'Arrival of the Ear_gla. Nsw Yoas,.Dscember 31, 1848. '. • anis, of Saturday evening,, December, the day before the scribe the state of that city as the highest degree. pieparations are being made in • Cr. The, police force throufh ;' has been doubled, .on account , sous disturbances and, rioting, that had taken place. Louis Napoleon's friends met and organ ized to suppress .oetbreaks in case of his election. General Charganier hes officially rcsion ed thei'canageship for the Presidency. M. Lamerune's friends were making great exertions to secure his election. ' On Saturday evening, all Paris looked like one electoral meeting. The Bonapartists wore accused of an im tention to assassinate Geis. "avaignac• , One of those person's'who ed with Louis • • ussidiere hail arr ed in Paris • . the election. eived in Paris on Saturday, , 'aces, state that the election of • t •• on would be the signal of a 'fl''" . • ;.ical rising. n '' r ~. '`iv of the National Guard have #.•,:, .••irt...., ~,..•,• , ,• • . !, ,' .. ; limier arms for Sunday. _ . . .T e troops, Garde Nubile, &c..'wntild he confined to their barracks on Sunday, the ,day of the clection. „ Letters from Marseilles' announce that the expeditionintended fdr Clyne Vecchia had returned to anchorages, but the tLoup‘s tad not yet been diSembarke ‘ d. Nothwithstandieg, all the excitement re iarding the Presidency, funds had risen. Letters from Paris on Tuesday morning, that the election for President of the blic, had definitely closed all over :e, and enough was :known to secure Nitpoleon a larger vote than was ex 7 dby his most sanguine friends. Ile in a considerable more than a major qtes over all other candidates. counts from the difftirent departments nee \that the election was everywhere, hated en calm and dignified principles. mus, Thhrsday, Dec. It) P. M.-1.7p to Is date tranquility continues.. Louis Na 'leon has•—•beeu elected president. The lection retures show a majority in favor of ) rinde Leuis(Omilar in proportion to th . OSe heady announced. • . Prince Louis propo ses to raise Gen. Cavaignac to the rank of la.rshal of Prance. .. . A partial' amnesty is' still spoken of a s ilielv to be presented to the. Chamber, eith,•r v General Cavaignac or the Ministry o! Prince Louis. • It'is understeod t tn. it v ill tot include the prisoners of Yin !nnes.. The intention of promoting the election 4M. Dffaure to the Pre-'t ericy of the 'hamber is revived, an will probably be :rried into effect. d .Marshal Bugeaud made. his first Wtisiear- V:e in the Chamber to-day, and vils ;re 'et! in the Saulte des Paspordus ty M. ; •er.s.and M. Mole. .. . great number of members of :.he As= bly have to-day left their cards at the i of Prince Louis. - ! 1 e proclamation of the Presh'ent will '3ly be [lade about the 20th ihstant. • \cif informed Paris paper sFs, so far `an judge from the incopplete re \at arrive to us from th• Depart ments, he suffrages were diviied in the followin:g proportions Louisplapoleon, 66 per cenct twaignac, 21 per ceritLedru Rollin, per cent— . Raspail, 4 per cent—Lamartit ,:3per cent.' It is calPulated.that the Cotnn ssioners who 'have been appointed to exam' e the votes, will ha4,e concluded their lab on Monday next, ard•that the National sembly will .on Wednesday proclaim the resident of the Republic. We shall the it is hoped, ' ~sally assured of a period f tranquility 'pose. ~ ILL LATER. --The . los ,news from :e confirms Louis Naf•ol on's increas-• opularity, and Cavatinac's downfall. returns from the Previ'ices are even decisive, ns we antiep ted, than the ages of the Parisians. "1. .Paris the ab majority of tin. Prius over all his tethers, was near 20,0 0, and in the It ieu subburbs, ad a t ajority of 20- k and an absoln • mijOrtty of 16.411 3 out of the :36,000 Cites Lolled for all the candidates. At .13ordsaux 10,000 voted for Prince Louis, whilst rely ti )00 voted for General Cavaignac. Julging from all the reports which have reacted us the Prince will have'an iinmense trajorit ' Ca vaignae votes have mostly been - trocured by Government influence. Aire dy lists of the new Ministry are . circulat , .some. of which place Marshal - )ticlinot =Coup; the - Ministers. . =I hote TI prole MEM turns t • LATER YET.—Louis No poles . engrosses all the attentim of the Geitetal Cavaignac was burn amids a large concourse of people tat the Place dii Throne. ENGLAND. 1. The Liverpool Mail of the 10th 1 • 'that the basis of the NeW Postall : L 'sent with the United Staten ha: settled, making a considerable red 'sent ',;•'' tnerican letters, and will. be sett ' , present steamer. •The steamer America arrived • A.. 4,• and the Acadia in about 4 ?'• t .t ..., ~ . ..Washington arrived at Pout ....i.' 4 on the sth of December, having ' I TT • d ' _ ': • —rine States .4an the 20th of No, ' The Hermann•sailed, on the 12th 'for New York..: , . •i • ' ' i , . Eurtlier—inteffigence Iram. the CI ' Good Hope confirms thee news of tt, and of the complete. die ersion. of ti . surgent Boers. •: ' ' . . -,... . . . " D IRELA .. i, - . Profound tranquility continues. 'evictions, 'voluntary and . : inveluniar! • gather with the past emigration, coni Upon an extensive scale. ' The. Lord I enant returned hisit. iteele. , to. Diiblio . . , see - st to be addressin g his intentions to the e 0 ttraticin-vf all sine ores . Many officers G in the Coast , uard sdrvice, the post . office, and board of, public fivorlci, having been abolished or tmnsferri4 to London.. There was- even - a rumor Pif the transfer• of the Irish Court of Chancery to the English me tropolis,-but; we altogether discredit this. Duffy is now the only remaining prisoner in Newgate. His trial commences on Thursday next. The agitation ' i favor of restoring the Irish Parliament makes no progress. The applicatio - made by Lord Fitzger ald for support, seem in many cases to be repulsed in unequivocal terms. _ telligence. LordeClarenden xv• warmly received on his return to the .Vto.: ',legal Lodge. The usual addresses ,ittWasnfidence have been.. voted, coupled witicetlie declaration, that now that-lA-tate is happily restoro. it is de- Sirable to promote an emjuiry into the causes which have stimulawd the. late discontjnt, and recommending a removal of the many grievances under which the country hibors. Thd \ reply of his F4cellency to the deputa tion arid memorial respecting the late nlleged jury packing, is temperate, eloquent and ratiocinative. It disclaims in the most em phatiC mannerNany studied design on the part of the Government of excluding 'Roman Catholics, .as such, from serving as jurors, and pledging, himself that on further occkt ions the Anernev General'shall not go be- I yond the, e lvviti mate grounds of action which I are ahs; iutely necessary to he maintained : 11; 1 ;1:i4‘1: administration of justice. lis I•;x..t 11, , 0 declines to make alteration i n the ; it stands:: Sol; 11 t rlSrien and his associates remain in Ri, Hnoml Bridewell. It is rumored that i; Judges of the Utieti'ißencli de ride i ;far or of the writs of error, the Crown will withhold :the requisite sanction fur an Nye•:l to di, of Lords. feetri his e Tile Gnat true hills articles tx•hi .The Nation %%,t; found it iirinttanti,nu Thy Sou f to-dnv n doaths starvation throughout Ireland. 'i'here have been exten;ive evic tions ft 111011:: the tenantry. The flight of tenants Coward the cadczraot ships is I.:;ceedincy grotif. Violent outraaes among, the Ftarving- peo ple are being committed' in all their dignst log variely. SCOTLAND. There here eight case; of Cholera and four deaths in Glasgow during the last three days, and on Friday twenty-six now ei .. i , st-c arid six deaths, and on Saturday. there Were nine case:, and three deaths. The Cholera is evidentlyibsitling in Scotland. ITALY. The revolution in th . ,!,,eity of Rome has terminated in the flight of Cie Pope from his dominions, and the head of the Roman Ca thdlic ChUrch, one. of the tanst•popular and patriotic P:itices that - ever ascended the Papal throne, is now at) mdle and a wand erer. After the scenes dtscribed in our last, the Pope remained a prisoner in. his palace in the OA' •I, protocted_ from per sonal danger by to direct intervimtion of AI. do Harcbur s,4l2e i ggencv ambassador. 'r he Pope, in flee rom Roue, took ;Ll fuge at Naples,al . - ul vas unr:er eie prmectitit of the King. 1101110 continuos tranquil. The Pope refused to go to France. Ile has .signed h protest decdaring th) late acts null and void. Another account has it that. the Pope has fled to Sicily. - There is a ministerial crisis a Turin, owing to the contest betweenthe peace and the war parties. GERMANY. From Frankfort thelews •is imp lant. The National Assembly has just decald by a majority of '225 to 111 that nobility s a distinct and political class, shall bo set a,ide -and by a majority of *.:53 to 170 that all titles, nut attached to ito office, shooklNie abolished. • RUSSIA. The array of the Emptyr now runounA to 500,000 men on the frontier, and makes\ it evident that he is watchini4 the progress of events in Europe. The army is kept in a high state of discipline, ready to act when ever an emergency occurs. Such 'a force cannot fail, to, have its iniluencc•in 'restoring the' Pope to his throne. The report of the death of Ibrahim Pacha had been confirmrd. Abbas Paella ,succeeds hint in the Viee- Ro.yahy 's election porr .; u: iis has .abdictcd .in (nem. .1 H. , I'rincis Joseph, son of tilt '.", ...—a vomit of eighteen, who 1... , le,:m himself the t..e It is supposed that EMI in oliigy sbernbled mach :!trokl in:4Y Emperor's ab ication in this ; Lis successor will not he bound as Iredtcessor, by pain ful antecedents, nit wi H •at liberty to fol low such a cours as accidents of the times may render neCl4y. The military Aitical offen ces still continue. !nant of the Austrian army, nt .1:j, has been a sentencey 4 co vienty years imprisonment in tying taken, part in the' late insurrection... .Another in 4 dividual, named Urban, hits also - been cob detnned to twelve years liard.woricius. for a similar . It has been..remarked that the young Emperor lways appears in public in military unifo , and also when he giyea'audience to deli tations. The Cho lera is•raging fearfully at Presb9rg. Privateletters mention that the abdication of the fate Emperor of Austria had produced a very favorable impression,increard by the hepg 1114 the new ,Eiejier9r *Pula agOn estrtblieh the Court of Vientitt: •• ; .1101111CCS ' rronge all been ction on over by t in 12 3 days. moon eft the mber. `f Dec. po of war, o in- , The , to nues ieut and Mahoney h• s / if Dublin had retu Dufry for .frlouin, is red in the columns of me letter to Air. Smith ri to iebtrllion, which nfortunato cfentleinati's newspnpers villi - AI S'llllA. Gold Mini; and Gold Hunting. D ,tr . 01 the' Coal Region.-LThe Pottsville Gold is found in most granite ridges Pre- Aft • r's humid, says: ire nderstand that there is 'ati unusual .enting Cracks., rind injunctions with quartz, . (le nd consequently in thb Sands, beds and gm' of stiffering„in this region. so disastrous eadows of streams: flowinertim such rid°, h been the business, that many of the working •a. 'According to geology, which writes in i tri n are deprived of the wages due them, and I hand qit ito legible to those ivho understand fli ir families are absoNely suffering from want.'? -.4. is alphabet, all metals are thrown up from i A Jersey Chrisl,7lllB.—The crossing of the Del he regions• below' the stratum of priori- •x • ive rock, or' granite, through cracks its wait , by the American army, on Chri nas ,#ight, 1776, and the battle of Trenton on th fol. -uch ~; ~, m. Granite consists of quartl, c id P , ' - 'o•.nd Mica, fused, mixed and cooled: ...loaang day, were eeiebratcd on Christmas, b the Iltlit -l e •• ••• tch of these elemems must b e tb itit t, ;iteepla a Trentha, by a sham battle, in which selow this cooled - crust., When the crest ilie. TrPnuin vo.lonteers partiCipated, assisted by racks, either by contraction in cooling, ~.. !the Philadelphia National Guard. expansive foree below, some of the elect below are usually injected into the cracls.i Hence wo often find veins of quartz in stet of granite, sand stone and other parts of the) crust, nt right or stnaller angles With thcd4 reciion of the cracked stratum or strata •;•-a When ' quartz 'is thus injected, it is s me times mixed with gold alone, someone's with gold and sulpharet of iron, some,rries with various metals ; and those ir:tied veins are sometimes found-on the-seoaths of the highest mountains, forged trough the entire crust of the earth. By cetosure to water.and the atmosphere, the suptinret of iron slacks or separates the quart, fiber. , ating the panic Isr of sul-. phuret 9r pyt a (awl; rd s tvaahed 1)• the stores, in to the beds and 5 )f. rivers, the slacked quartz heing ako wasted down as sand. —.Ail it tuerals are find most abu • dandy in ridges crossing etch otlitt4r ; . for ere are cracks in both dire tions. and tat most numerous injections ,n a giver space. . Seinetinies gold is fond without I i ; and in this catwthe .uartz is not slacked, but simply worn amallissolved by ' the rains and floods, especinlb When, aided by frost, as in great elova bola.. The gold washed down, is found in Imps. 7rains, scales and dust, and throtoh the whole depth of the alio vi,m, how, oft ; t:reat. Anil it-a ill also probably be roma throughout ;he quartz vein. 1-fence MI 9 gold is found ; 11 a ll ue ; ;;IL , it can geuerallY. !hotted) not al ways, be trued to quartz vans in the moun tains from which the rim. flows. But sometimes the golden sands disa;tpear sud denly, at different distames'from the ridge. In such cases, the quartz veins have been - njected, not into the rit4e, but into some strata CrOf:;111g the bed 0. the river, which will be Found on ;40netraing the alluvion. l'he gold of Caiiforn a Will probably be I traced to the quartz veils 'of the Sierra Ne• uada and the crossing- rido.es. This Sierra Nevada is a continuation of theA tides: be ginning at Cape I h4rn, 'Lind lw-aceeditor through Mexico to 11,4hring's,Straits ; and as go,d is .found ;that.: the Miele A tides of South A tuerica. and A 'telltale of Mexico, so it prolia I.ly will, or III:1V be, through the Si erra Nevada and Cho Mountains of Oregon. Another continuation of the Andes, and more immediately of Anahuac, are. the Rocky :Mountains, terminating ie 'Russian America. These•ridoo4s are crossed at dif ferent points, from Cape Hortt to the Arctic Ocean, by other ridges, minting in various directions bet weep East and West, as the main ridges run North and South ; the points of cro, , siti!rs being called hunts Icy gv ologists, and always the most fertile in met als, ' Upper Caliii?ta, like Old and New Mexico, is very knotty ; and hence time abundance of silver in Old, and of gold in New Mexico. As these processes of slack ing, wearing, washing and depositing, have been constant through invriads of years, the alluvial deposits of Caliihrnia are probably very deep. The Sacramento, flowing Southerly,. and the San Joaquitn, flowing, Northerly, rise in the Sierra Nevada, and receive several tributaries from the Santa ridge. Wherever an injected crack is found in this ridge, washings from it will flow to seine river, carrying the injected mineral ; and if these injected cracks are numerous enough for each river, and each injection contains gold', then will gold be found • each of these rivers. But these are points vet to be ascertained: The whole alluv on of Upper Calilbreia mar contain gold y and in large quantities ;' and gold may b 4 \found only in the alluvion of one river, , asked front only one injection, and that of e nut very rich. Geological ex j ploratim done can inform us. 'rhe gold of Russia is found in Siberia, in the Ural and.Atlay ridtrei, and the rivers flowing from them Northerly. It is also found on both sides of the Caucasian, the Oimmaleh, the Minn Chan and the (Thant liidges. It has also been .found in the rivers QQ Europe, washed from the Alps; Pyrenves i - )penines, Darpaihian, Dofrafeltf, and oth e,ridges. In Vir , Tinia, the Carolinas and Clirgia, it is wasrtedßifotplb the Allegheny ridks, of which the Blue and Cumberland are \karts. gold be abundant in California, it will be ot:ained by hai l work. Those who seek k must encot iter hot suns, heavy rains, tang marches, hard digging, hard washin‘. They must renounce all luxu ries and conveniences, provide plenty of very stfcog red flannel shirts, pantaloons that canna be torn, boots that will resist wa ter and thri,und long enough.to ford rivers. They mu4sleep on the ground, or on hem lock bough with stone for pillows, provide strong, tentkor rely upon bough shanties, wear - broad4riretned chip or straw hats, white, use tat simplest. fare, moderately, at regular hour* (ship-brend, or animalized bread, are thelest, with smoked beef, and drink water onl:. They must go in com ics of ten Imore, on joint stock, each takin g 's turnp . to do anything. They ust pay exorbitint prices. in California for Supplies„and have the gold region during the rainy seasonal lour or five tnenths. With careful attittion to all this, and the hardest work; the*may do - well, and may not. Those who 'Lye nothing to loose, can try California, T , )se who aro doing well, will do wisely to let eltalone.—P. Ledger. 10" Cdptains of s inlissts•at Cincinnati find, it hapossilile, te gage crews for,Nent Orleansi on account .1 he Cholera. Fr One hundred cases of Cholera 'were re ported at New Orleans on the sth of last month The number of deaths are not given. CeThe Boston Courier says : —"Aaron Burr died a 9hilklipn, according to the New York Times. So l'urich the better for him self. If he had five,/ a Christian, how much' hotter it would have ben for the ivorld • iiettlED. On the :Id of December, by the Rev. 1-1. A. Schultz, in Bethlehem, Mr. Jacob /Cent- Ver,of East Allen township, to Miss Eli:- dab. Mang, of Hanover township, Nor thampton county. On Tuesday evening Ink, by the Rev. Mr. Dubs, Rev. Namacl Leith, of Lower Saucon, to Miss Sarah Gross, of Allentown. On the same evening. by the same, Mr. Emdmict .41 , e1e, to Miss Maria Ginleht ger, both of All , mtown. On the 10th of DeciimlNy the R e v, in W..'7BNirtninerer, Prie to Hies Rachel Brien, both of Hilltoivn, Bucks county. Now is Your Time to Buy Cheep IrOil Odid itirdnre, Barber & Vol/ig, . Respect! ully inform thoir friends and the : public ' i general..that the;. are determined to sell tin r Fargo:dock of I ron just received i comprisim, among others I 4NO Tonl Eopliill Iron, such as &pure and itiuill. All sizes of \t a_ which will Ilt• sold at 2.: cents. I a pound, and for l'.‘sti at t.l cents, flaiii- Imered at 4 cents, in,,l all siz it American r011,..n.d ,..n.d ATry cheap. \ ^:':s Ulark.zinitli Anvils. of the best !.ind and wamilted, at :11 ', cents ti pound. A I. o l lorse S iil lb,ds, the host in the ' 4 l l / 4 4 „. United States, nail:mind. Al,so—Cost, Sti•nr, Diislr and Sprin!, , Steel. wit he sold ir extraordinary low pri cos, :tm2etlier with 1. very estinsive asxort i merit .4 ~,fSv , ,:;•&l4? II 1. R . DIIA R E, Saddlery, UnaciViljainaig.s. 4;.:: Nlechanics Tools, such as :lanes, Saws, land all other hinds o . " Fools, xrhich will he sold at lower rntes, tbln any other house in the United States. Thanl; ful for past favors thy 'have' 're ceived ; . n.ttit a t zerterr-is puldic.: they trust !hat -throtolli punctual attendance to busi ness and small profits, they tvi I . he able to !,nail! a still noire exteio.ive patrd'ip , ze.' Jinni:, ry 1. • ~ 9-1 \v. .tom • . ~ tcr - 17. 41' :: Raitl QP- - ; 74- e:- 4. :,-;;;,.i" , -:.-- i... F... lee., "e ''" . - _ NEW HAT & CAP Sr Hirano IL remi Talies this methodio inform his and'lln; public in general. that he a room in the new three story hricicl of Mr. Daniel Keiper, in Hamill( in the BoroneTh of Allentown. a f west of WeiSs's•NVatch and Jemil, %Orem lie has opened the iiew PIIILADELPInA RTORt Ile ha? just received, a Very large assort ment of. Beaver, Castor, and other Par ALSO, a beautiful assortment of fAllionalzle Silk flats, Caps, &c., of all sizes, prices and qualities. Ile flutters himself to say that he will stant void for his Huts, tha 4 hey dill not only retain the color hut tl they cannot' pOint of durability, be e . xe Hod. MC. Yaeger trusts that the Agit punctual attendance to his ;business, ; .1 reasormble pokes, he will be able to ~ tin. a liberal share of patronage, for , ‘yllicl lie will ever be thankful. • 11-6 m . . Deinure ; Lehigh, Schuylkill RUL misijuelutlina Rail Road Company, Pnrsbant to the Act of:lncci,moration. the Stockholders of the coo an will nit at the office of Jamcm , AL Pori cr. 111. in WAs ton, Pa., on the second Monda of J a n 1 / 2 i ir y, i A. 'D. 18-19, being the eight j day ol the month, at 2 o'clock P. M. to el 1. by hidllot. a President, six: Managers, a'l •asneernd Secretary of said Company, for,the existing year. J. N. HUTCIIINSON, ( (T w i n December 9;•.!548. IT )vi.r . , • Take 4 Important to Cott ntry rcha ,— re c, ed and. for sale at the' Phillo4 • is store, 20 hhds. New Orleans Suga 20 barrels splendid quality S which will be sold hy tAt3 hogshc lor bar at Philadelphia prices. • • YEAGER & IDNER. Nov: 30. . • ENGLISH & GERM Of every description, neatly exec ,•dat th • Office of the.4qtegister.' Frederick ItolileuM BELL-BANGER, BRAND-011TM AND LOCK-SMITII, In willtentowls. Respectfully informs his friends and' the 'public in leneral, that he still continues the abtlye bUsiness in all its various branches, at his stand, one door south •of Dillinger & Craig's Dry Goods Store: in Allen street in the Borough of Allentown, where he will also inaiMfacture to order all kinds of • ; . I LE IS E ••,-• flir 'i hrt(g7-liStR, Grocers, and other branches, war rantvd to be strictly accu.r. • . eerzni. rate, finished in the most, splendid manner. Ile also manufactures all kinds of Leeks, I )oor-plate., Door-knock ers, and every other article in his line. . Repairing of I_, , s ks, Lamps, in short eve ry thing in Steel.kon, Brass or Copper, can be repaired at the'Hiurtest notice and on the mbst reasonable tcrrns. Mr. BOHLEN .trusts through pUnctual,at tendence to bri;ii..9x,s and inodeft.te charges, he will be able to gain a large share of pub lic patronage, for which. he will ever be thankful. Alleptown, Deco - 111)er 21.. New & Dressmaker .1, M i s Talke . .... inform her old custom ers, and tho public in general, that she still tontir•ur a.the L'illiarr . and Mani ca-making, bu , inesh el in all l's vai lens branches, in the vi doge of Coop(' rsbn rg, Lehigh county. She ha; lately return, d from Philadelphia, with a biautiful'assoittaent of the newest and , s, most fa,luonable style of 1 1 ; 1 : 11: : JAMES BONNETS, i tt 4 4t ' r 'i mch as Silk, , Silk Velvet, i 4 , batin,.1. 1 ) 1t.,11, 1 0..c., of al l l col- . E t E i 0r,,..t‘ t sant prii..t.s,a arge imi.et,, of Ribbons, French anif American Artificial , '. is of all 'hinds, co:uprising mourning and at i made in the neatest style, allot which will b dispos ed of at the v, ri lowest terms. ClordrB, Deevore, aitd. Mani;ll(l3, wil! be made in the latest Ta&llionable styles find ill lile and roost expeditous man iner. 40 has assn wade ni•raneXimenp to riTeive the ininitl;ly Fashions: 'Litift ila delidria, both in the Press-making us well as Al iilinery hooch of the business. Repai rim! and shaping of old bonnets and dresses will be done at the shortest notice, and in the most fashionable Miss •S'chayer returns her sincere thanks •for the liberal patronage heretofore extended to her anti trusts her moderate charges will gain her many new customers, and a con tinuance of the old ones. Dec. 21. • . _ LippArd's Newspl r. ." The qtraker'icief .P 99 TIV , VIEMIGE LIPPARD. AtabOr of Was•hinki•in mid his Ge •- rals, or Le".ends of the Revolution ;" 4. The ttin.ber City," " Paul Ardenheiill, or The Monk of the Wissahickon," etc. Terms, TWii• not.i.Ans iy!r• year. invariably in ad vance. Single numbers live•unts. - • 'Phis paper will be entirely different from auy other publication of the present day.— It is designed to be. in every respect; a popu lar Journal, devoted to such matters of Lit erature and news us will interest the great: muss of readers. It will be edited by George Lippard, show Legends of the Revolution have become . household words ,throughout the United States, and whose works have been re-published itt Englaad and Germany, where they have sold by hundreds of thou-. sands. The New World, (edited by Park lienjamin,) pronouncesceorge Lippard "Tun E t7ti EN' E SUE tif America, possessing graph ic powers, which even excel those of the "Teat French Novelist." He needs no ,en comium from Publishers; the best• Magazine in the. country, the Lady's Book, issued by Godey,..holds this language in its January number c "'Phis author has struck out.an en, i'irely new patlh and stands isolated on a pointinace'essible to the mass of writers. of the present day; He'is unquestionably the most popular writer of the day, and his books• are sold; edition after edition, thou r sand altiYr thousand, While those of others accunudate, like useless lumber, on the shelves of the Publishers." It is our de sign to make this, in every respect, tire best Paper published in the United States: We will not set up-the_old and useless matter of daily, papers for.oar columns, not will we crowd our pages with masses of unsightly advertisements. "The Quaker city" will be at once a Literary. Paper and a Panorama ofCity Life. intended for circulation through out the Union. ORE. 1•, d friends us taken milding, I street, ty doors y Store, The publishers will embellisii . the "Qua ker City" newspaper with the best timod emzravings, but prefer to rest the claims of their Paper upon its literary merit nod the interest of the Romances published in its columns. . TitAll'prrsons remitting from the coon= re TWO DOLLARS before the first of February, 1919, will be entitled to a 'copy of any one of Mt.. Lippard's Dollar 'honks, the tnli;s of Which are hs follows : Washing ton and his• Generals, or Legends of the Re volution ; Paul A rdenhehri c or the Aloak of the . Wissahilion ; The Nazyl93.,avl Sequel; The Quaker City,-a-Ronai66 of.Philadel phis: Our tennis for clubi are as follows ; Two copies for $3 00 ; Fve..copies for $ 001. Teii copies for $l2 00; TWenty copies for $2O 00. i.:V'.lll persons (AtTents, &c.) who wish ti , obtain this publication will address (post p.tid) the undersigned. • , -JOSEPH SEV ERNS & Co. No. 7Q, CliOstniit street, J! ituary 4.* • • . 7 :-3tv.'„. . . IT-4m ,r 3 oz cI) a ire r, ¶-9m prices intuit TICLES. I Per Allent.Easton l'hilda: Flour . Wheat Rye Corn . Oats Buckwheat . Flaxseed . . Cloverseod . Timothybeed Potatoes Salt . . Butter . Lard . . Tallow . vax Ham . . Flitch . Tow•-yarn Eggs . Rye Whiskey Apple Whiskey Linseed Oil. . Hickory Wood Oak Wood . . Eg Coal . . . Nut*Coal . . Lump Coal . . Plaster . . . . Barrel Bush. 'Pound ME Doz Gall Cord Ton CaMimi Gold. REI :a OF THE JP. l w K S TORE. The subscribers respectfully announce to the citizens of Allentown and the surround ing country, that they have again'• removed to their "old stand" a few doors below Ha• genbuch's Hotel, in Hamiltim street, where they will'be happy to supply their old cus tomers together with Thousands of new ones, with all that is good and cheap. It is useless to say that WAGNER & HUBER have on 'hand, ,goods of every description, style anti qua I ity, also Groceries, QueensiVare,&c. In fact they have every article on hand that appertains .to the busineSs, all of which they will sell 25 per cent lower than any other Store in Allentown. WAGNER & HUBER. . Allentown, Dec. 21. • *•-.4w W'"lPcd, 7 r7l.6'lll .Q• Competitor in Selling CHE3P Goods. It is admitted by all, .that we have out stripped every house in "then diggins" in the way of selling cheap goods. We now • offer a reward of sl,oob for the person that, can be produced, within a scope of a days journey, who is able to sell as cheap as.we do. IP:fag/ter. iS' 'amber. Have the Pleasure of eihibiting the first arrival of Full and Winter Goods, which. is much handSomer, larger and cheaper than any stock ever before opened in this place. Owing to the great decline of Goods in the eastern cities, they are selling many Aides one fourth less than beftire. Come from the East, the Mest,.the North and the ! South, to the Emporium of great -Bargains , ! !! "A pennysaved is a penny earned." We are determined to sell more goods for the same amount of money, than any other es taillishtnent in town. Should any doubt the fact, we invite them to call, and if they do', not find things, as stated, we Will . pay them their lost time, and let them slope. Their stock consists bf a general assortment of Gentlemen's, Ladies--and Children's Dress Goods, of every descripton, among which way be found all the latest styles of Ladies'' Dress Goods, black, mode colored, stripped, plain, chame leon and satin stripped dress Silks, brillian-. tine, lustre, satin stripped modonna cloths, figured delisle, brocades, gala plaids, tibbet. cloth, patomatas, black, brown and mode cal-, ored French morinoes, mohair plaids, bar rel!, corded, figured, satin stripped, mode colored and black alpaccas, es-loi as 12i. cents a yard, cashmeres d mo) lin de lames, from 121 to 621 ce is a yar . Pink, blue, white and bla It bon et silks I L E,,, acid satins, with large stoc of eautiful. French ginghrtms, glish es and ca licoes. Calicoes as lox s t cents, and such as heretofoae sold for. 1 . 2 T-for 6 and 8 cents,. and Pis cent calico at 121, also a beautiful 4 quarter calico at 10. . . 200 SimMs of every style and quality,. black and [node colored tjbbet, silk fringe,. terkerrian blanket, long shawls, black . silk crape, lac laines, black and diode colored cloth, and other fancy shawls: Cloths and Cassimereg, The cheapest in town . ,.of every descrip tion color and quality, 0 quarter brown cloth from $ 1 to $:.l per yard, Cassimeres, plain and fancy, at reduced prices, Satinets and. Jeans, at any price asked for, Cloaking and. Cloak-linings, Tassels, &c. .10 dozen Um brellas from 50 cents to $ 2.00. WAGNER & - HUBER. • Dec. 21 Groceries 40•Qtreeisstiare. it A reduction in •In 7, r GRIES. '.uaret --,•WV-14-1-7-IPri ROCE me Rio Coffee at 10 cents a pound, and'as low a: 61 cents. Stigais, 'fens, and all other kind• of Groce ries they will sell cheaper than • dr before Offered in this place, • Butter, Eggs, Lard, and all other kinder of country produce, will be taken in exchange for which the•highest - ptiee will be paid. `WAGNER & HUBER.. 11--44 Dec. 21. . . Four llorse - VVagon For Sale. A heavy four home - Wagon, nParly new, on ly .used for about two weeks, ip offered lot eule, and can be bought at a bargain: For.. farther.information apply it the office g the , 1 61.4 e igh , '4140, II 6 AO 1 20 76 66 5 50 1 . ,00 435 5 5g 1 051 65 65 25 40 1 25 2 5 2 00 30 50 1-1-6 35 55 1 40 4 00 2 50 65 40 18 28 65 0 00 5 00 4 60 3 60 2 05 2 5%