_Foreign Intelligence. Arrival of the - Cambria at Boston. The Cambija arfived at Roston, on Sat urdal'idorning, and her mails reached this city yesterday afternoon. FRANCE The advices from Faris, state that during the speech of Matthieu de la Drone, on the Roman, question, an altercation arose'. be tween M. Thiers, and M. Bixio, Ex-Minis ter of affairs. The latter had declared that the former had said the election of Louis Na poleon would be a disgrace to France. Theirs demanded satisfaction. A duel took place immediately : one shot Was fired by each at twenty paces distance, but neither were wounded, and the seconds came forward and said . tliat the parties had done all that honor required. Both mem bers returned to the Assembly, just as the sitting was adjourning. De la Rossiere was the lust speaker, and 'would continue his address the next day. TURKEY._ 'The change of creed of Bern,Kinely and 'other officers is confirmed.. The following 'details concerning Bern, Kossuth and.Dem tinski, are very Interesting ;rl3em, as soon 'as he was informed of the determination of the Sultan"to resist the demands of Russia.' nand Austria, diclared that his country was ins first religion,. that the Sultan having the same enemies and the same friends as it, he was determined to become a 'object of the Sultan's and to serve under his colors, and that he would embrace Islamism ; that on quitting Hungary his resolution was alrea dy taken, but that if he had nig made his profession of faith sooner, it Was - because he did not wish to have the appearance of yielding to fear. He added, that he did not ask any one to follow his example. Ne vertheless Generals Kmelz and Slaen and about thirty• officers would not separate froin him, and have made a decluratton in favor of Islamism. Kossuth, who was greatly irritated against Mem, went immediately to the Hungarian 'camp, and informed the men the Porte re ,sisted the demands of Russia and Austria 'and that England and France appeared de cided to assist the Porte, and he supplicated ' them not to imprint a Stain on the flag of Christian Hungary, which they had always served with honor. Some words from Kos suth, gave rise to the opinion that Born anti his companions had yielded to the pro mises of the Porte, a great agitation showed itselfin.the Hungarian camp, and it was at one time feared that a disturbance would take place. Dembinski has not become a Mussulman, but he has openly acknowledg ed that the Porte had nothing whatever to do with the abjuration of Beta, and his com panions, and he has even written letters to the Grand Vizier and the Se raskier in which Ile expresses his gratitude. Dimmed:es in New Mexico. The Naliamil Inlelligeneer publishes nn interesting letter from Lietenaut J. [l. Sitnp son,ofthe corps at Topographical Engineers. to the Chief of the Topographical Bureau, dated Santa Fe, the 2Stit September, and giving an interesting account of the recent expedition into the Navojoe country, which resulted in effecting a .treaty with that sav age tribe. in which ?the right of the United States to establishrni I ita ry pests, Indian agencies, & trading housesig fully acknow . - edged. The expedition,consisting of artil lerF and infantry,uurnhered about 400 men. it left Santa Fe on the oth of August and returned on the 26th September. The road taken was swain/canny., Aria Santa Domingo. Jairrez, and then north of •west, over and through a aeries of arroyas, .canons, and mountain passes, to the mouth of the renown ed canon of Chaille, where the treaty was Ergociated, The return route lay more southwantly, and was by the way of the Pueblos of Zuni Laguna, to Albuquerque. The whole distance to the mouth of the .ca non of Chadic+ from Santa Fe was, by the outward route, 279 miles ; by the return Tonle 207. The letter proceeds giving par ticulars : All along the route we met with objects or - interests ; but what excited probably more than any thing else, was a series of ruins in the canons of Chace°, which, doubtless, from .their locality, appearance, and numbers, are rihe veritable ruins of ' Aztecs of the 12th vcentury ; the locality of which, on the an • thority of some of the maps, Humboldt has -ascribed to the vicinage of the very spot were they were found. These ruins are of en exceedingly interesting character, both eat account of the mechanical skill and taste. which they display, and of the undoubted evidence which they furnish of having been erected at a very remote period. The Indi ens of the present day know nothing of them except that according to tradition, they were once inhabited by a people which came frOm the North; that Montezuma was the governor of this people ; and that, after liv ing bere for a period, they dissappeared----- some eastwordly towards the Rio Grande, and °them southwardly' towards the city of Mexico. • Each pueblo is a single structure, coven ing in, some instances us mtrch as two acres in extent ; discovering in places, by the still standing walls, four stories in height, and containing as many as three and four hun dred rooms, The main walls, plain surfaces, throughout their whole extent, on the exterior, are ve ry nearly three feet thick at base, and re treat on the inner side by a series of small jogs from bottom to top, thus lessening the thickness gradually from the bottom. up wards, The whole structure is built of a beautifully . compact lamellar sandstone ; the inner portion of this kind of stone and of clay mortar; and the outer portion N ee d w i t h pieces of rectangular exactness, and so thin that three incherf !nay be considered us their maxitnum thickness, and three quartera of an inch theirideaht. The general appear mice of the 'htce of. the building, at a little distance off; is that of a magnificent piece of Mosaic wadi . ... AnOther Object of intereEt which. the ex- Pc(Ri9 ink* eriat.)o u to syp was the thr- famed canon of Chaille, which has ever been regarded as the stronghold of the Navajoes, on acconnt of the immense depth and inac cessibiliy of its walls, and the impregnable fort which it was:said to contain.. The idea of the existence of the fort we are now ena bled to explode; the'security which it is ca pable of affording to the Navajoes we find has been overrated; but the depth and su blimity of the canon, so far from having been too greatly magnified, we are now free to acknowledge very much surpassed our ex pectations. This canon will be regarded as one of the prime objects of curiosity our country affords, and will ever command the attention of the geologist and tourist. A third object of interest which the expe dition has brought to light, is the existence of a rock, of magnificent proportions and of fair surface, upon which were found inscrib ed, in some instances, in beautiful and deep ly engraves characters, the naines of a num ber of persons of rank and of distinction, in connection with their dates of passing by the locality, and some other incidental allu sions to occupation - and history._ One o( these dates reaches back as far as 1006, and there are a number of others of this and the succeeding century. It is net at all improb able that these inscriptions may he found of value in the suggestment or establishment of some point or points of history; and as such are to be regarded with attention and interest. fec similes of all these insciip tions I have had taken, as well as drawings made of every important object of natural curiousity, and plans and drawings made of all the principal ruins which have come under our observation. Another matter of interest which has been evolved by the expedition, and which I have come near forgetting, but which, probably stands formost in point of value, is a belief that we have hit upon a middle route between the southern detour made by Colonel Cooke from Santa Fe, and the north ern one, called the Spanish trail route, said to be equally long. It is very certain that from Santa Fe to Zuni, a distance of near ly two hundred miles, and in an almost di rect course to the city of the Angels, we traverse a well watered, wooded, and pas tured route, which, with very little labor can be made an excellent wagon road. And our guide, Carravahal, informed me that from Zuni, which stands upon the BM Zu ni, a tributary of the Colorado, running gen erally a direct westwardly course to the .Colorado, and which he has followed down to its mouth from Zuni to the Colorado; by way of the Rio Zuni, the road is equally practicable for wagons, and abounds in the necessary quantum of wood, grass, and wa ter. If so, and the route can be as favora bly extended from the Colorado westward to the Pacific, of which I have very little doubt, there is no question hut that a wagon route has been obtained which cannot but shorten the distance to San Francisco at least front three to four hundred miles, Knot more. Annexation. Lord Elgin, says the North American, is adopting a very silly mode of qoelling, the annexation feeling in Canada. A manifes to, bearing about fifty signatures, having ap peared, a circular was addressed by the ad jutant General of militia in Canada to all the commanding officers of the various militia corps in Montreal; desiring that they would. ascertain if any of the it officers signed the annexation address ; and if so, whether it tviis of their own free will and accord. If they replied that they did it willingly, they were to be removed from office, as the gov eminent will allow no person to remain in its employment who timid sign such a pa per. In. consequence there is but one of these officers left. The same sort of letter was also sent to some of the Queen's Coun cil, who dealt with it in a very summary way. They peremptorily refused to be cat echized as to their private opinions or acts, and snapped their fingers in Lord Elgin's face. This proceeding is not new—it has been tried .in England and Ireland, and always f a il e d. Opinions cannot be put down by threats or removal front office, nor can effort be thwarted by removal—and so Lord El gin and his council will find. lie and they could not have devised a better plan of run ning. their heads against a polilical stone wall, than by elevating those who have been removed into the dignity of martyrs. The very moment they were deposed for opin ion's sake, sympathies in the heart of other people, not stirred up before, belonged to them, and will give them strength to pur sue their object with increasing ardor. The prospects of ultimate success are raised and drawn nearer by the oppressive action. Lord Elgin and his counsellors are evi dently greatly alarmed, and it would seem, with the best of reason in the world. But they sadly mistake their course, when they make restriction and oppression their prin cipal refuge .und hope. Annexation is now something more than mere speculation in the.minds_of_tbe,pcople.oftnnada..Jt is a fixed idea and hope, toward•which the'sym pathies bend and which the judgement ap proves. News kom California. The Gulf. mail , steamship, Capt. Hart stein arrived yesterday at New York from Chagres, after a passnue of six days. She reports the arrival at Panama, on the '23ult., of the Pacific mail steamship, Ore gdn, Capt. Pearson, from San Francisco, With intelligence from that Port, to the Ist of October, one month later than the previ ods ad vices. _ _ The Oregon brought down from San Fran cisco three hundred passengers and 700,- 000 dollars in gold dust. 'The'fion. Thomas King, who was report ed dangerously ill at Sun Francisco at the previous accounts, was slowly recovering. and would love for the Atlantic in the steamer of the Ist inst. It is his desire to be in Washington on the opening of Con gress, to be ready to lay before that body the tilos he had obtained relatiVo C;cilifor- The Bible. The Bible supposing into be, other than it pretends to; he, presents us with a singular • phenomenon in the spaCe which it Occupies throughout the continued history of litera ture. We see nothing like it, and it May . Iva perplek the infidel to account for it, nor need his sagacity disdain to enter a little more deeply into its possible cause than he is usu ally inclined to do. It has not given to any other book of religion thus to triumph over national prejudices, and lodge itself secu rely in the heart of great communities—vary ing by every conceivable diversity of lan guage, race, manner and customs: - nod, in deed agreeing in nothing but a veneration for• itself. It adapts itself with facility to the revolutions of thought and feeling which shake to pieces all thingS ebTe; and flexibly accommodates itself to the progress of sock ty and the changes of civilisation. Even conquests—the formation of new—do not af fect the continuity of its empire. It lays hold of the new as.well as of the old,' and transmigrates with the spirit of humanity; attracting to itself, by its own . moral power, in all the communities it enters, a ceaseless effort for its propagation, illustration and de fence. Other systems of religion are usually del icate exotics, and will not bear transplant ing. The gods of the natons arc local dei ties, and reluctan fly quit their native soil ; at all events, they patronise only their favor ite races, and perish at once, whch the tribe or nation of their worshippers become extinct—often long before.--Nothing, in deed, is more difficult than to make foreign ers feel anything but the utmost indifference (except as an object of philosophic curiousi ty) about the religion of other nations ; and no portion of their national literature is re garded as more tedious or unattractive than that which treats of their theology. The elegant mythology of Greece and Rome made no proseleytes among other nations, and fell hopelessly the moment they fell. The Ko ran of Makomet has, it is trite been propa gated by the sword ; but it has been propa gated by nothing else ; and its dominion has limited to those nations who could not reply to that logic. If the Bible be false, the facility with which it overleaps the otherwise impassable boun daries of race and , clime, and domiciliates itself amon g so many different nations, is as suredly a f ar more striking and wonderful proof of human ignorance, perverseness and stupidity, than is afforded in the limited pre valence of even the most abject supersti tions ; or, if it really has merits which, though a fable, have enabled it to impose so comprehensively, and variously on man- I kind, wonderful indeed must have been the skill in its composition ; so wonderfully that even the infidel himself ought never to re gard it but with the profoundest reverence, as far too successful and sublime. In his last illness, a few days before his death, Sir Walter Scott asked Mr. Lock hart to read for him. Mr. Lockhart inquir ed what hook he would like. .Can you ask?' said Sir Walter ; "there is but one," and requested him to read 'a chapter of the gos pel of John. When will an equal genius, to whom till the realms of fiction are as fa miliar as to him, say the like of some pro fessed revelation, originating among a race and associated with a history and dime as foreign as those connected with the birth place of the Bible, from those of the ances try of Sir Walter Scott? Can we by any stretch of imagination, suppose some NValter Scott of a new race in Australia or South Africa saying the same of the Vedas or the Koran ? 311 AEI itiED. On the 2lith tilt:, by the Rev. A. J,Stras berv,er, Lewis .appel, to Alalil.lu Oil, both of Doylestown. On the, 2Sth of October, by the .Rev. Mr. W. Gearhard, I Riegel to Catharine Long, both of Durham. On the 21st of October, by the Rev. Mr. Dobbs, Mr. Reuben Reber, to Miss Lovina Ilandtperk, both of Washington. On the same day and by the same, .Mr. Leibengulh, of Allen, to Miss Re becca Sheidy, of N. Whitehall. . On the 1-Ith October, by the same, Mr. Henry Whiny, to Miss Wilheinina Ben der, both of Allentown. On the 29th October, by the same, Mr. Gideon Hun sicker, to Miss Sarah Schmidt, of Heidelberg. On the oth November, by the same, Mr. Zacharias Kemmerer. of Allentown to Miss Polly S'ehaad, of S. Whitehall. On Sunday last, by the same, Mr. Wil liam M. Bernhard, to Miss Sarah Deily, of Easton. On the 30th of October last by the Rev. William F. -Maththews, William F. New hard, of this place, to Miss Eliza H. daugh ter of John Evans Esq., , Montgoinery coun ty, Penn. DIED. On the 23d ult., in &n eon, at the house of Charles Cooper, Esq., Christian Dull, aged 59 years. On the 16th Oetober, in East Allentown , of inflammation of the brain, Caroline M. Steckel, aged 2 years, On the 17th October, in N. Whitehall. of fever, Eli S..son of Samuel and Maria Mil ler., aged 7 years. On the 28th, in S. Whitehall, of inflam matory rheumatism, Smut Maria, daught er of Peter and Ester Guth, aged about years. On the Ist November, in Macungie, of croup, Samuel Peter, son of Aaron and An na ICern, aged 6 years. On the 3d of November, in Hanover, of 'apoplexy, Peter Munich, aged about, 74 years. • On the sth Notrember, in S. Whitehall, of consumption,. Jonas Schmidt aged 45 years. On the 3d November, in North Whitehall of a lingering. disease, George Rhoads, aged ,5t3 years- Dedication. The new and spacious Hall in the BO rinigh of Bethlehem, will ` ho dedicated to Divine service, on'Simday November 18th. Preaching, norning and'afternoon in Eng lish and German languages. Revds. Beck er, Shind lc, Stahin and several other Cler gymen will be present, and officiate upon the occasion. AARON GEORGE, Chairman of the Committee. 1-1 w Nov. 13 Young !Allies Seminary 'IN ALLENTOWN. The terms of tuition of Mrs. Young's Sem inary, are as follows: For pupils underS years $3,00 per Quarter over years $l,OO " do. ,‘ 16 " 10 $5.00 " do. 16 61 12 $6,00 " do. Such pupils, as enter the School after the Quarter has commenced, will be charged only from - the time they commenced. - F.LtzAmmt Yousc, Principal. .Allentowtb Nov. 15' Allentown Academy, The. Winter Session commences Monday November It Full particulars as to terms, text books, studies ScP, may be learn ed by reference to the Annual Catalogue, copies of which will. be cheerfully turniSh ed upon application at the Academy. R.O . cIIANDLEIL.Prinapa. • Allentown, November 12. • —6t The lEolian Minstrels • WILL GIVE A an? natruincntat . 09, zet laiTt In the Court-House in .dllenlown, on Sal- oriloy evening., November 11th, On whioh occasion they will give a Varied collection of Pieces, original and selected, Which they are happy to say, have been most flatteringly appfiived of by the "Lownns or• Al ustc," in most of the cities and towns in the. United States and the Canadas. For particulars, please notice the pro gramme of the evening's Performance. Doors open at 6.1 o'clock—Performance to commence at 7 o'cloc.lc precisely. Tick ets '25 cents, to be had at the Eagle Hotel and at the Door. Should the yEolians be detained by in clement weather or any unforseen circum stances, due notice will be given of their performance on their arrival, by the distri bution of their small Concert Bills. November PUBLIC SALE Mil l'alietzble Meal Estate. Will be sold at Public sale, on Frt day the 30th day .of November next. at 1 o'clock in the afternoon, at the house of Mr. Ben jamin. llageabuch, in n Icei.per in Allentown, A Certain House and Lot of grouiel, situate in James street, contain ing in front :I'2 feet and in fleptlo2:3o feet, iljoining, on the north, lot of the Lotherian Church, and on the south lot of the Allen town Academy. Thereon is erected a two story brick 44—L at I)tv Inger us— • e t .0 . ""ay " 2S feet front by 33 feet deep, con taining two sdacious rooms, an entry, and a kitchen on the first floor, and three rooms on the second floor, and large garret. Also a frame Stable, hydrant in the yard, and the . Lot in good order. A good title and possession can be given on the Ist day of April next. The proper ty can be viewed by calling upon either of the undersigned, previous to the sale. J. F. Rutin GEOROE STEIN JON. REICHARD Allentown, November 8. 11-41 V c!) gitt.l Public Notice is hereby given to all per- SO6S, who are indebted to the estate of Jo . - serh Mader, deceased, late of Hanover township, Lehigh county, be it in Notes, Bonds, Book-debts or Vendue-papers, that they shall cull upon the underst„,, , med•one of the administrators, of said decease d, - between now and the Ist of December next, and make settlement and such who have yet le gal claims against the estate, will also pre sent them well authenticated. Oct. '2.5 aouactrao • Notice is hereby given, that the partner ship in the Tailoring businesss heretofore existing between Stetter 4- Getz, is dissolv ed by mutual consent. All 'persons who are indebted in the firm books will please call up on-John /P. Ruhe with whom the books are left for collection, and settle their account between now and the first of De cember next, and such who'have any legal claims against the lion will prsent their ac counts for settlement. EDWARD S ETLER, W ILLIAM GETZ, November 1. Attention LEHIGH FENCIBLES• tir Who Lehigh Fencibles will parade for Inspection, in full ! . *4 whiter unifor:n, on Monday the , 19th inst., at one o'clock in the 111 afternoon. • By order of the Captain, P. S. WENNER, 0. S. November D. ENGLISH & GERMAN JOB PRINTING Olevery description neatly executed at the "Register" office. Great Public Sale PERSONAL PROPERTY. Will lie sold at public sale; on Tuesday. the 27th of November next, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, at the House of the undersign ed, in the Borough ofAllentOwn, the follow ing stock of valuable personal property, to vvit Two Horses, six Cows, all of which are Of the Durham or Devonshire stock, one Heifer, Hogs, a two-horse Wagon, with full Harness, a one-horse Wagon, with har ness, two Wagon-bodies, Hay-ladders with Bolsters, &c., [-lay by the ton, two.Ploughs, two Harrows,W in nowing-mill, Cutting-box, a new patent Cultivator, a common Cultiva tor, a Slay with Iron soles, two Cuttina-box es, for cuttini Hay and Corn fodder, a Plane ing bench with all kinds of Carpenters tools, Grind stone, Cooking-stoves, tables, chairs, and benches, a large variety of house, kitch en and family utensils too numerous to mention. The conditions will be made known on the_day sale and due attendance given by - , -DANIELC. FI.IFX.EAC4 • Allentown, Nov. 8 il• tt:t on 1? o 'I'I o beautiful action Pitimo, of Mr. Mey er's Manufactory. in Philadelphia, which . was used at Mr. Keslor's School exhilii.ion, in the Court House in Allentown, is oilerud fur :ale. ANA). to Al:entown, Nov. 8 The undersio - ned hereby nut ilios Fucl: persons who have their papers delivered by hint, that the year expired on the Ilth ul November, and that they are politely re quested to pay their pobtage either lo tutu or to the pack holders. JOIIN S. KLEMM ER. November 15. Sartain's Union Magazine, The - Acknowledged Blackwood (It America. GREAT INDUCEMENTS To Subscribe for the Volume of 1830. The publishers of Sartains Magazine Lit erature and Art, announce to the read in, public, that whilst their Magazine l''or Pll9 is, acknowledged to be superior in every res pect to any other published in this country, they have made arrangements whereby the Magazine for the next year will excel all its fernier issues. The Literary Depart merit will remain under its control of its present able Editors. Prof. John S. Hart of Phila delphia, and Mrs. Caroline M. Kirkland, of New York, who, besides articles front their 01111 pens every month, have secured con tributions from the best Authors in Europe and America. These contributions, including some of the most brilliant Magazine articles any where to be found, are entirely original, be in!, Written expressly for our Magazine, and lint selected from other publications. 1.1 we connot attract distinQuished names of our list of contributors by the lip: ruiit~ to our prices, or the respectability of our Nlagazine, we assuredly shall not try to gain the appearance of it, by taking extracis from authors of great name, and so mixing them up in our table of contents, and they'shail seem to be original. Mr. Sartain, has entire controls of the pic torial department,und beside embellishments from his own burin, he will be assisted by sonic of the best artist of this country. Worn-out London steel engravings, w hich are used by some periodicals, will not find their way into the pages of—Sartain," under any circumstances. There would be a vast saving to the Publishers in using such plates, us they can be purchased at almost any price, from $23 down to the price of the met al. We aim to give the best, both in I.i:L ma ture and Art. Single copies 25 cents, one Copy $3 per j Annum, and a premium of either a portrait I of the lute ex-Presidents James K. Polk, Witham H. Ha rrison, p oft he Wash ton Family, Genera I Taylor. lietija in in Wes t or Henry Clay. Either of these Engrar ings is worth alone $3. Two Copies i 5 per Annum, and either of the above premiums to each subscriber. Five Copies *lO per Annum, and an extra Magazine and one of the premiums to the agent or person betting up the Club. flaring made an arrangement with the publishers for copies . of the Mehra. ted mezzotint° Picture, "The i death-bed of John Wesley," we make the following liber al offer . : One copy of the Magazine one year, and the Wesley Print, $3, or 20 cbp ies of the Wesley Print, and Nine copies of Sartain's Union Magazine for Thirty .11ol lays. Remember, the impressions are not from a worn-out English plate, but from a new plate engraved in the highest style of the art. Those sending their money early will get proof inipreasions. _Offer Extraor dinary 1 Any new subscriber, sending us Five Dollars prior to the Ist of February, 1850, shall receive in return full sets of Sar• tam's Magazine, for 1849 and 1850, and 2 volumes of Campbell's Foreign Monthly Magazine, & the Washington or Taylor print thus securing.upwards of 3000 pages of lit erary matter, and upwards of 400 engra vings for $5. The post town sending the largest num ber of mail subscriber for the year 1850, prior to the Ist of April next, together with the'adyance payment; will be entitled, gratis, to the Santo number of Sartain'S Magazine, for the year 1851. For the second largest each subscriber shall receive one of our pre mium plates.. Remember, these plates aro of a large size, and suitable for a parlor orna -, ment, • .N • • Persons wishing!to get up a club, will.be supplied with irispecimen number, by wri ting for it, and paying the postage. Terms invariably in Advance. . Joßt SARTAIN &CO., Philadelphia. Nov. 15, _ LEVI. KLADER If-tv _FOR SaILE. C. R. KF,SSLECI Tlic Yost Wan.. TERMS. pric C Curent. ARTICLES. I Per 4ilenl.Easlon Phitdir Flour ;Barrel l 5 001 5 001 5 00 Wheat . .... IBusli.', 951.. 951 I 'O5 Rye 1 -- ' 551 601. ' 5:4. Coro •• 60 50. lit Oats .... . . 1 --.- 1 301 '3O 35 13uelcw heat .. : i _ 501 . 40 ! 5O Flaxseed CI )verseed . . , 1 3 OUI 4 001 4 00 'I iatotliyzeutt .' . 2 25: 2 00; 200 Potatoes .. . ' —.- 401 501 05 Salt .• . . . . . ; 40 45 40 Butter .. . . ;Pound WI 12 1 15 Lard . h. 101 0 Tallow .. . . 9 1 9: S Beeswax .. . 251. 25! 20 [lam . 91 8; 17 Flitch ..•. i i 01 6l 43 Tow-yarn. . . 81 Bi . 0 P.,eirs Doz. j 16! 19: 10 Bye ‘Vhislcev Gull. i 22 , 25 1 2 S Apple Wllislwy —25 i 25 25 I,in, , ;sed Oil . . 'i 051 65 0s hickory Wood i Cord i 4 5o 4 50' 6 us ()ilk_Woo. , l Cott' ii-- lw Nut Coal . .r ==l 14 e.E.Firg I!?rrEe S?..pre T cl , ip; iinorsigned offers his vn'tiuble store stand, at Schantz's 1:21' Mill. in tipper Uacungy township, ( 'minty. It is one of the best in that list of tho county, where an enterprising young ;min con do a very profitable business, it beiii;; to one of the best custom mills in The county. 111 Rose II man of fam ily would take the store, a conveni ent hoti,e can h.! rented to it. HIRAM J. Scii.ANTz. November 1. a . — lw Slue anti Dwelling E The subscriber offers to let that large and spacious Store ZIV.V.--2P..Ei r ooese mad welling on one of the best business corners in Al lentown, directly opposite Llagenbuch's hd tel. It will be complete() in the course of a few and will be rented for a term of Iron 011 e to tire veiirs. It is the chimer. furaierly owned by Port. finb.t.r. The house is three story high, :20} feet front by 91 feet deep, containing besides the Store room, which is 201 feet front by deep, II other convenient rooms, besides celler under the whole of the house. 'J!ho Stole room will be countered on both sides, and particularly fitted for a Wholesale Dry business, an establishment much nee ded in Allentown. Application to be made to tho undersign ed owner of the property. Jolla kilon ton; n, October Church . Consecration. Notice is hereby given, that the consecra tion of the newly erected South inirehall l'hur.•h, will take place, on Saturday and Sunday, the 17th and I.Bth of November next. A number of eminent divines will be present and deliver sermons. The Al lentown orchestra, will add much to the so lemnity, on this occasion, N. 13. I Inel;z4ers, and retailers of ardent spirits, will not be allowed on the ground. Nlicittxv. . • DAVID EBERII A RD, B u ild er. , PETER ICKLEV, PETER 114LLER, October 23 1.4:214e iLv:riaag lon D 11 ISt tat (1) For young Men and Boys. The winter session of this 'school Will corn menet! on Monday the 22d of October next, and continue six months. At this school are taught :dl the branches comprised in a complete course of an English education and ako arxurattly to construe the Prench and SpaniA languages. The price for Tuition, Boarding, Washing and Fuel is $3O . per 12 weeks, if not paid in advance, or $3O for 13 weeks if paid in ad vancv JOHN PRICE, PrincipaL . Soptornher .71. R UAW", ATTORNEY:AND COUNSELLOR AT LAIV. Ilas taken the Mee of the lute Samuel flunk, Esq., and will promptly attend to all business entrusted to his care in this and the adjoining counties. Mr. RUN IC may he consulted in the Ger-; man, as well as English. Refer to Elon. J. M. Porter, Easton, Pa. tune 13. BCD I I a V M Ts hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed Executor in diciest, will and testament of Peter Steckel, deceased, late of South Whitehall towr.ship, Lehigh county. Therefore all persons who are in debted to said estate, will please make set ., dement between now and the 17th day of November next, and also all persons having claims against said estate, will please. to present them within said specified time., RODERT STECKEL, Executor. )tember 27. IS-10. 11-6 w Three Journeymen Tailors TIMM TEJO. The undersigned, residing in Catasauqu,n; next door to Gross's store, wishes to employ three sober and industrious journeymen tat--. !ors, to work on coats. Good handsaw find constant employment ; if application. be mediately made to J. T. MATcunrr. Catasaupurt, October 25th.. !it-1W 1 25! 1 301 1 25 I 3 5(; 3 50' 5 03 Ton 1 3 . 501 4 00 .4 50 - 2 . 50 ; 00 :3 50 :3 50i :3 50 3 60 !450' 4 50: 2 50 iiii-4w -.-lIV