"104intaginiglititsintr for Marell,referring to u treatise on statics and, dipwantrit, recently isstoni Harpers, calla attention to thetbeauty and fret* ig the ensuing pussego !ant+ lie rays ' , cannot fail to carry conviction to ever -candid mind :" " Lmr the centre of Mice be at 8, the origin of coordinates, SP— r the radius tor of the particle at P, P'P—,t/s an el ement arias path, coinciding with the tan gearr,-4.- PST•the angle made by the 940 vector with the axis of x, PSP dw he angle described by the radios vector inm 10,flaitely ?small time dr, inlvdr thb' g inerentent or decrement of the tatlins 1141011011.41b040140 litue. Let the Pm he eacribed with S as a centre, and radius SP,and the arc on' with the radius Sn=-- !," (iertalnly; the a the way to do it; witke the "area of the sector" is left nut ; whieliought always to be done, if possible, whet* : either the increment or decrement ofAlto sadius-vector equals the .2:-erentent Plane rectilincar.triangle . at ALI ! ilia &re ".welLstated by a yVylch, wri te!:in the' glillmtin•g.pass? - ge ; • . ';.'!.-1(1161,E boddloortvytki yn troi imhprth fOtin'yn nets at° iir perfreithrwydd uipOntf y mac yn Odielionadwy iddo gyr- - i.A.: l 3fiuswn tiErtv.—A young friend of miis was undergoing an examination for atimislion to the bar. Judge 8-- had pushed his questions pretty closely, but the candidate was netivr at fault. Finally, thtf Judge pointeed upon him as follows : "Suppose that a Boston importer should come to you with a case like this "—and hero the Judge went on to state one of the Most complicated questions that arise in regard to marine insurance. It was a po tter. Our friend, intending to practice in the country, was not " posted up" on this topic. But he was a Yankee, and he nev er wee aua loss for an answer. So soon asihe Judge had summed up Ids case, and close:ilia with the inquiry, ei Whit - would on say t " our friend promptly replied, .I'nFionlil tell him to sit doivn, Sir, until I could look atlnv books." " The best . thing you could do-;•-the very- then' g you ought to do," rejoined the Judge, "you are admitted, Idr." MASEACIIIISITTS ELECT(OI.7 LVT:"The Bay State has suffered great eirobarrass went and trouble from the requirertient of a majority vote, instead of a/ill:runty, as in this State , —in all her iniportantelections. Within- the last eight years. there have been,.in Massachusetts, eighty trials to lect lumbers of Congress., forty of which wore extra trials—no choice having been effected at the first trial. The House of Representatives has, by. a large majority, passed a Bill substituting a plurality vote -thus the highest number, and . riot a ma"; jority of all. the votes polled, will lie-aufk Cient to elect. .The change iiLfavorable the Whig pnrty. Ta s Fauitr or PERS ectrition,,The craf ty imposters at the head of the-Mormon deltt!!ion could have derived no Mposefreor' iiY4.ca,pperstiop than dial affordstl.hyibeir versecuturs at 'Nay voo and ; elsewhereer— They are .now rearing.up ..Rgiremit people in the (ar West. Already the settlement is established beyond the fear . of any t.erse ; and the current of emigration' is , etrong and steadily increasing. The col-' ony, on the Lake numbers eight thousand and is highly prosperous. •Thousand of new converts.are on their way to the land •The Sl. Louis' Rtpublican says : • • ..Those who do not know these people, or hive not the means of witnesiting the extent of their proselytism will be surpris ed at the number who are connecting themselves with the Mormon Church.— The persecutions they have met with have only given them strength, influence and vympathy ; and the persons who are now joining them are, in intelligence and pro perty, above the rank which has usually been ascribed to their members." CAPITAL PVNIPIINENT IN MICHIGAN.- There ie no probability of the passage of the law restoring capital punishment. No one has asked fur it except a portion of the Jurors of Wayne county. On the other hand, petition after petition has reach ed here against any alteration of the law. That forwarded by the Quaker's, attheir yearly meeting, last month, is well drawu u,p., Public sentiment favors a long trial urthe present law, before an attempt is made to repeal it.--,Detroll ddverl.ccr. Eatslaud in India. thtetruthfu I details of the late battle between the British and the Indian forces under the lia. jab tiliwens Singh, tivill.tio doubt prove that the story of the Bombay nlegraph—a paper in the pay of the East India Company—is hula clum sy excuse for a dreadful and unexpected over throw. The British struggle for rho Punjaub country is Likely. to result in disaster to all its other India possessions. The natives fight like devils under a galling tense of English cruelty, perfidy. and baseness. They were not intimidated by the bloody capture of Moulton on the 9d of January, when, for blowing tato the air their women nod children, Gen. 11 high, the British commander, compensated his artil lerymen on the nd. That siege was sustain otdby; the ezikh Chief hlpolraj, with unprece delltbil bravery. kw more than a week, ' and nothing but the explosion alluded to worsted him at Wit. It splash; that lindannted by this revere% that tearless chief retired to the open rountry, and arrayed Itiensell under the banner of 'the grata insurgent Rajah "Slivvere Singh, whoeeViiteM have just defeated, (as defeat it will prove to bas t ) the, British army of Lord Gough and lien. Phack well—a defeat that re vialtetil is the billing and wounding of ninety thta 00106111 And twenty-five hundred men, of the, British 410 their allies, and the capture of intiv guni anal ore regimental colors. Thsiolliieleter the British gomernomeno, in her doratiotio and foreign policy, is destined. under Primaidettee. to other rebukes end reverses. A reteettotittolletioto sad wrong such siahaaner lerheti wteatose^d in any age, C/101102 be aanc• till `be the pratetteion alio aspires to colight tott,mtwit. **Moe mem, and to chromtianiam the ig stefloot *ad- the 'heathen. A civilization that elditait its Way to dominion with the sword— , teligiott fos Mitt, whose diplomacy is et MIMS /bulged, and witneefumace V io= Ilio . , I,4poitilisivitior erlttio....is a cheat lb. S,i ik tietti - alml loom. ' We Melee that ittkillallamboemblial he the dual by " . we wise Italni/ Lemma front British belt Alsotwo the poweelhet.belonge to 'Ott' . 4ttiittit.,44,:" • F".,. ; -:-] ,, , 1,11/21.1,10,.!,', r ' " larriftVrtreAMA • . /Battle: 7 in flittia—Ahip wre4k• spf•Lge—Cfrorts to-Reinstate the.Pooc, &c. T i heittearnet Canada 'arrived at New York on the 4.5 th ultimo, With two weeks later dates . - from Europe. We 111111 C X. a summary of the news, which is of considerable importance:— The cholera is on the wane in England. Tits whole number of cases is about 11,000; of which 6,000 proved fatal ; 4,000 recovered, and the balitnce are under treatment. It has appeared in the South of Ireland, and several fatal cases have occurred in Cork and Limerick. The weather has become spring like. Trade still languishes in Ireland. The plies of grain continua to droop week after week. k great change is in progress throughout the whole United Kingdom. The Pope has addressed to the foreign en voys a protest against the proefernstion of a Republic at Hoene. In the sitting ofthe Roman Constituent Assembly, on the 1 2th, the Minis ter Sterbint, in the name of the Minister of Pi nonce, presented a bill providing that all eccle siastical property shall henceforward belong to the State. . The Pope has published ,a proclamation. , warning persons not to purchase !any chnvolv property that may be offered fur sale by the Roman Republican Government. Letters from Rome, of the 94th, announce that a Neapolitan army of 141,D00 men, vita approaching the Roman frontier.- Gtm.Buciehi commands the advance guard of the Neapolitan army. . , Letters from Romp, to the 24th nit, state theta corps of seventeen thousand Neapolitan troops was reported to have arrived within's few miles of the Roman frontier,• at Pondkia Rlace not far from Terrecina. About 25,00 oman troops were distributed , bete/lea Rothe and the same frontier, tinder Garibaldi. All the Austrian property in Rome has been confiiiiiii ted, as a retaliation for the contrihations lately levied by the Austrians, at reiresk On the the Assembly decreed the confiscation ttf . the entire properly of the church. The parish clerks only were to have salaries paid -to thine) by the Stale. The salaries of all the cardinals, except five, who continued to reside within the Roman territory, were suspended. Austria. it is said, is determined to proceed_ in concert with Naples, to reekons th e Pope, more especially, as not only the eithblicipaer. era of Banda and Belgium, bet the Protestant powers of Rnglant, Prossia'and Wirtembefg, offer to preserve. the Papal Gatrainmeot in the interest of Wealth of pow., is Europe. eta the maintinththie of the prenend peace. It is calculated that the, appearance on the Roman territory of an army Of 10,000 inert. would be sufficient to bring otbout the restoration of the Pope whhoot (fing shot . The Epoci, o fßome,of the 25th ult., Oates from Naples, that the ritiSh Minister, Temple; had protested against Neapolitan intervention in the Roman States. - Lettere from Rome by Vienna, armor**, that Austria hes offered the Pope eid- en urea and money. - Thg Czar, has declared himself In hie firm:. The Perris said to have obtain.• ed a loan crisis millions of scud' id Russia ' The (rightful wreck of an eilligrant ship has taken place on our coast, off Harwicke. The barque Floridian. of folbl tons berthen. E D. Whiunors, miteter, from Antwetp; for NO* : York—theipropeny of higsara. E. E. Hurlbut, /k C 0.,: chartered by-a German' company to convey emigrants.** irholly:lost on the 99th alt., and horrible to relate anon board perishcid, ' except three: individuals who were miraeuloue lyreacued from death. - . . The details of the late' war-like. Intelligence from India, are ;of more intereat,lou we at present maks but * * brief allusion to the subject. The Bombay roleirvig says 'another Inef.i 4er° l " l 'Millie* with-thir Siklis has occurred on; the left beak 'of the river 'helm, between the army Of the Ptinjab. under Lord Gough, and, the _ .Sikh :lore.. The §lkhe, under Rajah •Shwere iStigll. A struggle; in which the Eriftab here to deplore the loss of 99 officers ailde99oo men killer) and.wounded—retir Vets I T - riskarutiont ar`live retrimental . coldrs , • , tigkonepay. ~.- • . - - . -- • akfig , a struggle terminated in. victory, but was idiogriettCley` fife . light' or the Bengal cavalry' regiments; acid the retreat, as yetncaroely Mite isfactorily explained, of two British corps of 'i l 'Ag oo tYl•A struggle which left the contend. ing hosi 'so weak and shattered, that it was doubtftst which had aristiiheil the•greatest in jury front' the conflict, and which yielded' an few of Maladies of triumph for the shame, that the ePPontsult took a new position end/red' a salute in honor of its termination. Though master of the fteld, our levels a ..dratteheA . _,Wilh.b/ood._ and. it..iiolie.itirmi re lied ' universal opinion that two more such vietorlei would be ritual ruin. No attempt is made by the English pietas to disguise the fact that the news from India is of the mostdisestrous character. • .. Lord Gough has been proniptly stil►erseded in the command by Sir Charles Napier, who was to bavd proceeded to the scene of hada , ties on the 20th ult. . . . . The French government. continues to gather strength, and there is evidently a growing dia., position on the part of the nation to crush any attempt at public ditiorder--opon that whole, the prospects of tranquility aro more &voluble than they have beenduking the past years LATER FROM COL.YREMONT-Drwrd ful Sufferings 'of the Periy!.--A iistipstoh from St. Lbuts to the Philadelphia Atneridan, states that an arrival brings Santa Foliates to the Rd of February. The -Independence Republican contains letters from New 3lexico, representing the winter there to have been of unusualseseri ty. Col. Fremont, whom last accounts left on his way to California several Miles beyond Puebla. lost one hundred arid thirty makes In one night. , Being then left on foot , be came to Shot:ono clubion that it was impossible to proceed firr they, end finally he deepatched throe me n to seek the nearest aett/ement and procure sueraw. 'ride party- not returning in twenty dars,,,Col. Fremont started himself for ,Tans, distint\oo miles, where he arrived in nine days. Major Beale immediately despatched a party of dra goons. with mules and provisions, to relieve Col. Fremont's men. Col. Fremont, though match entatilitaiind worn out by anxiety and the deprivetiehe to which he had been subjeeted,secompanied the dragoons. The sufferings of the party are represented' to have been so very great that they leer...sea. reduced to the necessity of feeding upon the bodies of their ere/tirades. Mr. Green, who brought this news toil-Inde pendence, left Santa Fe several days alter its publication. Later reports say that all of Col. Fremont's party perished except himself, sod he is badly frost-bitten. , . Our correspondent at IndeiienJenee° eipres sea doubts as to the corteetnestof this news, but we do not see with what 'liaison.. RILEY, THE DESERTER.-4 letter in the Paiutorkst CArunicle, from one of a party bound to California, by the way of Mexico, has the following notico of Col. Riley:—" At Ja lapa we were called be by Col. Riley, the Irish deserter, (sn called.) lie is an officer in the Mexican army, and says be has been un justly punished by Gen. Newt, as he never was an Atnerican citizen, nor was he enrolled in the American army. He came to Mexico on his own hook, and asked a commission from Gen. Taylor; was refused, and as his object was to make money, he joined the Mean:ems, and after serving in all the battles, was taken at Cherubusco. lie received two hundred stripes, the letter I) was burnt in his cheek, and he imprisoned nine months. He intends as wan ea Gen. Taylor takes his wet, to apply to the V. 6. for Tedresa. willed', if his story is true, he will undoubtedly get. It is said Gen. Taylor Troyer considered birn a deserter. Ile Ma fine speeitnen of an Irish gentleman, arid a friend to all Americans. hie has great influ ence here, end has helperi many Americans that were in trouble here. _ Wedined with him on Sunday sad had a eery pleasant time." tirmt fAktitkilt EZMZE G :r11;11 1U R, G. -• I , #riday Evening, March 30, iB4O. CITY At; ,B. I'acmCßy Eaq. corner of Chesnut & Third streets, and t, W. CARR, het. Sun Baihling,N. E. Corner Third hock ,tteets. Philadelphia ; and War. THOMPSON, Eiq.South-eitet coiner of Baltimore &tkiuthsts. Baltimore-4re oar authorized A gent, far reeei ing Advertisements and Subacriptiona for "The Star and Banner,' . .and collecting and reeeipting for the same. 1111111 1 1 1. UMIX,EUMn=I,4„ Tat ii~timo beintsissitutei of daring up his hooky cogoefel, these indebted ~to ,bins for Out , . sorption or .1.4 i Work, to call and Mike P•7, , W00t 'Whir null slaty as possible. Sills will be .111111011 %Kiri intd plyewrat eon be Made tither to My. Aalf ix betaken—, ~ ita manse: is , winia wanner, to meet sundry engagements connemed **Albs coup duct of the office, it is hived that ihose intoreste d will attend to the manic atlonct . DLANKnew hat of Common, , Execonine and Adminialcators' rieedi Mo rtgagee, site., just jrt a on Roperior paper, and for sale at this office. Irgihs theiletit page of today's pa per, over the_sinattutt of "Little Rough and Ready," is from the pen ore writer not unknown to fame, whose opanibutions to, the literature of molyed, ant who occasions Ily; honor's die "Star" as tbomedium ofeotnniunicaullPeltheilitkinsifite to the Ths writer is a *lntel; ottlioilo* politician, as well as a good pod IRO Portia," mooncet. TOWS,OLP ELECTIOOIB.—On the first pato will be found teooeeaies ttable of the officers elected throughout the county, sk the the Town• ship elections. It has been compiled from the official returnsin the office of the Clerk of the Courts. ID — lion. Totes Voormaretumed to his home • few days Woos, with health somewhat impaired by clean application to public dues during the winter. We regret to learn that he has made up his mind to minors to Pottsville, Schuylkill coun ty, early Ibis spring. 101/"The Storm en Toesdsy last extended to the Atlsndc coast, doing considerable damage to buildings, Telegraph wires, dtc. Twelve span of the nevi:lLdiecied bridge, near Harrisburg, were torn away by the wind. It is find that the shipping along the Atlantic suffered considerably. 1117 The ilsriiwer Spectator says that • copper mine has lately been eliscinered on the farm of Henry Gitt, El' 4., near that borough. Ho has leased It to a gentleman skilful in mining who Pronounces it eecellent ore. LEtiIBI.A TlVE.—The bill for completing the Narili Branch Canal, wu called up in the !louse on Wednesday, by Mr. Little; and the que,tion was taken on Mr. Bales amendment sutheeizing the issue 'uf Small not.s by the Banks, which car ried—Yeas 43; Nays 42. The bill was then put upon its final passage, and negatived—Yeas 30, Nays 46. Mr : Chalk, of Philadelphia. has introduced into this Senate; a billso abolish the symem of fees and perquisites of:Shoring, Prothonotariee, Record ers, Clerks-of Courts, and other county officers, end make them salaried. officers. There is little liklibood of itnpaerage.. The Uenerat Schaal Bill passed the House A eallyin ea Thinadsly, /pith artv.e s t An a endment uttered try Mr. Niclnitson, repeal ing the act compelling the non-accepting districts tb' accept the common seimoraystena, was voted down—teas 19, Nays 47. Another amendineM, permitting the nr.n-accepting disaricui to retain one-ildril of the State taxa collected in the nate, for three years, for their benefit in erecting school bonsai, &c, was adopted—Yeas 40, Nays 33, The bill to establish a General Manufacturing Late, has heed negatived in the House—Yeas 30, .Nays 39. Weiesiti, the projector of the 'hail. road from the Vieriesippi to the Pacific was in tianiibtlri Lot week , and sakes's(' the Mem bers of the Legislature in favor of the • reagibility of the project, Resolutions were neat dry intro• ducal into the Legielsture ittferor of the scheme, and passed unanimously. PLIGHTS OF FAliCY.—Within the last few weeks we have had aU sorts of reports of this and that from Washington, Originating with brain lees/ newspaper correspondents, and we presume they'will be eicintinned for theirstifleation of gUell as ant silly enough to place any reliance upon them,. One, of tiw latest was a report of a Cabi net Council, at whinh - Messrs. Maring and Ord lamer announced themselves in favor tt pre. *captive policy, the other members condemning ib Mr. Fillmore warl'also 'said to be in favor of proseription. The Natiostal Whig rays that there la not *Angie word of trith in the statement from beginning to end r and that each a tbrmaldisevow al is due to the eminent gentlemen, whose MINN have been 'thus unwarrantably dragged Jtsfere the public to give conntensmne toe piece of sheer Action,—Daily Mies. OZrefr. R. R. Powau withdraws tont the Chamberabing Va/b7 &whiter—the tottiblish taint pinning line disbands of A. H. 831 , 111,P41.1 who his :been etinitcted'iprith the piper daring the past pear. Mi. entre - is'a young flan of fine capacity, *ed.& ready writer. The " Senti nel," noder, hie ettspidee. Aherne; rather natal In int I.oenforoieln, has, become reran of the woes n•idable Piro .1410, le* receive. If . the Dewar racy of Franklin know bow to eppreniate a good paper, they will ;ha the "Sentinel " • liberal pa. Etientrlt Of U. $. SENA.TOI2B.--The Senate 'of Wireoulit Itei pissed joint reeohnien inittruttiett 'them. Seenitorr . endrequeeting their Repreeentativei in con/rear toptiopome end advo cate, 'en annesdnsent to the' Tionetitutton eft the United Stater, triejniy t the people,, instead anise Legieleturne of the, thfretent Stow, Ow tight to sleet U. S. Benator4 by tit. gptnerid ticket. PROSCRIPTION.—ks answer to the Wary which some of the Locoruco organs Wore atteorpt• ed to raise at the appointments under t l tte new ed• ministration, and thoir ridiculous falaidioode - sheet " martyrs" and "proscriPtion," $ tidier In the Norfolk Herald publinhes a list of I id 'Whig offi cers in Washington City alone, who were Mawr cd during the first (our months of Mr. Polk's reign of terror, to make room for Locofocos. The quse Lion naturally arises, should the latter be allowed to roman. • GEN. SCOTT.—The Legislature of , York has adopted a restitution, withbrit dents or * dissenting sole, tendering the thanks °fibs State to Winfield Scot!, for his public services. GODEY'S LADY'S BOOK, fur April, Nut been received, embellished with about 26 distinct engravings, and containing the usual quantity of superior reading matter. Terms $9 per annum, with a copy of the "Lady.' Dollar Newspaper;' ur 2 °Tin of each for 05. THE CRY OF PROsCROIMN illitHE t i a le I Loccltoctos.—Tho py or Joon roliod .4. ilk. 4mofacesodho Gm and hunt ed,tlohrnitheifia;twe i ik , , with the f if) , (haw ' to h t "fey, is ed. hly Pt byte to a ' from the e L to x 6earireei 4is fltl‘oll, nd el" IA p m . iiiini . ty n cad to cry lOolterip egailar ell& Adm fetretion, when it is well known that the filii yell of the whole peek aria kept lip Air the; election Of Mr. I Pnitt..ontiM th, few Wlitio whickwere left in office bilitei, were made 4. riciims of the (Mao. Moor The American nye: IThe poderation 'Weights marked, the tlinfluerofthd edw AdMinlstritlion his not 407, 9 940.): 11 0 euterY4tf certain journals whose columns abound with such phrases ea " Proact4tieri," :if vietinnt," . the Mgiill !mine." the working of the ale." "chop. ping off heads ", and the . like. These are terms of daily use, and have get to he 5 0 'Mitch a part . of the Political vernacular as .to be of longer regarded as fignistive. -• Considering the source from which such .04.-utica POW. the sensative mind is.lotieh ell, These claitnants of sympathy. these ministers of Woe, who express such bor. tor al the idea' of proscription. - are pe'ett. 'hourly entitled to mmsideration from the fact .that tlie'ly are speaking in behalf of a pnrty that never proscribes. How forci ble is their appeal ! They call upon their friends'in office to stay there—as long as they can. One geutleman..in the posses. sion of a good place, has ',smite a hero ..annonriciag magnaaiinously..-that he would do sn; and a cettainournal has Mr' viveal some retuititseences of the saving of the Caitlin - I by declaring that it would put out its neck like an old Roman, rather than leave its nest. It is the beautiful propriety of the thing to which, we invite the reader's attention —the - admirable consistency. SATAN re bilking SIN never rose to a loftier attitude of the •sublitam. Passing the hounds oT ordinary impudence ; the demeanor of this outraged patriotism ascends to the height of a most imposing effrontery. It ig poetical in the boldness of its fanciful conception; it illustrates the picturesque of pqlitics. tbe rhapsody of humbug. The Black Ilussareof proscription con verted into meek wayfaring pilgrims ; po litical adventurers, who have become place. ' men, turned suddenly into patriots ; de. vourers of spoils, the harmless and tender nurslings of the Treasury. Such a meta morphosis has not been seen since the days of Om, who tells how a hunter be came a stag, and that JUPITER himself was disguised - in a shower of gold. - It will be borne in mind that the new Adminisiration has not made itself liable , to the charge of proscription in any sense ; but it is also to be remembered that the ejection from office, or the refusal to re. , appoint men whose sole or chief claim to place is founded upon the doctrine of "spoils," is not proscription. Quite the contrary. It is the very sort of reform I which the times require, and which good men will approve. Not, indeed, that the places of ouch be filled by new incumbents ! upon the ground of the same doctrine ; but by men honest, capable and faithful, who are respected for their worth, and whose occupancy of office will impart as notch respectability to the place as the place may confer distinction on the occupant. Among the Acts tetenlly passed by the Legislature, and approved by the Govern or . we ..ssars.44lhtlkfl,, stllnswoon to Adams cotaity See. 4. That. hereafter, whenever the Commissioners of the cronies et Franklin or Adams, exonerate any collertor of the State or county taxes, from the collection of his duplicate, they shall cause their Clerk to enter is a book to be immured by them, the name of the Collector exonera ted, the name of the person whose tax is exonerated..the amount of said tax, and whether due on County, State or State per sonal, and the amount due on each, and also _tbe reason- why they have granted such exoneration, which entries shall be signed by the ComniissionerS present, as. sensing at the same time, and attested by their Clerk, Sec. 3. It shall also be the duty of the said Commissioners to keep a hook, in which they shall open accounts against the es vein! Collectors of County and State taxes by then appointed, charging- the said Collectors, in separate accounts, with the amount of taxesssaessed in their respect. ive districts fir County or for State pur poses, as the same appears uponthe du. plicate,. Sac. 8. It shall also be the dots , of the the Treasurer of said Counties of Frank lin and Adams. to. give duplicate receipts to each of ,ail Collectors, foeall payments made to him on Count); or State team specifying the amount paid on each, and it shall thereupon be the duty of the said Collector, imetediately to deposit one of said receipt. with the Cominissionens of said County, and until he shall do so he shall not be' entitled an his duplicate for the amount so , aid to said Treasurer. Lair An indivislisel nomad John W. 1111Thenson, charged with stewing a home in Alexandria on the rfth inat., wy arrested within a few mike of this place on Eirturday last, having this horse in his possession. Alter an examination, he was committed to jail,to *wait the regnialtion of the Governor of Virgisia.--Cmposiler. 11:THon. Disaiitix A. DUPLACIII, the Atneri. can Charge Jr Akaites 'la BogoM, died M "tha t !hoary,` in In aptipleetle Hr. Sidle* was a prominent and lalluential att ain aillorthemi ehmsylvanim and for i mangier etyma minianaleil the tusetne xlioltivt In Con. gram. His death was unimmially lamented by On natives, end thosael his mouptrymen nt, as li'Veitfilion be 'me home. ,ANOVE# I MR I4I / 1 0- - .Thl n P4Pe state gad on Muiwhy last two eons of Mr, hew ; Strickler, of egad V ima 1 r .ter. playing With a 6* of O'doider wbicli *hid Nen placed in the 'Weir rehidenee: 'Toy wine Immo the' polder ignited,• blowing err the root albs hotter, gad otherwise/Riming duo build. inS• *lsl7s saboagh beaky burned, were not otherwise injured. mit i s ',wail t!ikt, CoI. It Allah Id Washington feel no sterehensions as to the . sa f ety , .. of Col. PrinnOnt and mod of his party. por tion adios intelligence lately recelired Louie, they think is correct, but not the whole of They ars inclined to disbelieve the worst features U:rit boiler in the Cotton Factory of the Meanie. Fife, at Alleging, Pa., exploded on Monday reducing the bullring to a mass of 'ruins, which took Ike, and, with 'wend adjoining buildings, won consumed. Some 25 persons wore engaged in the building at ;the tune, air of whom were known to be killed. The inhere worcirions or loss injured. Mr. Jamie Fife, hie daughtir and sista, a nephew, so f • Sim Vitale), were among the 104 . .. .. .. Tam STATE or Eitorn.—The political ce as 1 ottha lfuro ' horitols iiiiienli - to d ketstrgigiin. tits is qt, 7.711 , gi prom e Hof liplet . r some um 'loitoine. i A tiiii it! Italic) affairs, ho ester, ate fts „MA, worse,Of possi blet than they vat bee sloes Iht first Inftriirst dire ;evolutionary storm on the Continent, over a twelvemonth , ago. The Pope is still at Geste, where, from present appearances, he is likely to be permitted to• stay as long as he chooses ; but reports gaipgronutilhip,Ahsre f is to be a coalition oreother i ofthe pew/14'11w his restoration to , Paine. . •he bold move. l n 3 P I B , Nicholas of Russia Is. making skh his thirty or forty ihousand soldiers, gives an intense importance le the movements in that , quarter. "The. Treaty of 1815," says. the Autocrat, "must be preserved ;" snd hence, the various changes Continen tal'Ewro-pe has been of late undergoing, from the line of policy that waslaid down in the memorable convention of crowned heads at Vienna, are to receive no counte nance in him' or his. . FATHER MATIIEW COMIMG.—fn a let. let from father Matthew to M. Alton, Esq., of Pittsburg, dated at Cork, Feb. 94 1849, publish ed in the Pittsburg Gazette of Monday lest, this grezt Apostle of Temparsoos asps: • "Now that the position of:lreland bears aliiighter pri)spect, and that my health is sufficiently re-established, to permit me, without risk, to ewes the Atlantic, I pro pose myself that long desired privilege in April. During the ensuing month of May, I hope for the happiness of seein g i you and my other friends in Pittsburg.' GEN. TAYLOR'S IDEA OF CONDREISSION• AL RESPONSIBILITY.—The Washington Whig alludes to the fact that on the lest night of the session, the General Appro priatitin Bill came near being lost, and says : ""it is suspected that the opposers of the bill desired to kill it, in order to force an extra session. When this idea was broach ed to Glen. Taylor, we learn that it gave him not the slightest uneasiness. lie re marked, that the Legislature had ifupreine rontrol over the subject ; that if it did not pass the Appropriation Hill, he should on ly be obliged to put the Executive Gov ernment on abort allou'anee ; and that if it came to this it would be no inconveni ence to him, as lie was used to short al lowances." CHOLERA IN THE %V EST.—The Nash ville Banner of the 17th announces the re appearance of the cholera in that city.— Four deaths had recently occurred from that disease. The Louisville Journal, of the 20th, says "The New Orleans steamers of the past two or three days have again brought the Cholera up the river. The Bride un her fast trip had a large number of eases, four teen of whist) proved fatal. On the Geo. IVashington, previous to her arrival at Memphis, there were fifteen deaths, and on the Creole three deaths. At the last New Orleans dates the weath er was very hot and sultry, causing sick partiruturky among , ettngrains, to be alarmingly prevalent. REVOLTING STATE OF Tarsus.—All the letters from un board the steamer California, as she neared San Francisco, represent the state of things there as perfectly revolt ing, --according to the accounts received a long the toast. The diggers collected in San Francisco during the rainy season, had given themselves up to gambling and drinking. These letters also confirm_ the apprehended trouble with the foreigners, u hu were all armed, and whom the Amer ieans on board the California had deter mined should not go to mining. The de sertion of the steamer's crew, also, is con fidently spoken of, on the plea that their lime is out. Some had already refused to work. The uniformity of the letters on these snhjects, gives more than ordina ry force to their statements. Nawsramits.--The following, from the Liverpool Mercury, is not inapplicable to many persons in this part of the world, and to such we recommend its careful pe rusal:— Every subscriber, thinks the paper is printed for his special benefit, and if there is nothing in it that twits him, it must be stopped—it is good for nothing. Some people look over the deaths and marriages, and actually complain of the editor if bet few people ha his vicinity have been so fortunate as to get married, or so unfortu nate as to die. An editor should have such things in his paper whether they oc cur or not. Just as many subscribers as au editor may have, just so many different tastes has he to consult. One wants stories and poetry ; another abhors all this. The politician wants nothing but politics. One must have something smart; another some thing sound: One likes anecdptes, fun and frolic ; and the next ,door neighbor wonder: that a man Of centre will put such' stuff in .a paper. We onlywish that every man, woman and ohitd who roads a pawl were compelled but .one single : month to, edit one. They Would 'find that it is not quite so easy a manai as they at nest i posed it to be. " ' ' irrThe U• S. Finale miljoyined on Friday lust. NOT, Tat/L-4M rimer that Towitaasio HAYMIS had J; 1 40 1 1.4 big nee. as Oestatary of that!, is not ;enact. Tat OlittAT Buix BATtLZ.-.4t is said the„great ,battle ibidt tha , Sikhap on the loolt,plaixt near, or as some say, on the identical grinmd, which, 2,000 years ago, formed the battle• fi eltrof Alex ander and Itycclina... ; • ;, r • 'Etriarato 4 f4ciai.—AVe notice thal ex periment. have recently been fried in fen der', which have proved very istisfeeterily thim,eleotric light may be . applied to, the il lumination of cities, light-houses, 4tc.— The light has been raised upon the Duke of York's column and other eminences, and reflected in various directions with the most brilliant effect. Tax COAL BUSIIEL—The Legislature of Pennsylvania has just passed an act es tablishing a measure of bituminous coal, the bushel of which shall be 2,088 cubic inches—or in other words—five pecks of the Wiuehestcr or common grain measure. THU AIMS. Loomsarres MITMITID.— yrro New York Tribittmeiiiihtf Sinew §igt4ulit of the experimintit this meohlhe ma Tuesday. , hibition of the m of r bjelpee. atrial locomoti ode /day afternoon ig the xeh and rfectly or 1 spindle-shaped balloon, made of gold-beat -1 er s akin,.was about ten feet long, to which was suspended a steam-engine in miniature, weighing—fire, water: 4stiOniplitoi-L-- about three or four pounds. Notwithstand ing its diminutive sae, the engine turned, the light padle-wheels of the machine with ease, and kept in motion as long as the via ter Jested. t Tine nsdderrentseet 40111 ths helium!. in a At, , started from the eas t ern door of t al e ßotutitii, and went up stettifilY,'tiroPelled the'engine, in a reguftir gyration to the root—making two full circles on' its ' way. Here, a weight having been attached. it descended in a spi ral, following the eat of the rudder, and landed safely. This experiment was re pented a seeond thrie With a like result, and so farm flying' in a quiet atmosphere goes, the locomotive was fully success ful. It remains to be soon whether a large machine, aim ilarly constructed, would safely resist the violent commotions of the open air. There was a large number of persona present yesterday, who testified, by, a hearty applause, their opinion of the exhibition - • - ROTATION IN OFFICE.—At s meeting of the citizens of Seekoult. Brintol county, Masa., on Monday week, P. T., A bell, Esq., was re-elected Town Clerk, an office of, considerable responsibility and importance! in that State. The Pawtucket Chronicle .states that Mr. Ahell and his father have been annually re-elected to the office for nearly half a century—the . father for thirty-six years receiving the entire vote of both political' parties, and the son for the last twelve years. This is rotation from father to son I SIGNIFICANT FACT.—The New Orleans Crescent publishes the report of a commit tee appointed for the purpose of ascertain ing number of deaths by Asiatic cholera which occurred among the Sone of Tempe rance in that city, and the adjoining towns, during the recent epedetnic. The com mittee state that there are twelve hundred and forty-three members of the dif f erent divisions in New Orleans, Lafayette, Al giers, and Gretna. In these divisions three deaths only occurred, and in some of them not a case of cholera took place.— Of those who died, one had been a mem ber but a week, another less than a month, and the third was a watchman who was much exposed. The proportion of deaths in the city was fifteen to every thousand souls, while in the Sons of Temperance the proportion was one in mom than each four hundred members. Dears 'Es —A pious old negro, while saving grace at the table, not only used to ask a blessing on all he had upon his hoard, but would ales petition to have sime de ficient dishes supplied. One day it was known that Cato was nut of potatoes, and suspecting that he would pray for the seine at dinner, a wag provided himself with it small measure of the vegetables, and stole under the window, near which stood the tattle of our colored Christian ; soon Cato drew tip a chair and commenced : "Oh, mesas J e ord 1 will now dy provi dent kindness condescend to bless evert• dog before us ; and be pleased to stow op• on us just a few Caters—and all de praise," —(here the potatoes were dashed upon the table breaking plates and upsetting the mustard pot,) "Dent's cm, mason Lord !" cried Cato, "only jiat luff 'etr, down a lit tle easier next time !" MARVELLOUS COINCIDENCES.—One of those remarkable cases of presutiment, or "second sight," that have occurred at in tervals to the confusion of all human ere ulation in every age of the world, hits just been brought to our knowledge in this city. The daughter of a highly respecta ble family, a child of some twelve yearn, who had been ill of fever for some days, told her parents in a paroxysm of delirium 'in Monday evening, that her brother, who was on board the packet ship Devonshire, coining from London, was then within twenty miles of home, and had with him sundry presents for them, specify in among other things five books with -red covers, gilt edges, dm The vessel arrived the [text (yesterday) morning, and the return of the brother with the specified presents verified the truth of her marvellous im pression. When the brother entered her chamber she recognized him at once, and on the instant interrbgated him-eoneerning the presents which she said she had dream ed ; when he colirmed her prediction in every particular. She then immediately relapsed into delirium —Newark Daily ddrertiser. • SWORD POR PRESIDENT ritum.--The Ames Company et Chicopee, Mass., have just completed a magnificent sword, by or der of the Virginia Legtelature, far Gen. Taylor. It is the richest and most cele brated finished production of the kind yet brought nitt by thafeminent company, and is a lit .present to the General, whose pru dence mid. abilities won for hintself so high. renown in the fiat campaign of the MexPl can War. Theltilt of the sword is of so lid gold, richly chased ; the scabbardis of sliver, thickly plated with gold, and ado - ed with heavy gold mountings.. The whole 1 13 MN - aces 800 penny weights ufgold. The value of the sword is 1111000. The scab- Likud has the folloWing engraved inscrip :-.-:..Presented by Virginia to hertlit. tingttished . son, Major General 'Zachary Taylor, for his- gallant and good , orindinst at Palo Alto, Resaca dele,Palms,,Monte ? rey, and Buena Vista.' EXPURGATION OF "LAW LATIN."...-The Legieltitoni'of New Yoilt ha r e dateimined to exterminate all "law ,Istin" front legal PrPefie4 41 8 . _ Pis , ague, of .thio., raayg, mem wag eaep. in jhe court of Cowi:to Pleas, in blevv - Vork City , hy the'ricital - of a reatent'sust of the' Assembly, which soya : "Witeru4defittm4snt iu. *bang, to loop the Staie. whereby, the,tighte ,of the plaintiff maybe ntpaired an eider of olio Go, may be graitled,•and this shall be a substituie for ths writ heretofore known es the writ of'oe e;gat.' " The new legal , expression "No (lo" called up such .a ludicrnua sew elation of ideas from the vulgar significa tion hitherto attached to it, that the whole bar burst into laughter. SENATOR WRITCOMII.--lt has been gen erally believed that Gov. Whitcomb, re cently elected to till Mr. Hannegan's place_ in the U. S. Senate, 'is a Free boiler.-- The Union avouches that so far from har k* any sympathy with the Free Soil par ty, he regards it as wisehievnus in its do. signs, and hostile to the best interests of the country. SnirOULAR AND SAD FATALITY...-:Ilie A i r recordo m a death, by en nothrtimac t 'ciao orirni Ther member of the Hoch family, ' gichrnond township. A p n ,„,.. living so of the late Joel'lloelt. (wt,,,„ death by Ilill from a wagon, was antiont.• cisd sev I weeks ago) about 12 yea r r u f ' age, had hei misfortune, un Tuesday, th e Ifth inst .; 'While riding a horn employed in propelling a threshing-machine, 40 1,11 into the wheel-work of the machine, whit - t !mini ill rapid tuotion„ tots the flesh em u . pletely Aline of the legs; below the knee, and fractured the bone, before he could be extricated. He survived .yilil n t lay, in excruciating 20444- witinAles tput am end to his sullinnis. •-•.' Provideime tanntiii'Vhilie inarketrnitt this familytas the. peculiar; object of its af flictive dispensations. ,About sa, year ago, Mr. Samuel Hoch lost hia life by falling from a hay-wagon; lost winter, the barn of Mr. Joel Hoch, with all its valuable ontents, was burnt to the grotind t a few weeks since, Mr.Aloch himself fell front a hay-wagon, and was instantly killed; and now the above sad, accident occurs, to add to the sorrowful record.—Reading Gazette, BENTON UN THE PROTUCELL.T.-841MEIOE Benton has commenced a serious attack on the late administration. in reference to the Protocol to the Mexican Treaty. He attempts to prove that the Protocol Firece ded the ratification of the Treaty by the Mexican Vongress. and.not. subsequent to it, as appeared by Mr. Polk in his message. He gives two reasons for his present course: first, because the dignity of the senate should be asserted ; and, secondly. that we owe it to the credit of the country to treat a weaker nation, like Mexico, with magnanimity. He maintains that ;he Treaty would never have been - ratified by Mexico, without the Protocol, and that the signing of the instrument was a monstrous assumption of power on the part of the Commissioners. He also agreed that the Protocol is in direct contravention of the Treaty, and vitiates those portions of it to which it refers. He charger! Mr. Polk and his Administratival . with direct false hood. The Loco Senators are boiling with in dignation at this expose. They declare that Mr. Benton is making the, Protocol and Free Soil a bridge to carry him over the stream that divides the two p arties. To DRIVE AWAY Rare.—Mr. Charles Pierce, of Milton, pounded up potash snit strewed it around their holes, and rubbed some on the sides of the board. and un— der parts where they 4.-aine through. The next night he heard squenkinglimeog them, which he supposed was (*mm the caustic nature of the potash that got among their hair, or on their bare feet. They disap peared, and he has not been troubled with them since that time, which was neatly a year ago.-- &eon Cultivator.: THAT'S THE FIUVRS.—The newest fi g . ure we have seen as to the value of the gold mines, is arrived at by one of the writers from that region. wis . a. aussibipties Suthad the Sailer, by 'Limn Monehatuten, and midi the Arabian Nights to the pre duet, and 'hen says even this ipso a "ear eumstance."—Chicage Journal. A YouTilrer. CH treeta-alltat‘ra.--Bever , al attempts have lately been made lot Bea ton, to burn the Park Street 'blurb, and a boy named Wm. Weaver, only ten years old, was caught inside on Friday night, itit; plying fire with waste paper. Since his arrest, the boy has confessed that lie set on lire the livery stable of Wm. Prescott. on the 17ili instant. He is said to have been a remarkably gond boy at school. His father and a friend became his bail in 113,500 on the two charges. The number of votes cast in Vertomat on the License question was 34,471—z0r which for license 11,110; Against 23,861. So Vermont is to be without taverns for a year. TROITOLIS is CALllrClentAr.4 letter from on board the steamship California. at Ma zatlan, Feb. 15th, !eye : "1 anticipate that there will be mac+ ex; eitement, and perhaps something more se rious, growing out of the fact of so many lot eiguers going to the place. Gen. Smith signified to those on board the steamer. that on their arrival, they would not be al— lowed to go on the public lands. They are generally armed, and I think that some serious work will take place between them and the American population." NATURAL CURIORITT.—The editor of this Denton (Md.) Journal was shewn, a (awe days ago, a kitten with six legs. The an % Until is perfect in ovary other% respect, each the extra legs are fair and the usual aim and appearance, situated shout midway. this belly. it died a few days after its, birth. ANR.CDOTIL fOR FACTORS AND CIONSION*. ORA. - -TIS West Tennessee Whig tan yarn upon a farmer in that part of the State,, who, to make a speculation, pip a large. stone in oue of his hogsheads of tobacco,. and forwarded it to Ins commission mer, chant al Now (Means, ilirecting his mar, chant there to send him a barrel of snipe.. •By accident or otherwise the Mono imp discovered. The merchant took the amps. from the tobacco and put it into Aim ham* of auger before he weighed it, put op the , head and sent it back to,the,mhacco mam, in the course of time, and 'Ad i os my at word about the 'Mae. But , he found it beK, fore, he had used np store than half of OW sugar. lle,got lour Gents lutd boughSpirt back at eight, without daring to sumpelets• the.Ptxor , privilege of .grumbling AI, oft , ' hundred per cent. *duet* price 104 Purchue , Dishoneety le not elwArt u tillk boot policy." ,; „ ." • 'uthie di, It; AND Loss es Live.:.. , storm on Tuettday night, 6 large thresitto -17 brick house situated in t iliceinna Street, Baltimore,''*is destroyed by fire. :The building wu moulded five or ail Ger.. manliamilles: Three or theinmatee. Mr; John Tater, his 'with, and child, who ee.to copied Doom..ih the third story, were oh.' able to escape,' end perished in the fiarnet.' E. a. 61REACRAFT, late a member 904' Pennsylvania Senate, from Wasbingilim s diet) there on Tuesday last LIBELOUS VALIBTINIE. - A femrale on Friday held to hail at• Philadelphia its *4OO, on a charge of libel, in aeim!hitil scurrilous valentine to a nother woman, . Friladiot Lou of Lillie. Oa the eight of tiattorday, thel7Th l nhi mo, thellleigire Royal, io illieg4Wil(Scot . hind,) took fire in the upper gallery, from • leakage in the gat Pipes. .0 1 ! fire ' was soon extinguished ;.bussuch was the alarm oldie people that in the rubli to get Out sixty-five, persons Perished. The panic was principallyin the uppergaUery, where there onrit'aliicout'ilie hundred people, the ptioe4odutission being three pence. • The "'torahs - shed down'the'stalts in the terror . 4nixine...undefined calamity, and fell over one another at the , foot,'; thereby making a lOirkside of i compact masts of proatrate r human beings against the only means of .egrets.: Andependent of the preset.° of hu man beings upon each 'other, this flight of stair. soon become a second black hole of Calcutta, from die iutensity of the heat.— The weak' were trampled down by the sttong, the latter only to be trampled down in turn by the furious crowd in the re . The noise of the stifled cries and ails, i l and die struggles for life which came from this horrid staircase, were most agonizing. Belief to the living was finally obtained by cutting through the partition. By 9 o'clock, all the room, in the Garrick Ho- Ml, near the .theatre, were .. .filled with the .dead. They generally exhibited a placid aspect, and seemed as if death had been .caused by pressure on the heart. The were many painful cases; one was that of a poor woman who found her hus band and two childreu among the dead— one of the latter a girl only three years of age. Sixty-five were taken out dead ; several died on the way the hospital, and .many of the wounded will probably die. AN APPALLING SIIIPWRECK.—In the tel • egraphic news by the Canada, it was men tioned that the bark Floridian, of N. York, &um Antwerp, was lost, with nearly two (hundred passengers. The vessel sailed for New York about the last of February. (Her passengers comprised young respect able German agricultural laborers, with 'Their wives and families, and many grades of mechanics. Amongst the number on hboard were from fifty to sixty women, and 'between twenty and thirty children. of dif ferent ages. The ship was worked by a .erow of nearly twenty, part of whom were .flugliiiimen. She encountered very heavy awember, and struck about 8 o'clock, on 'Weidoesday afternoon, 7th inst., with Ire .attendous force. Within a few minutes of the vessel strik ling, the water broke into her hull with much 'impetuosity, blowing up the hatchways, 'weeping many of the poor creatures over !boast!, while others were drowning in their !births, being unable to rise, from the effects •of ass sickness. Captain Whiunore per ceiviug• the inevitable destruction of the ship.igsve orders to his men to launch the boats. /The first boat broke adrift the momeot•she was launched, and it is said .capsized.directly with two men that were ;in it. .The.moment the second boat was lowered, ithe .Captain jumped into it with Mrs. Whitmore (his wife.) This led to a despesate ash towards the craft. Some twenty or thirty poor breaiures, men and women. leaped from the quarter-deck of :the foundering ship iuto the boat. The result was, that it was instantly capsized, and the whole party were instantaueously lost. There being mow 'no possible means of escape left (or those on hoard, the crew took to die rigging, to which they lashed -themselves, and upwards of a hundred of idle emigrants congregated on the quarter . deck. Here they.hed not been more than ~an hour.hefarothehhip broke in two amid ships. .I'lielnaitunaist fell over the side • with a fearful crash, and a trementlous sea carried away the imitate of the quarter . deck, with the mass ter human beings on it. A' frightful shriek filled the air, and the next moment themnfortunate creatures were sees struggling •in the deep. By great efforts sight or.ten were rescued by the moo who had secured themselves in the rigging, and, alas: wily to meet with a .Mure horrible death, All except four , froze to, death before rescue came. Toe .Gate Commo.—The steamship Falcon bum New York for C'hagres,tituolt• .ed at she bar, below New Orleans on the 18th lust. She reports the steamer Isth mina at Havana front Chagres on the 14th, with intelligence that a brig had arrived at Panama from San Francisco, and reported that, the steamer California would leave for Panama in a few days with $5,000,000 in gold dust.. isotoseros, WitAK Nravaa, LowNeu .or erarre. &c.—Wright's Indian rein foqiMl area natural, and therefore a .certain cure for all kinds of nervous disea se, jomause they completely cleanse the stomach and bowels of those billious and .corrupt humors which cot only paralyse .and weiken the digestive organs, but are the cameo of weelkAarvoot low 'Pill". 4 "' Weight's Indian Vegetable Pais are also diftiet:pitiffiei of the and Ihirofore not °Mr impart health and cheerfidness to the mind, , buoalseogive. new lite add vigoi ClP P Bowark•feenatmfbfte! Pineal/ft from tbe anent, ;she 4*lclet of 'Whom will be found in sash yew end toWn-ia the--united Maim: Tile,form* , Otejtatst, Of. *TS YAW BON, a Sown fct ustlysliaro ti end Wholeeeli a t Wright's Prissiest fidlcts,loCitace*woo t?hil*d 1p t • 111 0 0.fCI 0 0. ; 4 anwher of the enbeeriber i e barks are „ca. 'te. the 11411111 of 'genitalia& of the •teette nelshbosbod I and mile gloats* Amore itobliged to aik that they ' imr Married without delay. The genii* men harietrotintee of the Congressional VA requested to return them forth, +wit „ JAMES COOPER. Much -so, 1849. • ) d mir..A few Cords of Good WOOD wanted at this officio in payment 4of subscriptions immediately. CIARDEN 01.0WEIt gyp" - the best guslity, just reeeired and • -- lur Wit by H. li. BUMMER. STATE OE THE TIIERRIOMETER Duat)ra tug rAia,arksz. .• • "'T,A.L2,r. N. 9, v. it; Friday, March 13, - .1Q...' 61. 41 Saturday, .. .... 114 . 4, . - ', 38 56 51' Sunday, .. '6' $5, ',.' 44_ 62 41 Monday, a 20..,... 22. ,'" ~ ..., 47 84 :e B a l 7. - " :.17, .. Ail 39 33, edneaday, 28, . 34. ' 4;1, „As Thunsday,- a . • , 211, , 49 ~ ' I(t.' i i '`' .., io BALTjMOBE MARKET. viten Tea oovestiont ritternwerperfleAr. SERF CA i rr i tr-rsriOos ranged from *250 to $4 50 on the hoof, equal to 8115 00 and $8 25 net, avenging 48 50 gross. • iIOCIB-4topply small, and sales IWO,* are ma Mug at 85 IA per+loolbin. , , . , FOUR.—The dour motet depreawel t. oaks HOward inky:l4,st $4 86 7 -which is &Boot the settled price. City Mills held at *4 82. Corn meal $2 40 rig 80. Rye done $3 31., GRAlN.—Supply of all kindeofdriin fight, pri em unchanged ; red wheat Isl 00 a E. 06 ; and white $1 10 asl 15. White Corn 44 a4B ets..; yellow 40. (hue 25 a 28. Rya 68 a 60. PROVISION ea: Pork $ll 00 .'0 Prime $lO 00. Bacon—Sides '5 a 61 cents; Hann 7i a 9 cents. Lard oi andli linkers. MARRIED, On the 18th inst., by the Rev. Martin Lohr, Mr. UalAll W•UNICII,USUI Mil" MAST EULLNTIA daughter of Daniel Diehl, Esg near New Oilbrd. On Wednesday the Ytrt inst.. by the Rev. D. D. Clark, Mr. Wm Doting, •nd'Miia Scesx Axx Funitin—both of this county. On the Bth inst., hy, the Rev. Brittle; Mr. Joint Kt:N Le, end Mies C:ATU•111111S E. e3cuai v an—both of Ty.roue" township. On the '47th Wet., by the Rev. Dr. Watson, Mr. FIIILDSUICIIt MOIIUTZ. cud Min ANNA ELts•, daughter er Mr. Alias° motifort—ill of atrabibri tp. At Mann, Pe., on the 2?d inst., by the Rev. F. Ruthreutr, Mr. PAUL WA/MILLER, and Mist ELlssartu, daughter of Res. F. Ruthreutr, (for merly of riettyeborg.) In Lancaster, on the 21st inst., by Rev. D. H. Emerson, CHAlLnaßcraucrraridHasars,ia E ,R., youngest daughter of Henry Y. I:Haymaker, Esq., all of York county. DIED, At Hanover. on 22d inst., CR &LIU BA II ITS. infant 1011 of Nov. Charles A. Hay, aged 7 cuouths and 17 dam On the 14th inst.. Mrs. Msanstest wife of Mr. Abraham Hull, of Union township, aged 4$ years. On the 24th inst., Mrs.- COLLIES, wife of Mr. limes Collins,of Mounkjoy township. On the 15th last, DAVI n, infant mon of Mr. Conrad Eckert, aged I ycar, months and 21 days. On the 26th of February, in East Berlin, Mr. FaKt,aica 11641911.11, ill th e S9tli.year of his age. 0.1 the 2a most., Abbottstown,duilt.pit, infunt eon of Mr. Joseph Weil. On the 16th inst., 8 - ,ant Tif tOn4LrVA, infant daughter of Mr. Joseph filen tr., of Conowago fp. At Philadelphia, on the 22d inst., after a lung illness, Bev. Hasa! K. WILIIO%, formerly of this county, and send the late Capt. David Wilson. of Ilamiltuuban township, in the 69th year of hia age. I'o ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN THERE are but few persons, compar atively speaking, at this season of the Year. but who are suffering. noire or less, with Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Hoarse ness. dr like complaints, caused by the sudden changes of or exposure to the weather. To all those who are thus af flicted, and who may read this advertise ment, we would recommend Hiss's Ex rEcrultsvr as the most effectual remedy ever offered to the public. No faintly should be without a bottle of it in their house, as a timely administration of it would prevent much suffering. Hundreds who have used it, say' they would not be without it were the price ten times the amount that it is, and who is it that does not think more of health, the source of our happiness, than of wealth ? Delay not Meru to procure a bottle at once, and you will never regret that you tried it. Li-cAuTios.a.n Toe Gitertsrs has the words "Rossi Erperto r ant , improved, Baltimore, Md.," blown in the glass, and the initials ".I. F. R." stamped on the the meal. Each bunk. hereafter, will be envel oped is • w • on which is the far 'Mute argnature of the proprietor, withal.* win - eh it is couoterfert. l'iepared only by Druggist. Reltimurc, 11d For sale %I SA MC} L H. BUEHLER, Get tysburg; Dr. H. W. Kauffman, York Springer Geo. W. Heagy, (01't ace 54.1 rents per bottle. March 30. 1540.--ti. Cheap for t ash. ejir l .. SCHICK has just received, per • hat arrival. as large and as good an assortment of Ladies' and Gentlemen's Gloves and Hosiery as ran be produced in Gettysburg. Also a splendid lot of Rib bons and Flnwers-.-all of which will be sold as low as they can be bought at any other store in town. Gettysburg, March 20, 1848. LOOK 41P LL Ladies wishing to supply them. :11 selves with handsome DRESS GOODS would do well to call ut the Store L:SC DICK, and examine his stock ef GINGHANIS, LAWNS, LINEN LUSTRE, plain, striped and barred Cambric Muslius, Alpacca, and a good article of Black Silk, Black Gimp and Fringes, Needle-worked Collars, plain and agured Bobinet, a fine lot of Irish Linens, Folored, bleached a n d unbleached Muslin, Drilling, Brown Hol land; Table Covers, Combs, and many uth-, er articles too numerous lo mention. I would therefore invite all to call soon and examepe for themselves before purchasing elsewhere, as I feel confident that I call please all, both in style and price. Gettysburg, March 30, 1849. ,EINiitTSHI3 , German Vegetable Pat li e 'Ptitoder, prepared by J. F. H, widish or eon, Loncaeutr, Pa., aid for sale of the .Bookstore of ..- • ' .. . • . . • , KELLER KURTZ. Jnfount Eagle' Tripoli, OR cleansing• and buthishing‘all tier Jihad Metall° and OW" Surfaces ; tiuoh{aa gold, silver; brass, Britaniums and street wares, svintiow panesoihet,.. Viii Tripoli ispare,beingentirely free from aoidei mica, or caleareoun eirthor; and therefore altogether superior U the jtaliett Tripoli, so touch .t Poe' sale by • .11C/EIJ*4 'KURTZ:. (1 ARDEN $144P40--* . fristrOPPlY warranted Wirth 'Ol. 1019, lust salved and for sale by ' ' KELLER-lEURTZ:', DERFuNERIO, i 3 0 .4 FANCY e:, .4 1 1Tictrf ,Tovs,k, for Edo 0. WLANER. VINE, FRESIIMACKEREt o and su perior ENGLINH CHEESE, just opened at STEVENSON'S. (..;11001. BOOKS AND STATION ERY, of all kintle.noustantly on hand and for sale, at the lowest prices, at the Bunk and Stationery Store of Dec. 10. S: IL BUEHLER:. Alonzo Johnston's New Store, kb. ;10krkijkb'oNDir1keyr,! A Arw. libor•abavo btadipt.. P•BiItAPB4POL4. listl e . r A A . ; i lH U N F D l o 3 i 7 V i :f i l r A i rl i tt, Try = ' ' Curtains and ' Veniffs'', Blinds, of all differeni sixea t varying ijy price 'final Six Oink. to Twenty-Dallare a piece. All she new styles of every. descriptten of patterns, and of the latest.fashions of dif• ferent colors, and a variety of Trimmings .ofxll kinds. Also, be a ettifulllßLE At. CIfIttLOTII in patterns and in pieces, ...oa Cloths for floors, Patent Coach Curtains for. Wagon Covers . of a very superior article, ■oy width, double or single; of the finest fin ish, and a splendid assortment of CLOCK LOOKING GLAMES,PIRE BOARDS, &c. fr7 , old Blinds painted and trimmed over, to look equal to'fiew, at very little expense, or taken in exchange for new. Has'on hand the largest and most com plete assortment of the above articles, at 25 per cent. cheaper than any other estab lishment in the city, wholesale and retail, at reduced prices. • 111:7" Merchants and others ere invited to call before purchasing elsewhere, as it will be to their advantage. o.7Any of the above goods made to or der, or carefully packed, so that they can he sent any distance without injury. Oth er Manufacturers supplied with Slats, Fronts, Heads, or Pullers - at the lowest prices. (V OPEN IN THE EVE:MI.79.4i March 30, 1849.—1 y J. M. OREM. W. S. llonuss. llitEill & HOPKiNs. MERCHANT TAILOR AND WHOLESALE HEALERS In Cloths, Cassimeres, Vestings & Tailors' rpicia.' No. 230 Baltimore at., fi. W. eon Der of Chaxles, BA LTI MORK. A large assortment of READY MADE CLO'T'HING, of superior quality. Cloth morns up stairs---Entrance, south cud of the Store on Charles street. Marc h 30, 1840.—1 y SPRING & SUMMER CLOTHING, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. /AN hand and for sale, the largest and jr hest assortment of SPRING and SUMMER CLOTHING, at prices very much reduced. C 0 TS. Coats of every variety, embracing all the latest styles. and of an improved rut and make, from 78 cts. to 1,2, 3, 4, 5,8, 8, *lO, and upwards. Pantaloons of all kinds, from 75 Ms. to 1, 1.50, 1.75,2, 2 50 and also a very fash ionable ifiatimartimi . it iliTeTat 3.50, $l, and upwards. Vests of every variety, comprising silk. Satin, Cashmere, Marseiles, Valencia, from 50 cts. 75 08,111, *2.50, *3, and upwards. Always on hand the largest and best as sortment of Boy's Clothing ever offered in this city. A splendid assortment of Cloths and Cassimeres, of the best make, together with a large and handsome variety of SILK and MARSEILLES VESTINGS, which will be made up to order in the best man nur, 20 per cent. less than the accustomed prices, and in all cases a neat and beauti ful ht guaranteed. Al' COSTUME HALL, Corner of Prau street ■nd Centre Market Space. H. H. COLE. Attached to the above, is one of the largest and moat extensive SIIIRT FAC TORIES in the country, embracing every variety and make, at prices which cannot fail to please any one wishing to purchase. CrONE PRICE ONLYzi March 30, I 049.—1 y JAS F. ROSS, JL. SCHICK has just received an • elegant article of SATIN, which he will sell low. Also, plain and figured Cra vats and Ilankerehiefs, Collars, Suspen ders, &e. March 80. Plaits and Figured Chums. &TEEL BEADS. Purse Twist, Tassels, Silk Canvass, and Hein -Wes, constant. ly on lend and for sale at SCHICK'S. March 30. Al A CA Li LE I"SRIOTORY ev, E.NG -11 LAN I).—Harpers' cheap edition, Vol. • 1, just received, price Kr cts. per vet: For sale at the Bookstore of KELLER :KURTZ, March 30. I4WARD! S Palma Omuta Pomade. The proprietor eCtliis new and..beau urn' preparation, confidently recommends it as having no equal in the world for im parting a . heautiful, soft Mid glossy appear ance to the hair, promoting itsgrbwth and and preventing its falling out. • sale by . KELLER KURTZ. March O. REGISTER'S *VOTIVE. - NOTICE is hereby given to all Legatees - 1 - 11 and other persons concerned, that the, Administration Acedunts of the deoeitsed persons hereinafter mentioned will be pre sented at the Orphans' Court of Adams county, for confirmatioh end allowance, on Monday the 16th ditty Of Nell nett : The first accountol PeterEPley, Exec utorof Peter Melhelm,-dixteutsed: - • • The guardian account of line Weagly, Guardian of ftiontteville.Bearil. • ' The account of Jnhn Bereaw, .Admin istrator of Thomas Snotrilbe,.deeeased. • The account of.. Wrolllank, , Ezeoutor ofJaccib Guise, deceased. . The final account of %Vm. Rex and Ge% Rex, Administrators , of John Rex, deceas4 ed. TbU first and ...ApUl papcpitit of 10,441 0. r" r4l, Adaunis o4 4r of Rufus !I All ' decias i ed. , i ~ Thb final . iceoliitt. of Peinieljiiiie and Andrew'' M. Deitr4orti: 40EnigterittPri , or . Peter Rurtv,er,"tltittriPit4 .l Th ` etriii. ll .ceatiut 9(1 1 ,; 01 1 8 *Iland , If . , 147 ob sagiii, esii§pi.prp of HenryH Aot!,de. 1 he &at 11000 rt :Qt S. S. soroulker, txmiutar of Elizabeth Sieenhergen. de. ceased, , , . ~r . TIM first account . to Andrew ,Rife. gx, eoutor of John Rife, deceased. The account of Joho•Rostetter, Execu tor of Peter Grid; deciwifiti• 'p ie first add 'Ana) account of ' rsaito Staub; Administrator of !glory Bishop, The that account of Robert Smith, Ex ecutor of Wolter Smith, deceased, ' wst. W. HAMR,IttILY, Register. Itegiater's Office, Gettysburg, tc March 14, 1F t 9. CO.St 11.41 E II ILL. P3NT3LOONS VE ST S. B Y's CLOTHING. FOR GENTLEMEN. j WASHINGTON HOUSE, GETTINBuno, PA. THE subscriber has the pleasure of announcing to his friends and the publicgenerally that he has leased the Public, Mau se, formerly kept by Mr. Rums in harpbars burg street, Gettysburg, Pa., a few doors frout,the Centre Square, The House is pleasantly located, has every necessary convenience in the way of Stebilec drio,,,etbd•wilFbe Coaoaahsti on strict W,EftiPERAWCE principles.— The sobsctibie his had !We experience in keepi oriesblio houies, and be litiper be - able to. furnish a pleasant and' caul (*enable .4 home !' , 141 such as maybe dis posed to patronize him. 'HENRY S. MINNIGH. Geoyeburg,•Pa.. March 23, 1849.-3 t 0 hat hiker/o+olfb Whig," Carihile "HtirakV, and York " Rapabliran " inatot to th e ainowat or $1 and charge "Mar" Oboe. - IN THE NittTTER of the intended appilostion of Davies Enecran, to keep a publin house in Franklin 101144; Adams county—a being en old stand: • WE, the undersigned, eitieens etthe township, of : Franklin aforesaid, be lt* personally acquainted with DANIIIL Beocon. the ttßove &tattled Petitionefrand also having a'knOwledge of the house for which license is prayed, do heridiy certify, that such hoot, is necessary to accommo date the puUic and entertain strangen+ail and travellers. that 'he is a Peraell of Semi repute for ho'Pesty and temperance, and that he fiWelf . jirotiicled with hotnie l iiiiiin and convenience! for the lodging end se, commodation of strangers and travellers. We, therefore. Veg leave to recommend him for a license, agreeably to his peti timr. John Knnnse, Henry Knoture, nielWeWman, Peter Kime, Gorge Baum, Mesa Rattenaperpr, Bernard Deardorff,. Levi *Wit • Joseph DahMey, John D. Becker, , John Lauver, David 11 I Hardie. • F. G. Hoffman, March 23, 1849.;—.3t.• LITETAEY CONTEST. THE Philoenathean and Phrenakos rnian Societies of Pennsylvania Col lege will hold their Annual Literary CON. TEST, in Christ's Church, ort the eve.' ning of the 18th of April. The exercises will consist of Essays, Orations and a Dc-, bate on the following question : Pub lic Education preferable to a Private?." KTThe friends of Literature, and the public generally are invited to attend. DANIEL GARVER, WILLIAM CARROLL, 1 Join/ Conn WILLIAM F. GREAYER, of she EOROE ETETER, DANIEL WORLEY, Societies. JOHN W. KREOILO, March 23.—td A WORD TO THE WISE. THE revolutions throughout Eti rope,du ring the year 1848, have been produc tive of a momentary stagnation in the coal t merce of the world. Many reports have reached us, that thousands dila merchants have failed, and a great number of its man= ufactories have been obliged to suspend , their operations. Many have been look ing with an anxious eye towys our hap jpy land of freedom, in order to save the j wrecks of their fortunes. Favored by the low duties, established sly our govern ment, they have been able to meet with a suitable market to dispose of their other- Iwise worthless goods. Al no other period since the establishment of our government, have our markets been so glutted with all sorts of goods. Hence goods have de clined enormously in prices. Let it cot be supposed that this will continue much, longer ; already we are informed, by the news brought in the last steamers, that tranquility is restored and confidence re established between the different nations of Europe, and that 'business-has -already re= vived—consequently, prices of manufactu ring goods must and will rise again. Being convinced of this fact, I would im form my customers, and the public gen erally, that 1 have just received a, very large assortment of Spring rout Summer Wearing Apparel, together with my usual assortment of fersehy i .Fltncy Goods, Pistols, 4-e. My goods having been pur chased when prices were lowest and choices the most exteniitie, • l feel confideet hat I not only can undersell any one in this aeighbothopd.... t he cities not except. ; ed. My stock being well selected and of the best materiiils, it cannot fall of giving entire shfisfact ion, to those' who Will honor the with their calls. . My ;stock of goods is large, consisting, of Meri t s and. Boy!' Wearing Apparel, of all sizes and iittMitii and prices ; and my mind being maddiip as to selling cheaper thaU the Cheapest, my tamps of,sale only be cash and at only one price. art-I have also on hand a lot of PINE, OIL, o[4 superior quality, and very cheap. Also, a CARRIAGE, and two second hand BUGGIES, which I will dispotio;of upon reasonable terms. MARC US SAMSON. March 23, 1849. ASSESS NI ENT. NOTICE le hereby given that a tax of three per tent. has been duly att sessed on the. Cumberland Valley Mu tual Protection Company, the payment whereof will be required to,be paid to an agent, authorized.; to reteive the same, of whom notice shall be given. ' . • A. Go MILLER. Secretary. March,,2a.--41t 2000 PREMIIIIM ALIN US, B. J. WILLIAM& NO. 12, NORTH SIXTH STREET, PHILADIMPIILA,'I , Ye*llia* Blind & litlsidialw Shads 1 Mininglect Per,. ' ' ,A , WARDED the first and highest Med, al. et the New York; Baltimore and • hiladelphlatihibitiontr, &rale etipeirioi- Hy of ,hist blinds: with tonliribint confirm &once in his ananufasture,) take thipetten l'An 1 . 14 „ Fi s _u "'kir' , Ict his Allu s riM wn t9l L- 000 utiouw'rf Darr?* ann.yritt shop With fancy ind'p a nTrunniinge, of new, styles and ecilotve. 'Algid', ii , large and general assortment of transparent Wihdow Shades, nll of whicb,he'*lll sell at the lowest Dash prier*. ' ' " . g... 7. Old blind/ painted and tri m to look equal to new. 111:7"llealers supplied on liberal terms. The citizeue of Adam' county are res pectfully invited to call before buying else where--confident of pleasing all. ' ' nrOPEN IN THE EVENINGS.,4gi March 23, 1840.-3 m . Somell;ing for She Frost' rant of RIBBONS & F ERS, for sale at CO.PARTNERSIIIP NOTICE. I T HE subscriber has this day associated j - 0 - with himself his two sons, JAMES F. and HENRY J. FAHNESTOCK, in the mercantile business, which will be I hereafter conducted under the firm of S. FAUNESTOCK SONS. I hereby tender my thanks to the public generally for the liberal encouragement ex tended towards me, and respectfully solicit a continuance of their favors to the new firm , SAMUEL FAIINESTOCK. IIC7•All persons indebted to me will tall and settle their accounts, as I must have my business closed without delay. Gettysburg, lad. 1, 1849. 8: F. - THE Undersigned hereby inform the public that they have the • LARGEST cups -BE .57 4:4'I,4CTED 4 70 CAT the, . Celery, and hope by felling - ',Meal,. end attending to business, tor - 110e - ai eotythotenee 'Of; , the public, few, . . JAME Ao.;I*AIIiF.BTOOK. • .. . lIENR FAH ZOTOOK. Gettysburg .414-'11•;1848,!.--tf AT .THE OLD STAND Mari. is XIEWSH O P ' (1 - . 'FRET • TENDElSick,iiOadedginents.,to his frterdi L tor, k it pont, 4611,"holl the 01184re : of plinoviteivg that again located at the old - anted; on Wasitingtoe strain, one square soitth - Of Tbdotitoit's' Hotel, where lie 'wilt be' tips - red ashsre iittiire, to do atl nso oach, Cloth it Sin"' Painting. lE:PCARRIAGE REPAIRING done , at abort notice,. and on reasonable iterate, for which Country 'Produce Will be taken: The subscriber is thankful forpairt,fa: vora, and hopes, by attention to business, and a desire to, please, to merit, and cfei. calve a continuance, of publie patronage. J. G. FREY. Gettyaburg, lan. 12, 1240.1-41. ztkeildatroo. Agx9417057V(' fIENIMM WESTERN. NEW YORK COLLEGE OF. HEALTI .207 Main street, Plinio, N. Ifinß. G. C. VAUGHN'S Vegetable Lithontrip ti c Mixture,- a celebrated medicine-which has made GREAT CURES IN ALL•DISEASEN, is now introduced into this section. The limits Man advertisement, will not permit ranee tended entice of this remedy; .we have only to say it has for its agents in the U. States and Can ticles a large numbef of educated MEDICAL PRACTITIONERS in high professionaratanding, who male a gen• eral use cf i t in their practice in the following iiseaber • and disease% of the Urinary Organs, Plies and all disease* of ihe blood, derangements of the Liver, &c., and all general diseases. of the genet. It is particularly requested that all who contemplate the use of this Article, or nho desire information respecting it,. WILL WILL OBTAIN A .PAMPIILET, of 3 2 peg s, which Agents whose names si e below will gladly give mil.. This book treats upon the meth:A of cure—explains the peculiar pro• parties of the ,article. end also the dimwits it has been used for over this country and Europe for tour years with such perfect amt. Over Is *lama( testimony from, the highest quarters will be found. with • ' . • NA AIES. PLACES AVE DATES, which'can be written to by any one interested and the parties will answer pod mild edinmunications tErEe particular and , I 1 1.0 1 irklr E./tut: 4l l as no other inch pamphlet has ever been seen .The evidence of the power of this , medicine over all diseases is guaranteed by parimosof well knows standing ih society. • • Put up in 30 oz. and 12 oz. bottles. Pries *2 tot au oa., t sl for 12 or., the larger being the cheapest. Every bottle has. 'G. C. VAUGHN" written on the direelinns, &c. See r amptilet,p. 28. Prepared by Ur. O. C. I intern, and sold at principal *Thee; 207 Main street, Buffaki,'N. Otriees devoted to sale of this ankle siewastrate 132 Nassau, New York, and earner of Esse: and Washington, Salem, Mass and .by all Druggiats throughout this country and Canada, • LrAoanes....-8. H. BUEHLER, Gettysbned JACOB MARTIN. Neve Oxford; MOW: WOLF East Berlin; WM. BERLlN.,Lianover; JOSEPH- R. HENRY, Abbottstosin: •c • March 21, 1042.--4 y; . . DR.I LAWREXCE BILL, DEN T HAS removed bid race to th.9, l MgdißS opposite the Lutheran. Mrureb, Chambersburgstreet, 2 doors east of Mrr Middlecoff's store where he may all times be found ready and wilting to attend to any case witbje the tioroiince of the 'Den tist. pargonik in Witflt Pr NU sets °tooth are respectfully invited to call. R.EFERENOES. Dr. C. N. Dimmest', Relr.C.P.Kuoirpr,D:D. " D. Howries, ' PtOf.'M, Limos,. I. O. 'A. Co ore, Lt, • "' M 1/4 BAVO in Wg' "D. Drumm, • " • Wk. Ili.lisirtaresur Rev. LC. Warsaw, D. D.. e - July 7, 1848. ' .' . Gettysburg' Female Seininary. HIS Institatjio:cor OttiCslpcatiou of T'onni Lltdi:o l 4 Of ttiPani4 nn #.li 7th of 414,y. igkAligh , Otnett OcilY 6 burg. under the superintendence of Mrs, and and lifilie ,, Wattialis4 who. Will give 4o iitruction in all the elementary, and higher hrsucklet of SP Butlish eduation ; mid in Music, DrawirgqPgintingicFceatil. and Fancy-work. -- Getttstritiii•Feb.rath*.lar MOGAN & CO., isoctscrias.of ,8 . ,11 7 17L18,i4 FRENCH 4 , GERMAN ' GOODS. No. 8, Bank stred, Philadelphia. stay Binding, Sewing Bilk, 'Pins, • Carpet do. Patent 'Phread, Tapes, Coat do. Tailone Twist, Curds, • Flannel do. Thimbles, Galloons, Quality do. Welkin'. Fluniture do. Purse Twist, lim•kidt Zyes Wire Ribbons, Zephyr Worsted Rile, Cotton, end qinnen Can Vim, Gloves, Hosiery, Shirts and Drawers, Comforts, Infants , Bockb, C.bildreos' Gaiters,. Stuspenders, Woolcn Yarn. and a great variety • STAPLE AND FANCY TRIMMINGS. Match TACONETS. and CAMBRIC and ej MULL MUSLINS, of the Tip4op kinds, for sale by J. - L. 'SCHICK. SCHICit'S DROPSY, GRAVEL, Ril*MritL• PROCLAMATiON. i'VETHEREAS the lion, Wit. N. IR VINE, Esq. President of the several Courts of Common Pleas, in the counties composing the 19th District, and Justice of the Courts of Oyer and Terminer, and General Jail Delivery, for the trial of all capital and other offenders in the'said dis trict---and GEORGE SMVS}:R and J/011:9 AVD/VITT, Esqs., Judges of the Couru of Common Pleas and General Jail Delivery, for the trial of all capital and other offend ers in the county of Adame--have issued their precept, bearing date the 15th day of January, in the year of our LORD one thousand eight hundred and forty-nine, and to me directed, for holding a Court of Com mon Pleas and General Quarter Sessions of the Peace and General Jail Delivery, and Court of Oyer and Terminer, at Get yeburg, on Monday the 16th day of . 1 1pril lierl— .NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN To all the Justices of the Peace, the Coroner lend Colistables within the said County of 'Adams, that they be then and there in their proper persons, with their Bolls, Records, Inquisitions, Examinations and other Re membrances, to do those things which to their offices and in that behalf appertain tolki done, and also they who will prose cute against the prisoners that are or then shall be iu the Jail of the said County of Adams, and to be then and there to pros ecutusgaitist them as shall be just., WILLIAM FICKES, Sheriff's °Mee, Gettysburg, Mira D 1049.—tc D. HALSEY'S GOLD & SILVER PILLS Ire founded upon the principle that nearly all diseases arise from, the same causes, or that a trtorbel. coodition of the liter, stomach and bow ellOriirdiapaies the systbm to met) class of dia. yue. When these important functions become obstructed with superabundance ot bile and vis• cid . roattar, liature ceases to rultil her proper co fleen It is then that the blood becomes impure bruises the secretive organs of the bier, vi hose ofilweria is',lo, separate the worreout principle of thig Vital Suid are r-o Linger lit for their °thee, aniftintwasted part of the blood continues t her e. tote -in eiteulatiou and becomes diffused thmitshottl die whole:system. Thus tilled with infections humors the body is. made li a ble to sieltnessi . chanemit is exposed to a soil. deo change in the weather, a bad cold or con sumption would be the result—it in the vicinity gleconlaillatla disorders, it would imbibe the infeetlemr: • , • Ds. Barons's Goan. AIM Sites' Plitt*, al though pleasant to take and innocent in opera tion. is this "Moir, titi elliinf medicine in the World, to remove the bile and vieeid from the system,snd to restore the liver, sten-l och bad bowels: to the' performance of their pro iMe•functinirs, thereby rendering the blood pure, iiildivesting.tile .. Aystem• from all morbid and infeCtioos . , 110311 v remove every disessit,Mowever longstanding, and end4w the system with health. strength and vigor. A circular giving'* full explanation of the two-4okt setibri oftbe.Gord sad Silver Pillt, can be-inikettbesgent•gratte. • • Prite only tib cents per box, containingbOth kinds; and for sale at the genentl-Depot,•No: 2, Cedrtland street. New York it endi 11 n Gettysburg by S. .BUEHLEK ittlf."l9; 11349.-.-.8m.. • • LIST. NOTICk:• • h rr Ht sohemiber u purchased the en. .llLtirc.interest in the Book Accounts of the 'firm of THOMAS WARRKN & Co., and .requeitivell persona indebted to said 'firm to 'conte 'forward immediately and close theleaceotinte. It is hoped that thogi in, ' O O 3 OO will attend to the matter or Or Wore ,the tat day of *Sprit next, as Sflier , that perk/44m. hooks will be placed in the,hinds or officer for collection. 'Ai I '4lli in want of Money, I have to rattueit that all persons' indebted to me, of long standing, (on my own books) will make immediate paymentortheir accounts. • I'. WARREN. Gattysbiwg, March 10. 1849. 1111r—niP. 'es PrtlE subscriber, intending to leave Gettysburg shortly. is desirous of closing up hie books immediately. All personstherefpre, indebted to him for 760-ES-tir*heriville, are requested to make ,paymetiA, op, or before the first day If .4- .pril rtttsl as slier that period he will be compelled to leave his books in the hands of en Officer for collection. He hopes that . hie friends will attend to the matter at once. 13., SCHRIVER. Gettysburg Miircli 1849. Blank [Soaks: SHE undersigned would . respectfully Jt. intorin hhr nytheriatts customers, that he . tsifi) 041,P large variety of halt- bo un d gAartoe pi* do,, I)enti, Medi um, Day and Lodger Account Books, 'Memorandum and Past Books, to which their attention ie insited, and 'which are soli) on 'such iiirifis as cannot fail to please. in addition to the books named above;enr *welt Fempriiies all the popuhir SCHOOL .IND COL LEGS BOOKS of the day-IMA as tie various editions of Spelling Books; the various series of reading ,books o English, dictionaries and grammaret- the works on Arithmetic, peography;'Rhetoric,'"Eloctitirin, Logic. C . oltiniptign . ,,„ ; # 441114 ; geomotry. . Sur veying, Mensuration, Brewing, Book k eepingoHistory, Biography; Natural Phi losophy, Chemistry. Betsey, 'Mineralogy, Nithirel'Histriry;'PhYMeleigy, Astronomy, letidierivaltnil Moral Philosophy, Politi -40:-E49410:1X, french , " growlers, Dic tionaries, Readers, &e., and all the various German, Latin,,greek and Spanish school and Classical books, with a variety of the standard works of the day, in the depart mettle Of Literituie, Science and Art; to gether with' Every .Briick of Stationery now . in use, all fur sale at the lowest cash , prices. U7 - Particular attention will also be paid to all orders, thiongh COUNTRY MERCHANTS, and others, for Law,' Medical and Misceilandois Books,' ,Stn. for public and private libraries, and no ef forts will be spared to complete all such orders, on the most reasonable terms., KELLER KURTZ, Bookseller & Stationer, Opposite the Bank, and few doors east of Kurtz'a Hotel: FRESH GROCERIES. rfilHE 'subscriber has jolt received the best quality of MOLASSES SYR- R P, which he offers at 50 cents a gallon ; new •crop, N. 0. MOLASSES, a fine ar tide ; do. S. 11. MOLASSES ; superior winter-strained LARD OIL, as clear as wa ter, at 111.00-and a general assortment of Dry goods and Groceries, "at prices to Suit the times." J. M. STEVENSON. IBAXELLA NUR SMUT. OETTYII2IIIItO4 PA' RUIT TREES, of all kinda. (graft* r in the root,) can be had of the sub scriber on reasonablo terms. Please cal and judge for ,t ourselves. • • C. W. HOFFMAN. . 7,-s:.rlef NEW ESTA inistutitbiT. Chair 4 and Cabinet Furnitim LOll ER 771.01 N EYES! **4-' D. & J. CULP R EB' ECTFULLY stnecienee b Akl citizen' of Adams roomy , ghat they have entered into co-pennerehip fee the manufacture and sale of ail kind* of . Chain, and Cabinet iilienitare, and that they will always have or hand, at their Establishment in South Haltintore street, Gettysburg, a few doors above Pahnestocles Store, (the old nand of D. Colp,) a fog assortment of CIIA4IIS, of every variety, such As BOSTON ROCELVa; SZIT .I.VD COMMON CIIRIRS. Alen, SET'rEES, of varieue kifitte, painted in imitation of ruse•Wood,matior any, satin-wood, walow, maple & and 'all fancy colors. wits eonitantly keep on hand and make to order, Bureaus. (-entre Tables, . Bedsteads, Cup boards, Stands, Doughf:Troughs i ,-r trash-Stands, Dining and Breakfast Tables, ke. all manufactured by experienced wroTktnen and of the bast material, which they be pleased to furnish to those .who msy favor them with their custom on the most reaSonable terms. Having supplied them selves with a very large and superior stock• of stuff, they have no hesitation in stssue ring the pnblic that they eau tarnish work-- which for cheapness, beauty autfslafriMil 'ity, cannot be surpassed by any other shop in the County. They will also attsod to all kinds of HOUtil.: AND t4IGN FAINTING RULE HANGING:, &et upon the shortest notice and most Omura abletenns. Wall Paper will be furidabed —specimens of which can be seen at our establishment. ',III work made and sold by the firm will be warranted. They are deter. mined to sell as cheap as the cheapest, just to suit the times. The pohlie will cousult their interests by giving them a call before purrhasingelsewliere. Al/ kiwis of Cotter try Produce and Lumber will be taketa its part payment fur work. Fell. 2, 1849.—tf CAUTION ! WHEREAS sundry individuals et bills, • bare been trying to monopokeis, and forestall public opinion; end wbetees the subscriber can at the present tiine vhrw the largest and best stock of CH A:IBS in this County. therefore be it known to,stli persona interested that the undersigned • continues to manufacture at the old stand . in South Baltimore street. every variety of PAM/Xand Ace.l.VC 1 CHAIRS, which will be sold on the most accommodating terms for Cash or Prodni.e. , illy Chairs are made in Gettysburg: cud, not in “Boslon." House anti Sign Painting attended to as formerly ; and from long' practice and experience in business, the subscriber feels confident that his work will bear the closest inspection, because hi" workmen are of the beat that the country can furnish. • C.911/NET if of every variet y and of the beet quality, will he rim:imbed to Customers, and at all times mine to tir der. All kinds of ',timber taken, st fair prices: CH AIR PLANK particularly svanted—something less than -5000" fha will answer. . . ' 1' • ' Feeling thankful for past favors, the -- subscriber hopes, by attention to husitietis, still to merit a share of public favor. HUGH DENWIDDIE:' Gettysburg, March 9, 1849.—kf JOHN 7431IINGIPIL&N. C. 9 It NET Jll,l GRVrEFUL for the liberal : abate of patronage he hats heretof6re ritcerved, takes this methiid of respeetfillly inform ing the public, that he still continues hta business of Cabinet-niking, at the old stand, in South Baltimore sleek, Gettyshfirg, Second Square, where he 4 prepared to furnish - every variety of FIVINIAktIk v I=l Bureaus,.Cenlre and Dining Tintilespfled- Steada, Cupboards, !Turk, ll'ash and Candle Stands, ke, 4-e4 in a neat, substantial, workmanlike man lier, at prices to suit the times. jtj•Ilo is always prepared to make COFFINS, according to order, and at the shortest no tice. Having a good and handsome Hearse he ran convey corpses to any bestial growl' at the lowest rate. BER. and silk inds of COtrtir- TRY PRODUCE taken in exchange (of work. Gettysburg, Feb. S. I 849. THE MOST EX I'M:I'VE Sillier F:ST A BIAS II 111 ENT IN THE UNITED STATES IS Jr NO. 170 BALTINOEF. STREET, NEAR LIGHTS Hallimore, Md. Where 500 persona are employed, and a Meek of 1000 dozen shirts alr.sys on band. AND O'l'li e lrl irri t OTHERS call and examine the largest and best ittock of SFUIR'PS that has ever been offered. consisting of all sizes and qualities MEN AND iIOYS, which for . style'aie workmanship candot be aurpesseil.. More than usual effortehave.been mai-- - to relider the assortment complete 400 de= eirsble in every respect. w. Brxritqc,', • March t, 113411 1 y TEACIIERS WANTIC.O4., ,‘ 'I I IIIE School Directors of ?m i ni* I township will meet st tits hitisfto l :tti MAN lissom HART. in said Mondrytho 91k• Of. vi r el,,,tl ek, • p. se., to relent MO* o 16 /44 6 1 0 4 0 14 of the Public &boob,' inissid tow&t it By order of dm &inf. A ABRAHAM SCOTT, Itlatefs 23, 180.--31 • vAßrowir TOR 14*f: Tiiii 0174101, ::N.PjµF j s:lyrvr~ w.*