TERIIES OF THE MINEltr 704RNAI" •• • Metz aCtiscetrlttes; Til"O• IIi)LLARS per annum. pafrable in ;Avant. 11 22 If not pain within Al mouths — aud 12 5 i uot paid within the year , . - ; ; id ausi:I 4 . ' Three eopl'en to one addressiiin adraticej 15 Seven' do fdo .do - 10 Fifteen ,tIO ' d 4 du , ' • 2l Club eithscrlptioua Most be hirartably p aid Itt 'reties, and sent, to one sahlrear. • . , , ie,ellaticia , AND OTRZia: L . . The Joossat elf! be furnished to Carriers and oth et $1 per tip copies. each on delivery... sa .cu A irevenointd &hoof , supplied Pith' 310 . . , . - Joveurat at sl,fit :Advance,. - . Vtit . t..aw or Arants. ,• • TI eubwribere order the di ' ' nuance of their oi ratefre. the ouhlieher may .. ..due to send them le , 1 1 all arreantees are pail, • 1 . • It Fubserihere neglect nr refuse to take their 'new' per, from tho nffiveto which they - air directed. they , held -retToOdble 'unlit they hate Fettled the bide ordered then divontitined. .. . —• , 1 If saha•ribers mote to Other pla,nn without int6rm ' the poblieher—and ihe nowspaiwri are sent to the fo .. direction, they are held reaponale. , The courts have decided that refusing to take new, '' ' pen from the °Mee. or removing, awl I.lving them •' calla! for, Is Mime facia evidence of tetentional frau 1, --, I RATES OF.ADVERTISINC. „ ...- . ___ ..... ' One Ai afro of 10 lines. 50 cents for one insert lots-,-1, sapient i p sertlons, 23 routs earh'. 311 ines one tins e....its—subsequent Insertions, 12% rents each. - All / Tertisesusnts over 3 lines, for short p'eriodi, charged square. • , noires. (Eft. Two. THUS*. XII• TWT .Tbree lines, 63 88 $1 2.5 $2 25 11.1 Four lines, ~', 80 125 175 -2 7' Fire limes, ' i l 00 ~1.50 200 3 Fix tithl , , 1 . 25 225 260 4 Ser.% lines, 125 225 270 4 Eight lines, 125 2'2.5 ' 285 ' b Nine lines, 125 225 300 , 5 ALL uTEn FITX MUSS COUNTED As *NQUAVIC Or TEN LINi One square.. 1.25 '• 225 3 '14 '6 00 11 Two squares. Three "2 .. '' 4 005 00 '. 9,00 1 4 F squares,43 ..) 501 750 12 00 1' Fur vinal•es, 4. 0 6101 800 .14 00, 21 Quarter / sod., 00) _: 900 12 00 An 00 .3 •,,,si,a o ,o” spare for short periods, as per agreement ii rit tisinom Notires, $1 ea- . l.l—accotispittled , with advertisenient. 50 rents cash.,.. • Ad reitisemen t 4 before Marriages and Deaths, 10 e. per line for li rst insert ion—subsennen t Insertions; 6 C. per lisle. Nine sr.‘rdslire counted as aline in advertis Mirchants and others. advertising by the year, rhanges.dd n standing advertisement not exceedin I inew•willybe charged, incl b edbug subscription, 1 Space to the amount ottour Ktiares, with than- ' ~ , ger , and subscription. . • 2 Without changes, at the rates designated above. ' ' • Ad. erripemen ts set in iarger type thanfusual wit c h,,i.,1 50 per cent. advance. nn these prices. All , will be ehorged the tattle al letter press. , Na Tiade advertisements received from Advert! .Icentrahroad. except et 25 per cent. advance on ti prl-cs, Onions by special act eement with the publish -Marriage,. 25 cents each. Deaths irceompanied with _ti.•ea. 45 costs, without untlees, noteharge. ''-- All notice& except thole of a religious character for educational purposes, will be charged 25 Cents for number of Muds under 10. Over 10 lines, 4 cents per additions!. ' -4, ~ • - _ __ 1 proceedings of meeting'snot of a general or public Icier, charged at 4 cents; per ilne for each insertion. I To &CHUANe calculations we will state that .32A , II nial3 a column-164 lines a half collumn—and 82 quarter column. 11952 a ords make a column-1476a column—and '11:18, a quarter column. All odd sloes o each square, charled at the rate rat cents per-Ilue one time. and rents per line for three times. ' Yearly advertisers must confine their adrertislo'.. their own business. Agenles Inc others. sale of Estate; tc.. are not'inclUded In 'bind nem advert Irefne IRON . WORKS. , TAMAQUA IRONWORKS. Carter & Allen, Iron Auadirs, 4tacianikis, ik f it,r end Mac/draft( '; ifai,ers add Off I The subserlbeis are now prepared to reepisn'orders for all kinds of &at innary Engines and niticbinery for collieries. biVa furtmeeti. mills. Lc. EatenQive fa",' ditties and practical experience in tltrL bukiness. warrant them In taking the largest cowl, at the lowest priers. Particular attention Is called In Tvem. S Allen's 2 , 010 Patent Witolini- Machinery. by which the 'SI, or ;. , hatt rope or alpine run on the top of both drtirm double ways. This au rangement, It is confidently believed. wl ' I In the wear and tear of ropes or ehalna. the price of Illachinery in flee years; and for fast winding,simplii of construction and It cnnurd he surpasi We also recommend the new car wheel. Invented by' Lucien 11. Alien. This wheel ran only be had at works. and has stood the zest of the tatters' severe ten; past. triumphantly; not a single wheel having broken since Its Introdurtlon. We are now plaeit i t/ under the cars of some of the principal Railroad Con nies Iu the eoutdry. , We woo:dale:a call the attention of the public to TIIIIVINUIt Car Stiop.curenerted with tbe,ithore works ' recently erected fur the manufacture 'of it:Wm.:id; li Freight Cant and Truckm, and furnished with All th . test iroprbrements, so that they and thus enabled to ecute work much cheaper and with more despatch 1 heretofore. , All work ;mit:inbred: Persona wanting anythin , ,our line would do weU to give tut a !call. • :! . tar CARTER A, A LLE ,!, FOUNDRY A 6 A, CFl"?Ffi:: •ar s',V("., „..", * T.h.IvINTERSTEENtunOt ~ - I g l ow pp his readiness, fronc the complete° , rt I ~..,•' FM ,ttßeaboteuutedestabli;,htneut,t,i .! . neMH;, "`piy wit orders in 111 liue-ut busin ,I - . . such its for Steaup Engines . Railroad , 7 . iirilt 'ar.:, tfumps, Coal Breakers,eastingsami Mac 7-vy of every pattern. ! lie warrants b Is work to gives fa-tion, runt accordingly colkits pritronage et hotil , abroad. Inn. '27.1857 4.15 , • • FOUNDRY AND DIAC'HINE SHO ' Steam Car actory, ate. temp NOTICE.—The business c fthe late! of SNIDER k MILNES, will be co , ' --- Mai by the subscriber in all its va allifsc /tit bninchertOt Steam Engine building. • Founder, :manufacturer of all kin Machinery, for. Itching Mills, Blast Furnaces. Rai , Cltr. /kr., .G•.' Ito will Mt* continue the buNinete. ur lug and Selling the i•eleln - nted Pine Bawl Wirite As! . s r ed o n rein, lied .Aph Chats. being pole p for of them, Coll erlrs. GEORGE W. SISYD ..January 21.18 n • 34f POTTSVILLE ROLLINC MILL. I I(I SUB1(.11t1 BERS ire . 1 I am, faintly manufacturing various. siv• l Ccilliera' Balls. weighing 22, 25.28. ... ...ritr.thriir and 4U pounds per yard. Also. nails of the most approved nalt wevrniug 45, :Ai, 58 and 60 pounds per yard. 'ltrom experience of the past eve years. we test confide Making. Rails unsurpassed in quality by any mill i r••untry. All business cemmunicatiehT Messrs. VAUD-LEI' 6: .54),N, Iron Fartort, meet withremit attention. , JICO. BUNN d al • June 20. '57 A PALO AkTO ROLLING MILL., THE Subscribers beg leuce flounce ; to their friends and the to 7,7", :eneirally.that their nevi .. . Bolling :.310 Alto is now complete. and lie ' . iperatinn, and that they are prepay. furnish r - ratie.of various ratt e rnaoeeigbing front 70 Ms nor yard. Also, differe:,t aitell of 81, square t ound niere.hants• Inir iron. , 4trdors Car hits or.bar iron are lresprctf ly !toile suit Meet wine- prcmpt atferitiop if left eith. the Rolling Mill, 'Bright & Lerch's: Ilarda are, S 4!entre stre.d, or at their mfrs, N. Corner of e and„„ Market Greets, 2d story. • IIAYIVOOD, LEE & - Jan. 1. '57 141 TO COAL OPERATORS at. MINER Pioneer Boiler orks: The subscriber restihrtfully invlt Itt' NNW attention of the buslneskcommun,l ' his Boiler Worlts.nn Railroad stmt rdpvia l iq low the 'Passenger Depot. Fetticrul e where he Is prepared to manufactlir - 110113111 S OF EVI.ILY DI:F.CIIIPTION, Ftnoke Stadia, Ale Stacka, Bloat Pipes,'Dasotnetern. • Cars, kr,. &c. Boilers on band. Ileing aprtefical merhanic and having for yearsAe himself entirely tb Mit: branch' of tha buslnessdhe I era himself that work done at his estabildintent give satisfaction to all who may favor ban with a r i I roily 'duals and Companies will fled it . oeatjy 'Gibe vantage to examine his work beforeettgagibg deer' • Nos'. 21, 'L7 47-tf J011:f T. NOM B AVER PAE'ADOW IRON WORK }iCI)4ONA 11110THEit, Iron audit FoUnders, respectfully Inform thel • hams. and the public generally,that is i;jcipia are fully prepared at the atm; e estit meat. to matinfltcture Steam Engin every size: Ptstopaltaliroad and • Drift Cars, and e l other descriptisti of Iron and Braga Castings aultald t he Coal mining or other bneiness.on the most reason' I ems. Also. Plowing Cylinder" for Blast 'Furnaces 31,bine work In general. Repairing :dl kinds done with Oral , OOPS and desp, at the lowest prices. All work furnished by then! , soled to perform well. They would the erode ' -three who may want articles in.t heir line In thisyiri Al orders will meet with immediate all 4 prompt a Bancoi • March 4;ISS: . W. it":: . 0 --- r- ASHLAND IRON WORKS. P . * 'rim SUBSCRIBERS SUBSCRIBERS are new am", pr,•pareti to furnish. at the Ash land orks, Steam Engines and l'unipVtil r irrc ? .i .l i tz power and miparity. for Mining and purposes. Coal Breakers or every Slit pattern now la oseelogMber with castings and fb of .n.O , descriptilms. Coal and Drift Vats of all and pattern 8, large Truck anti II orse Cara—alit - lain{ at the shortest notice. The sultscrilAs flatter t velvet' that, Inasmuch as every nOtinher 61 the fi r n, practleal mechanic.: they will be able to fttrolf , h ni !tory that will compare favorably with_any In tb tin All orders directed to L. it.Ganste & Itenv..r Lied, SrhUylkill county, Pa will roceive`prempt a Ilona L. P. GARNER. . • 311CIIARL - GARIN}, JOSEPH GARNER AAland.. May 10.'57 ' . - DEHAVE i tI'S IRON WORKS; 1 luerav THE Subscriber is prepared to INES of any re f i l .i c i t tu u p r :o B f T rg li cap l n :N rlly,,and Coal itre , • .4 every description; as well as tit r kind of machinery used in lir;,lxe, 0. r un mres,ROiling S tills. Saw 31111 n. kr. • ' , Nola the fullitior. PORAORRed for manufacturing , trmil long experience In the Pau work Leto out at' thi..“tAbil‘hment.at• the very lowest prices, or a +nperior quality. Per Sous dr..lran%Of putting tip ninehineryof any arc invited I. all examine pattern. n oel becom pu Hinted with prices before rontrart elsewhere. ever, kind are solicited. and strict sttet will be given to their prempt execution, ' ttyl A M lAD AN+ Millersville, December 410851,A' 41141, WASHINRTttONbwiIIe, (RON WORKS. u h JAS WREN Milk the attention of 'the hostiles', clinon ,' 19 their New Ma. lane Shry and Fou turk Entm erected tot weep Coal and Railroad et • end fronting on Norwegian street, ihry are prepared to execute all orders for limehlo, end iron, soeh Steam Eu0,9..1,11 ban is e:, hat tar Rolling Mills, Grist and Saw 31111 s. s,lngle Double feting Pumps, Goal Breakers, /hill Core, All' of It a tread Castings, Audi as Chairs for Flat and T 1 , or:J.. Switches, he.; all kinds of cast and wrrugh Shifting. Being prset lea! • mechanics, and hweing I he'oem. aids of the Goal Region their study .for y also ill 1 .. Inds of Madan:Ty in their line of 190Iness, Ostler thenmeires that vcork dotiest their t•stahllat , eith , fartion to oil who may honor them,w t liakikfuily rereired and prpmrby 0+.1. , 41 the most rea.onable terms. • T 1 19‘1.53 WREN, e *3l ES n; EN; r Nor. 2.!, 47-lf - - . TRENIONT IRON_ WORKS, • 1 - Tremont, Schuylkill younly, reaal The Substriberareereetruliy id • • :t... I hy.altnntion of the buylnenacozornid • -", 7 to their New Machine Shop and F. 1 iry,ereard Inithe 10W11 of Tremont'', 1 - - ,-1- .. and..,. t h.. ~ nrsertotendenc e and mart in,ni. :7F - Nt.ept,rl Z. liaidnrfr and 1%14 Cruludt a. ayl fr prepare I to execute all hrifery Inc Ilfachlmyy l' ,, i• 71, 1 , 1J1r.m..urh as Steam Alogiora of any pci • I'vni, Or any rapari:y. Coal Ttreakeranf over?. dna.- 1 1.171. 311 kirk,l.vor Gearing for linliinn ltilla. flrixt Fax Mill, Win en• and all randy r. ft‘alirrail Canfl f ,l'll 1 . 1 :11 , 11 . for.rist and T raffia:, ir..OlA. switch t ,q all kind, of !art and Wrouga: Imo 8401:thwa• !kir.' I , Indnr. prartfral Merhunic.and haring had the i"il'a, cod <pliancy for many years in the Coal ilai a,q,a• d.rliour of pulling up Machinary of any a • ii.e, , ,,tt-d t . rail and examineour patterns and cup v,, % .11111tt '4 ok. und become acquainted with prity •ti......Workit,liefin rout rarti thy wbreirhere. Order? a • rrr kind than kfull y rtn!eivli. and strict attention sell 6...t0 In I li.dY wand, execution, haring several IS 0. 40, sod 6Uhuriir Engines inapt. hand. !in 6, 11,!17 11e r. A. L.A. N. FEL • • . • . : i • ' : , I I .'.,. . • I . • r • . c „ ...._TI-I.F - • ....'.:•' ..- _ ,- • . , , 1 • ~. , . . ~.. , . • . . . :- • ~- i • .t....A: 4 4 4 .vp --- ..w.., : - •:. .1 ,-, . ..: _ , • 9. .. . . . •• ......„,..... ....,.. 0 ., _.: , • :,, . 1 .-.....•.••••_ -...,.., ._ . . . . , , ••-•,. ~, le , •-...- '' . - i . ' ' -4.-• . • . . - .•- 1 ~ • . . '. ' I N . . • ' . .. . I .1.1.:"-1:-'7.. 4.1.:-....:: ::' -4:-.‘ ::'..V. -:---f....- -- . 'lnt l.. ' 1 : :'''' ''- t1 011 'IN -. ' ; . ~,...,...„, , _.,...,.... . . . ' F 's ANI). POTTS IT . ••,. . , . . ILLE , - .t. $O. - -- -34451• 2 -' . - GENERAL ADVERTISEP , • , , . . , !.... . . • ---.....:.5-...--,-,,. - m.4i. YIA at: ' J . . , • ....---. I: -- . 5. " 1 . Mr . I • .../ 1 1 . PUBLISHED :EVERY SATURDAY MORNING, BY BEA4AMIN BANNAN, POTTSVItLE, SCHUYLKILL COUNTIY,'PENISYLVANIA. yo . XXXIV. • .111EDICINAL.. ; • W. RIMING c " olesale and Retail Mr•na.glilest and Chemist. • 8. • . Corner. Centre and Noreregtan Ste., (Opporite Mortimer?* Hotel;) ' Orr SVILLE, IrEIIISIA.I. MANI FACTRER. AND SOLE itiontirlaa OF Epttnrs Pectoral '3ll/ixtura ' - i EPTINCE PECTORAL MIXTURE cures Coughs. . -EPTIN .'S PFTORAL MIXTURE cures Influenza. EPTIN . '3 PECTORAL MIXTURE cures Bronchitis,-' EPTIN ,' S PECTORAL MIXTURE cures Sore Throati., EPTIN 'S PECTORAL MIXTURE will relieve minium?. tie patients in advanced:stages ol,the disease. EPTIX '1 , 3 PECTORAL MIXTURE sold byJacos L. Sao- . • Na.. , Ashland. EPTIN 'S PECTORALMIXTURE sold by J . Rims* • BV Ns,3lloericrllle. EPTIN 'S PECTORAL MIXTURE sold by Wm.& Ruin, deb uylkl il llaven. sold by PECTORAL ifIXTURE sold by,all druggists gen rallf throughout the noun ty.l oelobrr 21,17 t" T ' I ' ARD ASSOCIATION, rblladelpinla. - ' dilution, established by special ea:barmy:l el hi the sick and distressed . ; afflicted eirident and Epidemic disehres. 'IOWARD• ASSOCIATION, fvthe awful destruction of human life, -oil diseases,. and the deceptions practiced 3 upon t le unforttmate VIM ims °tench Monet, by Quacks, several. ears age tilt acted theft. Consulting Surgeon, ea a Cli Al ITABLK ACT worthy of. theirhatne, to open a Dispen ry for: the . treatdent of this , !lase of dkeases, In all t tilr forms , and to give MEDICAL ADVICE GRA TIS. to 11 whe apply by letter, with' a .description of their co i'dit Me. (age. occupaileir: - Ilibi t a df ILfe.l c.,) and In e a . of extiemepoverty, to runNrsu MEDICINES FREE OF CIIAIIOE. It is needless to add that the As sociatiolo commands the highest Medical skill of lheage, and will furniah the mcet approved modern treatment. If The irect_oix, oii a review of the pant, feel assured that t.h it labors in this sphere of benevolent effort. have been of great benefit to the afflicted. eapecially to the young, and they have resolved to devote thtlimseires, with renewed Seel, tOthis very important but much des pised cause. Just published by the Association, a Report on Spec matorrhma, or [Seminal Weakness. and other Diseases of 4he Sealant Organs, by the Consulting Surgeon. which will be sent by mall. (in a sealed envelope.) FREE OF CHAR( E, on receipt of TWO STAMPS for postage. Adile. to , rj Report or treatment, Dr. OEOROE It. lAl,llk W.'instil Ong Surgeon, !toward Association, in. 2 South Sloth stn*t, Philadelphia. Pa. • I . By outer of tho Meet . ..tore. EZRA D. IIEART7ELL. la°. FAIRCHILI4 Secretary. Pre:ideal. '47 ' I 40-ly J___ • a Ica. 'll7 ' •, . . Sia . REAITTIFTER a 'Long Unsti,ccei!spapy Sought, 1 1 " - FOUND AT V :.LAST ! IT lISTORES PERMANENTLY WRY HAIR r"' tot, prald 11, thy, aP ago, re flee, • tiro:ll2i I s original inlet; ' coveiriqa ugrlantly. the bald I:moves all daudrurf , itching and all scrofula, 1 art and all rurions; makes thl.hair sort. heal- id glossy; and will prenerve It to any imaginable oyes, as if .by magic, all blotches. tc., frocu the d cures all neuralgia and nervous headache. See A . Oll the following: • , [ I J .. Dover, N. It., Feb. .—O 241,11557. ..0..1. WOOD CO: Within a few Mays received so any orders and rails for Prof. O. J. Hair Restorat ve, that today we were compelled ,to Boston for a quantity, (the 0 doyen you for all being sold.) whi ewe might order a qnstitlty iat. Eirry bollle we hare sold arms 1.1 hare pros, Aree orb four new ersitoniers, and the approbation I ironage j it 'receives from the most sultstantial anti cif irat. of our vicinity, fully convince us that !DIST V ALUABLE PREPARATION. , . u+. as boon as may be, one gross-of $L star; and'! ten B 2 Rise: and Lettere us. yours very respect. ! . (Sinntid] DANIEL LATIIRDit A CO. _ .111 l Ekory Grove. St. Charles Co.. Mo.. Nov. 1 1851 t. pito '. O. J.INVOOD—Dear Sir: Some lime last summer we w4r 'induced to use some of your Hair Restorative, audit.effectslwere so wonderful, we feel It our duty to ~, . yeti' an the emitted, to report it. Our little rain's head for some time had bean ,perte.-tly covered with Sores, and some called It scald head. ',' The hair almost Mitirely came off in chnsequenee. when a friend.' seelingllsle sufferings, advised us to use your Hes torathks and I ,re did mo.with little hope of 101COPSS, hut, to our , l-1.1.1114 ac! that of all our friends , a very few ap: Fittest{ , tis removed the disease entirely, and a new.anil luxuriant drop of hair soon started out, and we tan now say that our boy has as healthy a scalp. and as liisuriatit crop )f bairjas any other, child. We cavi ' therefore, rut dq herebj, recommend your Bestorativ4 is a perfest reinesly for all' diseases of the scalp and hair. -' Me are, yours respectfully, GEOEOF: W. 1111301 N BOTIIAjMiI ' I SARAH A. IrIGGINBOTHAV: j • Gardiner, Maine. June '2241..1655.; ' PROF. 0..7! WOOD—Deer 'ch.: 1 have used two bottlier of Pro t tssor Wood's Hair Restorative, and can tituly sly it is t e greatest discovery of thence for restoring and cbanglog the,hair. Betbre using it I was a mail of Ity7s enty. My hair has now attained l' s original color. lon ranintuendlt to the world without the.least fear..4is my C 3 was sue of the worst kind. lout., respectfully, re . , I. DANIEL N. MURPHY. • 0. J. WOOD b, CO.. Proprietors. :112 Lroadway. New York, 6n the Great N. Y. Wire Railing Establishment,) and 1)4 Market street. St. Louis, Mo. PllO we low Wobtro , to eon wnrde from ), duced awl pat worthy 11 I%a and out: dot full), tflt up s-- land I th e. nd ! rm tin owl ron s o f P),32 Fre rns, the it ta will lan ilic, rl at • till to t: to and .ii And void by nil good Druggimds. • .luny IH,'SS 25.3 m • WILLIAMS'S • ANTI-DYSPEPTIC EIIXIN. iaxspepsyll kndlgestion I •J)ropepsyt j ‘.. MORBID SENSIBILITY of the Stontae l h and Bowels; attended with obvious dis order nt the digestive organs. idid its attendant ills. such as IVilasea, Ilendache, Veriign, nes ts of Sight, Deb lily tf ihe.Nerrous System, Ilyl ochandriaaaundice, 1.., of Appetite, tfa.• ting the Strength, . Fa silence. with frequent belching:of twindi riti t, d taste, (,n ignition and uneasiness of the Bowels, Bill. ua linniling, • ' Ru ing serisatton at the pit of the Stomach, Lit r Complaint, • N Oppre.szion ojter Eating, '. " I uleitalion of the Heart, . 1 . l e Par in thipil al' the &mach, be !awards Iheright side, Sall .wrear rf Cr..mple.rinn, Del emion of 4,irita and ir rtiabilify of temper, rte.,. Rave n many cares di tied the skill. heretofore. qt the .best t. edical practitioners In the World , and mangfases have u abandoned as Incurable. ( - -,, ,ti . Da. J. Witueus, Chemist and Phar aro tlst,:utter "atudy lig closely the practice of Dix. Alnethy and J. .Totin. n, England, and observing the net re of the_dis. ease in all Its sta,g es, dtiring a sqjourn in the southern. 'and.western prirtion of the United Slates, where It ipre rails f a greater extent than elsewhere. procured fn,m tloteli America, certain resits and herbs. from which he preps Ai an "laixia;" which, after eighteen years' use in pre a te prartice r has proved ititelf more efficacious ill the cu te of Dyttpepay, than any medicine that has ever been prepared in any age or SO clime, for the Rime pur' law , I , I lavlC. aubinitted it, with an explanation of Its corn peartrie to to number of Phyalcians or Phiiadeiphh, knffilMg whotri'were the tate Dec. Joseph Hartshorne and J. C. Morton, it has received their entire' approval, and many lif the Medical Vacuity are now not.nnly prescrits. ing It for their Patients, but are using It themselves, peraonallyi and in their families. As slunk, it is tine. ~ quallel. and Its properties are of PO invigorating a na ture. t at It is given with perfect safety and success to the mist tinder infanta. The Etigia" is very gradual. but Certain in Ito action upon t e OV-gons of digestion. the Increased secretions of the II ,er. pancreas and mucous membrane of the Sty marli,and' reU ultra that only one dose be taken in twen. tyfour holies: for eondrmed Dyrpepay ran only be cured 1 by ['inn/deify restoring the organs of digestion tc a heal- thy state. The great success met with In curing the most agxravated cage nt Dspepsy. riretimpanied some times pith a high grade of hypochondriasir. has medal,. lishedithe iii4t unbounded•confldence In the curative propertiesf, iiiis."Etaxxx;" in aureola:nation of which nod 1110 following testimot lets: . ATTESTATION.—We, having used Williama'm "Anti- Dyspotic Elixir," with the moat perfect satisfaction and 'slicers , take great pleasure In recommending it to all perhitn! coffering with Dyspepsy, as we tire "filly con. • imedi of its most ertimabte qualities in restoring the digktire powers. reninvine all pains and uneasiness,and imparting a healthy lone to the Stomach: • John I;. Pontos...3s South Wharves: Crajpi Morris, Tacony ; Thomas Aid bone. President 0 !lank of, Venn. aylvtinia ; Abner Eimer.. Market etreettliirwe Stall; Ed-, ward If. Rowley, No. 14 North Ithavvii; Wiehael Dunn, l c Superf tentlent Merchants' Exthanmi: II I nnah s tiler, FPrankord Road; Hannah Webb, 28 Filbert street ; It, N. Sp rrv. 12 Ediard street; Lawretre Newbold. No. 396 chesitut Street, Pi.iladelphis;AWni. 'lard, 0 City. Row; Rudolph L'Artil, 20 Broaawa i y ; 11, N. Winans, ___ r . .. 94 Wa er street, New York. , The Jot of names could be. ext;ooed tts almost any length b ut s t he foregoing Is deemed i‘uflicriMt. Terlien wry qr!lf. SPER RY who 4 rAr4 abandoned as I . nrurnbfr. and Oren op to Die.. ' DR. r l. Wltitams:.—Dcor Sir:—For fifteen years pro-- •lous to 18,54. , 1 coffered PO much from Dycnepcy, that I became completely prostrated, loth in mind and body, and atlength!becarne PO weakened 1 could not attend td toy bo Mese, stet wan sinking into a decline. and it was bellev I never could recover; .the best medical aid wan procur '1 for me. and every means retorted to without any re ief, till I was adyleed to nee your 'Elixir," and from t re time 1 began taking it 1 . gradually improved iiii I vas rolulactely restored to health. The dreadful sutlers lige I endured from lipspepsy 1 cannot describe: int I am cone& nt that without the use of your "Elixir." uslinum lii , ' , I,r tny grave. I assert that 1 solemnly lw.. been loi,i• **Ens h ' has saved me from an early deaf 11.- 1 cenfinne now In the , etijoylnent Of maid. excellent her.'.:ll. - / i-- : H. N.SPEREY. . I '7 147 . , 11 1 57 - ' No. 1104 N. Third st.. Phllad'a. We; the undersigned. H ersigned. have known Mr. U. N. Sperry 1 for se oral yearn , and take pleasure in stating that his „assert on can 'l,e p..rfectly relied on. and that we: our. 'selves know that he has born wonderfully restored In, healtit from the brink of the grave; and we twlieie.ge be as rtr, 'cutely by the 'tee of Dr. Williams's '..Elixir." t Tioni.-.1. Citoint.za, No. 113 Stimuli st. • 1 .lotts Egarr,4tare ar., above Peron& Personally appeared before me, (one of , ttie Alderman of thel idly of Philadelphia) h. N. Srgagv, who tieing dilly arrow& doth depose and, say, that the Picts set forth I 1, the *hove certificate a on t rue inerefy particular. Swort and subscribed thin oth day of June: 185;. , • ' FREDERICK itICEL. Alderman.. Tba'El lite" In sold In bottler, at $1 each, or 0 bottles foi P.!, kProprietel.—JAM ES WILLIAMS, M. p,, Chemist and Iliarenn:erulief." ~ Nico.. 4 South'Seventh etreet. I'hlladelphin.4 'or sale 12y JOitzt ff. liteown, Centre . .elteet, Pettit , ' - -,,A ;Olney 20,.'58 8 . '5B . ft.ly , e , , ten ~ , a de hey en ;ha • 1 , ew • . Dry (toed. e nd Grocery Store. 91114 E Undersigned have - - ....:_ g _ ~... - opened a! :New Dry Goode.and Gm- 4:6, VI I , orp. Ini the building on .Centre street. r'' , eat to reset Hotel. formerly oe- C- : •- copied by r Mimeo k Chasibers. whwi• -" • --- they rill be happy to see their Mende grd the paddle generakty. Their outpost; is to do eseitutisely, s Cdl3ll. .boasioT al hieh will trouble them to Fell cheap. • ' ~. . , ir4-014 curb A CALLPIES .. • 1 ' , BEATrIt t LISEDNELL l'othertile. A prli 3. '.58 - 14tf • " , ••••••111=•••••1 I I WILL TEACH YOU TO PIERCE THE StriELS Or THE EARTH, AND BRING OUT NEON THE CAVERNS OF MOUNTAINS, METALS WHICH"WILL %TR STRENGTH TO,OUR HANDS AND SUBJECT IA ILL NA.TUEE TO OUR Ude AND:irtmusctigur. denim: o. I - I !p 1 MINERS' SAFETY LAMPS. • , A Stipeelor Article. THE SUBSCRIBER .has just. re , eilved from New Castle, England. a lot of Davy's gatety Working Lamps, made, under the Inspection at the 4nglialt Government Agent, of the beet quality wire gauze. Alan, Gauze Covers made ready for use, for these Lamps. There arb the best Safety Lamps everin troduced Into this Count: s and areforsalewholesaleand retail at about the cost of inferior pimps. Also, Wtre Gauze by the yard. end Lamp Brushes by the dozen or single. Also. the Otanney Lamp for Bosses and Mine Viewers. This LamtAts covered with "thick Glees, and [gives an Increased light which is of importance to Mine Viewers. BENJ. DANNAN: tita-Theats Ltinps cau be put Into a box felled with ex. plosive gna. and,moved rapidly backwards and forwards !without any coering, and will tot explode. August 8, '3732- 1 • SAVE YOUR TIME. READY MAD PAPER BAGS, 'T - 4 1 OR GROCERS, ' DRUGGISTS, I. CONFECTIONERS, BAKERS, &c.—The Subscriber i reipeetfitily informs Ma friends and the pUblic that be lbaa been appointed Agent for the sale of lirPatent Maeblneemade Paper Bags, • . lIIAMMICTURED at ems. John H. Lan= * Co., of Philadelphia. These Rags are of sites end qualities of paper suitable for ALL PLIOONS 4110 Inb the article. and are offered at such prices as will at Onto commend them to the eon ' tuner. There are many advantages In purchasing and using ready guide Bags. Where no bags are meal, it requires !double the quantity of paper and string to pack the name !number of pounds, and more time In putting up a 'pack !age. Wheread eztensive:business le done an : Ba s made ,by hand;lly baying ready made Bags, one ad can be dispensed with. By using them, you will not only save time and money, but always have a convenient recepta• cue In which to put pyour goods. . • . Wherever thew BA -e have been Introduced, they, have given entire so lisfactiera. . For sale at Manufacturers'. prices by- BENJ. BANNAN, Paper and Book Dealer and Stationer. Conti° street. opposite Episcopal Church. Pottsville. A first rate assortment of WRAPPING PAPER al ways on hand. Feb.2l, '57 ft 8- SAVE HONEY THESE HARD TIRES! ____ , • I DRAINACE AND WATER PIP E. Jn.t the Thiny IFonted in the Mining Reyinns. l a '.l 1 H E subscriber has been appdinted Agent for the sale of the '1 Stone Water in Drainage pipe. ' This wages In also from 2 1)1 inches tip to, 12 Inches in ca re, and w l_ ar a' pres sure of from 75 to 100 fort fall of water is a easily.laid As iron pipe,--connectiqns ran be mad At ny point— is Indestructible--Will last furore! Iti fact Miore dura ble than iron pipe t biteause it does not rust—land la af forded at the lbilowing rates at our store. l'n4arille,or can bet sent direct to points where Rail Roadalun from Philadelphia when quantities are rialuired. Freight tu.led from these prices when parties receiving the ripe. pay• Freight. 2 Inch pipe - ,- ' - 14 cents per foot. 3 .• ." - • • - 18 " " 4 " . 24 6 0 0. „, „. . •. . .5,! . . f Al it 8 " • " - - - • - 47 " ~ 57 . - 10 " Cl f 7 CC Cl These are the cheapest and most durable pipes that . can be obtained for conveying water. We believe they can be laid even cheaper than wooden pipes.and ire only about half the priest of Iron and lead pipes,• Catl . and see them at the store of D. HANNAN, , Ayent for the .31outfacturett. - Pottsville, Jima, 1827. 21 Melodeons, Organ:Melodeons, and Pedal Bab- Bass Harmoniums, 511 Washington Street, Boston. TILE AM.:N . IION of Clergymen, Committees, Schools, Lodges. ke.. Is Invited to the now Pedal S , uh-llass Harmoniums, wade solely by the 31annfactnrers. It is arranged with two manuals or hanks of Keys, the lowest set running an octave higher than the of hoc, and may he used separately. and thus pet In one case two distinct Instruments; or, by the user.f the coupler, the two hanks of keys may be played at the same time by use of the front set only. This connected with the Sutelt.iss, will produce the effect of a Verge organ And is sufficiently heavy to fill a house that seats from 1000 to 1500 persons. THE ORGAN MELODEON Is designed for parlor and Private use: The cnnstruc• Jinn is similar to the Church Instrument. l*ing arraug• ed with two banks of Keys, and u hen used together, by means of the coupler, is capable of as great volume of power as the Church Instrument, when used without the Pt,ithl. Alts<erery variety of MELODEONS for Parlocueit. •Furcliaseremay rely upon instruments from our Man ufactory, being made in the most complete and thor ough manner. Having removed to the 'spacious, build. ings: 511 WASHINGTON STREET. we have every radii. ty for manufacturing purposes. and employ none but: the most experienced and skillful workmen. In short, we will proudseourcustomersari Instrument equal if not superior to any Manufacturer. and guaran tee ENTIRE AND PERFECT SATI.SFACTIO.N. Mo,tcTetemeai, LEADERS or Climes. and others inter. iested In musical matters, are respwtfully incited to visit our rooms at any time and examine or test the inbtru ments rot exhibition for File. at their pleasure. • Asa still fultherguarantee to the pul•lie as Intheexcel. I once of the 31 RI,ODEUNS AND HARMONIUMS from our Manufactory, we beg leave to refer, by permission, to the following • PIANO FORTE MANUFACTURERS OF ROSTON. Who have examined nue Inatrumenta and will give their opinion _when called upon : CMGEERCOI Seas, Maury & CLAIRTON, T. GILBERT & CO. WO. P. EMERSON. k ALLEN. A. W. LADD Leo. GEORGE HEWS, WOODWARD& BRoWN,NEWEIALL k Co. Melodeon. & harmoniums Rented. Persons who wish to hire Melodeons and Harmoniums with a slew of purcbasing.at the end of tho year, can haye the rent credited as part payment of the purchase money. This tnstter la worthy of special note, as It enables those who desire a fair test of the inntranteitts hefottrchaaing;to obtain it at the expense of the mans acturers. to the extent at least of a year's rent. Orde'f's from any port of the reentry or ivorld, rent di rect to the manufactory in Boston', with cash or sat 'gran tory reference. will be promptly attended to, and ar faithfully exeented as If the parties were present, or employed en agent to select,-and on as reasonable terms Price List t Scroll leg, 43,4 octave, - - • - $ OO Scroll leg. 5 octave, - r • - • - 75 Plano style, 5 octave, - • •. - . • 100 ' Plano style. extra finish, 5 octave, - 115 Piano style. carved leg. - • • • • - 125 Piano rtyle,2eets of reeds, • • • • • 150 Piano style. °octave, • - - . • • 135 Organ Ilelpdeon, - • - - - - 2110 Organ Melodeon. extra fllllllll, • • - Pedal Suhania Harmonium,' • - - - Letters. Certificates and notices from the press, from all parts of the world, may 1111P0 be peen at our parlearoom. Descriptive circulars i4n/t free to any addreas. . S.D. Sr H. W. SMITH. 611 Washington Street, (Near Boylston Market.) Boston. June 27 '67 261 f - EXTRAORDINARY • • CI co pFLco co 1"1. xxx, Both Waterand FirelProof. ' THE SUBSCRIBER 116 s been - ap pointed Agent, and Is prepared . to put on 11. d. arren & Co's celebrated Fire and Water Proof Rooting, —lt Is compoied of Felt. Composition and Gravel— it is more durable than either shingles, tin, Our or Iron —reqUires no painting, and ran be put on complete at little over one-half the expense of other roofing.— The advantages of this Rooting may be summed up as ("lions: • I t,is both WATER-TIOUT and FIRE-PROOF. IV will not expand and contract-, with heat and cold, X like metal roots. - one inch to the foot is all the Inclination acquired. The roof han be walked upon without injury. It ran be used for drying ptirposes. It is of great advantage to firemen when adjoining buildings are ott fire. It is not Injuriously affected in the least ity changes of temperature. It Is adapted to every climate. It is not affected by the jarring of machinery. It wiil latacmoret than double the heat of zinc. 'Moor galvanized iron, without danger to the boarding beneath It. • It la easily and quickly rertaired.if injured. Gutters of the same material can be formed.on the roof. ITS COST IS MUCH LESS THAN THAT OF ANY " • OTHER FIRE-PROOF ROOF NOYi"IN USE. Insurance Is effeeted at the same rates 111 On buildings covered with other fire-prteif materials. liundrede of certificates can hi Peen at It. Bannan'e Bonk Store. append.We One or two to show that it is no humbug: ~, We, the undersigned, had our Banking House roofed with Warren's Fire and Water-Pmof hooting &taut three Yea;ts ago, and so far have had uo reason to doubt its ell fmary and durability. tier recnt having need it, and should!in building hereafter pMfer it to one other roof. ing. 't ' DREXEL & CO. Philadelphia, March 12, ISInT. i - ,'!*lti'llmonstruiCaune 20,1857. Messrs. 11. M. IForratrE O,.—tivrtxxxa was pre sent by invitation, titan experiment with your Improved 'Fire and Water Proof Ccmposttion Roofing, on the Mat of May last, The object, I suppose. was to give persons not acquainted with the nature of the roofing. an oppor tunity to see it tested. I arrived on the ground-about 1 o'clock and saw the boards put on tke roof; they were in n rough State, the edges not jointed, or grooved and matched. After the boards were on they were covered with three layers of felt, and then by a coating of Com• position, nod the whole covered-with gravel. • A quantity of combustible material was placed wlt kin, and at the appointed time a match was applied. A furl ens fire soon burst from all sides of the louse. and en veloped the.whole hi:endive in a fame. It continued to ' burn for at least three quarters-of an hour. At that stage of the fire, I felt a desire to know bow the roof wnuld stand if water was thrown upon It, and naked per 'mission to try the experiment. which was granted, and, I applied three or four buckets of water on the roof which run off as though there was no Ore under or areUnd ik Gentlemen. my opinion Is. that so far as .fire Is teen. earned, it is the best kind ofn roof,from the fact that its air tightness prevents combustion In ease of a fire In a building where the roof Is of your material, the tiro would not be likely to extend .to the adjoining boll& lugs. 1 bad an e,xample of I lila kind last winter,ren the 4th day ofJanuary, at 4 o'cl vk in the morning. A tire broke out In a row of Erick Homer. on the south side of Seybert fit.. wept of 22ndketreet. It had a roof of your. CAmpreition.ntul the fire wee confined to the, house where it originated: I have no-hesitation ionaying that if it had been an ordihary roof, the whole row wool have burned down.'froth the feet that It was one or th coldest mornings we had last winter.axd the wind hie a hurricane 4 the time. Seybert street is Korth of t Girard College waif, and at that time of the morning together with the coldness of the weather. made It 4 long time before we could-get water on the building— Notwithstanding this. we evtingutshed the Ste without Injury to the adjoining buildings. I tjterelore recommend your rooting to the community as a suporinr preventive of tire. , Very Respectfully Yours. he.. • SAMUEL P. FEARON, Chigf EirpinPer of the Ire IMpartrand. Any fnrther Information with regard to this Rooting can be obtained by ceiling on the subscriber at his Book Store, rottiville. BENJ. HANNAN, or JOS. Ds FREUN, Carpenter is the Orchard. Potlarille, Whee will put or the Rooting at short notice. For Colliery Evtabilibmente, Miners' houses, Regina Keaton Breakers. .in this Region, this is jog the roof required, as it is fire proof, and no 'parka &liftman it will set it on lire. !?Shingle mad tin rosfecoreryd with, the materiel if the pitch is Dot laulleop, - July 4, '67 8 , ~ MANUFACTURES. S. D. H. W. SMITH, • wINUYACITR ERZ OF SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 17, 1858. ,MANU,FACTURES. PORT:CARBON SHOVEL FACTORY. 1 Charles Smith, Proprietor. • 4111das dooal shovels, spades, coalriddles, The patronage of the public is respectful!) imitate/. January O. 58 2.tf ' WATER METRES. T" Subscriber having been author- Ize4 by the manufacturers Of Water Metres, will surply all orders left with them, at their prices. E. YARDLEY k SON. 3.5. Pottgrille. - Aum:ist 90. '5O BAR AND RAILROAD IRON. . • HE subscribers have now on hand and will welt fur CASH, at the lowest market price, is - arge stork a the Lest quality merchant Dar Iron, Plat r Dar Railroad Iron, and light T rails, for mines. E. YARDLEY At SON. Pottsville. November 29.'57 IS- SOAP. • • • . c HE subscribers invite the attention miners and merchants In their manufacture of Ilit WN, PALE,,,end OLIVE' SOAPS. de, &e. These Soaps having lung been eatensirelp known le Schuylkill, Carbon and Lucerne counties, are recommended no of re liable quality. Orders received by mail promptly atten ded to, air.iiel Soda, Sterch.dc., al ways on hand:Titk JOS. ELKINTON d SON. .783 South Second dive, Philadelphia. • June 20,-1111 2t-6m VULCANIZED RUBBER HOSE, ' Pbr /lydranfs, Locomotives, lire tEnyises, and otitis T HIS par- THIS HOSE rt . a. great advantages over leather, as it needs no oiling, is perfectly g t, will stand a very high degree of heat without in jury, and is nJt affected by the severest cold. It ran be had of any size from,ji inch to 3 inches inside Aflame ter—larger sizes made toorder. Also, Couplings. Branch Pipes, te. For sale by. B. BANNAN. Potts,ville. May 2.1.'L: 21- WILLIAMSPORT PLANING MILL, 1 . BETWCIN TILE Sunbury & Erie Railroad and the Canal, (Opposite the Furnace. Williamsport, Penna.) fIEO. S. BANGER & Whole k_fi saitrand Retail Dealers and Manufacturers of white aud yellow pine flooring baards.sash.doors.bllnds.shut tern, siding. wood mouldings. ke. Jig and semi! NM lag, fancy and plain. All descriptions oft urnlng and planing done with promptness, and In the bent manner. February 17. '5B: ' • 9-17 T " • NOTICE. To Coal Operators cud Schuylkill Coun ty Dierchauts. SMOKING TOBACCO, by Steam power—nnOtba a day, at Hamburg. Smoking Tobac co and Segar 31anufactory, on hand and ready 6)1 sale. • WO barrels sweet scented Smoking Tobacco. 200.000 II:df Spanish Sugars. 200.000 Sixes, Spanish SeSsrs. • 100,000 Seed and Extra Segars. Orders thankfully received and Promptly attended to. Terms easy. MARY AN MOTEL Ilamburg, Darks County, Fa. 3641 Sept. 5. '57 PIANO.S_AND MELODE ONS Of the best. manufacture.arranted, II: 4 1 0H SALE BY THE L subscriber. All Platys and Melo deans sold by him will be warranted—if 1 nolwltst they are represented, they can be rein ned.— Allkinds of Melodeons - will' be sold at Manor etu rera' cash pr , re.s In l'ott.rille, by which. the .ptv-eh. sec,. ogre the ea rrilexe and risk of traosporbstlon. Pia os will be sold frotn $lO to 52) less than regular city p res accord ing to the value ..f the InstrumenL those ho preterit by culling on no, and receiving a , letter of credit. can make theirewn select ionsat the Manufaknrer 11. ascertain the prices. and we will furnish the Instrument selected at the above rates. If there is Ally doubt in this coat. ter-011 we have to'say is—TILT US, MAUCH CHUNK Wire Rope Manufactory, Fisher lEttaissaa-cl, Slenufpt ttreg of Vire Rope, for inclined Flaws. shafts. xlopes. ibtorm tbu public that Le „Li now pre pared to make : Twenty years since, Prance consumed 200.000 I bales of cotton. She now requires 400,000. f Twenty years since, Germany required 100,000. I She loon. requires 400,000. Twenty years.sinto, t Sweden took 6000 bales. She now takes 60,000. tWe barb, thus, an increase in three highly pro- I teeted countries. amounting to 550,000. Adding to this, the additional demand of Belgium and Denmark, Russia, Austria and Spain, we obtain about 700,000, as the quantity added to the con s somption, in the protected countries of Europe.— ; Turning now homeward, we find the addition in our own consumption, in tho six! years that ful -1 lowed the passage of the protective act of 184220 'have been about 300,000 Lulea; nod thus do 14e obtain, as the total additional consumption of the pretected countrics, the quantity *of a million of bales. ' In four years, ending with 1838, the quantity taken by the mills of Great Britain averaged 1,. 100,000 bales. In the four, ending with 1854, the average was 1,750,000—the difference having been 650,000. In the same period, however, there bad r been an increaso'in the export of mere yarn, to be I 4 . ! woven abroad, amounting to 80,000,000 pounds ; {and an increase in the imports from India, to the I extent. of nearly twice that quantity, as Ilove !reason: to believe, al th ough unable to obtai he precise fi gures. This constitutes no additi to !the supply of the world, there' eing no more rea -4 Even for believing that more cotton is*raised in :India now, than was raieed there twenty years ;:since. The excess import into England,- is a con , sequence of decline of the •domestio manufacture, I. And of the growing necessity, throughout India, for making excherigeistmong themselves, through ,ithe medium of distant lands—precisely as the p3ople of Blind* and Mississippi aro now com• !palled to do. Tito additional yarn being included -In the consumption of the countries to which it !goes, and the additional India cotton giving no increase of supply, the two quantities aro to he 'deducted from the apparent increase of British eurisuniption. That dune, we have little more than : 400,000 bales, as the growth of consamp- Mon outside of the protected countries, slalom, a million within them. Such being the ease, the s t reatinterests of the planter wonid certainly be promotert, by the adoption in Ireland, India, Bra• ail, Turkey, Portugal, 'and other unprotected .sawaries, of the system under which the coo rumption of Central and Northern Europe has so rapidly and wonderfully increased. _ p How is it possible, Mr. President, that these va rious communities could accomplish the work 'suggeited? All of them are pour, and so, it will he said, are likely to remain. So roast they do, *bile they shill continue• the work of, destroy log 'eapital t aa 'they are.now doing; hut, so they will! not do, whenever they shall begin to eshablish:that circulation of service .erhiea:, constitutes society,: and economizes labor. 'rebind feeds daily more than seven millions- of peopte—all of them con. seaters of capital, whits but few of them produce anything to represent the things - consumed.— More than three-fourths of the mental and physi cal power of that country goes to waste; but that Waste would cease, so soon as A and B were ena- - hled to exchange servicja with C and 11 ; and they, each and all, were enabled to exchange with Others.. Estimating theloss an being equivalent 10 the labor of only two millions of men and wo- Men, and the value of the things they might pro duce; at only half a dollar per day, we (obtain a doily wooers. of n mil/sou of , dollars; and en an nual ono of 53110,000,000. The effect of this la bor in will:Foy the coal, the ore, and the thousand 'other things, now useless, by which those idle :millions are. surrounded, would he, to it,id !almost as much, yearly, to the value of the +and' in cul tivation ; and here wo have an annual amount, far mining total value of-the mechinery , fur mining coat and smelting iron ore, and Vfur spin :ning, jenti Irk:ming cotton, wool, flax, and silk, now to use in ENland. Turning to India. we ate a 1:i1 drel millions of people, nine-tenths of :whose ewers are - .wasted fur want of domestic trimmer el Give them ! that,.and capital will at i .once exist, to an amount far greater than,that of the tnaehinery . of Britain 40 Franco combined. :Looking next to Turkey 'and Portugal. we see 'millions of people in a situation precisely similar: -and yet, they emit all be fed, clothed, lodged, and kept in order fur daily work. The daily Ins*, .'there, is greater than the annual amount of skill 'acd labor given by England to the,euniersion of 'the cotton and the wool, the iron, the copper, and :the tin, they can 'Word to purchase. Let.em ploytnents be diversified, and that loss will cease; and thin, capital will be found to exist in vast almndanca. So is it everywhere. Mexico and Peru would have an abundant supply of capital, were they enabled so to modify their policy as to produce that eirculatiownhich is. required for se curing, that each and every man be enabled to sell iris own powers, and. ttfkbecotne a COfnpetitor for the purchase of those of others. All force re sults from motion, and it, is only because there is no motion in the toasty of Ireland, India, and Turkey, that those communities continue poor. ' Looking now homewards, Mr. President, we fled a waste of capital, in the form of physical and mental power, not:exceeded by anytountry ed the world; with the slightest claim to be held es civ ilized. Perin after farm is cleared, and State ! alter State occupied, to be then in part abandon- TO CARPENTERS. AND BUILDERS . - 1 the earth of its soil, to be sold in distant markets.. Mills follow mills, and furnaces follow furnaces—. . "JCIEE3E, • ruining in quick succession, all who undertake SCHUYLKILL COUNTY. LUMBER ieuch 'oat. Employers and workmen spend years — sa y__- In acquiring skill—to be then turned adrift, to 1. MANUFACTNRINC, COMPANY ' seek, in the wilds of the West the fond and do. !tart;on hand at the ir exten•ive est/attainment, on thing that the policy of the central gtiternment Railroad street, a great quantity of lumber oteverykind denten to them at house. -and descriptionoililih they can supply to Operators, , 1 Wi t h every stop In .this dire . ctiOn , the tax of Carpenters and Builders, at lower rates thaw It can he can! supply grows—the necessity fur new roads bought elsewhere: They are !!also ready !io supply:4 through the means of their extenklve ,businese. and la-1 increasing, as the power to make such roads de• tow saving maehinesottanufactut+d articles in theirline, clines. ' The proportion of the population engaged a t a saving of'2s per rent.on fonder cost.. ' trading dfiii:gwosrpkecourltanitionns—Putrhtnetice'laa'sftsodofinmpiodlidtli:maleann— • d Their large workshop* bare beeit In 011eCOSFAO1 opera-,, tins' for the put year, turning oat vastrquant Ines of Deers, ~' ,W ludas,' Frames, . that ChM which Mori at the east of the producers, Swale, • - Panel Work, • —ir, therefore, I a continually increasing one.— " .Mouldlime, Bett.gloste.._ , • I Hence, Mr. Preiddent, it is, that wears steadily de. 4 , B li nds, Manniatere s l:' ' : Cline in both Morals end manners—that being the • Shittiersr And ail kinds of Framed, Paneled and; Ptirtied Wort.' towards frost ciiilita t ion, sod not the one leading Which g Look *hero.t e may, we !witness a.waste of la. •, • - Which that have constantly on hand. They are reedy to emu teorders at the shortest notice, forany quantit3 ' ) Is or quality of sawed or manufactured stuff. • 0 : Inn, consequent , num the al:Wanes of_tbat-diversi 'Pathan in the &Man I for human eff.rit, which is Dry ,and green Hemlock, of all klnds, for buildlngpur•t -poses:, ask, Maple, Poplar, chair, plank and scantling us that freedom of domestic in wim i d i k e ' s to l:V o Ch ni t e r r a ,' Wi Wh l inou p w i t n 'P e likin p ° l 47 ,ol7 l4 :3 3 : 6 2lA a•nwe :2: lf i on l i i, ellitixoe: Deed e dm t commerce, r t re el e v r i e n a g t i tibyof your se lfao e xten a d s ed bi l i . n o g inron e rs P et and %Inch .panet,aiways ready: alas, plank, beams ,With foreign _ - eountaes.: Millions of human au" rails. scantllog,postsomagtio, la th , „dung lath,pall sines art coestantlybarning , the feel tequirsd for ng. ke.. ke. : ~, . „.,,,,3„„ - the production of the power thlabor, and as coo no sawed Ara andrererl th illa . 1 2 ..... ••-' 'Swab. bl ow i ng o f . lbl, steam that i s wasted. -- nu beadier to order, at the shorten mattes • - 1 ,, 0014, Nitro 29,10 1 , - - 10.. --t Look when we may, went mills. gad Mast", ALL KLNDS, LENGTHS AND SIZES' OF FLA 7 .1-VD - ROLWD ROPE,a At the .hortest notice, of ants:dor quality, ind on the moat liberal terms, at his Wire Rope Factory, Manch Chunk, Carbon Co., Pa. Reference eau be made to M veers. E. A. Douglas, N. D. Cortright and A. 11. Broadhead. at !Mauch Chunk: to N. Patterson. Summit 11111, to Sharpe. Leisenring A Co., Tit more, Lucerne county, Pa.. and in !fact, nearly all ;heort orators in the Region wbo have been using his mNs. August 15.'57 CARRIAGE FACTORY REMOVED. THE undersigned respectfully em brsee this opportunity of Informing - the public that they have removed their s t „re—b. - extensive Carriage Factory, from nauch Chunk street, where they have been - - Amok" Mitre the late lire, to thel f New, Large and COMM/11100S building, In I‘l, rrie' Addition, op the old site. where \ they are prepared to turn out CARRIAO ES EQUAL TO fit E KEST IN THE STATE and ready to accommodate thcircustomers and all these wliti may favor them with I lielepat ronage. An entire new and well seleeted Mock 'of tnaterlaln and the saute old bands will enable them to do work whilh in elegance and durability cannot be surpassed. They will continue to attend to the businessberearter an before:with determination to give general satisfac tion orders will receive prompt attention. airiteprilring done at the, shortest wake. , July 18.'57 29-ly k 111.1111 i HARD. TAMAQUA CARRIAGE & WAGON FACTORY. Horseshoeln and Blacksadthing. _Par — Mc Corner of g BROAD and CENTRE, sired.. THE subscriber takes this method of informing the public that he has become the sole proprietor of the above establishment, and he hopes to _conduct' it so ea to give mtisfactinn - to the business community, by cm- . ploy Mg none but the befit of work men, and using, the best materials that can be found in the market.; Being myself a pr & Oral mechanic. I will guarantee ail work turned out to .ae reprettented. Jobbing work of all kinds promptly attendedlo and neatly executed. Ile hopes. by strict attention to bust• netts and reasonable charges to Merit a liberal chars of the public pa nonage. , DANIEL DEAN. eirD. DEAN has *Pit hand an assortment of new and second hand carriages andkexp,ess wagons of 'rations styles. Also. bitavy wagonspf all kinds. Old carriages bought or exchanged. March la, Nitt • BUILDERS"I MILL. THE SUBSCRIBER havpak es tablipbell kiln/wit In Pottsvlll takes this method of Informing builders. ear. I:4R ' posters, snd others wanting anything lo Ma line, that he is manufacturing, and : will always keep on hand—Saak, of all depertylious, Doors Ac, Door Frames, Shutters, Blinds, Mouldings and Window Fames. , Worked Fmmeri og. white and yellow pine, constantly on hand. Orders received tor bill stuff, hemlock IT white pine. Wood-Turning. Scroll and Jig Lwing, in all the vari ous branches, will receive particular attention. Therhleery used In my ei , tablishment Is-of the most- erect description. and all work ‘ill be , manufse t ured rem seasoned lumber, and warranted to 'giro sat tataatloal. „, , My MILL Is situated in COAL 'STREET, abOieNorwe : glan, next door to the Screen lictery. and thoseWimithig 4ny of the articles enumerated wUI do well to give me a ,11 before purchasing elsewhere. i JAS. P. 61tQUADE. -1 Pottsville, May Im --- '6 B AS-1y ` 4 . PQTTSViiiLE • Saddle anti la anufaetary. IIiEItEWITII iiivit your especial attention to my eery °steins's', stock of Ready Rade Saddlery. Harness, drAWOIM dk.. embracing the largest variety ot styles ancfnualitles ever offered for toile In this county, and at Oros that will compare favorably with-those of any otberhotimes in the trade. 6 .,„ (laving seen, for some years mat: ~ in the habit of purchasing my mit • ~, Raw Material erelutirelyfar Cash, I find myself now In the possessionof advantages from li this cause not enjoyed by t a trade generally. and feel that I can, with contidecce, Hell the trade ofall CinflP,l , of dealers: and my arratijre emits for the coming Pea 'iton's trade are based upon trin-e larger aminot of busi ness than I lwre ,Ailherta done: you Can therefore rely upon lidding at my establishment-every (btu- that Is re quired in my line. ' • Orders by mall are respectfully solicited. and the goods sent warrantod 'to give satisfaction, lxit h as to pm ire pied quaIityWOMELSI.IORFF. apposile,Rpiscepal Clawed, Centre strut, IN.Usrale. March 7.1657 . 164 y SOLOMON HOOVER. ' AV (desalt and Retail DEALER in Stoves, Ranges, . , * • Ileaters, Tin Ware, Hollow Ware, Sri- ‘-,•_,_;.... Janis Ware. 'Brass Ware. French Ware, and . ` - ' - '-'4 Outlety, Range hollers, Portables Ranges. Gas • • Ovens, Summer Furnace, de., del,.bas added -""' to his termer stock of Stoves a variety of new pat terns of Kitchen !tinges of which he tan give the" highest recommendation. lie calls particular attention to his new style of Ren ter which he is confident will make the bed Renter tbal hasever been used in this parer.the country. a 150... variety of new patterns of Cook iig, Tarter, and 11,11 Stoves. Re calls particular atte t ion folds sheet iron 1 Parlor Stove, it is andmprovement on the Klsterbach. which be is confident Is tbe'best store in use. Ile has now the largest stock of the above articles (tcoinimer ous to mention.) that ban erert•etin offered In this part of the country. He Invites his fgods and customers to call and exantine'foFitheutsel es. feeling confident that he can sult r .them in quality , nd price: he hatters' i l himself that he has bad peat espeilence in his line 01 business, therefore he f 414 confident that he cannot be surpassed in quill t:i of chespnesi. diffßoollug and Spoutikig and all kind of jobbing done at the shortest notice, i Centre sired. 5 doors abore.Nurket, west side, l!✓tsrifl e March 21, 'b7 It. THE ADIEU. We'll miss her at the morning hour, When laves Ind eyes onehste: When sunshine tails the dewy Bower • To wa ken Trr to repose: • For, like that singing of a lied. ' Wb. in first the sunbeams fell, The gladness of her toketwasCheard The earliest of us all. I - . , . f We'll miss lomat the seining time, ' f For then her voice and lute Nest loved to piing some street old rhyme I , When other sounds were mate: Twined rotuid the &orient window-seat, While she was singid there. The jestssmitut from outside would meet, , And wreathe her fragrant hair. We'll mlts her when we gather round Our blazing heazth at night, When ancient menteries abound, Of hopes where all unite; And pleasant talk of years to come— Those years our fancies frame. 4b I she has now another home, And•beers another name. ' Her heart Is not with our did ball. Not itith thq things of Yore! And yet, tnethiriks, she gnat recall ' '-• Whet wu so dear befor4. the wept to leave the fond roof where Ehe had been loved to long. Though glad the peel upon the air, And gay the bridal throng. Yea, memory bas honey eells, And tome of them are owns, Yor in the sweetest of themidwells The dream of early hours. The hearth, the hall, the erindow4eat, Will bring nabrr..allud; In you wide world eha mount meet All that she left behind. Loved, and beloved, her', OWO sweet will It was that made heti fate: Rae hes a fairy house—bat still 'Our own seems desolate. Re may pot wish her back again,. for oar own dear Wake Oh I tore; to form one happy chain, Hew p i nny thotiSan'st break! political CC0110M1). TO TILE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. , . Letter Twenty-Sixth. The real and permanent interests of al •e members of a community, Mr. President, are n Perfect hartutiny with each other—each and every Man profiting by what ever lends to irrease the proiluctive power of his neighbori. o, too; is it with the etuntitunities themselves—each profiting by the increase in the productive poli.er of each itnd all. That it may inorerse, there must be, in each, a growing power of association and combi nation, resulting from increase in the diversity of employments-- the eimiumee and therproducer tajting their places by each Otter's side. To pre. '*etit such approximation is the object of the "war. Mute" waged by the British manufacturer, as tie. • . sctibed in a former letter ; and hence it is, that ;discord grows so steadily in alt the coantricti sub. jeet to the British system—lreland and India, I*.ftlrlttv• anti Portugal, Jamaica, and these United !States. Seeking evidence of the existence of a perfect harmony of international interests, and of the necessity for measures tending to a reduction lof the ! pnwcr ! to carry sit that war, we emu look to [the st a tistics of, Out cotton trade for the past few !years, to some few figures in regard to which, I ;desire now, Mr. President, to invite your' atten '4tion. It. TIANNAN Putty. i ' , . mines "f milt's. scarcely, even when at all, em. PthiuuYs unable el t i iii glI And tt°l : a " m t a . i t i t: pow e r e e l t VI : f h e a e o yy r , Till a r e is his grain, ,h wasted? prepa r ed ca t p eh t o eßn- fur n ish.te f e e a r a r: t, t s o r is foreectto Si t i re it. Why can he not Wilt? Be.- . .cense the miller, miner, the meson, and the laborer, are unable to sell the force resulting from the consumptiori of food. I Look, I pray you, Mr. Pr esident, to the extra ordinary wesfe of capital, consequent upon ;the necessity kir using the . most perishable materials In our houses,i ships, roads, bridges, and other don struelions of ?very kind. This, too. isa growing • waste, as is moved by the fact, that the ratisof insurance against Are has doubled in the last few years. In countries that are advancing in civili zation, nears!) , increases and the rate declines.— With us, security steadily diminishes, and the rate increases—till's furnishing further evidence that our tendencies are from and Am towards. civilisa tion. Why ii it that we use so little igen ? Is it because of:tiny:deficiency of coal and'ore ? Cer teinly not. , Why, then, do we not profit by them? The country ibuuncia in laborers, wh O.would glad : ifemploy themselves in the develipment of the treasures of the earth, could they obtain food in_ exchange forlabor. Why , is it so? I, Because the central government leaves.the peoplitentrusted to its care, expoted to a ''warfareltavieg for its Ob ject, the prevention of the sniping orcoal, or the making of trim, in any country, except the tittle one of Britain. Because it fields, that *bila bound to protect itself, it is under no obligation to protect italconstituents. 1: . Look next,l I pray you, Mr. President, to the taxation of ckCar farmers, for the maintenance, of the 7,400,004 tons of shipping, that carries Our products ts the distant markets, and reflect that the cost of ufaintairiing this groat fleet, Is, paidby the people rho have rudeproducts to sell, and not by those ;who buy them. The man who . mist . go to market; must pay the cost of going to it, let it take what tomtit may. The corn, and the cot ton pay for the maintenanee of.the ships—leaving to the cidth 411 the profits resulting from their eontributiena.' . Look further, to the-fact, that the loss of ship. ping, in a single year, by age and accident, hi no less than 93,000 tons, as shown in the last Veasn• ry Report. At $.lO a ton, we have, here, no less than $37,00t,000. Add to this, for the cargoes of these reseal?, only a similar nniount, and you have $74,009,000; all of which falls upon the pee ,le who furnish the machinery of transportation —it !icing the community whose product; !are must bulky, that pays the coat of going to, Mid returning fr4m, the market. s ~, ' Thro ighoet the Union, Mr. President, there is a waste of passer unparalleled In the wfirld. Thut power is capital,. At how much might it be valued -were it fullylapPlied ? At, inore than the whole 'of oar present product—the quantity wafted beng greatly snorei than that employed. - Our present production lies been estiinated at $3.500,000,000 a year—being nearly 10,000,000 a day. Estiina ting the daily waste at no mare than that semi we should haveifor the weekly one, a sum equal to:tha t capital that harlieen required fur the creation.of all the cottoh.tualls of England. Why; to we not, economize tiis capital, and lot it appear in Oils form of mill?? Why du we not bring the. spindle" to the plant4tion ? Why do we not make a mar ket et the mines and furnaces, for the producesof . the farm? Because. the central government re fuses to pertpit the: people to-snake the effort, dace far all, to free, thianselves from the tax of trans portations, Becroie, in oppositiotpto the vietri so well expressed by youf;elf; your ituntediaje pietlecessor.l have held, that it was better for - elich man to go dailv j ttS; the spring in search of• welter, titan that an . ta ueduct, by means, of which ;the e men should unite in the effort to construct iiii ll i water should be enabled to come daily to their doors. Tlnit, Mr. President, is precisely what ire are•doing—each man rending his little products to the distadt market, at daily cost for transpor- Wien, whet] only the slightest effort would be re quired for htinging the Market to their land; and thus anniti4atitig,iat oneelamt for eeer,-the tat of, transportatilm. .1. In all countries, capita laccumulates in the Pre. else ratio of the economy of human power.. That it may be cdonoinized, there most be differences ie.' society, resulting from the development ot the: via. rious faculties of men. The commercial pitiicy al France tends in that direction, land therefore dries she grow ridh; while, for want of that pulicY, Tor key 'and Portugal, Ireland and . India, and . olar Union, darling; from tiny to day—doing , Mid fort the plain arid simplareason, that in roach awl ere-1 ry of them pert, is an enforced waste of caOtal, ninounting,lWeekly to eve than the annual value of the foreign manufactures they consume; Let , them be etnOncipated from the dominion iityttede —let them have commerce at home—abd they will 11400 hive more to sell, and will be enabled to buy far more then they now do—becoming largos customers th the producers of cotton and sugar on the one hand, and to the makers or silks and rib. bons oo thelother; and adding, too, to the market of these-letter, by increasing the demand fed the products °tithe former.l 1 The furthers of the world,. Mr. President, are I natural alias, as against the trader—he seeking to have theft products at low pricer, and they de- I siring to sell at high ones. •In the natural order' of things, then, the-agricultural nations shield be found stilted in their resistance -to a warfare against :thiruselves, having .or its ohjoct, the che.ipeninglof their products. 'ln Europe,they are so found—all the advancing countries a•ing I adopted measures orprotemion. Aracousequence, I their deinadds upon our i hinters are steadily in creasing; and yet strangely enough ; our planting interest is the steady opponent of protectiqn, here] and everyeihere ! Constantly profiting, as. ./hey do, by the fnereaseil demands of France aiulytee, many, theyiappear before the world as advocates of the systr, under which rho Irish' and:.-Partst guests demstdd for cotton, has almost disappeared. Hence it ist that, instead of placing ourselves, as we might do, in the lead of the world, we nrertip. idly declining towards that condition of colonial dependence, from wbieh,we were reecued, JiY, the war of. Ind. With grearrespect. - I,- ' : Your abed% 'Tryout, .11EYKY . C. CARET: Marrb 1110, 1858. jßiscellanp. . yi n , RA NEVER M AIME D&endow ispatch. -1 At pagei 421 of Iforper'e Jlsigaziite, August, ISM, is to be found a story of teal life, (given is if related til the principal actor iti-lt,) which dif. fora widelt in particulars from the 'facts of. the case as remembered by a lady who was coteiapo vary with C circueistnces. Her narrative is as follows : Forty y ata ago, a xouog lawyer from one of • the more western coutellos of this State wear set tled in the ,intin of Laneaher, nod bad succeeded , in establishing himself in good practice.. Ile came poor i‘oll unnoticed into the community; but he had mails his way to the foremos( rank. of kis prufeesion,land was now received nutting thu beat ociety of be place. Ile was shrewd. Ile. wee • rbillOUE. I • Ile sought a connection atnung Tamil- i les of the highest social position. ' 1 In Lanessler were several families enj•4ing 1 large wealth .and living in opulence end reline ment. Pratuineet among these was the .C—n: family* Oar lawyer beestne intimate with a young l, lady of that family. He courted her. The piling , Istly was impulsive—somewhat giddysomewh.st, of a coquette, so to speak i hut this character Or her must be understood in Its mildest signilleatimi., She and the ' , citing lawyet:were understood to he under:an engagement of Marriage. • . '•; sliponeei b t l t.il l yeet: s rt s tiriait e nrboa — st:oo7 b m a i d oauf a itesh m e arried sister . residing 'nenri Wilkesbarro; another. married to ea. Mr. '! fl go rr in this city Suddenly,,in - the winter season, sbe! had her trunks Ducked; and, accomp a nied by ' a female servant, paid a visit to her•sister Wilkes barre. She departed' without aPprising her i n -. tended of her movements. Ile was "Mitred..., When she returned to Lancaster, after brief sfr -- ; Lynne, he did not tall upon her. Thu' party. subsequently. Ile was doing•tho f-li to another . , Ile was formal to Miss his demeanor was so indifferent' that it SII3V; Geri! to the • 'heart! She had not calculated Won effecting him to be reedy to fell at her tr0..." 6-- 1 ever it might please her to permit biur• tired early from the party. Who shall - feelings agitated her during that nichc l corre d t h. - • Next day, during which it hail not „a y mother's eye that her 'Laughter was ' 1 : 0 4 " -- 1 mind, Miss ''C--announced her jute" " whit+ lug her sister in Philadelphia ; " j"nics ro froth had been so recently etuptie'd enr r t r , r b e e t r u o bject. Wilkesbarre, were repncku4. follgq,wing mom. ing she started foi - this city, I r e ali , ro n m g „ ' c r e e n i; ; g l .— e oc a S dl e h d c ' el T el l a t e la m a gi e n oi Dinelislienuhewil,irons of a visit :1 uld ; B , t ta p il ; -;.:,:ar,r• servant who` h Mr. end Mrs. sigre:l-- T . sos Z e L h l t'u b r u P- ol ri n se 4 ;- -f -bwat ri in t u h i ye e .o a t b ah r al u :i i p nri t ee n ip e u s r sin s ce i iefs, the pu•pose.of d a s t iiin l b e t.. t e o r traveling furore o f . v t ' h t e h y. ° Purb:ers"reac:tiai i nw:a l ing; Utala:r0111 ; 7713:14 I rrt : : : ' Whin, but : I at the time. ' sister; and: kill, where to the ScianYl' i Mr. 111 r with others, walked cut hours` n the. , ice s looking a h "h : r""lcitri°hn" water was an l t te r d;l ner-diein'eci,Ty'-diitdenvot specially obidrvet, The day , :We, salved , g hre .t c h ied s s r j h et r nP e:,:h rd r i e u ' r cn i ue pe s ravr i a f l e l e l e c rtlegM ad A n . i i r l i l n iiket rer, (druSg of•indisposb At dinner, Miss co mp 44 , remarked eta er lion. R i si ng from the table. ate 'small bore i or make a I' 4 her,)i i t 1 P A if : b i l l : e s was e k tb. a l t Yt e l 11 : e . 3:31:11 : 61 : Voet t W- h .l ytao-nelliwol:tal:etrelicelyp Coupe many n o Ir ua rs w atr a u : s i Q at i v : e d i s delineations—all to os drrmo tf ro m t: l d ththe I gr t t th o u t a t t :o r s being meet ap w dla a ey s ir o l m a e t t a Mdoeftr. up . e e r rand. Nii;shsbeelliel'ouhedidligoo 'mha 11cr -Ste ng7 led her pleat of todiassieerrs!santitirut:uurnedi.ber. 17Suchntitha*oegge:r7L:1:71.. .N 0.29. she ridded; she waseonvinced she Would not be in Condition to aecompany the party to the theatre. 'Her sister advised 'her to tie down until tea„,miag:. gesting 'that perhaps the illness would pass off: in .40 hoer or two. . ! • • , Misr retired, having exacted :a positive 'promise that The was not to be - wakened at tea-. time, if then asleep, but to be left undisturbed ens :tit withinn - almOst the hour of getting ready for the ;tfeatre. "Shortly after retiring. she rant down ,word to her.ilster,•requesting not be disturbed In ';any event, if she was asleep. Tea passed of without the prevent, of Miss; C—, and when the. party assembled, she wa s . in fast slumber, or Opened, so. ' They proceed. ed to the theatre• without her. - AO 'hour later, one. otitis female servants passing up stairs, beard unusual sot:1141"in the chamber wearied by Miss C. She tried the door; It was ,fastened on the inside., She alarmed the household. Miss 0 -7- was loudly called upon by name. No answer, but still the convulsive and straege noise within. The door was forced.' Mime— was Tonne. in nit* ~,vulsions., Neighbors were summoned; some bur ' tied fur 'physicians; andolie colored. waiter of the house wits dispatched to the theatre for Mr. aid Mrs. ll.i In brief, a vial was "dlieovered, labeled "Latulankm." A nt carried the empty vial to the nearest apothecary, where It was ascertain rtedihat d "levy's worth" had been bought during ;life afternoon by.a young lady. The stomach ,patip was applied,.end every means taken to 'jooonterect the fatal dose ; bat Miss C,— was a -corpse scion after midnight. • An express rider was dispatched that same' night to Lancaster, bearing the distressing infer oration to the - suicide's parents. 'Hastily the corpse was boxed. tacit eneoffieed.) and Iwo sta ges were furdisbed from Tomlinsou'e,stablea--zin .one tho_corpse. and a ,t;. in the other Mr. and Mrs....H-; stniting . shortly after daylight, and proceeding at speed. throughout the day, spitting do expense .for fresh horses at frequent - stoPping-places along the road. Twelve milers tram 'Lancaster, the carriage of the pat'ents met - the stage hearing their dead :daighteri. On horseback; at the side and In the ;rear °Ohs parents carriage, rode • gentlemen of ~tliet:faraily and intimate friends, who bad beard of theimdden:disath,•and whO came abing to emit • 'stile and mist; while in the rear of-all, keeping 'apart from all, rude the lawyer—in fact, the lover atid'hntrulbod: of the suicide.• Be was enveloped •ii) a dab surtout of many capes, such as was the fisbian of tbdt. period. Dejected be wais, but he Made no :demonstration ; ,keeping a part, as if he felt it no:privilege to mingle itilbe ;gieup escort big ther.corpse into Lancaster. : was' l nftet; darklinoenllght,.eleer, but intense- Ig cold) Whenlthe C— residence was !reached. The box seas borne into the wide ball. IThere was necessarily a etir, , among the servants!. weeping, -blirryingito and fro, lights Sitting hither and thi ther thronigho;ut the rooms: end in the haste and egitatimilon all sides, the - hall door wills lett ajar. , The lawyerlalighted. Pis band trembled as he burriedlyl hitched his hoise's bridle. Ills tall form moved towards the door. lie placid his foot . upon the .widealah of the step, and at that instant a gust of 'Wind throw the door violently open, re. ,vealinz to hi/0, gaze , the hOx containing the hotly .of his betrothed, while the light frourestupended talon gave hint a glimpse of a female descending rs.ei 'the staind ex-agonised tether_ pacing to and That father approached the door to elose it. !Distinctly shone the, bright moon on the figure of :the lawyer, Mod as the'father Maw him entering, he said. •!Janies Buchanan,. you must never enter 'ply do - Ors again: you have murdered nty'daugh. 'ter 1" • And that door was closed .in the face td the in (thew a Young Men, now an old man,) who is, 100 present Chief Magistrate of the United States, i/ The Words-hbove given as the utterance tlf the father of Mhis C-- are distinctly remembered ity one who was at that (line a Sempstress - in the .She it was who was in tho. act of de 4eedding'the stairs, when her attention was ar.' :rested by thelswiden opening of the door, the tall land stirtouted ferm.of James Buchanan, distinct iin the-moonlight, and the int presslea and re -Iproachal lan'page of Mr. C I It was given out that Miss C— died. redden -Iy, and the Iln•medint•2 members of the family ! never :after Were known to talk upon the subject. !Those who knew of the farts kept silent. They lame revived only with a .desire to correct a-refee. Lien upon the memory of Mrs. C— that the re- Intarksln Ilrirpor's .11.gashie imply . ; also with •a (desire to caphsio, tq whoevei may read this not !having lightol upott-acy infortaation upon the Isulject. prevlouily, why . James. Buchanan acv4l.l • Ituareietl. - 1140 said -then, While oppressed wtel ([grief, that.hts heart was buried in the grave of Miss innd that he would never marrit— iThe single stilite in which he his remained, through ii•ng.years, ,t•ouchis foria sensibility...of feeling !the: is not credited to him by the world -at large. How deep aria his grief, is spoken in - the feet that his lifewastVowed to celibacy, and the expiation ;adhered to. ;Bo has kept his wod--kas kept and loci!f keep h.! . M. 1, . . . •: . CIIARLES Dica:ctt ' s - the well known author, has I 1- - - - 'separated from his wife, allowing her a stipend of $3OOO per atirium. The alleged cause of the sep nration ir, , neoinpntibility of temper, but the warmest ad here of Mr. Dickens, must, Indeed, admit that it. had been better for his fame and for s tune if he hid not so lately discovered and made public, the r Aincumpatibility 'of' temper" between himself mina s h who fur twenty odd years' , .{gad loin inTs boson!, sharing his sorrows and Joys ? ids' equggles -anti: triumphs, his obscurity and renowp.l None lint he may-know what Is the• I . nspect of tluirghost or skeleton of the 4 huusehold \, 'which sat at{' his boaid and bedside, marring the feast arid hilanting the dreams of watching and ! t • of sleep; bdt surely , *she,hii once lured wife, the mother of his children, if not insane, mutt have Vecome4eriged almost.to a fiend, if he could o ° l, , milking-all !amide. of eilf , bear with her in li. Jcnce, rather than take auth a 'step to open the r , !esier lips - 4 calumny. The charge - of intidegf i ) .On his'eart ii no doubt false, as he avers ; ho' ois heart ii not what it once was—false priie.find • populai , statue have spelled him Is-iliT h ' n. ~ Charles Die, ens•worrld' have lost hie P od rig hand rather than du this thing. Ile Ps"r' eed much by which the world was ins& c' gr be bitter.l .114:inuch of his good " rk h3l marred by ibis evil example! BE tWAYI Mum , (inns..Bsostir Wilson • in - the Uourvk of bi l s epeeeb Oa " trava g a" •al in collecting sums e;tint Ity the Administrs o the nations revenue, stated 6 ' l there are at Nl agarn 19 tn4employed ;to "'Peen of $12,000 to collect $OOO ;at 2. 1 men at 818 4 00 to eblldel $9000; a t Irish, :d men at $17,000 to _ collece$10:000;.., twtobarg 26 men at $14,. 000 to oortot at Burlington '33 men SSSOO; at Wiscassel 8 men at $18;000 to es , $110; dt•Portsrootth 21 men at $7OO to at $l4OOO ii`at $5500;. NewtMTYPntl 13 wen $6:1 4 to'culleci V.NOU ;at Marblehead 9 min ;t 'to collect $250 ;at New Bedford wn ooo tot co:lect 4000 ; at Perth Am boy l en at:4po to collect $l5OO ;at Norfolk 23 ies collect $61,000 ; at Ocra. - - wen It s2o6o'to culledsB2; it Toledo 7 cute' tan s44ooito collect $567; at Detroit 10 men 4 1000 to collect $405 ; at San Francisco 134 N o at $40.1100 collect $1,580,000; at Beni cia 3 men at 440 , 0 to collect $2300 ; at Stockton t Man at $3190 to collect $143; at Sacramento 1 nian ati $3140 to collect $402; at San Diego 4 men at $7600 br collect $3O ; at Montary 3 men at $7030 to cille'et 'sls; at, San Pedrol men at j $4200 to colt et $304. • rpti _Hotta Enucarrue.-1. From your childrett's eaoiliest infancy r you must inculcate the necessity of Instant obedience: 2. Unite _firmness with gentleness. Let your children alw,Sys understand- that you wean ex actly (That yeti say.• 3, Never pi l uutille them anything unless you be lievethst yo can give them what youprotnlze , 4. - If4ou t 11 yourchild to ilo somethingolsow him her •tu do tt, and - see that it is'done.. 5.• Always I punish your children fur willfully disobeying ypu, bu't never punish in anger. ' 6. Never lot them see that [hey can , vet you or make you, lose your self command. -7. IC they give way to petulance - and temper, wait till they are entail, and then gently reason With them oe the Impropriety of thelr.conduct. • S.' leememberthat a little present punishment, when the octariag crime, la much more effectual than _the threatening of a great one, should the holt ba renewed. : • 9. Netvisr give your children anything because ;they cry for It.. - • 'ID. 'On no aceotint allow_ them to do at one lime what YoThatie forbidden, under the like cireum. stances, at' another.. 1 • 11. TeachLthens that the only, sure and easy way hi appear good, he to be good. ; 12. Aceustom them to make their little recitals with perfect truth. - Os the recent triatof General :larded 11. Lear: cliental -with the. klllluft Pr Col. Galas Jenkins, at Learenct, Kama, oar I Ittliparabsiwean the rourowl was so point. .4 aria opportune that it Is worthy cif note. Col; Young Instated that. In law,,tbe nun elaln Is sup.. posed lir be wiongful IT state. r.Orlarat Is. the law of Englarid—not of Amer. kik. g ,Corikiangi-11 there Is iny book, An Criers earth . that costae , any tither ,doetrlue. agree eat it without . greerldar (Laiostiter.) Mc. Cos.—Then y..a11 letreviere law In your stomach than you forth , had in year bead! (Rodin of -Laughter. Cot.) iTouttg. lea difficult man to nonplus. but this en fatly ituraki hlin—lnsiesd of rffolnlnd, be muttered sou* leg about borrowed wit. . , BANNAWS STEAM, PRINTING OFFICE. liarhts meowed thee. Plume. Ire we now prepared to ozorgler JOB tut BOOS PRINTING of ewers dmilitt•• Ulm at the Mee of the Moue Jocasat, cheaper than it ass bodes. at any other eatabrishaerati■ the toss tr, each.. , Boots, Pomplhts, Bats o, Loafer, larpc.lberars. agaitresd Baer. _ Thad Balt, raper Books. .A Woks tr Agrorment. /time Beata, . Itat nuoisi .Order, Books, dr, / At the very shortest noilm. Ouslathok of JOB TTPX Ia more extensive then that or any other *ace In Ude sec tion of the State, and we keep handsempkrod eareaaly tbr Jobbing. Being a practlail Printer mermil. we will guarantee our work to he u nest's any that can 'NI; turned out In the, cities. PRINTING IX POLON, done at the shortest notice. ). BOOK BINDERY. Book a bound In every WU, of lON. Mask gooks of ovary daserlatton nuusuleturod, bound and rioted to coder at abodes*, polies. • Hoy to Drum , Coirrazyur Noma.-Rinvaa's awe krfrit Dela:tor; ti r July. givea th• Iblkirlig rola", a pi re. ful obeervation of witicb4 will primed poisons from Er lag imposed upon by counterfeit notes. In nearly' all OUNII : - 1. If Jos him a surpleiors looting nefa, 'suds, 11 2. All gen ulna bank notes, meept lagof a Itsm al d toy Inatitistiona Sr. noosed b the het artbta in the country. and have a bold an d mot appointor% and, ex erpting In a few eases, Sr. printed upon good paper. 3. She flew. If ala i :tam a Mink. expression ;'and the even and small eels of the picture an, perfect. the diaper, of . figures, the landscape% trees, home; rattle, ship% steamboats, and the at knee em. blems of the attegotkal figures are aleayseotrect. • 6; The posdalllos ruling on the stroll, ovals, Ivens and ornamen le, Sr. regular, soma% and of a uniform appearance on *very part cf the riot/sphere used. • • 41 The principal Ileve of the large letters to the name of the hank; an generally upright, and perfectly true aid even to every part. • 7. The round hand writing Engraved on the body of the bill, should be equal to else and . distance, and of a ,uniform character all over the note. S. A COOITIMITIT not" has Invariably a rough, nein lAA appearance, the pa* Is genendiy of an infector quality, the sky, landscape, and {anent perspective of the pictures have in Incorrect and miserable appedrine• the lettering has an unsvon and careless finish, aid the mond hand engraving throughout , the note le raptly, If seer, unilbrm. 9. One of the - surest tests of a counterfeit note la the ilgastore of the president and ashler, which If fovea of a bold character, still has a tremulous appearance.— Courtsrlbiters seldom tally a *nadir" without Ammo imperfection that an be deteettd by careful "Family'. lion. lb. Counterlbitert. unable to "above" off counterfoil or bonus banks as readily am In dojo gone by, hero turned their attontion tho"altering" of pool,* $1 notes to sa. 1138.20 a. sod 100 a. and as the many neer dineoverica In chemistry, have opened fresh avenues to means by which printing and writing Ink can be extracted, they base within the past few months altered a groat many bills, and la such au !Math: manner that omen bank officers and brokers hero been deceived. 11. The safest plan Is to eaanzine 'carefully all notes of a large dettopalnatton. and Maas theta altoipther If you have any doubt as to their being genuine. • 12. The best method of aerarity against count/4dt 'lank notes of mall danotninations, will be for' the par pie to advocate and have enforced a law, prohibiting lb. laming by any bank, cots' of any denoainotion Ices than Aire Dollars. WARMING TO TO!: ISITEXP AAAAA .—Cbas. Lamb tells bis sad experience„ as a warning to young men, in the folloling language : "The waters have gone over me. ; But out of the black depths, could I be heard, I would cry out to all those who have set a foot in the peril ous good. Could the youth, to whom the flavor' of the first wine is delicious as the opening Scenes of life, or the entering upon sum* newly diseov-. cred paradise, look' into .my desolation and Ge made to understand what a dreary thing it is when he shall feel himself going 'down a preci pice with open eyes and 4 passive will ; to see his destruction, and have no'power to stop it, and yet feel it all the way emanating trom,hlmself; to see all godliness emptied out of•blus, and yet not able to . forget a time when it wis otherwise; to bear nbout the piteous spectacle o( his own rain ; could he see my fevered eye', feverish with the last night's drinking, and feverishly looking fur . to - -night's repetition of the fully; could he but' feel the body of the death out of which" cry hourly withfeebler outcry to be delivered, It were enough to make him dash the sparkling bev erage to the earth, in all the pride of its mant ling temptation." • - No SCOLDING.— If you wish. to make pun neighbors and 'family happy—if you would see calmness:4nd evenness of temper developed - in your children—if you would lighten the cares, , and smooth the path of the companion of your bosou.—do not irritate or scold, or ho In a passion. When spur humor Is crossed, but remember that othertimee hearts as soft as yours, and let tbrr 'sunshine of ehristlen meekness and gentleness always beam from youreyes. How happy will be a:circle in sueh a ease! Ah, this christian temper is about the only requisite to maks fire sides happy—plaices which hurbands and children • will regret to leave, and , be glad to return tog— let the husband be indulgent then to the annoy- . anees of his everaworkin.r, and oftei over-Work ing wife; and let the wife airways meet !dram dh 'miles when he comes home perplexed with the cares of business; and lot both be forbearing un der their mutual imperfections, and home will be more as God intended it. • POLITICAIr' • Tux Huntingdon (Ps.) Almmimin him Placed for e of Oen. Fimon Cameron at Its mast head As the peit.a eandhlote for the Preshieri In /VW flon. Tustiners Serrate„ It Is stated, is to be lb. I.e. publican modidate for Congress from , Laneasterroeur , !Award Darlington, En, Is his competitor for the DOF nation. Tax Coanne, the Oblo"msgaboy," is likely „ up in Congress. as the Republicans of its . _ 0p..• h. (Ohio) Cougrassional district w are determined on !nation. a *s.s. la tho lowa Dotooeratle State COorrolPol , r Ja mb { nit., a resolution endorsing and serrurise a tratlon of James Buchanan, was ls,J . 6 . 0 b.l Tote of 10 to 112. Firm:ma p ts Democratic oros in 11;inn. , : r. '" dfly" Z.rn ..../ 13 _ .1.- , las and against Lepton : far it , 1 " Th i an and Lecompton; and two steed m ...?, flu th e editol : es Tissu,' these two neut..' ''''' ' n ' t- e,wkille the four set Poetmastarships, or, siaetNieg co committed owes are provided i'r made of the_ following Tin Republicans ( f I. ea bare rotary or eta te—Ell.. ilomlnations for State or , ro ' -5 ."„, jab Sells. Muscatine mote. me Aidttw a n i ,,„,, w . Callen, Cedar count. Crete f rammer— esley Jones, .. Thr r,,.d Office—Amos 11 Mil. Hardin cotinty. Ile.7:" au riny enera —Samue 0 I 1 c amlanioner of Des .Moines A . ler, Cerro tAbrda cet •,. Dice, liebroks oc ,, Y " c Drake , w „, Improve ,e_ifilli.ori C. ayoe county. niver n, .. ~,,,,, In agitation Is in progress all ELAVERT 1',7,:, t b; . 1 .1.110 n of making that • Ices sr-oment of the en slavery party Over Miv•so , Stale. . The c. ^ ~, taa etteteed hy lb. St. Louis R ep ,, , ,,,., ^ PI"' ' la .et th at it would cost too much to pay for OIL to the ' I , T t . the oats. To this the St. Louis De 0.. ;he frw i' tlt in not necessary to pay for them. and s era: we"' ` 1 " It ~,f. to .bow by statistics how the increase of free r" - ,..n c arries with It she natural diminution of the •''''';'',, citing the three following counties: . 13 '"„„,, , Censua of 1861. Census of 1568. 11. " I ' Wh tee. Slates. Whites. Slaves. 6.a-made. 4688 101 • 8854 18 , Ina, °Dr, 4:35 1321 6033 728 .110. 6771 1037 0/10 808 aerat De Pete . also ponts to St_ Louie, Charles, f s s ige„ Harrison. Crawfiard. i and twenty other St. counties, ire which slavery Is fast dirappearing. It is • cation. fact that thee. counties are mostly In the middle and soother* section of the State. or those we have named. FL Lents. St. Cherie*, Orege,fkile. Gasconade, and St. Francois, Ile along the Illasouri river from Its mouth to the centre of the State. A few years ago thievery same river was - i•vetned by lawless banditti. who refused to permit free emigration by that channel to Kansas. It seems that, like the dreg in the fable, In grasping at • • shadow they have lost a reality. COL VOILTZT, of the Press, has been reviewing the coo - dition'ot the Dentoerstie party in this State. He comes to the et:inclusion that Leeempton tact •feerful discount, and will not pay one dime In the dollar. In nearly every Congressional Mettle. In this Rate the Democrats .ure either, trying to get rid of the whole record—to bury it out of sight—or elle are bowing their Lecomplon rep- Meentativert Into private life. In the Berke and Lehigh district Heavy Chapman's nentenleation is demanded as essential. to the success of the patty, owing to his Ind,. pendent resistance of the Kaolin' policy of a majority in Congress. In Chester and Delaware the champion of popular severeignty;Jobn Rickman, is admitted to be the only Democrat that cam be elected. In Montgomety, and parrot Philadelphia. Oe en Jones Is pertineelouely begging for a nsnotnination, assistesi by the U.B. Mar shal of the Eastern district, who la moot shamefully prose tinting his office to help this double recreant Into Congress for ,another term: In Berk; Disney Jones Is opposed by the very flower of the Democracy, headed by the Engllettorgan of the party. Even in the Tenth L.. glou Mr. W. If. Minutia is not safe, though bolted by the recollection of an overwhelming majority., There if little hope for Paul Leidy in the Laverne district ., little for Reilly in the Franklin district; little tbr•Ahl In the Cumberland district, and none stall for (11111 s of the Cl*. Hoe or for Donut of theSehuyiklll district. Montgom ery ;as made his Initial battle In the West, having rap OS his nomination whit a rush. - - . AD-P e ter Daily, a boatman on tbq Schuylkill Cannl, - hadOne of his legs so seriously injured .on. Friday, by becoming entangled in the rope While going through tbo locks at Schuylkill Haven, that amputation was net:unary. The operation was performed at Reading. goer At Detroit, laeZ week. a party went out for • ride, and Among them were one McDonough nod his game. Upon returning, be became' jealous of her conduct towards another and commenced op. braiding her, and finally knocked her down' .and kicked her while she lay there. Nice conduct fur • lovyer. pr. President Buchanan, in his pluelamaUt to the Mormons, tells them thit—"lf you obey the leer, keep the peace and respect the jolt rights of others, you will be perfectly secure, and may live on In your present faith or change It for another at your pleasure ;" and urges them to avoid bad advisers and to lay down their arms, which, they seem very much disposed to do. - i pti-Steubenvilfe, Ohio, stands upon a coal bed. The Herald of that place, says a shaft has been sank in Market street, and coal remitted at the depth of 220 feet. The vein is four feet thick, and the coal is of a superior quality for household,; mechanical,' inanufactorinZ and gam fiorposes.— About 1,000 bushels are , raised daily, and thi7 amount will soon be itiareased to 3,000 bushels. -The Fres. Love institution at Berlin Heights, Ohio. appears to be in an exceedingly prosperous condition: The Cleveland Herald says that there are from thirty to fifty of the sect in the. township of Berlin.; that are constantly creating buildings—five or six having been put up within a law weeks—and the occupants are , becoming more and more bold. On three oats• . glans of late, men and women from among them have been seen iu bathing together, naked. On a Sunday within 'Blur weeks past two women and two men were so bathing. and a third' woman sit ting on. the bank contataplating the myna., ' Or officers on board the steamer Minnesota: lent to Shanghai to strike h; rule into the hearts. of the Chinese, write home that she draws ea much water they caul, get Within -fifteen Miles of port. All they see of Shanghai is done through the telescope. This illimtrates the management' of our Noe) .Department, The perfection ,of our Postal sys t em is apparent 'ls' the feat that a boy at work in a oboe shop, at Milford. recently fiiund In an old mall bag, which the proprietor of the shop bat purcbised to work Intii shoes, a letter which had been mailed at en oaks in Tannins*, and di. • meted to another piaci its the 'sans State, and which emitalood four fifty dollar bills, a twenty, a 'ten, a Oro, and s three—ln all, $;36. • • ..;•
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers