effect could be felt.. That law provided that tbe du- Ur* should be reduced from time to thee u n U 11842, when I no duty should eerie d twenty per mint : To any one who is amstaaluled with the transartioas or thelast twenty year*, in this country. it is in areely ne. eeseary to say. that between 1837 and 1841, occurred a series of digesters, peelonaly without a parallel In Our history. Not only wen, the people bankrupt fr in Maio* to Geofen.bu the government, between 1821 and 1843. cant ntcled a public debt to the amount of $116,1598,958.- I The amount cf foreign debt due by corporations and in. die Iduala. rate in 1841 to 1200,000.000. The import. from haeleg ineremed.now fell off, and repudjption and die.' grace were the order of the dAy. Now came a political revolution. Which swept ferns power lbe President of the United Elate* and his political fr etT - Tdir . . On She 30ta day of ,Augast,lB42. was Inangunited • different policy in• the act of Congress , known as 'The . Tariff (SIMI." Linder the wire provisions of this legit. baton every interest recovered in • manner 'almost ml- , raculoue. GOO. WALMIUL AVID 1 1=3112TOG. We paid off our foreign debt: ferrates, rotting mills, cotton mills. and mantrtacteries of earionekinds sprang Go?. Wallecr's letter tai the Bletiocratic op. and soon we had almost lost eight of the mielbrtunes ,, which bad overwhelmed us. We In ported largely of Slat e ‘-tonren a a la . ' —r tin ' f Ind . mi. is published. ' foreign merchandise, but weolesoys paid for rt. -tie ' p i ne d by importation, Pont' motu,ooo o, tw o ulnd It is forcible and eloquent. Gov. Yiralker bullion. . gamin theeourse of it: • - . I The proenetten et Iron, test, cotton iamb pad wagons ~„ . . s . Increased beyo n d , measure. Our shipping was rummer. Iny Own °pluton, SS neretotore °Gen cl othe, and Increased largely, and above all. did inunigra• pressed, distinctly repeated iu my letter of lionnthat greatest and Omit Indication of tbe preeperity • r ,es _____ ors hi p o f H uns, of our country, increase. Between ItS3B and 1841, the acceptance of the upveru annual average number ot immigrants who arrived. well and reiferatted in ml inaugural addreai, Wig, mow but by 1847, It bad risen to 239;32. During th 4 .that t h e meet of t people to -their consti• same time. the amine! addition to our 0404 had vii! . , __ __,_. , NM from l'htooo tens to 146,M) tom.. Nothing so stlimi tuttork -can only pro ly be governance of a Mates the building of ships as Immigration. for huma4 direct popular vote tor or ugainst its adoption. freight Is the nrcet highly remunerative which an, i I carried, either on th e sea ar on the land. I Indeed, :a what l other way can t ever be An argument which has been use! by t LON! oppesed td known that the people.would have assented the protective policy, is that our Aiming Interest• res .„ the ~tjeausu''' tioin 7 unless they ate permitted quires that counneree must be free. The advocates try '''" I the ••free trade" doctrine lees sight of the tact that a ear :Ito vote for or evilest its adoption 7 The non is Haden individual or a family. It Is eeeessary, 1 !admits th usual. b• dose as r eg ard s 1--- '1 l'resident, n hisluiessage of December last, first, to build oneself up vigorously before a me c an I . . hope to be a good customer to the farmer, the mantas& ite. race hope l • turer or the merelmnt. It is equally necessary foe ; .a 'don oi sl eery, anileGnialed by It Stale t; on ' l ! country first to strengthen itself within. before It can I stittitior, although ' be ced that! hi s in cpti e 8 •hope to have a large stud remunerative Satin commeree. i . °. to This was well exemplified under the vaticus tariffs tee f alrnetiona me regards the submission of, dlywrOndiedlBl3lundaerndthleibtgbOutiorgt(wtelfeeitsitno"al‘faireeptetradere. having,"and i 1 4 I e to d: co , nstitution, re 'tenant and .unquali recovered under protection with rapid strides , . n It is most .i iinfiietunate that such an On the 34 of July; tans, was pawed under the auspl tetrof Mr. Robert J. Walker, an act non knowe jet his. o pinion h had retnamed so long dormant in the tory ae .-the Tent? of 1146," which will • be renternbered b reas t, .nf the President, for-if thelblifhest longer then any other law which has been enaeted bl' suggestion tO that effect had been mu e to Congress. %Ince the adoption of the Constitution of the United States. trans the injury which It has been Inane tneutal 113 produmeg •to Le estimated in a* Indust me, it is quite evident from lirty lifeircing opin nal inps on this very point, so often and distinctly sod financial mint of view, in t honsandsofi millions of expressed, repeated in my letter of accept. dollars. In addillion to this It is tesprinrible tor an amet.nt of demieullsatkie and crime which cannot be &nee of the Gueerse.e. of Kansas, and re rsiliP computed. but which has lowered us in the estimation itentted in my innemuml address, that on such nt the civilised world, and made, our name almost - codli 0 1 Ott Iti nonymons with rapacity and crime. Let us examine into so.ut "fib' malts of ibis art .,, ... In ape a s ki ng e v n e f r hstionupkilehdgmees e t u n n e t tho ipe o ple 1 Manufactures are as much an,eseential 'lenient of Hee , indeed, without the former the latter cannot flourish. I ...1 sr • s es W lker save: • 1 greatness of a Dalian. aa ittlindiuts and flagmen:amid .or Minna of si fair election of the TerritOri- This measure at once enabled the 'English ayateas ANS Liegvuature, uov. a . . 1 whirls Is a continual war modest labor, enterprise and ' And why should they not now be redeemed? In fact. freedom throughout the world-to aim lie dead. ly and cruebing blows against our tnanafaeturing For myself, these luter. pledges have been thus far eels. By draining us of our gold a tine field was most,faithfully maintained, and they, will be thrown open to the nearer, who while he was alt a pro. _.,4 ee ed byme, if necessagt, with' the last dneer, was enabled by birrexorbitant demands to carry ''" m off what little had been left to the manufacturer by the doniempyofemxiyatelinfece's. b , load and 'lolce eat hour an to that es English monopolists. These were pladgea well There being no indeteement for men et *spinal to In iest their means in manufactures, they have to A great known extent. engageill in trade or In speculation. There being hat A moderate demand fur laborite manufacterieS, those to the President and all his Cebinet.—, who would have desired to employ themselves thus have " an any abandonment of them noel, oft my 1 Thep were pledges given by me in gcteal faith,: been forced to dm Westin States end Territcwies,to add part; atter the people had accepted rind , acted day by day, to9n tinnaturaW - 1 eof straits which tr now upon them, would be to cover miaelf with about to cure itself ill the destruction of the mass of those Involved Ist it. I Here waste our enrol:me littte as yet but imperfectly developed, while men rush to Kansas to engage Ina •• timid or cor be the action of the waveriu.., , infirm and dishoner. 'Whatever, th en, may civil war. In otder that it may be decided whether 81a- I ru p t, very shall or shall sot there be Intteduced. • for me I will continue to • tread the menace and proscription have no ter. , rocs • 1 An Inevitable coesequeace of preventing the growth of a' proper dlYerrity of employmeut, and of obliging ~,• P t i "tee large a peopoition of persons to empty In mere trig- ' Si" , 1.,: l . sit conseqences or sacrigeos, per rdthkunheorer conscience and duty call me,,,,te• • . ding. creetetian unnatural and destructive emnp a tition. sonst Or po tura This competition tants Inevitably mutt in disester and In alluding the - frueintent and m ming of widii reread ruin! Alen is prevented from. combining • , _,,, with his fellow man. The finest soils remain unmet's. he t Kansas and r ••• 4 slid the fernier whole obliged to look to a distant i . Nebraska ,act, as far as ena pane or transportation. (Whilo he Is exhatielug the soll domestic institutions through a State market "es nearly all ble profits swalloweii' up in es- , bling the people to form tend regulate their la thus; seeding at a great expense to a distance. be Is ,_ • — Walk er ys em . unable to MISS the more protttabie descriptions df Pip' dues. At the game tinsi„ the ransomer isobliged to it'S .- „ I , double prices for newly Alt he consumes. Here we fad pittillellulY 4 ' tr.. tiltioll, is concerned, G ov.. the "meth" mn4 the Tl V neer 3°K*l4 apart by an 6 Such is the true meaning of the ems peo natural condition of thl-gs, , The sequel of a polleylehleh hum preeented man fr°: . l ;de in the Kansas and Nebraska bil ,as now combining voith his felk4 than. in cenvertint duets into manufactured sends,, and which I • h r Such sties the iuterprelation given to men, women and children from the 04 t o the 11 i t ° ' ' A7 o driven g . . and alwrizs advocated by its distinorhed ace 'system withatit a familial its the worl d . The , breve . both Mouses of. Congress in the !nude . • aciorbiCh is but suppWMental and hate on y • . alwrOombnayubetuont:fenbidenaditrawyettabsit:padefinrimolndill""utimotunt,iirbs.amdtioudrord.co.:::; t i bl h n i i " s unsiso e a : c 1 n by i t a y a n, of ‘ the !Causal; and Nebentilta bill,) m'tt for ratificatr 6r reiection, to the vote -ed by our mare uiring tee conatitution,itse_lf In t Wadi t . non.produeing millions: 1" to I.l" tis id the rm sta E pe n; e i r meire .i. hThatilkdeitefunnodw4 tee ram , - Wm' years past we have been making farms for future use. In'non , n e re , .. t0 ,,,,, i distinction be matte between minuet and eriver,, ll Y m t r o rb ged „ o dit of the people. Au . silly s tould ,,, th i ls OdiOUS about from place to pise*.and in hoz. Ar .p a r. r . . v .‘ I sist la this carryiaba te ttlers. In ri ...zia n we T it : 3 „; 4 o .4 1 many CUUSUUMIS few inner lie permittedtto vote for or against the Minnesota? Whishould the people of the given to tion of their StateconCsotintsutiti4ntetiacmi, rightane e 500,000.000 or moss that vliblis to `W e t • *,,,,,,,, o f $.5A,.., ~ .is great sovereign and parted with the precious metals 030,01)0. The shipment of Hose. Ppelous metals still!, • ne - wnhheld from the people or Kansas.? Ls . .. I the One a - sovereig,n and the other'ra subject Onset hta"armernlibottlltvaP:dtt..Fes...:rtelbrt,hweseheissehmo.weueabbt:o:fl; Irma , . . "Ilehba. benn °jai° lir the untorfunati teen a It 1 &Stet Where *reale, and in whacthreetten igen" al r anks in Plnd a ° VW fouled. however, that 4r e we drifting ?, Are we upon til banks of does and past continue us hr q d u . 2 erg. ropectwg , the 1 ausweiclub :ilkoiwbanc,,ter.pbveligrstintinc th it. ei b r lid los t i l l ... frtm pie ' t ad or t i :i t at l e4 3e rsphorus i or Danube,. or upon hle oil cense d„,,a„d per to year. simply Lend couditVW oriedox4l to pope ar sovereignty b y t blood of lAi h s ,„ l ,,,,, n .' a" fd ic k, " tt 4r tartra n :ri l itteetto 4 nlnal t l so • Ts° • ihe ,reteluttetr? Is tit executive edicts or . *--- -- -- - le and the pate of milmied 1 f ', . tumor r id hyee Cellf ... er° sums VTILOOO.OOO werth a , uoveretgerrig his that Constitute liberties b um ou t cm tea ts t ot t m orto bend had; to .0, u r country ! Are we freemen ,who know ibracusooovermai w 4 ' ; • • i t lag ' dare ni4 stain," i our, ng ts, aad incno tb.ecinollatit,tortb.reille'as.'ltist64l""toreerviwelotialtesardiPtirol xre we vassals, serfs, or sieges, paleee alaves„ eat lion asa Ss ''''' — ltt at 110/0 I n eltrobldO 7l in tot , tbilt, mill erttp or change at. they , stein' ofd, d, „ ares sisinsossi tio 0 4 j ,„,,,issis The ithip'• . • . „ . •. 1 " 11 .-,, e te ttt e.r.l l , l , ~alit„ ideas, ere have alma amounted b e toot i n a name: i I s is th e ; pi,p een 1 snoll. -- .•-•- -- theatteis sad elreutottilit critic , St'oes, as represented in 'the Semite andi l " issinsoowiAlra,„ date mentioned. vas bse Sint 1 H oit „ th y mi sity ..- ablosametogn , . boa a s, t43 . j once, epresentather, who are tO n.Vord to, I 137541 1 4 s new es s ' - . NO. 11:- currency, When we pursued a policy which thine acid out of the country at the rote of 40 or 14 milliros per aaawit 1 It most hi retommesbored also, that AblilL tofd Ova to ray :for pule *bkb we could ourselves, miaow tartan of.s.rood or of baler quality. Loolthapheyood our own rroortry, we tea that mei y . natistrwhiett eatiboast of soy prosperity whatever, has pumped the'rotectiee volley. . If we *HD eyelids* into the condition of Thlgiwni elnvie Ike hail been It defeedent of Um Netheelands. we will dud that while she is the most, dowser, populated eons ti wnyi in Europe, else is Gee of the Wit highly Inure Puil l2 OHO the condition of the mass of the people Is mull irk. mac and SPOT* improve 1 . We will • and that is bas wham from the proteoLion Ot her illiabiktit" Mires.' l ~ ,EY tids \ ailey we have : tersely heisedited, as will he above on coking at the exports of American prodiew and marretketures. le 11134, the tWatiesount of Ames.-: lean weechaudiee exported-lo Belgium , was valuedn't •.sstic.:l42; and In 1436 it lutd - theu to 0,34304 -_ Holland looking, as she does, to colonies, skips avid commerce, In 1E34 took of American .merchandise to t h e ' m ime of vada,shi, which was were by earl half • millioriof dollars, thee she tookin 1363. 1 • Thue, In three cams Is It seen, thattlm ability tamale. tilts forilKo ttillllDetliN IS found to nibs 11 , 0111'int•flial Tirr. and so It Wirt always be. : • , 'llwe u Dub to the Ueroure alateeilachaded Within the lelivergin, er Tariff Uulon, and td Franc*. RU5644 ;Deemark and Sweden, we will-we the same ahem; me culling from like yawls. These countries hiv• protect. ed their Wei 'Aber from a knowledge that la thus fun t er ing that labor, was to be forted the tree road to wienk and happinees. II have had . an opportunity of cowries ping with a gentkonan of kris obeeriation and letellb. genre. and flue wholes,' labored 'snore ardently in the , reuse of American Industvy, than any person now Ape • log. Ile bas just returned from an European toss_roiel he secured me that his heart sickened:schen on s ung ' . the prolpetonicondition of mechanics in the Matelot . 1 : the ZoUverein and In Relatifs'. he tboight of the rile j lortileti was shout lo wars 'Wm our oirn industry. 1., If writtirn to Instead we .111 see a country' which ims lied perfect -free trade" with England for the last . half -.e ntury. What do we Gird 'beret Desolation andsnhe ery— a land of hidings aid o inlet. Vendee to thous who hoer always been poor, !ale to those whohaveere Loren rich. . We are told, betrayer, that this condition . has Wpm from slant of providence. or of industry od theymeli of the Irish nation. Title le false: 14' breed° you•illn4 a wan more desirous of engaging in work than the Irish map, when he ban been broughtlo this country? Where do you and num who'll!! engage In snore laborionsinield Where : do we and Inen.who Will save morons' of their little settliimptt • Inirihid. however. wherelainneec. lutes ate Dot permitted Aro flourish, little else eau; RI done than to devote ogee leaf to the lower bunches of agriculture, and the cultivation of the same IMP." r. tatms. has and fault exhaust the sell end bring famine , after instinct, Limo labor le wasjed there than in al. meet see ether-At Hived ceuutfy. became of alma of diversity nremployment. *bleb results In • went of a limper demand tor, the swig perishable of all .counedt. lien—labor et the; instant of its production. - Thus we Om aidebcdied teen:anxious to weal, with large Will' lies delendiint upon thew for a slapped. literally *tare log hereto/Of teen absence f demand for that - which thbgam obliged to waste—labor.. I. Thirteen years after' the .taperition of Brinell tree t Tri4t npon Ireland, an En Bob traveler.on visiting Kil kenny', remarked that two thousand persons well "to taill without employ : went " Ha (Other observed ,t - , lo Convey ilp idea of the de:041010U of them people, I n4.ntkin. thaf when an order recently arrived for the r menutecture of as many blanketsf&C thopollee as would have kept the toms at work for .al few days— Lees I were lighted about the country — riot .-boellireiLto Imre Wunicate insutreetlen: hut to evllite joy, WO. # fir. , starving men, tere about to earn bread to support their families. Nee rtheless. We are told that 7riehmen will not work at It ." - This , be it borne itt mind, walrin a inenurecturin di strict. restively In the blghert ele gni, peen., se-one, whichhut a few. short yeWe be. too*, could et or fabrics rivalling those of Zuglend. ' We have been'told 'that tbbse terrible results-I-paw ktim and misery—cowe'retr, m seer pyorrhea** 4 that rendre , . yestileuer Red.Wlll4 Ire the Instrumentsirhk-h thelAlntlehtg has chosen for Ing thin wkli. 'This cerrecti Is rase, also! No such erudition Oasts Is the wo Id, as norip ban invariably commenced by cultivating the poor milk As he becomes rich and powerfbi, acrd wahunte tureetriow up, he peeress by dearewi, the ability Ito re. claim' the rich roils of the Taller. anilithe rivet; betimes. Irides& It is doubtful. !bother therS Is any limit to the - ability of the earth to yield a support to animal life. . '' A t this day, the bests die pf Ireland are uncultivated, and unkultivable. This condition must and will con. 'thine as long as England insists In the tyranny of man ufacturing nearly eerrything required .by lasts !purer red tuition.. !Ireland is now• but A poor. ontlaylny , farm of England lend while she remains math. vibe can never . acquire 4 he tower to reclaim the rich, heavy KO. OHM . bogs.l. the elindition of Ireland has, however, been lm. Iyroved to a Wairkeiteraoner within the poet ten years. I now heelblvi improvement been effected? By the drain of the U. Elites upon the laboring population. ;bat Is. 'bee, which Was eitbout% market. has round In America ' a demand, which has enabled, It to escape from rates. Hoehn& misery.. Brthl wil not follow, this fruitful subject any Bieber. Let Ms best you to hear l's mind, theheceselty of allowing the ransomer and the I prod*. 'c m err ito coa to the side of oweb other. If you vela es. ' ine t hi s beautiful proviiion 'of nature. and apply it -folly, go dwill and that it is to Its violation thaD we are indettedifer.nineetenthe et the misery and wretched. wee which roams in the world. . . l England with hey two clareei—that which Ii Int ;catty powerful and rich, and. that *MeV is tidectly . ' Ind - powerless, Is able to make :cheap wadi I. . It et it these cheap geode. the result of ilLyeld labor, she vociferously cries" for adjulesion lido every market or the world—there to force apart the &win:nee and preview. Hence the necessity of a protective tatilf—.to every man who would improve the condition of the laboring claw sea if E ngland and Ireland. to keep sfeadllyile View the peat doctrine of protection Id American lndwitr7. For. when by vigor. and prosperity we shall not only well emptier and well pay our own labor, We shall drew from England and Ireland laboriagmen and artisans by huh deeds of thougands. Thus will the price of labor rise • in those two 'Count rirslnd thus will their condition be ,Improved, and every da., will the pewter Otthe imarmellst deereturyinhile that ot the landreriorwees., l • In - cob - amino, I would Appeal to every imatlicr de sires to Fee labor remulferated, and Otpreted s t res olve that he will net cease, night er day,Logwork In t cause of American Industry. •I plat him support no men We of Ere. whatever be his politics, who lir not. nuteallprosol• anal.. in fever of the enactment try Cougrrea, cd a DNB!. TECTITE TAHITI •. , ' • • . • ' . • • • • ll 'See Report. gien.,of eye and,Neana;H,. t.,1L8. t . - Anil'. NW j . - I . . Pio tamed oat+ at the their , as indicated by their nabiueill judynk for are they merely to, register ex- scathe edicts, wider penalties for refusal of denunciation and proscription ? Is the Pre 'sident Life master, or the servant of the people, that be iliould thus dictate to them or their • representatives, unde,r threats of exclusion from the party of their choke? . Is Democrs• .• • cy a mak and a shadow, or a substance? • it means the power of the people. This is its vital mance. Or has it lost its true cation, or are we moving . from it • with view less but rapid strides towards despotic power, to make end unmake the rules of - political faith under pains and penalties abhorrent to - to the souls of freemen? Is this' , the eighty wood yeir of our independence, or is it the first•xekx of American .archy, that is now dawning upon us. • Let the people—let the Masses composing - the true Democracy—arouse from their elem . bete.. let them 'break The chains which Would fetter their free thotight and frte•opin• ;ion,. and assert their blood-bought rights, end especially the great indefeasible sovereign - right of self-government. • 'We have fallen upon evil times; the Libor- ties -of • the - country' are in danger. Let the people•fn every - town, county, and State, rise as their majesty to the rescue. Let the timid or corrupt falter as they may; let the Demoe• rwcy of Indistii, now iii mass meeting *assem-: bled,, proclaim, in tones that shall ecboi throughoat our Republic, that the Spirit of the Revolution is not extinct in their bosoms, but that from the lakes of the• North to the lovely valleys of the. Wabash • and Ohio, you, the Dentqemcy of Indiana; will stand as one undaunted column, by the great principle of popular sovereignty, Bastioned by them at the polls in 1856, as embodied in the submission of the Constitution for ratification or;rejee tion by the unfettered vote of the people , of Kansas and of everpother Territory. The steamer Nous 2'aylor errived at New York on Saturday week with ton Francisco dotes to the Atli of February; and $1,049,000 in , *peel. The main topics of. the 'news are the proceedings of the Legislature, a multitude of suicides sod bloody arrays. and a eilvel. *corm. Of the 'suicides an extraordinary one In that of Adolphe F. Brenda, a.natise of Norfolk, Va., aged 33 - years, and da ring scree years, a confidential elm* end book keeper in the houre:Of alaoun'dray, a Cu., of Son Francisco:, lioeingrbecome dissipated and a , do ' fauller, he wound up his career by,• . taking a dose of strychnine on the manikins td the city., • When discueered 4 by his side woe found I s small slab, containing about four grains of strychnine,. aed seaweed on the ground were serape of piper tom from a memorandum 'hook.' -Olt . /hero ply ul roper deceived wrote disjointed sentences with, a .p - elicit, expressive of his teelicip and the thoughts, uppermost is his mind OW swallowing the dead ly substance. The . chareeter of his band - writing. as the time paired and as the poison operated ou the ',stow, grew. - Mort tremulous acid, iodbitinet. Both sides of the paper are written on, except the , last scrap, which contains only these words, .'I am dY"—probablr put thereat the moment do - ceased tell into the dna parozysto. The sad fate of brands prevents use the most singular ne ses of suielde on word.' ' The anti on his Moth er of 'the iatelligenew of bin self-destruction, seemed to give him irast concerti; while the strange circumstance of muting down the offset of strych nine, as it sapped theeltal powers, and other ice marki, is an illastralion• of the extraordinary 'mate of mind' tuerhich he was brought. - • • MerTifiliti;CAlrrtitil IIICOirDIAT. Ktaptalalasoadm-- 1 here utred yoo—you. One of the best:of mu. Yoraive me; o I ant nearly craz y and will emir be dead. Thigh of It: la a few lamest s to be in the preesare of God! I feel cool, jet toad—to think that I am thus soddenly to Neve this world, Ibis beautiful rise, nad allay blends.Ord I. my poor motber; Ide boys she is not alive. Ibis Wien , 'will kill her. •I pray all fargire me 1 orra cold; this damp air; the simmer lea just_Ared ber gun; thank God. she to off: Tell Geoese Cliftre to take my pencil and do af terwards altia It se he thinks best, and to be kind to the giver. • lleare.tes likdlerw 7 -lirsthe man of the bone that amount. *ley to Judge figs*, I am Mad and ask Airstream of blot. • - , ..A. 7. basma." Assam 50, 1011. . ' • . On the hack of dile hitter the following was d • 'You will dud my hod, on the 1111 scar the lone Ifountain Cemetery. Arist* bare ate buried la tbe Vision Yard, at I am, or rather was, a Catholic. "It taxman , to Navies this world. whore nothing re 'mains but toiletry, may God forgive me. I have ,been looking at the steamer; how rid I Seel. Please do not allow any pentiwaten to be made about me-tthis sets, for Instance'. This I ask for workmen ;eke. !qui / write this in lite saddle I for you moot read MAUI). OFFICE. ST* bow propatod 0 of synx,oetip '74o.ool".llbaa It 010 mot,. =Mirth. ° Alut4. Mots., 'ta. /la, tof JOll 21r1 1 11 Ia ale* In Mho era employel napnwaiy ter trantrif, we will as any that tan be the RILINTIXO IJi COLORS dose setlla . • . .BOOK BINDERY. Id be awry variety of style. 16Ik Solite %Moo esurfactand, bound asol falai ea" , ootteo. IL yenta Illte Captain Maeoudray and Judy Dam to °you any Warr *or me." DIAXDA'S DiINO MOV011(111. On this firat piece of paper deopased orate: ' "Yet the thoughts of my poor Mother heaps my heart warns, or rather hot, fur I feel Ilm her murderer. God help me! Mow slowly time passes; It seems to me nearly half an Immediate I took the fatal dose, yet I do not evil/c— -lime okay It lel • I hal .tiff from the sold."- , ?Cumber two: "It is fearful to die then aloie—th look itieundi su the tsilla, boar the roar of the twain. Poo your fellow. beings swing in the Soden% yet die skunk' s. "Jost after my third dorsals.* skied and told his Mendel was nary. God forgive's*. I here I am.— What terrible impasse Ills calling be ilnalki," !lumber three: ' --rot silione—halt of the tattle I have taken. bar doses of the rtryett—at intetwala of about t bre* taiselm, yet do not suffer. I feel nervosa, bat will note the lime on ,be b..k of ibis." "—I think It has been Insets minutes Mae* I tent the first. lam cold and chilly, May NM good malt from my daktb." On the earth piece the. writing Writing any DKr/. The pooh are apt ski Irregularly oven paper, length wise and d Wloaallii. I They areas Slims half an bob,. lam dying. God help Bs, A. T. B.". OMME TExAs.--Stretching as the State does from the parallel of 28 40 to 36.30, and covering an-extent of 700 miles, it offers great induce- VICTIM to , organized emigration. Mr..l. Do Cordova whO delivered in Phlladephie some "evenings since, a lecture on the resources'and products of Texas, has resided within her bordera twenty.years. Mr. DeCordova in the course of his lecture said as be came from her - rich and fertile fields to the crowded nortberi Cities,. be could but wish that some of th; ' energy and enterprise of the north contd. be applied on tier broad an 3 flowery prairies.- T Although her poiiticr. is* that of a frontiei State, let thi) emigrant to Texas does not encounter the full hardships and perils of froti tier life, and by the aid of honest labor and a fair share"of industry any man can obtain a good home, which cannot be wrested from him. B,v the laws of Texas homesteads are exempted from seizure for debt-200 acres of land and the necessary tixds and implements of one's calling being included in the exetrip r tion. . Mr. lYe 'Cordova sketched the legal ,and * ,educational advantages of Texas, as a 'coun try desirable for emigrants, and then gave a brief statement of.the progress of religious . affairs. It' appears that Roman Catholics, 'Methodists, Presbyterians; Baptists and Epie• copalians are all represented, and their churri ches 'and ministers are found in all portions of the State. Both State end county tax amount to but 22 cents on the $lOO, and there -are millions of acres of fertile /and, only waiting;for the emigrants to break op the soil. 'The ireker devoted the litter half of his lecture, to a fall, though condensed amount of the advantages of-Texas as an agriiultu 'ral,, grazing, swine growing and !beep Ali ing country. Cotton. .sugar, tobacco, wheat, rye, barley, millet, and everreonceiv• 'abletind of vine and vegetable eats be grown • in the utmost perfection, and with eenweon ,prisdoincsAn. immediate velure/for your out. lay (except, perkapi, in the. limy Of'raising horses) may be Obtained.' The Speaker advised 'his heaters against • going there -twapecalate in Linde', but main- . tained 'that all fanners, mechaniei and *fliers who wervilling to' Work Would do well to , go to Texas. lie advised The' fortnatiorier Colo. nits of say 10a batiks, who might bay :land near together and emigrate is companies.— The lecture is suits by, the Inptintr to have been interesting thsoughoutood thaaccounts of the luxuriant Flops •of.Testas; :and the -; •wild fieldspurts witieltiney,be enjoyed io she north western . Rstikakof tbe§tato, were 414 .--__. -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers