ioreign 3ntelligencr. ----- Arrival of the Europa. ENGLAND.—The excitement created in Europe by the reports of the boundless riches found in California had somewhat subsided, when the news,by the last packet once more aroused the spirit of enterprise, and the newspapers again teemed with no tices of all kinds of shipping adventurers in connection with this auriferous region. It is no longer an El Dorado, but a verita ble terra d'oro, the confirmed statements of mineral wealth in'the California hills now :leaving no doubt but that an immense tide of emigration will now float towards that 'quarter. • FRANCE.—There is very little news 'from the continent of importance or general 'interest, except as it regards France. Im mediately after the sailing of the Niagara, 'intelligence was received-in England, that 'the breach between the Assembly and the_ _ I President — had — Widad - into a very fearful 'gulf. A real or sham plot was disclosed to the French Ministry, and for a few days Paris main assumed the appearance of a beleag ,uered city. The streets were occupied by ,not fewer 'than 80,000 men ; and Geinerid :Changarnier plainly intimated' that the first barricade that was yet attempted to be. ,raised, would be the signal fora general .slaughter. • Whether the Red Republicans were sur prised er, unprepared to cope with the ex tensive military arrangements concerted— certain it is that Paris for a few days trem bled on the verge of a new revolution ; the issue of which can scarcely be doubted, as Marshal Bugeaud was despatched from Paris to bring up a, strong division of the Army of the Alps ostensibly to command Rouges during the State trials, but with no less object than that of overawing the Red Republicans in Paris. The differences between the Guard Mo bile and the Army of the Line only added fuel to the flame which hourly grew in in tensity. The motion for getting rid of the propositions of M. Ratesu to dissolve the National Assembly, was'only defeated by a marrow majority of 416 over 405. Since that vote a greater tranquility has prevailed, and once more we have to an nounce that the struggle passed off without mortal strife. Numerous arrests were how ever made. In the National Assembly, on the 20th ult., the Minister of the Interior announced that he had been directed by the President of the Republic to present a bill against clubs. The Assembly bad already enacted se vere penalties with the view to repress ex cesses and remove dangers so alarming to society. Government had ordered a num ber of clubs to be closed in the capital and the departments, and denounced the offen ders to the tribunals. It was impossible 'that confidence could be reposed whilst clubs were permitted to exist. They formed a state within a state, and no free government could allow such nn anomaly to exist without endangering its 'existence. • COMMERCIAL.—The trade has been steady since the first, and any change that has tak •h en place in'Breadstufis during that time has been upward. The market is now somewhat duller and hin,Oid. American flour is quoted at 265. to 275. for Western Canal ; 265. to 275. for Philadelphia, Baltimore, New Orleans and Ohio. 275. 6d. to 2.85. 6d. American and Canadian White Wheat is now sold at 7s. ad.., to 7s. 6d. per 70 lbs. and Red Gs. 6d. to 75., Indian, Corn has latterly declined and prices have receded. Present prices are 30s. to 31s. ff for white, and 31s. thl. to 325. for yellow. Properly of Married Women. A bill has been introduced in the House of Delegates of Virginia, which is entitled "tt bill to protect, the property of married Women.". Though 'it enables women, who may hereafter marry, to retain the whole benefit of their property separate from the husband, and subsequently receive in' their own right property from others than their husband, vet the rents, &c., for any one year shall be liable for contracts made by her husband within that year in the pur chase of articles for the use of his fitmily. To secure the benefits of this act, the wo man must cause an accurate inventory of her estate to be recorded in the county or corporation court where she resides within eight months after her marriage, or eight months after coming in possession of any gift, 4-c. Clerk of the court to publish a description of such inventories. The wo man is not authorized by the act to ri l ake sale of any of her estate, .but the county L cor: poration of superior courts, upon Pie:pint petition of herself and her husband, may.or tler the sale of any portion of her estate, and direct the proceeds to be loaned out or. in vested for her sole and separate use. The bill farther provides, that in case the hos ,band survives the wife, she leaving issue, 'he shall have a life estate in all her proper ty ; and in case she dies without issue t. he shall have a full title forever to all her per sonal property. • Political State of Canada. The Toronto Globe gives a series of tab ular statements respecting the political state of Canada, from which we gather the follow ing items : In Upper Canada, twenty-three constitu encies httve returned Liberal members tOthe present Parliament. The aggregate .num ber of their inhabitants is 483,929, The re maining eighteen constituencies have re-1 turned 19 Tory tnembers'While their ng gregate population' ih mit? 2305 a. Two to one of the inlitlitants of this Province have returned. Liberal ininiifiert: :the aver age number repree ctitod by each mettiber is 17,218. The average n 111 lie 1 :. 1"V Fir t (4 lll l ed by each' reform member is 22,015 ;*tiliile the avera&' of representation of each Tory member' N• 13,660. • In Lower Canada, according to the esti mate of the population for 1848, each of the 42 members represents 18,263. Of these, 35 members have been returned on the Lib eral and 7on the Tory interest. The Libe rals represent a population of 705,265, and the Tory only 73,058. The aggregate number of Liberal Consti tuencies number 313,417—0 f which 218,- 658 are in Upper Canada, and 73,058 in Lower Canada. The census according to ages makes the population of Upper Canada 735,879. No census having been taken in Lower Canada since 1844, an approximating series of cal culations was necessarily instituted, which gave a result of 768,434 inhabitants—the increase being taken at 79,652 over 1847. A New thing in Mechanics. Mr. Joseph Harris, Jr., of this city, has invented and patented a box and axle which require no oil, and yet almost completely ~a~ses that ng ange o mac mery, friction. At least, so we cannot but hope, from seeing a working, which we under •stand from Mr. Harris has been put 'in a lathe and turned 1000 revolutions in a min ute,a motion which, with a common sized railroad truck-wheel, would carry it about two miles a minute, or 120 miles an hour, without producing any perceptible heat, and without the use of a particle of oil. The mechanism by which a result so desirable and aitonishing is effected, is somewhat af ter the manner of that discovered by the prophet Ezekiel in his vision, wheel in the middle of a wheel, or rather six wheels the middle of one. The box is about five inches in diamater, and the axle , three inches, and in the space between them are disposed, at equal distances, six anti-friction rollers, which are kept in their places by teeth at both their ends, playing into corres pondirT circles of teeth in both the box and !axle. There is no bearing upon these teeth, which are cut to the anti-friction curve. ,The bearing is entirely upon the smooth portion of the rollers between the teeth.— The only service of the teeth is to prevent • the possibility of the rollers getting out of place.—Boston 'Chronotype. General Taylor. Among the incidents connected with Gen eral Taylor, on his route to Washington, is . the following: An old farmer and soldier who had come forty miles to meet him, made his .way through the crowd and seized him by the hand, saying, "General, I have voted nine times for President, but never gave any vote with as hearty good-will as the vote I gave you. I felt that I was voting for an honest man, who would restore the ancient order of things." "I belong to the old school," said the General, "and I will do my best ; but I fear that I cannot meet the expecta tions of the people." "You have been in maly tight places," rejoined the country man, "and always came out succesful, and you'll do it again." For every one that ap proached him the General had some pleas ant speech. Free Newspaper Circulation. Sena:or Allen, of Ohio, made a speech the other day in favor of this measure, now before Congress. The proposition is, that newspapers should be circulated free within a circle of sixty miles from their place of circulation.—The Senator entered into a discussion as to the operation of such a pro vision, and estimated the number of news papers in the United States at 2,400, but in order to keep within bounds, put it at about 2,000 : Assuming the number of the papers to be 2,000, 1 assume the circulation of the whole to be once a week—none of them•are less, and many of them are daily—and 1 assume the number of the copies issued by each to be 1,000. on an everage. There are then circulated in the United States 2,000 news papers, each circulating 1,000 copies, mak ing in all a weekly circulation of two mil lions of newspaperscirculated in the United States. But all of these papers do not cir culate through the mails; many of them are distributed in the towns and cities where they are printed. "1 have made acalculation as to the prob able proportion of those that do go through the mail, and those that do not. I have supposed that three fourths of the whole number do go through the mails, and .are transported to some point from the point of publication--that is to say, 1,500,000 news papers—and I have also supposed what would be the proportion between the num ber circulated within and the number circu lated without this circle of sixty miles." The conclusion, at which he arrives, is thus expressed: "I do not look on this as a boon to be extend ed by the government. You will observe, front the nature of this proposition, that it applies in such a manner as to affect distant localities in the interior of the country, and that it is exactly within those localities that the mails of the United States are transport ed on public roads not made by the federal government—often not by the States—but by the local pdpulation of the neighborhoods. The people of each neighborhood- make their roads, and from year to year they re pair them. The people of the counties bridge their own streams, and from year to year repair them, and your mail goes over them free of charge. Your mail pays no . toll to keep them in repair. The local pop.' ulntion of each vicinity, who are to be ben efitted by this poor little reduction of the tax on the privileges of reading, therefore have a right to claim h as an equivalent for the right which you have of passing free over roads which they have to make and keep in repair, aud•on the making and repairing of which you . spend not a farthing•" , MARRIED. On the 22d of Pebruriry, by the Res. Mr, I:le:riritn, Mr. IVrtherh.ohl, of Al lentown, snrak Weida, ofLcmyhill: (5;§'6444 Mr. William Nettlinrd, to Misg Carolina Hartman, both of Allentown, Bible Presentation to Gen Taylor At the Presbyterian Ladies' Fait.. at Frankfort, Ky., on the 14th inst., Gen. Taylor being presCnt by invitation, was presented with a magnificent copy of the Bible, and the Constitution of the United States in the same volume. Rev. Mr. Robinson, nn presenting the volume made the following remarks: Gen. Taylor :—I am requested by the ladies of my charge, to present to you this noble speci men of American art—a volume containing the Bible and the Constitution of the United Slays. It is intended as a slight token of their rever- r ence for a man in whose life they trace many re semblances to the Heroes or Sacred History, whom God balled, unwilling, from modest priva cy, to unsought honors, and to be a nation's ben efactor. It is a token, also, of their affectio f. the Chieftnitt who led their sons and brothers to the field of glory. They . are willing to confess, sir, that the taste which selected such a token for a public man, may sa . vor a little of the Puritanism of their gteat ancestry; yet they are sure, that in many aspects, this is a gift, not more appropriate to be given by them, than to he received by one who holds your position before the world. The Bible and the Constitution ! It is our Religion and our politics, and, therefore, a fit of fering, from American people, to an elect Amer ican President.. What nobler gift to a States- man, than the Constitution of Heaven and the Constitution of the greatest nation which Heav en has put upon the earth. The Bible and the Constitution! It is no in congruous union. It is but the Sacred Text with its best political commentary. Hail the Bible not been recognized, there could have been no Con stitution. It was only minds imbued with the principles of the one, which could have conceiv ed of, and worked out the great problem which is solved in the other. The Bible and the Constitution ! Surely worthy to be the symbol borne before one who is going to take the Chair of Washington, and under a vow to make Washington his model. and the Constitution his only rule of political QM Sir, the prayers to Heaven, in your behalf, of those•whom I represent, and of all the wise and -good in - our country, will be fully answered, if controlled by the holy precepts of this Book, and thereby enabled to rule, alike unawed by fear and unallured by flattery, your administration end as auspiciously as it is to begin ; and if then, when the toils and honors of life arc clo,ing, supported by its Holy consolation, you shall die as peacefully as you have lived gloriously.: To which. Gen. Taylor responded:—l accept With gratitude and pleasure yotir gift of this in estimable volume. It was for the love of the truths of this great and good book that our fath ers abandoned their native shores.fiw the wilder ness. Animated by its lofty principles, they toiled and suffered till the desert blossomed as the rose. 'these same truths sustained them in their resolution to become a free nation And guided by the wisdom of ibis Book, they founded a government under which we have grown from three millions to more than twenty millions of people, and from being but as a stock on the borders of this continent, we have spread from the Atlantic to the Pacific. I trust that their principles of liberty may extend, without blood shed, from the Northern to the Southern extrem ities of the continent. If there were in that Book nothing but its great precept : "All things whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you, do you even so to them," and that precept were obeyed, our government might extend over the whole continent. Accept, sir, my sincere thanks for the kind manner in which you have discharged'this duly., and expressing again my sincerest thanks to the ladies fur their beautiful gift—l pray that health, peace and prosperity may long he continued to them. DIED. In Phillipsburg, New Jersey, on the 17th inst., wife of Henry D. Neumayer, aged 36 years. On the 21st of February, in Upper Sau con, Eliza, consort of Henry Romig; in the 33 year of her age. On the 22d of February, in Upper Sau con, John Ehrhard Weber, aged 86 years. On the 20th of February, in Allentown, of old age, George Weise, aged 83 years. • On the 16th of February, in Upper Sau con, .anna Maria, consort of the late Con rad Stahl., aged 80 years. ' On 'the 20th of February, in Lower Ma cungy, Jacob incand, aged 65 years. On the 25th of February, in Reading, Pa. Locilida, wife of Mr. Samuel Warner, and daughter of Mr. Jacob Huber, of this place, aged 35 years. On the 26th of February, in Hanover, Mr. Joseph Klader, aged 62 years. IetOVUt(DM Notice is hereby given that all claitriS due the estate of the late Samuel Bunk, dec'd. not satisfied on or before the first day of April next, will be put in suit immediately after that time. Circumstances imperative upon the administrators render this course necessary. • JOHN RUNKI qdmun • • stralors. , C. NI. RUNK, .. Jan. 25. Allentown Letter List. John Adtms, Frederick Abend, A, F. Butz, G. T. Brock, John Cliftou, William Dech, Ann Daubert, J. G. Deshler, John Eshenbach, Thomas Faust, John 13. Fox, Angelina Gangwere, Lorenzo Guth, D. P. tidily, Lydia Hoffert; Aaron Kichline;Jona than Keck or J. Flexer, Caroline Knauss, Jacob Kammer, S. A. Kemmerer, George Laubach. John Losh, Mare A. Middleton, Alfred M'Kee, J. D. Meeker, John New herd, Maria Ritter, Peter Strominger, Henry Strauss, Chas. Sassriman, Thomas Sherer, Adam kito'nfq, kieniy,Pc;holl, Pan. Sterner, Conrad'. Stab, S. 1: gchujtz, W. H. Stip, Mettler, Sarah Wagner. E. R. NEWHARD, P. M. Poor House Account. The Account of Charles Saeger,. Treasurer of the Directors of the Poor, of Lehigh County, from Jan. 1, 1848, to Jan. 1, 1849. 1t548, Jan. 1. To balance as per s 236 3718 y Cash paid 101 orders last year's account, • To cash received of Edward Koh- ! By error in last years report, ler, Esq., on account for board ing Levi Kern, - - To cash of Thomas Faust, for a Horse sold him, - - To cash of Edward Kohler,Esq., balance for hoarding and funeral expenses of Levi Kern, - To cash of Grim and Reninger, for Oats sold them, To cash of John Sager, Esq. the amount of fine for gambling paid into his oflice, 3 00 To cash drawn from the County Treasury, as per orders, - 4,500 OOl OE RE Car IT U.L•ITIOM • Of the Expenses of the Poor House of Lehigh County, for 1848 Sundry Expenses (luring the year Dry Goods & Groceries; $ 515 32 Making a coat, - 44 33 V 'env Stone Coal, 245 61 Stove and Pipe, - 8 63 Tables Benches, Bedsteads, 44 43 Potatoes, for 1847, - 25 95 Beef and Bacon, Dried Apples, - 5 12 Cider and Apples, 23 57 Tobacco, - 1S 30 Wheat and Rye, - 227 69 Ashes and Wool,. 12 60 Wool Carding in 18.17, 7 20 in IS4B, 4 74 Cleaning a Clock, - 75 Making Shoes, &c. . 35 33 Making Brooms, 7 41 Casting Doors,Grates,&c. 2:3 10 Tin re, Medicine, &c. 35 14 Collins, • 10 50 1,324 50 Farming Utensils. For Butchering . , 6 69 Servants and Laborers, 1.15.60 Chestnut Rails, - 105 80 Makin, Post Fence, 18 50 24 Head Hotned Cattle, 579 20 1 Horse, - 100 01) Wheel-w right Work, 19 OS Black,:iniths NVork, .19 74 Sadler Work, - 26 80 State and Road Tax, • 36 31 Lumber and Sawing, 27 0(3 • Carpent. Work & Repairs, 72.U(3 Plater, - - - 4 55 Clover Seed, - - 00 Apple Trees & Grafting, 23 60 1,227 03 Orders of Relief for Out-tior Paupers, Borough qf .qllentouut. Executing Orders. 12 SO Attending Geo. Noss, 10 00 Northampton township. Taking ,the body of John White out of the Lehigh, 3 00 An order for Mary Taylor, -10 Hannvrr Township Conveying, John Luubilch, to the Poor house, ExecUting orders, Upper Saucon Township. Conveying C. Gtiugler, and C. Baue r to the Poor House, . Upper Milford Township. Conveying Samuel Diehl to the Poor House, Lower ilacungy Township Boarding and conveying S. Sicher, to the Poor House, 4 00 Costs in suit, vs. Geo. Sick er, (her husband) .✓assignee Sn or Personal Property. Will be sold at public salt•, on Thursday March Ist, at 1 o'clock, I'. M.,dt the house of John. Lcillt, in Saucon township, Lehigh county, the personal property of trillium Fulmer, viz : One horse, cows with calves, hogs, 1 four horse wagon, I two horse wagon, rassee, sled, 2 hoddies, 3 ploughs, harrows, ladders and bolsters, winnowing mill. log and other chains, cow chains, grain cradle, forks and rakes, grass scythes and snenths, wheel-bar row, mall and wedges, grubbing hoes and shovels, wagon bows and cover, shaving horse, saddle and bridle, gaiters, plough gears, fly nets, single or carriage harness, collars and bridles, &c. Also, clock and case, looking glasses, table, stands, kitchen dresser,*beilsteads, barrels,,tubs and stands. grindstone, &c. Also, 8 acres wheat grain in the ground, I() acres rye in the ground, and a great variety of other things to numer ons to be mentioned: The conditions made known and attend ance given on the day of sale, by A. I{.. WrITMAN, Assignee. Fob. 15. 15-2 w Watch Found, • The undersigned has on the a , ••^" 2lth of January last found watch, in Weisenburg township. Lehigh county. The right owner,*by proving his property, can take Up the same, by paying the cost of advertising. DAVID METZGER. Feb. I. . 411.-71 w. ENGLISH &GERMAN JOB. PRINTING, . . . Of every description, neatly executed at the Office of the "Register." . 60 00 ' By Balance in the Treasury, 75 00 31 63 91 27 $ 5,000 29 1 Total, • Executing orders, Treesenburg Township BE Executing orders, - 1 00 Heidelberg Township. Conveying Elizabeth Boy er to the Poor House, 10 51 Atttendance toJulian Boyer, 1 50 5 60 N. Whitehall Township Boarding and attending to Thomas Boyer, 49 00 Medical attendance do. 18 00 Conveying Leah Moyer to the Poor House, 1 60 Executing orders, 40 South Whitehall Township Attending M. Wert, . 500 Medical Attendance, 10 00 20 62 Conveying Paupers to the Poor House, 3 00 Henry Leichty, travelling Pauper, 4 50 Philadelphia .dltns-house. Herman Foeringer, 42 07 Sarah Ann Brechalh 4 00 Printing and Stationary, for 1846-47-48, 58 97 Print., Stationary, for 1848,21 40 Postage, For Carpenters Work, & D rafts, Bricks, 16 68 Hauling Brick, 8 87 Lime, 97 35 Sand, 22 SO Lumber, •l 3 97 Dre,,sing stones for steps, *2 00 Plaster of Paris, Hardware, 205 71 Black-smiths Work for 340 Salaries. Thomas Faust, Esqr. 3SO 00 Dr. Charles L. Martin, 50 00 :^ do. for out door paupers, 10 01 Henry J. Haberacker, 50 00 Samuel A. Bridges, Esq. 20 00 Chas. Saeger, (Treasurer) 40 00 `2 00 2 20 4 20 gra Jesse Grim, 20 00 Nlichael D. Eberhard, 20 00 John Blank, 20 00 1 SO 610 91 examined and approved by the under signed Auditors of Lehigh county, the 26th day of January, 1849. • CHARLES HITTLE, CHAS. L. NEWHAM?, JOHN K. CLIFTON, 39 00 4:3 00 1 PUBLIC SALE. ' Of Personal Property Will be sold at public sale, on Saturday the 10th day of March next, at the house of the undersigned near TREXLER'S FUR NACE, in Longswatnp township, Berks county, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, the hollowing personal property, to wit : Ten Cows, two Heif 1 . - ers, ten Oxen, a full- Y )*;? ' blooded Devonshire. Bull; a - fine pair of Match Horses, 4 working Hor ses, 2 Colts, two four horse Wagons with Boddies, one 1 horse .Wagon, I Cart, Ploughs, Harrows, Wind-mill, the best kind of Harness,.beskles a-large variety of farm ing utensils too numerous to mention. The Conditions will be made knoWn on the day of sale and due attendance given by WILLIAM TREXLER. . ¶-4w. Feb. 8 All persons interested will take notice -131:7 virtue of en order issued out of the Or phan's Court of NlercerCounty Pa.,and to me directed there Will be exposed to sale, by public vendue or out-cry on the preinises in West Salem toWnship,.(now Greene) on the 23d day of March next, the following piece or parcel of land, viz : 107 Acres Land, fag It. more or less, with appur- •fi!..) .1 :: , -tenances, late the estate of John Ati,ortz, dec'd:, bounded by an, of Samuel Rodgers, 1-fugh Nelson, Samuel Mc- Cullough and John Wortz. Terms of sale, one third in •hand and: the balance in two equal annual..payments with interest from confirmation of the, salQ. JAMtS McKEAN, Sheriff: Feb. 22. • ¶-4w. Upper illacungy Township -- 15 00 .s.'alsburg Township. • ENE -- 46 97 Printing, ,S'lalionary, 45 -- 80 82 Hospital. 548 00 41 94 Ism 26 60 Sheriff's Sale. ptitto Current. ARTICLES. I Per Allent.Eaeton Philda. Flour . .. • 1 13 Frtdi 5 25 5 60 5 80 Wheat , . Bush. 1.00 1 05 1 20 . Rye - 65 65 76 Corn - 55 65 '65 Oats -- 27 60 86 Buck Wheat . . .40 .40 56 Flaxseed .. , -- 1 2 130 140 g, Cloverseed . . 3254 00 400 1 tmothyteed . , -- 2002 75 260 Potatoes ... 1 F 30 35 66 Salt l' 50 45 40 Butter . . . . Pound 10 12 18 Lard 1 i 9 10 9 Tallow . . . . 1 i 9 9 S Beeswax .. : i 251 25 27 Ham 91 8 10 Flitch . •. . . ' ---- ' 71 6 4 Tow-yarn. ..' I 8 1 8 8 Eg,gs .. . ..,Do z. 14 10 15 Rye Whiskcy ;Gall. 25 25 28 Apple Whiskey, 18 25 28 Linseed Oil . . -- 65 65 65 Hickory Wood Cord ' 4 60 1 4 50 6 00 Oak Wood. . ,' .350 3 50 500 Egg Coal . . . ' Ton 1 3 751 4 00 4 60 Nut Coal .. . r-- , 2 501 300 350 Lump Coal . . -- ' 3 501 250 266 Plaster .. . . ; 4 501 450 260 $ 4,448 89 31 22 520 18 $ 5,000 20 EEO PUBLIC SALE. Will be sold at public sale on Thursday the 20th day of March next, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, at the House of the subscri ber, in Salisburg township Lehigh• county, the following personal property to wit : 12 01 A 'r 2 heavy :working . • • PFPFX Horses, , - J e w four two year old Colts, Cows, Oxen and young cattle, Sheep, Hogs, Ploughs and Harrows, Wood-sleds, Hay-ladders and Bolsters, four horse Wag on. hay and manure Forks, and a. large va-. riety of House and Farming utensils, too nu merous to mention. 69 00 The conditions will be made known on the day of sale and due atteudatice given by WILLIAM DIEHL. *-3w Feb. 22d. tollalindll ZIIL By virtue and in pursuance of an order issued out of the Orphans Court of the cowl-. ty of Lehigh, there will be exposed to pub lic sale, on Salimlay the third of March next, tit 10 o'clock, in the forenoon, on the premises, a certain, Two Story ItOuse 9 4 ; I. and Lot of Ground, situated on the. PM . east side of Margaret street, in the, Borough of ,Allentown, county of Lehigh, bounded on the north by a public street, on the east'by a twenty feet wide alley, on the south, by a lot of Charles S. Bush, and on. the west by said Margaret street, being lot numbered in the plan of said Borough 1:30., It being the real estate of.Gottlieb Bender, deceased, late of the Borough of Allentown. The Conditions will be made known on the day of sale and due attendance given by Pitnar El. GOEPP, adnunistrator. By Order of the court, , Jon* I). LAWALL, clerk. 11-4vr February 8 971 40 Will be sold at public sale on Saturday the 3d of March next, at the house of 11•71, ham W. Wagner, deed., late of the Borough, of Allentown, at 1 o'clOck in the afternoon, the following personal property to wit. • Five Shares of 'Odd Fellow's Hall Stock,', 2 Mahogany Bureaus, Mahogany Wardrobe, Pining and Breakfast Tables, 3 Detached Lever Watch,. an tl day Time Piece, Coal Stove with Pipe, Venitian Window Blinds, a large lot of Car. pets, I large Mahogany Looking Glass, be-. sides other House and Kitchen furniture, too numerous to mention. The conditions will be made. known °ti the day of sale, arid due . attendance given by JOHN WAGNER, J2dners. REBECCA WAGNER, Feb. 15, CNAIVAIGIS • • . Schnurman's Rotunda Still Open! Large Sales and Small Profits Nom's your Time, as the Stock of. Winter Goods is to be Cleared Out It has been settled down to a plain matter of fact case, that Old Schnurman"• has .sold more goods in the past year than was ever sold in any single establishment in ten coun ties, and what has proved,so beneficial to the co►nmunity generally, they had . the advert ! tage of buying goods at least 10 per cent cheaper. Such then being the case, he is r sues this as his last ►nanifestq in the Winter Campaign. Having just finished taking an account of stock, and found that they have yet on hand • $ 10,000 Wkorth or Geode, for which he wants buyers. So now is pm'. time—come far and near—distance is no ob ject, as it will doubly repay your trouble.— Recollect Schnurman's Wholesale and tail Emporium on the Market Square:. February 15. ' ¶-4w -12121112 ban go ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR At LAW, May be consulted during Court week,' and a few days before,at the house of David Stern, Innkeeper, in Allentown August 5. MACKEREL; SHAD, , • I r Constantiy on' hand l SALMON, and for sale by ' HG, . PALMER & cm' HAMS &, SIDES, Market Str. Wharf; SHOULDERS ; mi.tizovnia. LARD &CHEESE Feb. 22. Public Sale. ¶-4w. ly---* c _ ilf.—lhn.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers