. ..:—.,..t---.......a............-----.... - ....1p.ac.- 7 —___ A. mew [F it row ev r: ju le i k an iitora .. diet:: Isa liVith akthis ; j0 ma r peet. agreeable us it A, 0 ill , A...._ . ~ Notice*. • !At ce,..lL .- -, ^ w einuedwa.l upon experie nce . It it ..46 Is the "Calorie Engine" en ttecoirqiiiell" suilinteined Opon sinentific principles, that .:.. _. _-, ..-_ : _.,_..1..-... ! I Ali. _4e! ''. . -- —.wed a Dili ..---- ~.., 6‘ -«e - • led fact t Does twelve utiles en hour imam will yet vindicate its superiority, at 1 dr .. m 1....... ~,.. (be • ' t dt.. , - 1-- -;‘, 1 „ , i .- toilla wind and tido, and seven or eighty- I all'the expenditure of fuel, and life, and `-ii.a. 1 uti -., . F 4, 1853. •140 0 ' gains: them, settle the q ues t io n . If so,. limb, that have hitherto sitanded its pro -1 k le the report reliable ?- With these prelim- ! gross. It is the expansive property of 1 111 w inane' answered affirmatively, we stay ; w a t e r again s t the “regeneratitr" of the - lii to 4....b. 1 , 1 script in. ~ leveled to n•I • blow off our steam, turn on the -, 3 1 " 6 " - caloii. engine. Witter, with a Calm eji y and make a thorough revolution in motive ' eeexpansion to 1728 tittles its own hulk, nista ty. in Worn ii tufty , me airy will ( n, have th vett. of : i power all the world over. Nur a revolution ! swell, lee of their I at 212 d eg re „„ o r h est, ag lintels: ant ivutiol 4 ainst air, no _ we of doubling its volume wily at 4UI tle a alone; a new era dawns upou us,,and the receiv I, c r duss l caloric engine, though it iney not super-; grew. The skill whit:ll has so adapted e machinery as to equalize these 'nerves of in the I I ce d e steam, will make its way where steam has failed to penetrate. We only power, atid their, to overcome all the Ilan ! WI II ' once ! ) I down net itch 1 ger of the one, and to encore all the adviiii resent e I ,ot, 1 a wait the measure of success to anticipate the most universally. serviceable. grateful tag° of the other, is a triumph indeed. widen be et i 1 11.1 a ' s and beneficent of all the inventions allied ‹;esiiiiie the above was in type we badly eel Titin 1 ling de ant with the labor of mankind. have received a dispatch from New York femme net ' I, dun i , 1 l be dot kw 1 with I The engine takes its Mime front the , me 1 w principle of heat. 'Flits principle is Bp- giving us the result of a seeond trial trip down the bay. in which the Encino:in has tohbiti ipl i the pn., , , plied to air, by Ericsson , instead of steam. made a tleeided gain over the former effort, 11.MIll illf I SOU Ilth 111{161 $ll I g , And the expansive property of air, under . having accomplished nine miles per hour ,ant ill, , to pander ; 1 Men act I than we h i, the application of heat, is so managed that' against wind and tide. This seems 11l frill bill , the power indicated a bo v e i s made avail- be the warrant of success. This thing i letuer. If ne 'rot trip a 'dr i blood, under \ able by means of the engine just now put i I i in operation. We have already published I! for rapid developments and accelerated 1 the legislators ot is done, and we may confidently look T he a h hi oah m ovement. ilo co reason, tit laws, let several articles explanatory of various m 1 at- : speed. be connected with the subject. But it will !grade themselves k be found a theme of growing interest as its iit to free soil. We success becomes more apparent and its indignantly ! capacity demonstrated. 1 -, Waist Railroad Accident.. ; t i l STAR IND DINNER.' LEGISLATIVE. ...0; , :.. .. Narrow' lump of Pretideor PiebTo.-.1•1 1. 1 is spreading at the South. The 1 ...a. ... z... a ..,.........--. ;.a• : . -. .-_ : ........1...... ! Ig'jraOn Iltlondey,' Mr. Carson, er ; Pumeet's iilfortinie.—Tnii first number of a new ( T NT . The butane death itf his Sin. .. Putnam 4'Co., Nevs L yo4. has been laid on our t o the in each county in the State Bolton, Jan. 6.—A frightloil neeitlent I . CEETTVSk3 URA,' 1 tte Senate, announced the Stan ! .:„Com i , . . p eg bine tota not thts title. puhliahed by G. P.! Florida Senate has passed t bill louring it i utilities, the more : Important of w tub we table. : , Dia etilbsiliaed teith a splendid engraving . p eople ..,.. occurred on the lliciton and Maine Refl.! i . road alma noon to-day, whereby the life I I rids Evening, Jan. 14, 185,3. ileme * .,, ~,,,,,,„..--_—_-_--....,, ---- -- 1 Fitian.:—m -Darcie. . - or the . tratjace„ of et,..mee sem . ,.. ,, t ,H tna he e id , to a d i e;erruine for themselves whether they sty.ra. iue ..... 0w. i and contains one Wifred ; and twenty page . of : us of . the President elect who greatly endatt.i rent license for the sale of intoxica gored, and hit only son instantly killed.— SPECIAL, NOTICE. . l f kremlin and Sanderson. •s, , interesting and instructlecreading matter. The I . . ' nublis.hers aredote. . ~,, h „/,... ~,,i , ,,, owl . Wig liquors within their jurisdiction. We When near the town of Andover. in Mas- 1 Judiciary—Meson. Kunkel. araturtrie, Buck. i • inferior tononp m : b n ii.t : j' in - A l ing-mjc-.-. - observe that .similar movement is on foot imehtteetts, the train was thrown off the! Fr Ail t h ose . indebted i s ° this outs 6a sub. ! elew, triVeil and /firmer. ticription, advertising or jobbing, are requested to I Corporations—Meows. DerlingionAloge, Hams ' tra** by some obstruction, end precipitated 1 ,„„,xe istyleentwitheut delay. Persona in l e " , ilton Haldeman and Quiggle i Harper' . • Maganse.— ins January No. of time ; valuable Monthly is in keeping with the high vention, lately hold in that Stare, drew up down an embankment twenty feet nigh. may call st the office. Thoie in the country will i Bath—Masan. C midi ite • heition, Haldeman. i character of the preceding volume. Abbott's ifs iau act to be introduced into the next Leg. Inning a temerity:lt, and falling upon a pilo , have an opportunity during the January court of ; H am i lton an d H, w„H,4,1 1 ,,, lustratts! The of Napoleon is continued, with a se- { . , • . - • of rooks alike bottom of the einliatikmfr it. "idulg• or thefimile* Walling tho almilfiliitthei , ! onetieandlni andPiaVgation. r Memrs. Evans vies of interesting ankles that make up a table of Mature, for the purpose, math° title reads, p a s- ; indebtedness. Subsorihersont oftbeFounty,obo i crabb, Fotaytb, bandersion and Skinner. . The mike at • the.tione were fillet( with papers by ma il, can remit their duce 1 Railroads—Mears. Slifer, Kunkel, , contents ..hard to beat.' The circulation of this 1 of "enabling the inhabitants of every cowl emitters, among whom were Gen. Pierce,; reee ~, d i : sa l t i e r ,. Hoge , Ro• I magazine has a l rea d y reached over 100,000 cop. bertson and Hie - tee. ty, town, village, and election precinct in 1 Ms monthly, and is rapidly increasing. ll* l ad! , and only soil. si t i"tere*Thtlf boy ! We trust ol;frionds will not set this notice t 1 of ten years. Gen. Pierce 'vas the first I down as tine uf the Likemlimgrituteil dims, which 1 On the mile day, Mr. Quig,gle, (Loco) i ! the State of Alabama, to protect there to Pimiento himself from the fritginenie of insane nothing and may be atteaded to or not , read in place a bill authorizing the citizens I t selves front the evils arising front the sale t ' bout inconvenience . to the •Printer. We ere I • L• , 1 ristrurg, by into. Faux & Co.. la issued semi- ! the ear; which was literally smashed to ..t- _, 9 " 1 , 1 . a , hil I and , inhabitants of other atates, passing f weekly duri n g_ th e wail er , of t h e Legislature. and ,of intoxicating liquors." It provides that tons, and though sound ii limb. he fit• r ni l ee it, ar t n h i e o tom u m ou r : ic id em m e eet nt rr a n e r b e w el y dil ear,— . l l through. this State, to hold their AIWA weekly the remainder of the year, at $2 60 in I whenever the inhabitants of any of the po• plainn of considerable pain in his ha . ek.— . i iiiirimuithit is ., be mea.. _ , a nd it eit'i only I during their transit. This is illacc ordance ; .°l.diZiceip'h°43,B ntical subdivistoes of the State wish to in not paid in advance. The weekly 1,, „ . • . His son one iitsteutly crushed to twin- Ibe done by setting our own Inuit those indebted god - Mn, Pier re recittved a number of steers '4O, We have sonies3.ooo on our Rooks due for i with the Governor's reeentineudation, and , fur 85. $1 110 iirladrouce. or four toper crease the price of a license, or to abolish vontueinits, none of which, hriwever, are ',fobbing. Ailveitising, eutecrietion, disded among i the promptness with which the measure is ! , 1 the sale of liquors, they may do so af t rhea Wafer Core Arrant, Phreaaloaiml, mu! , , . , considered dmigerons. Many other pay. some seven or right hundred patrons. The a• I . . , , • .. ~ sougnt to rte protect, evi ion s more eagernetet , The Snidest—monthly dollar *elven were badly brideed, and the down 1 menet dtte vi b t v . each ma wen ! that it but a in ma th ue e r o . g: r ; to Ntevara. Fowler di; Walla, N. Volk—are quill publicutions, hy . for obtaining the consent of a majority of ; pander to thecaprices of the Slave-nowt. r , the qualified electors therein. Fifty vo trail' has just brooght in six or eight oaths i ii lP " i ii, ta ' min t ' i t ': ii. w h in 1 It det n i l n e t l invnt -- . our table, each al them stored with interentrirg and .- - P r : t ilt : n .l than we had expected to find in the Legis- : r pec work. Wu ters in any county, or ten iu any city, Yil wwuntled. , The eitixenit of Andover stern, un rea di ng 0 4 make no hio mind in dismissive matte uhar to each aesidoons in their intentions to the suffer-1 us from difficulty by promptly discharging at Ile tuer. If men will deal iu human flesh and' know of no periodicals fur the same price, equal in lag, or election precinct, may, by petition on.vatoe to those. I .. _' - (east a portion of his indebtedness 1 I blood, under the sanction and protection of • to the Judge of Probate in the county, re • _ We gather , from the New York papers '''''.- i local laws, let them tin 90 ; but there can! The Proassavanio Farm Joaenal has nearly ! quire the vote to be taken in the custouta. *testa additional particulars of the accident. Ibe co reason, either iu justice or law, why - closed Oa second volume, and gives evidences of x.,„. manner, after the i legal • e liananotices.— The train was composed of a beggage . continued prosperity. Every Pennsylvania Farm- . and inissenwer car only. The exact cause • 1 the legislators of a free State should de- , er should take it. Hower). MerVdidi & Cu., The effect of a decision in the affirmative, of the accident is not definitely kicertaite- I grade themselves by voluntarily extending I Westchester_publishers—sl per annum. ! after thirty days from the proulatuation of Oat one of the axle trees is , supposed to it to free soil. We could wish to see the • We are indebted to a — friend for a c i r il result, will be to have the force of a co ii. ...T. the haire,broken ; some say It was the joined ...e re's introductory to the Course of Lectures on law ; and every breach of the same will movement tndignantly repelled, but con- ' R on which the, wheel plays. The dity eras ' Medical very cold—the thermtimeter pointed akze- Chstry and Pi; •in the edic-il . fen to little confidence in a body_as strongly ! Hepastnent emi of Pennsylvan li i amil Colleg • a '). lir.Mßee " subject the offender to indictment, and on e. se ; ro---and the accident weednuhtleas cowing marked by dough : facedness as our State' Wad recruits elected hi the Choir of Medical Clint. ' conviction, to a fine of not less than one 0,,, ev id ence, in the hu ndred , to the frost in the iron works of the ill- Legislature has shown itself during the - „,,g, and Phar macy , and dollars, to which the Court may y with which he treats his theme--Clierr, ; add imprisonment for fated ear. I last two years. 1.4 1 ,try : ice importance to the Physician”—th,t the ' Institution will be irenclltted by his CUIIIISCUiIIi 1110116, Thu County not more than three Mrs. Pierce and the deimased son had The House, to its credit, has adopted ,' Solicitor is stimu h;en absent four weeks on a visit to rela with it. - diree in lioston and Andover. The acei- .hy a decided vote, Mr. Hentlerson's rose- j lated to the punctual discharge of his duty A “Trnet for the nines. an Elemental Contrnat ' b}•a fee of fifty dollars iu every case of dent happened near the latter place. Gen. Outfit'', to have the House opened every ! Pierce went .toMoston on Tuesday morn- I morning with prayer—the clergy of liar- ic , ,, t , frecrt the Religion 01 } brut and or the :spifit. " conviction. Merchants tir salesmen of ally .ilir title of a new ruldiettion from the pen of in', and with them attended the funeral of I risburg altermiting. The Senate might the Rev. Dr, scIIIII7CICIFIt, of this place It is as • kind it ho give away or lend intoxicating Mrs. Pierce's uncle. Hon. Antos Law enia. ;.: eill e i 1 t of a recent dincoirse Irel.;ie the truth il do itself some credit by following the ex- drinks ••at their Places of business, or any rence, on the saute afternoon. They re ' Cr.,,, lt 4 yriod tit' West Pennsylvania, at iti Last Se.. Omitted it Mr. Aiken's, in Andover, whose I ample. vie., and d r published at the equeat .1 that I.ko i ty. public place," with intent to evade the lady is a sister of Mrs. Pierce, and were On 31ontlay, in the House, 31r. Leery I ii ` . t'l'ic di s e ase d bs'init on, of pe culiar inn ter laws, :ire subjected to the same penalties expeeting to retnrn in the evening. , , in the present aspect of theolre•lenl col,t.oversr introduced a bill authorizin g the ealiceiiii this publicAirm, wWi in malted icy the ulletiii .. , ' 4 ' . it they bold !!.• 'There is un exceptieu The train in which they went left Bos ton at noon on Theriday, and the aces- lion end abolition of the relief issues of the aetii , iivni.ied abilitt , will le rerti with curies- in favor of physicians, druggists, and oth dent happened just after it left the Ando- ; I_74ainnion wealth. midi.. t , ti aln B e n oi st. It can he hid at the Donn mote , r ,,, o f 8 H . Ls ,, , itohi , pi„.„ , or ttl. ~,,,t.. ~. who sell liquors bona . ide for sacra ter depot, twenty ! mile/ from Boston. et ' —Wm* W p- HITE. of this place, has been a i * ! mental, medical, or mechanical purposes. about one. They bad out been in the cars pointed Ax.vistant Doorkeeper to the !louse. five minutes. . • We congratulate hint ou liis ... k, sl luck. Gelis Pierce. after the accident, appear- V. bet Mrs. Pierce was ; taken asad the members upon securing the set -7:1 composed, away in a very high state of mental an- ' vices of Cu :ii•eUlliiii•shlring an officer. guish. Her sermon* were agonizing.— in thu Ilotete Mr. Haldeman presented The little boy wits their only child, air el • a bill to repeal the act authorizing 11 road tier brother having died some tea years front Deardorff's mill in Ayttmlis comity to Owens lime kiln in York county. On Tuesday the Speaker of the House announced the standing eittnrnitturs. Dr. , Mellinger is on two, Divorces and Local Appropriations. Mr. Henderson read a bill to extend the ' charter cif the Carl's(' Deposit Bank. . Aithe time of the accident General Pierce`was conversing with Mr. Young. the superintendent of the new Mills at Lawrence. , Professor Packard. a relative of Gen. Pierce. was lit company with Mtii*Pierce and her sun, soul the party nertipied the forward part of the car, which was divided in the middle. -- 'They were all thrown into' heap, one over an ! other. MairteT•Pieree lay upon the flour of the ear, with his skull frightfully frac tured. • The rap which he hail worn had fallen nfl, and was filled with his-blood and brains. title girl ofMr. Newell: of Hillahor 'ough, had her foot crushed, and it must be amputated. Mrs; Newell was badly inju red, and Mr.' hieviall haila leg broken.— Mr. Horace Childs, bridge builder, of Hen niker, was badly but not estiotlelY bru ised. , Several women were severely bruised' The car is said to have broken near :he middle. The baggage ear in front waa not thrown ofE Abraketnan stood on the end of it and witnesved the accident un harmed. A dispatch, dated Concord, Thursday . evening, says: Considerable apprehension is felt here lest Unit melancholy _fatality way prove se rious in its consequences to Mrs. Pierre. She has been for several years in delicate health, caused partly by the lose of her first child. The boy killed by this acci dent was almost idolized by his mother and father. SHOCKING ACCIDIINT.-M8 copy the following thrilling narrative trout the Del- aware Gazette : A. young sailor about 25 or 26 years of age, by the name of Stansberry Messie, of intemperate habits, and being some what intoxicated al the time. climbed hi the mast heed of a large new Bchootter belonging N. At W. B. Horsey. and to show his sailor-ship to -several persons who were looking at him, attempted to pass fmm one maslhead tS the other on the spring stay. To do this he utulenook to go feet foremost, swinging his tinily, under the spring stay and holding on with his hand* and legs. The spri tig slay being a horizontal rope more than sixty feet froM the deck, it required some ain't to work his way from one mast , to the other. After he had passed about two thirds of the distance his legs by some meine slip. ped off leasing him hanging by the hands. He made several efforts to gain the stay with his legs. but failed to do so. He then cried nut` ..1 shall fall, God have mercy uWnae." Thoserwho were looking at him ontild render him no eartltly asaist &nee. though two .other sailors at the toast head were within a few feet of him. He continued to hang by his hands fur several wittutee, and when tie could hold on no ganger seemed to relax his hold one finger et a time. The spectators seeing he was *bout to fall. turned their backs 'to keep fame witnessing the sight. When at last he le4lo, Oh horrible to relate, he tell with a crash to the deck that could have bee. heard at the distance of half a mile.-- iie deteeeded feet ferettiost, and such was the fa with which he tell. that one of his thigh home passed entirely tlt neigh ihe Jet*. and the other penetrated the deck 111 she depth of near two inches. His thigh bones were literally shivered to splinters, end in this state he lived near att begging the dotter who was called tti his sal "not to let him die in his sins." Pour fellow. him well . There was mosey a au..itia man in the World than lEhenstiterY Mosaic." Niwa. A par t Itnag.:—.l:he New Hemp- Ake Psamies, the leading De.noe retie paper et Costeuril, satyr the Mnting , office ot that has 441 M the gradtiating actioot of . a a Senator in Cower*, several atlereseetad .. see tollintgrese. many editors. *mime esittisters. and malty oTher young S. who have tilted st swim)s times tasponeible stations is the row Salnthy. ' ' 1.14111101 at.--A. far am *beer. 66. d. the Ellemoorasse **wily Ott Gev. • is 1410. The 416mkate alorio 11 110 • Vitip. Nal Ai HOMO 36 IP II Whip. ig.The unexpected success of the effort now being made to secure subscriptions for the Railroad .hom this place to some point in the line of improvements in York coun i ty, has difihsed general confidence among the friends of the enterprise as to its ulti mate accomplishment. That iftli ROAD ! WILL RE aunt: seems to be regarded as a fixed fact—the time and point of intersee tion being, the great questions now to be Settled.' The determination of these of . , course depends much upou the energy with which the movement is iressed and the lib , rality of our frieuds in' the townships, who after all are the ones upon whom the betie fits to accrue from the construction of the toad must =duly fall, and who should feel most deeply interested. Whether the road shall go to Hanover or direct to York bids fair to be the real question to be decided, and as that must in a great degree be con trolled by the evidence that may be de evelopud, in the preseist movement, of our ability to make the longer road, every friend of the enterprise will see the propri ety of securing the heaviest possible sub ; seription-tit-onee. We believe the subserip- Lions already reach near $1n),000, w ith f u ll of the county yet to canvass. -The liberal subscription in the borough has been iu part Pespon ded to, and we hope to see the good work go on. A number of our farmers have talon from GOO to 31,000 in stock, and iu one or two instances we believe this latter mark has been exece&id. ..But auspicious as this begiuning has been, the movement must not be permitted to drag. There is nothing like “striking when the iron is hot." There is a growing good fueling that must not be smothered by in- I action. Unfiuggin,q, perseverance is ever the price of suress k Let every individual in the county, whanver his vatting, regard himself as the peculiar fritlud_of the cuter prise and join hands - Will/ his neighbor in the offal to push it forward.' We notice that a correspondent of the N. York Tribune, represented by the Tri bune to be an experienced engineer, (pro bably S. W. Mifflin, Esq.) in discussing the project of a new railroad from N. York to Washington city, urges the adoption of the route through Easton, Rl:tiding, York and Baltimore. There being already a mid direct front New' York to Easton, and one'from York to Baltimore and Washing ton, the uoustruution of the link between York and Easton, (about miles,) would secure a continuous road from city to city. One of the inducements held unit by the writer for the adoption of this route, arises from the fact that by the time York is reached they will be on a direct line of com munication with the great contemplated road from Harper's Ferry to Knoxville, and thence to Now Orleans—the link be tween York and liarper's Ferry, via Get tysburg, requiring completion. yeLWe notice that the citizens of Ha gerstown are agitating the practiftbility of teaching thh Baltimore market by building a railroad from that place across the South mountain to Westminster, and thence to intersect with the Baltimore and Susque hanna Road—a formidable undertaking, to say the least. Would not the completion of the already partially graded road be tween Hagerstown and Gettysburg, be more practicable and at least equally de sirable by the people of that region. lia'From the, Auditor General's Report for the tiscul year ending Nov. 30, 1852, we extract the fullowiug items of local in- Tux en Bank Dividends Dank or Gettysburg, Tax on Corporation &orks Bank of Gettyirburg, p 333 07 Uhambsniburs & Gettysburg Turnpike Road Company, Gettysburg and Petersburg do. York and Gettysburg. do. TRAYS. Ltrenses, 4.e. Thomas Warren. (Treasurer) ,lohe Pickins. (late Prothonotary) Daniel Plank. (Itag.ond Rec.) (Cullat. Inh. Tax) W. W. Hainendy ( " " ) Paryereids by Store Treastu-y. To Adam. county, (Comm. Schools) 11,924 30 Thorn's Warren, (abstenumt on Btate J. Aughinbankh, ( lisreant. Appraiser) RA Ili-ROA D Commissioners.of Allegheny county, Pa., have ',Ascribed the smn of $750,000 to the Allegheny Valley Rail-Road. It is said they would have subscribed a round million, but $250,000 were retained to push forward the Steubenville road, aCrTheyield of sold in California con tinuos as great as ever, and the supply seems to be exhaustless. 1117410 e. Chador H.' Atherton, father of tilemeor Atherton, of New Harrpabire, thaw* Beituday Wt. '' important 'rain! Au important trial is now going on in It.dtiinore to determine the freedom of Rzteum. PARKER, the (mimed girl, who, it will be recollected, was kidnapped frift Chester county. about a year ago, by a cer tain Thomas M'Cycary, Baltimore, as the agent of Locher A. Sehooltidd, of that city, who claims her as a run-a-way slave. The girl was living with a Mr. Miller at the time of her capture, who followed b. Baltimore with some friends, in order to prosecute M r. NrCri. ary for it bin:Tidily.-- Mr. Milkr, it will be recolketed, a - as found dead a 'lay or to'o ;11TerWar4!s, not far from Baltimore, under eiroutustances which justify the suspittion that lie was • murdered. The present trial gr.ws out IX a p,tition of Bache! Parker for her freedom, and ex cites much interest. Judge Campbell and Judge Bell, or this State, and Win. Norris, of Baltimore, appear fur the girl. and Win. Schley, Wm. P. Preskei, and Utho Scott, for the claimant,. A great many witnesses from Cln•ster county have been examined, and thus far the evidence is overwhelming in favor of the girl. No thing short of direct, wholesale perjury can break it down, and hardly that. P. S.—On ‘Vednesday, the counsel for the claimant yielded to the overwhelming force of the testimony in favor of the girl's freedom, with sundry mock professions of magnanimity, liberality, die. Forty-nine witnesses had been examined for the girl, and 30 more remained to be called, when the case was abandoned. Rachel's sister, Elizabeth, who had also been field by Mr. S'ehoolfield, was of course also restored to freedom. It is to be regretted that Attor ney General Campbell, at the conclusion of the trial, thought it necessary to dis grace himself and his State by a parcel of unnecessary twaddle about the "foul spirit of abolitionism," the "duty of all good cit izens to aid and encourage the pursuit of fu gitive slaves," the "fidelity of the present Government of Pennsylvania to the corn promises of the Cobstitution," and similar stuff. Judge Bell very properly maintain ed a dignified silence. sB3a Is THE GUILLOTINE.—The Boston Post has a cut of .a guillotine, which it used to bring at the commencement of a Whig administration, State or National. The Executive stands by smoking a cigar, while the bead of a victim lies under the descen ding axe. Some motto quoted from a Whig speech or letter was generally underneath. The Poet will have a capital occasion to bring it out after the 4th of March, and for * motto we would suggest the following brief extritet from a speech delivered by Gen. Pierce in the Senate in 1841.--Lquis-, vile Journal. 613,440 00 29 67 to 3 04 406 .91 3,477 70 "There was nothing in the administration of Cion,Jtokoon which 1 on uniformly foiled tojuo lifY as the nnnoval of one worthy uirwor to $l5l pinge.to annthor." Mir The Miner's Jonrnal says that the cella of the new prison in Sehuylkill coin ty--forty inn number--are all occupied with orintinal*--and that HUM was the fright- ug. the Dehmitre X•egiolatura op Wad neaday elected John DI. Clayton to the U. 8. i Setutte for Mr yeem from the 4th of Mitch next: The Chtrutbrrriutr t : 11 . 111 e, under the Charge of of ( MI • ('Lruc hts lwe.no, o n, of he hest puFeni in the Nnte. eomnrnrrn t h e near ye If with fl series of illtudratiout tint mutt impart new itorrerd to the paper. ee al verti.ciitec,t ill an other r.duanit. From Europe ICI - .- The steamer lialtic nrrivt at New York. on tite 1 I th itist., bringing four days later in telligenceirom Europe. A lit ly C:11 , 11144 liaS ;irL7atliZl'll iu F1,111;401, ciitlitit Mel ;Li fon;;IVS: Premier. L and Alwrlcen ; Chancciiur . Lurd Craw- worth ; fltatteellor of the Ex:du-titter, \1 r. (iiad-ton e ; Home Secret:lQ, Lid I'a!ut -1 en,tott ; Foreign Secretary, Lard John ; Colonial Secretary, Duke of New ; Lord of the Athniraltv, Sir .Jatae.-: tirahnin ; l're:ddent of the ( . .macii, Earl 01 Graiiviik ; Pelee Seal, 1);1kt.,.f secretary of IVar,'Syduey lierbert; ident of the Indian 13ttiril, Sir C. \Vood ; l'ublie \V: rk , , Sir \V. 31:desworth; witie oliiee, Marquis of Latid,loutte. territit. gale tarred at Lit erpo.l nn the ni`lit ~f '_(ltlA, eau,ieg great dant- 't`e to clic ,liippir;g Frew Vninee We learn that ex-king Je nane I,,t‘e Levu utininatt•fi the throne, iti the event of Louis fdling in direct or adopt ed itie. The nutaination is unfavorably rec.( i‘L.l lhe insurreetiiin in Albania and :110 n . tetiegru is rapidly spreading, and affairs look ulifaviirable for the 'Eurbisli N., further progress had Lean made in the Burmese War. The ''lll,rtll..westertt frontier of India was again in a state of in- surreetion Advice:: from the Cape of Good Hope report that the war is almost over, and that the chiefs are suing for peace. The mining intelligence from Australia represents gold as abundant. Prices of provisions were enormous. -NEW TERRITORIES PROPOSED. —The organization of three new Territo- ; ries has already been proposed in Congress. The subdivision of Oregon and the forma- tion of a new Territory north of Columbia; river, to be culled Columbia Territory— also the Territories of Platte and Nebras ka. It is not at all surprising that the planners of the Capitol extension at Wash- ; ington should have so designed the Senate Chamber us to accommodate one hundred Senators. The extra desks will be needed before the building grows old. private letter from a well-inform- I ed source says the Whigs in Congress were never better united or in better spir its than at present. They are hopeful of the future. KTMr. BALM:Ieg nomination for the Supreme Court, it is said, has been laid on the table, by a vote of 22 to 1, by the Lo eofoco caucus of Senators. Thu objection to his nomination is alleged to be, that he does not reside in the circuit from which the Judge should be taken. lllZrßesolutions have been offered in the New York Legislature, expressing deep so licitude in regard to the pereecutions which Fraucisoo Medals and fstnily were subject ed to in Tuscany for,the alleged crime of reading the Bible.Theq . request the President to exert his influence with the government of,Turoany to allow them and their fellow prisoners to en3igrate to this country. lICPAt the recent York county Dem ocratic Convention held on the ad inst. to tippoint delegates to..the next Demohm tio State Convontion,. delegates were ituatructed to support, Hon. James Gerry, of York county, / for Canal Commissioner, and Ron. Joel 118. Danner, of Adams, fOr Auditor Otoutral: PC74IOII3iN. OARIMIr and blituartazte,, will aceopt our thanks for sundry doou. monts. SINGULAR A FFAIR.—A day or two after Judge Elmer benteueed Treadway, at Salem, S. d , to be bung for the murder of lii.. wile, a little boy, tigvd alwitt 8 vtaN, wh. , se parent:: result. 1111 :lie Ile:glib"!ho, i prellended its practical character made inquiry of his parents respecting the least, hot hi have estimated it as Eriessiiii wanner in which com:einneil criminals are , did. He had also to contend %vim the cxeettled. The parents heedlessly explain- p r u d ices of ed the teat ter, and shortly afterwards left Brunel, who in his latter days,seeins to have acquired some of the the boy atone with a small child lying ill me e i eritte preudives of the peoiile, whom the cradle asleep. During the absence of he had just fasemamt_by Its tunnel ender the mother, the boy procured a cord and the carefully adjusted it arimnd the neck of the' Thames. And Brunel, J.:itching an erroneous conception of die thing, resolute. sleeping Indic, :ma p rocee d e d to I „, ritoctt.L 4 ly withstood all attempts tu remove this oil the insuuctien he received from his impression. and Faraday, in an attempt parents. When the mother return e d, she'to lecture upon the subject, prepared Mu-- found, to her surprise, that her child was self elaborately ; but half an hour betore •Icad, hating Lett cholte.i to death by th e , the time fur its delivery, he was said to hate been p entaturely altected, front wham cause nobody knows, and on appearing before the audience plainly told them that 't 01..‘1 EN Di 1.1 ItC LE.—The 14wu racy of Philadelphia city and couu- tV have ad ern their pr:ntary elections iu June next, and among tin in is the following, which could be introluced into these rafts to the good of all concerned : ••If any candidate fur i• tiice by otters or gifts of Illoat, ittuncy,or any valuable thing. is 11111 d amity of attempting, directly or indirectly, to tnc vote of any democratic citizen at the elect 1111 l Oil the second Molliday in .11111 e, ,II of any confer, u, , hts nonce isto be alllCiellll,llll the list of catch .1.1b.s by the conference, and ally solve cast for such candidates ist,l nut be counted.•' COMMON SCIIOOI.S.—We learn from the school report just wade to the Legis lature, that there are in this State 9,699 common schools, with 6,M0 male and,2,- 853 female teachers, m 1 ,1207,059 wale and 213,74 ti female scholars. The average cost of teaching each scholar is 42 cents per mouth, and the total cost of instruc tion $743,546. The whole amount of school tax levied last year was 8982,198, besides the sum of 1.5.!3,958 appropriated by the Legislature. new Rolling Mill is constructing at Danville, Pa., by the Montour Iron Company, which will join their old mill, and the two united will be the largest es tablishment of the kind in the United States, the whole structure being 231 feet long and 134 feet wide. A LITERARY OHM.—The Harrisburg Telegraph publishes the following verba tim copy of an advortisement sent to that office the other day : FOR REND On a Bublick Vendue is lowa Dauphin Coun ty On a Bublick Honer nemle a Hone and Lot and a Schob and a piC of Land nenile 28, Acre, Eich by dem salt on the 21 December 1862 at 1 o'clock in the Afternoon December 14th. Executor of deust. PCPThe Canal Commissioners have re duced the fare on the Philadelphia and Columbia railroad to 23 cents per mile.— The same price is now also charged from Harrisburg to Pittsburg. 0:1 - Judge Douglass has been ro-eketed 17. 8. Senator from Illinois, for six years the 4th of March next. P'"A Mormon organ, called the Seer, has been started in Washington city, by Orson Pratt, one of the Latter Day Saints. It is in favor of polygamy, and attempts to justify tho practice by Scripture. The power of Congress or of any State to pro hibit it is denied. lOTA oouple of twin children .are in Cincinnati nine years of age ; the girl weigh 181 lbt., and the boy 187. o:7oThe extraordinary mildness of the present season was broken in upon, on Wednesday and Thursday, by a rough, tlis arneable snow-storin. • ' 0:7" On Wednesday last the completion of the flalthnore and'. Ohio . Rail-road to Wheeling, was celebrated by 'largo excur sion party paMing over the entire route, including the Governors and Legililatures of Maryland and Virginia. Mr. Ericsson, the inventor, is a Swede by birth, but an adopted citizen of the Untied States. The achievement by which we hope he has itnioortalize'd name and lame, is or no recent date. Af ter many years of careful reflection, he in troduced to the scientific world of London, in 1833, the mode by which he proposed to effect what be has now accomplished. This was a process for constantly retaining the hem necessary to the expansion of air, by means of a ”regenerator ;" and in 0114 lies the economy of the machine. An in considerable loss of heat occurs from radia tion, and this being regularly renewed at small expense, the calorie enaiiie performs its work steadily, safely, and. it is said. ef fectually. nut, ti",i,,01 14. and Pro les:44,r Farad), nnixt wer,l 111111111Slit'd .5 , 11'(111:1 thu day, ;ippr.ov e d he y, ility do not :went to have row- [a model one.] worked at all. lie took the idea, perhaps, that it was like the Yaii kee's perpetual motion down at Littstiug, which worked tirst•rate so lutig as the titan turned the crack in the cellar. With such untoward misconceptions as these, the British Government declined the project to which it was invited and with held its aid. For nearly twenty years Ericsson has pored over los inaehme, until at length he found a man of sufficient eral spirit on this side the Atlantic—mind that Mr. Bull—a merchant of New 'York. Mr. Jacob B. Kitching, to put his faith into money, in which firm it is marvel lously prevailing, and wed it to the genius of "caloric." The ship Ericsson, and the new propelling mach inery by which idle is designed to tread the ocean wave, is the legitimate issue of money, kith and genius. The vessel is to make a trial trip, and, it is said. will look in at Baltimore, when our citizens will have an opportunity to seal) her lair proportions. But admitting the probable success of the invention, the Ericsson, superb and admi rable as she is, as an experimental creation, is but the earnest of what is to come.— Leaving out of view the resells of exper ience, the improvements that will certain ly attach themselves to the work, we have a motive power so compact, so Com paratively cheap, so portable, so safe, so superior in every respect to steam where it can supersede it, that the mind is at fault in an attempt to conjecture results. The printer at once obtains glimpses of a young calorificalor doing the work of the press all over the country ; for the press and and power will adapt themselves one to the ether, and demand and supply will only be reguriiied by the usual equivalent. The artisan of every class, to whose labor machinery can be applied, may find the "calorie" adopted to his wants. The fanner may presently stable his "horse power," and put a young •'calorical" colt at each end of the field, and till the lertile earth on Ericsson principles. And as for the sea itself, it may, within our day and generation, murmur a long farewell to the! winged wanderers upon its uncertain breast. Fur the"calorte" can put enough I of fuel in a'sanall side pocket to circumnav igate the world. According to a present comparison with the steam engine, the caloric engine of the Ericsson, consuming only six tons of coal in twenty-4one hour', indicates a saving of about eighty per cent. And such is the estimated rate of superiority in this item alone. From, tins,, we perceive a great diminution in the amount of coal or fuel required to effects given pewee. Hut in the immense multi plicrtidn of this pow. er, 'and iu applicability in so many instan- ces where steam's not v and n.eter can be availalo, we .may reartrahly anticipate that the'demand.for luel will ,be increased weed ul tr - Tne New York Journal of Com merce says : "We understand that the gentlemen through whose instrumentality the calkie ship Ericson has been built, are fully satisfied with the success of that vessel ; and that it is their intention short ly to luy the keels of other and rhill larger E hips, of the capacity of say MO tons, into which engines of sufficient power will be placed to give them a much 'higher maxi mum of speed. We understand lima du ring the present year, at least six vessels of this description will be built for the same parties, 11177 At a meeting of the Lutheran Trus tees of Franklin College, held in Lancas ter on the oth inst., Mr. F. A. )It:tit.rs ticitti, A. )1., at present Professor of the Greek I.ativiitoze ate! Literature in IN allia ( . . , lit go, at. Cottalourg, tras g11:1 ; 2‘," 111 hiStlElll . l.ll—,l II) rstabli>hr l I.y t act ine , iria , rating• Fr:till:Hu ' , .11e p.. )1 la en tamneetetl with l'eliii ,‘l‘;inia Col:ege ab.att tw,, y, which time he liaq aLi repuCi tionas an able, a, e.lapli,heil mai :•11(Ter•- 1 . 111 te:Wlier. Nall) .Jf the friumla of his youth in this, his native city, n ill lie gra ined to learn of the high position he re:idled in the dilrcult pr,tfe.,t7,:i,,1l he has chosen.—/,untrisli* if Jrr- sev hive beets inskillg tlerts savi the l'r,titott liaz, itr , , Ii •{t ut th. State. to am— Ili" I.y 11'611011, to in? I recut:;t Ihc uk•.x! 1,4 islattm, prnyitsg the ,•flactilletit 01 1.1., , - liihitor% )ut.• u ❑unrLt•r nut. from ..,(1,111)(1 - 7•1 lu Wechir , lay the )Itis•titliii. tis Legbdtit tire ikett•t; I . rit‘t t itor by the I lloeing t Clithtill 116, Nanii .41 . 11 I 31 ; in Coo Seirtio, Bi;•11- ,q) 4. •riti , . A 'wilt' ENet.oiliNo Exci.orrioN The New lock litotes, ;tenee preitAr..tions are nrtk nue In lit nut the seronil r xploritig expedition, plc - posed to be Sell: lu the Airily regions. in search of Sir John Fr:oil:hie, by Henry Grinned. The ilatc for its departure IS 11X1 . 11 the middle of April next. It will consist tit the :.rig Ailvtinee, which formed n part of the ars; expedition. and is still 111 perleet order, wish t h e excepi i,,„ her keel. which was kllOektli tiff by the tee. II is Sine 11 ill he taken into the dry dock in :Mom three weeks. She will be aialitted by a crew iii picked men. uiiidrr the C 1.11111141111 of Lieutenant Kane. U. S. N., and be amply provided with sledges and India rubber boots, with which to penetrate into the frozen regions, —using Whichever mode ut convey:oleo may most faciliiate their progress. Pem mican, or dried deer's flesh, will form the essential article of food. On her North erly trip. the Advance will stop at Green land, and procure a supply of dogs. The sledges and other details of the outfit, aro in course of preparation. The direction to be taken will be the region of Smith's Sound: and as the'expedition will be ac companied by a corps of seientitie observ ers, interesting results of a scientific na ture are antioipated, even though the ex pedition should fail of 115 main object.— Lieutenant Kane is peculiarly qualified for the eommand . of the philanthropic enter prise, and it could not be undertaken under more hopeful auspices. ANOTHER FLORIDA WAR.—Governor Brown. of Florida, on the 23d nit. trans mitted to the Senate of that Stole a tints hake covering the letters from Gen. Blake and J. Darling Esq., iu relation to the re fusal of Billy Bowlegs and the Seminoles to emigrate. The G °venni!. sake the Leg islature to clothe the executive with sufii• dent power to cad out a rullicient force to protect the frontiers, nod co-operate with tha.general govertimeut in any measures which it may adopt in the emergency. It is recommended to ttend into the swamps three hundred Creek warriortt under their own offivere, to capture aa many Seminoles as possible. It is believed the -Indians have established a fortified 'cantp on the eeetern edge of the Big Cypress, south of Fort Myers. IMPORTANT 11110 Common Pleas of . Philadelphia, Ori' SsiOrday, the court delivered an important decision, whereby about one million thilbire *Milt of properi), claiming exemiiiion 'tax!' anon under, various nets el the Assembly., is made liable to their just proportion . 01 taxes, which .will diminish the rate charged upon other property, heretofore bearing all the borthen of taxation for public purposes. The 'PentutylV4lll . 3 Hospital, 1,3;111:1,p t Churth' H os pital sad istlier - eintritSidev 0 1. ligio i nititudliiersry inetitulions front apich anincome • is derived, are Made to pay a tax under this deciSion. . The hinter trnili of Sonteteet tounti, Pa., etotJuutii to #BOO,OOO a yew. YS:.O Since !Ili aßrOtit'llie two houses of Congres* lay*. begun 40 show 'Legislatiop,lbr...the benefit of 1 the country is not to be eutieeied front the The "Short session." expiring oh the night of the third of Marsh mitt; is io be frittered away itt frivolous debate, and we shall have ; to Wail until the r•rdittiration of the Sour borne" for the development of the projects which they have in view. The Senate has been mainly engaged in discussing the Tripartite Treaty which the United States proposed to England and j France respecting the Island of Cuba.— mt. Cass started by offering a resole -11011 covering a large extent of ground, and I breathing defiance to the "whole or' Eu rode "or none." In the House the De fictency Bill, and the lieutenant General ship resolution, have been up for con: sideration, and some of the members have cut up such "fantastic tricks" during the debates as make the people laugh. The only thing to be gathered from the debates in the two House's, is the evident determi nation of the Locofocos to back out on the Cuba question. The red-mouthed Cal houn disciples of the South will not touch it, and poor "Young America" is dikely to he smothered in its cradle by the fierce onslaught of the Old Hunkers." England has growled,and as on the .54° 40' or fight' , question the Locufocus are for takiiig a , back seat. It is amusing how the grin of the English Lion does frighten a Locoloco, and how cringingly they act in giving her, virtual possession of everything she de mands !rein its, and all under the specious plea of "Donueracy." Out upon such humbug ! Having by fair means or foul "roped in" the votes of a majority of the people for their patch-work National ticket last, fall, they now coolly turn round and give the Flibustiers the go by at ally rate, and' "there's more a Corning." We shall see the end of all this some day.— Fed; Repub.' !icon. TERRIBLE DEATH ON A RAILRnAD.—Mr. Frank Ward u wheelright of Boston, met a most horrible death on Friday, by fall ing (rein a gravel train neer Quinsy. No less than fifteen ears, weighing in al! a• bola one hundred tons, passed over his "body. The legs of Cite unfortunate ratan were completely severed in three places, the trunk was cut into three distinct places, his arms were also separated into four while his head Was rut completely and all that could he found of it was a ma s of brains, flesh and crushed bones, toil more than tall thlek. The Itaginents were seattered along the road bir mere than filly roils. The deceased was ii ~ t ranger to tlowe coolowted the train, but the pities of his body bring gathered up and taken to the Boston depot, his wile repaired thither. and as a part of the trunk with his coat hanging to it was lifted from the box, Allt , uttered a shriek of agony, sereaming —Fs Friuli:, it's Frank !" It was thus that his limne was ascertained• ORIIAT EXCITEMENT AT IAI.FM• 0111(1. —Tlit . Treasurer 01( '011001)in. ,, 001,... called Ott the 30th int:Lint. Itpoti thr for taxes assessed -ct eral and being refused. not the ground that the tax w•as levied nn the erspiitil lustead of the entered the hank w,th a pm...v. armed with guns. revolver. , and tor the pfirpt,t3 0r bre.Litig open tne vault and SPlZlltif the re•qutsrtc fund.. Al this state Iti the attray ariiii,taito %I'M , &Afr o! fir the purpose of , •allnig the doector•. together. that Itie might decide whether ihry would or would not pay ttleinx .0 a. .e•sserl thret tors met, xn.l protested tblabist paylittz, and tit' weans orutit , , crowbars, &c.. &me the tax•eathering party out ol the honk. PROBABLE EsCAPF: uY 1U F. 1111,41 PAT RI nrs.—At the lute ictOit 111 Mr. Meagher took an orrastun to make the ("flowing reniark.. wind' Wllll it I ,erin to indicate that Atiiertea will sprat voill:1111 more of those Irish rilrlot4 o iio reeve 1100111E1i to bear the l t rthcu of ellie 6e the unjust decrees of England : •.1 did riot rel.! toy freedom to forget others. Suffice it to say, that if they are not soon amongst you us free• as I am. it is not v fault. our die fault of those who may assist them. but &ben- own. Meas ures have been taken, and weans afforded :toil I trust that betore long we shall hear that another ship, hearing another Irish re bel, has lett dial share, and left it under t h a t fl a g or ihe five stars, beneath whir:t hound au asylunt ut dint land." hnK Its:Evaat. OF BILL)" Bow LlO3 To LEAVK FLORIDA.—The National !meth• gencer confirms the report that lidly Bow• legs has been compelled by his followers, particularly his sister and Sam Jones, to :Timm the eompliance with his promise to leave Florida. Ile had taken to the ev erglades. and as a regiment of "Cow•boys" .or “Craelt.rs" is being raised iu Florida, to pursue him, we may expect to hear moon of the commencement of another troublesome Indian war. IMPORTANT SUIT.—It is stated that the heirs ol the late Stephen Girard are making an effort to obtain possession (tithe entire ostate now in possession of the city of Philadelphia, including the LCollege build ing and grounds. The heirs have tiled a bill in equity in the Circuit Court, and have commenced an ac ' at ejectment in that Court and in the Court of Nisi Prins. This is not the first attempt made by the heirs to obtain this inialeuse estate. "I fear," said a country minister to his dock, "when I explained to you in my last charity serinon4 Chat philanthropy was the lore of our species, you must have understood me to Hay specie, ' which may account for the smallness of the oolitic tion." • Ur. AFRICAN SLAVS Tamos.—Letters from the coast of Africa mate that the British government are about to withdraw their naval forces from the eitaat, mid,. of course; by much an act, abandon nw efforth iti that . guarter for the aupprestiitin of the slave trade. IMMIX LAIC—The 'Maine Liqtior Law is made a subject of discumion in all parts of the State. The people imam to be de termined In secure the adoption of Pro hibitory Liquor enactment of some char •ctcr. The population of the globe is supposed to nine hundred end tiorty•sesen land. It is 'calculsted 'diet all mankind might be collected withia .the space or ten wailer square. It is thotigfit the area of of the globe might sustain 12.000.000,000 *ooll4on—twelve tittles the present .4.4autniter. From this it appelis there is Curtin enough in the world for %II of us. stud Ilan we ere not likely meatier lur souse • time to come tut elbow room. flieteorle Phenomenon la Arerset. An anonymous .oorrestmadeti,, of. the Galveaton tourott.iiteit-froni Brszoria. Texas, under dite - Of 'swot; lo :no. 1852. "I send you all eitcount of.a rmatirkable phenomenan.:which was jean here on Monday night (180) last. It was a me teor of a splendor ninth beauty or appear ance seldom witnessed. About half past ten o'clocK in the evening it appeared in the east, and, I think, filly degree, .above the horizon. T. the observer it seemed to be about the size of the sun's iliac, and very brilliant. The whiffle heavens were lighted up with its radiance, and the most minute objects were as plainly visible' as in the light of day. Its path across the heavens was from east to west, passing twenty degrees south of the zenith, to a bout forty degrees above the western hori zon, where it burst into ten thousand frag ments. Its passage apparently occupier four or five seconds. As it burst the frag ments of it. like sparks front a sky rocket appeared to full for about a second, and their disappeared. linmediately after it burst there appeared a pale blue light, which traversed the path of the meteor to the place where it became visible, and there disappeared. The matters worthy of remark connec ted with this appearance are, that no re port was beard, and its nearly horizontal course, tending to prove great distance; its magnificent proportions, and the light re-traversing its path. Q,uere: Might nut this light have been au optical illusion ? From its great distance, it Must have been observed at other localities. Its appear ance a; first was truly trightful. giving one the idea that the bull was falling toward the earth. I should be glad to hear other accounts of this phenomenon, as it Was one not only of rare occurrence, but in some respects different from any of which we have accounts. I would observe that the next morning before day-break, there occurred the heaviest thunder-storm willi which we have how visited tills season. Considerable sensation has been produ ced by the announcement that the horrible disease, the oriental leprosy, prevails ex tensively in one of the distriets of Norway from which there Is a large emigration to thus country. The Boston Chronicle states that a clear case of this disease was met in the practice of a physician of a neighboring town. it is hereditary, but it is said not tit be contagious. Some doubts exist as to its being curable, but Nlat'll!Sei appears to have attended the in stitution oh hospitals for this disease in Noi W,ly. Wu were 81Irplibell to learn trout one 01 our must experienced physi cians, that this affection, iu wilder type than the oriental, Is to be met with ocea• sionaliy w prileiltg• in this Country. TIIe gentleman informs us that thus far the winter, both as regards weather and the prevalent types of dis ease, strongly resembles that of 1827-8. 1 1 . IiNJANI IN FRANKLIN. - Gen. Ilaiteroli, E-q., Ili 3 let:titre Iwhire the New York I listorical Stiviety, reported in the Twiea, pays all eloquent tribute to the philoso pher :—.•Not the halt of Franklin'smer its have keen told. lie was the true fa !her of the America,. Union. It was he who went forth to lav the lout/dation of that grevttlesign at Athaity ; xnd in New lark Idled up his voice. Ileie :moon.; us he ppeared as tlro apor.ite Of the CIIIOII. It was Pr..lll.lin who suggested the Cult gri•ss of . 1774, :Ind but for his wisdom, and the confidence that wisdom iii.pired, it is a loath r of doubt whether that tfull gress would hate taken etivet. It was Fiankliti who stiggerted the bond of the Ci.itin which hinds Oleo; States hoot Flor ida to Maine. Franklin was the great (11- 1 ,1..war,t of the eighteenth century. Ile never spoke a word too soon ; he never spoke a worth too Isle ; he never spoke a word too touch ; he uever railed to speak the right word at the right season." Syet:KlHi OF THE CALORIC STEAM EN HIN K.—The new York Post of • I•uesday says ; ••The new Calorie ship. the Er le:4- ellt (lOW II the hay this twinning in fine style. She wits going at the time our informant saw her, at the rate of eight or ten knots an hour, and was a beautiful aught. This was the engineer's trial trip, and in a hew days, we learn, a trial trip, to which the press and others wilt be invited, is bit he:made. • I'ltere is now, it is said, no doubt of the complete success of this important enterprise. It will he the grand est multi ph in pruetical'art which the age has known. MICIITGAN U. S. SENATOR.—The. Hon. Charles E. Stuart, Democratic member of the Douse of Representatives, has been elected to the United States Semite by the :Michigan Legislature, m place of Hon. Alpheus Fe'eh, whose term will expire un the 4th of March. EAVV TAXATION.—The expenditures of the city of New York Mr the next fiscal year is estimated at four millions of dollars. This is exclusive of the tax for the sup port of the State and Federal Governments. The population of the city is five hundred thousand, and the ratio of increase twenty per cent per uutft. BALTimostr. nI4ttKET. ANON VIP II ALT! XORI PIIN OP Y 'MPH lia i 1 FlSH.—There is a moderato demand. We quote No. 1 Mackerel at 13 50 a $ll per bbl.— No change in other qualities. FLOUR.—The inclemency of the weather M iley operated agaist, out •dwir bu,iiiesa. males of 30ii bbla Howard sweet Flour at $5 25 per Rik and 300 tibia do. at $5 a slight decline. Tiki market closed heavy, Nothing done in city —the list bales were at $5 25 per bbl. We quote Rye Flour at $4 50, and Corn Meal 3 56 a $9 628 per libl. . • • GRAIN.—The receipts of Grain continue light. We gouts Natal sales ot . red Wheat at 1 12 a $1 15; white Wheat 1 15 s $1 , 18 to $1 20 and very choice do, (or hittitly flour, $1 25 per, bushel. Rye' 82 cents per bushel. White Corn 58 a 59 cents, and yellow do. 61 a 63 cent* per bushel. 'Maryland Cati 36 a 40 rents, and Nutt. sylvania do. 42 a 44 cents per bushel. Clover see: se; Timothy do. $2 50 ; and Flaxseed $1 84 pet bushel. 0 ROC k:H lEt4 —The Grecery_uterket is quiet; sales small. We quote Rio Coffee at 9to needs per Ih. Sugars and Molasses unchanged.— Rice 4 cents per • ' PRQVISIONtI.-.The traneartiona are • arty We trate new Meow Pork at 00 AO s Bdl, per Isbl4 old Mesa Pork at, $19,; dlr. $1.7, par bbl.' Meer Beef $l6 per bid., Baron dere;o4, 03.'eenie, do. sides 103 a 103 centi, and hams 13 a•-133 rents ter lb. Lard in' edifi. 11i an* a it In kere - 12f a ITeenur per lb.-- , Butler itt kegs 10 s lla cent*, fog Sa s e 6 seats pet lb. Owes* 4 4 3 ngi eebts per lb. . IEORSC MARS. FLoNß,,porbtotrivitiveguaii, , ,. 4 sa t* ItEA'l' pa umbel, „ , 106 to i „la . ' HYS . • , 110 OATS, ' - • , ' • I'IMOTHT SZED; per bushel, ' • . AO' ('1,0VP,12 SERI), ,-" 6'60 FLAX•SERIE '4. 1, /11 0 PLASTER OF PARIS, per lon,' • 6' 60 ===M= irte -= The lower bilutoblltif;tltar Xi*: -Hampshire Legislature hall ,lionautiP4: by *Mote ma jority, in the Senste'i . rescilultdl}.tePreca tory of the'rejigioub teat, the . {institu tion of that State. It is not improbable that the people or the Granite State will, within a year or two, efface this luul and only blot from their escutcheon. How TU DESTROY LOCOFOCOIOI.—The Pittsburg Journal is responsible for the following :—Saida heavy aided but clear headed old German,* Democratic member of the Legislature: • "Lease de public works, and base die Maine Liquor Law, and I would'in give a d—n for de Democrat ic party." Our city columns record this morn ing another Mitrder produced by RUM , ---a wile and mother beaten to death in the presence of her little daughter by a besot ted demon of a bus band.—New York Trifune. An Excellent Remedy. Ile 'Those of our friends afflicted with Onfihs, Colds, &c.. will find themselves greatly relieved by the use of Dr. H. H. Ilighee's excellent Remedy for Pultnottn ry Diseases. It can be had matte Drug, Store of 8. H. IluEoutit. in Gettysburg at 75 cents s houle. MARRIED, On the fah Imo., by the Rey. Jacob Ziegler, Mr HENRY LONG, of Mmintjoy townehtn, nntl Minx HANNAH M.B _OWJIAN,of Mnuntplen sent townenip. On the same day. by the same. Mr. WILLIAM J. MILLER, of Indians. (formerly of Gettysburg.) and M.ss AGNEd WCREARY, of Franklin township. On the 214 ult.. at Eaton, Ohio. by the Rev. I). Kemper, Mr, s A MUM. BELL WHITE. of Gettysburg, Pa., e n d Miss JUSTINA. youngest daughter of Mr. M. Filbert, of Exton, Ohio DIED. On the 3J inst, RICHARD HARDING, son of JAM and Aluitha Chandoerlin, aged 2 years and month,. Why should our tore in ,orrow finw, W hen God recall. hie own. And bids thorn leave a world of woe For all immortal crown I On Friday evening. the 7ibinat • in Cumberland tonmallip. CLARA EMELINE, infant daughter at H enr y aml Elizabeth Mintilgh aged I month On the 28111 ult.. at the reaidetiee of Jot/ITh keener. Epq. near A bliolistown. alter a lingering Mimi.. Mr. LEVI . LA UGHMAN, muted 26 years anti I month. On the 4th inst., Mr. FRANCIS M'NUTT. of Butler township, in ton Stith year of his ace. In I.ntlestown, on Friday last, of typhoid Fever, Mr. WALTER J BISHOP. aged about 23 years. In Logan county, Ohio. on the 2 .id ult.. alter a Tong and severe Mess. WILLIAM KERR, F. 9., formerly a resident of this county. At the toiddenee of her lather. in Enitnittditirg. on the :lot alt ,(;01, 1 *1IBIA MACIIi \, .1.11.1.A -ter ot Dr. Janie,. W. Eichelbesger, aged 13 years 3 months and 23 days. FOR RENT, THE TWO-STORY Mit BRICK HOUSE, o ii I/Aron(' street, now occupied by !qr. selizetTer. There im a we!l of good wale,- nod a brick staid«, on the pretnises. In quire at this ',dive. Jan. 14, 1853. ISIIINCTON HUSE, COIiNER OF MAIK.E 1' Si * * 4 l l • - NRKET ; Harrisburg, l'a. I "HE undersigned ha' tilted up this II well known and favorite House. with evert' rllioveilielice requisite for the accommodation Od the public, and sitheite a einitintianee ol lite patronage. En liber ally ex iended to him he the travelling %M. T. SANDERS, flarrishurkr, Jan. 14, 1853.—tf 1,000 Book Agents Wanted, 10 SELL '1e1'(11 L & UsErrl. %ORK.s FUR THE YEAR 1533. *l.OOO a Year. lIVIT AN TE in every enunty of !he U. States, Herne and enterprising men to engage in the sale of some of the best books published in the country. To men of good address, possessing a sm a ll ea pi. lid ()Irmo' A 25 to $lOO, such induceinents will he offered as to enable 'he'll In make lout three to live dollars a day profit. irrThe hooks published by us are all useful in their character, extremely pop. ular, and command large sales wherever they are uillereii. Fur particulars, address, (postage paid) ROBERT SEARS, Publisher, lb + t. N, York. Jan. 14, 1853 SETTLE UP. THE undersigned, bring about to leave Gettysburg, hereby gives notiee to all persons indebted to him to call and make payment on or in/ore the 16th day of February next. After that day all un settled accounts will he placed in the hands dill officer for collection. Persons having watches in my care are desired to call lOr the tluino as soon as pos sible. The undersigned has mill on hands a large variety of JEWELRY, WATCH ES, Ike.. which he is disposing of at re duced prices, and invites perstms wishing anything in that line to cull and examine the same. ALEXANDER FRAZER Gettysburg, Jun. 14, 1888.--if NOTICE. THE subscribers, haying heel, appoint ed Assignees. under a Deed of Vol untary Assignment for the benefit of eretli tors of ROBERT COBEAN, of Cumber land townehip, Adams twenty, Pa.; hereby give notice to all persona indebted to said Cubed', to make payment to the under signed without delay ; and all persons elainis are requested to present limn; ,prupurly authenticated, for .eattle ment. INtir The first named • Assignee resides in Cumberland township. the other in Free , dont, township: , SAMUEL COBEAN, JAMES CUNNINGHAM, Sen., dasignees. 11P. , . ALE persons indebted, for fees, to Ficw 'BERT 00illeAtf. .1101' Register and R.- corder, are notified that Ili. Attsigneett - will be in Dettysbutv, during January Court and 'also at the'office of D. brOmvavottv. on IViday the 4th of,Yebruary next, to receive said fees, and if not' then paid suits must be hrohght for the same. Doc. 31, 1852-Bt. eAtsam. OF WILD CHERRY, For Consumption of the Longs,Xiger o,oluplainta, Coughs, .00141‘, Artbma, Bronetuts. Croup, Whooping &c. , - Ti. celebrated tied y 41111,61 remedy wiui diecov- erred some ten yeiti ado. that time it has ,by its arch Mesita; beiatt 40:fly; ouredysthdliaiely working Ine Way throUgh 'the oppeeittontif quiets and counterfeiters, until by Mt true value and in- triasie excellence, it has gained for itself a most entiable popularity end eatat fished itself in the con. Mance of au intelligent sad enlightened public. from one end of the continent to the other. The testimony of thousantle who have been relieved and cured by thisevaluabfiiiaaticle, will chew that it stands unrivallett r —at the heed of all other med. kines'for the cure of dlejaies fin' Which it is recom mended. The genuine Dr. Wham's Balsam of Wild Cherry is now for Seib .by July .appoiated agents, end all respectable dealers in , medicine. in all lards cities and important. towns throughout the United States, Canada:, and the British Pro vinces. CAUTION I The origins and only genuine WIsTAIt'S ,BALSA 34 OP WILL) Ci-lERIIY, was introduced In the year 1838. and hs Fern well tested in all the complaints for which it is recommended. For ten years, it has proved more efficacious as a rediedy for Coughs, Colds, Influ enza, Bronchitis, Asthma, and Comiumption in its incipient stages, than any other medicine. Always signed I. BIiTD, on the wrapper. EV" kor sale in Gettysburg by t 3. H. B LE 11, and by Drug gists generally. LIST OF LETTERS, Remaining in the Post (lite at Gettysburg, Jantiarylet, 1853. Keppie Joseph Berea w Elizabeth Kaufman Jacob ' , err MN. Daniel M. Little David ,Lithe S. Berne John Bender John Beecher John Brewer H. M. 2 Brennenion Jesse Cover Eli IBIDE=I trinelure Mist' M Millet Franklin Crkswell Samuel Davis J. 8.2 kemoon /ulnas Devine Bernard Marks Ch.rlotto Moore John McGrew Mrs. Jane De Groff Catharine Epley Geo. A. 2 Eckenrodo Miss M. J Noel Henry Plank Jacob H Pitzer John B. Fine C.:2 Filler Magdalene Featherhoid*Jaeob :Rail Jacob RAO' Mies Sunk Reek Mias Mary Pried' Philip (li , hrig Adana (lohrtnilit Mid iel Richards Isaiah S. Sourbeer Daniel Nanderson Isaac 2 SahaDing John Sheakly Catharine banitli Susanna Grita Hiram Gallagher Samuel liertgrii Mrs. Harriet Hartman Jahn Hoover Magdalen* Scott Mrs. Juliana Wireman William H. Wintrodo 'Young Samuel P. Young Miss Mary OUEHLER, P. M. (or loners in the above .3 , are advertised. ficrinao Jacob !keit Jacob Hagcrman George Humphrey %lieu E. 2 Hood H einrich (nr-Persor s List will pleaso say th init. 10, 1h53. SIXTIETH VOLUME The Franklin Repository & Whig, PUHLIsIiED AT CIIAMBERSBURG. PA. rep HE Franklin Repository and Whig enters SITTI•Tit year, enjoying a degree of itrarpeiity to all tis departments unexampled in its termer history. it. circulation never Was an Large, Ito ait , ertitihe idiot jobbing never so exten• 'site ; and its rapinly increasing het of readers att,rds the sitre.t guarantee that the various itn provenienta tiitirdlticed by tne present Proprietor hate been well appieciated, and will be amply into I did, by an intelligeot public. The Re positor y and Whig is of the largest dabs of itapets. etalltalltint thirty-two long col llama, and is pointed on entirely new type and the best qunlrty or paper. Its advertisements are set compactly in the smallest type, so that ample room is lett tor a quantity and variety of leading matter rarely ~tiered to the patrons of Conic ry puma's. lie itilatigettient , for conducting the different depaitnieuis ill th-- cZeptia.itory and Whig are of me most complete eharac ter. Political and general Eilitutial Deparinients are under the im mediate siiiier‘isititi it the Proprietor; and the 1. .cal and Literary Departments are in the charge 01 gentlemen whose cameo) and experience have rendered these comparatively new features in . Country papers, at once interesting and useful to the gene.al trailer. A small portion of the paper will be d.roted monthly to Medical Miscellany, Ns prepared tram iiur medical exchanges by one of our leading Pli,,iciuns. Particular attention will be paid to the Reports of the Philadelphia, Baltimore and Unsinbershurg Markets, which will he given Weel. Ay. The filet numta r of the New Volume, which will he Utz:Heti tili Thursday, Jan 6, 1853, will roman' a strikingly accurate likeness of the late Hon. Daniel Webs.er, with a biographical:sketch and reininiscetices c ttttt dieted with his isle I and dining the year we will publish portraits of Pre r.eleot Fillniole, Hon. Holum Choate, Hon. S. S. Pientisa. Hon. Wtri H Deward, Hon. IL C. Win throp. Horace Grotty, and Gov. Hunt, all of which are engraved in the very best style on wood. lisogiaphical sketches wilt also appear with each portrait. While it will ever be the aim of the Proprietor of the Repository and Whig to reader it a wel. come visitor to every class of readers, he will en desvur to lender in especially meinl and imitspem sable to Wh.ga Its columns will not be freigh ted to any considerable extent with Political nisi ' ter when there is little or no interest felt on the subject; but when the occasion demands it, it will be second to no journal in a zealous support of the Priticiplea, the Usages, and the Candidates of the Whig ' , arty .4ifvertirenieies.—The circulation of the Repo. intory sm. Witte is 2,200, and It is certainly the very nest aikeritsing medium in this section of tic State. Tr.RMS One copy, if paid within - three months, $1 75 within the year, 2 00 " not paid within Oa! year, 2 25 Fire copies, embracing 3 tew slibieribera, Ten " " 5 15 tiu • When dohs are ordered, the money inner inva riably accompany the urder. Letters must be addressed, post•paid, to ALEX. K. NeCLURE, Dec. 20. Chansbersharg, Pa. Harper's New Monthly Magazine Ti MITER'S New Monthly Magazine has .11 already rt•.aohed a regular Monthly issue cd• more than 100,000 CupPra, and In still stea dily and rapidly increasing. The Publishers have endeavored, by a weil-directed use of the abundant resources at their command, to ren der it the most attractive and moat useful Ma gazine fur popular reading in the world ; and the extent to which their offurte have been suc cessful is indicated by the fact, that it leas at tained a greater circulation than any similar periodical ever issued. Special efforts will be made, to reader it still more interesting and valuable , Auring the co ming year, In addition to. the nanal ample iv', choice selections of Foreigp,iind,Pornttse: Literature, en incretused dount cf grigth Matter, by the ablest Amer ican Writers. will be hdreafter &mashed, The namber . of Pieta:- dal Embollishinents will be intiredied ;- dill greater variety will be givetivbe its nt renfs and IdiowellniMoi•4llrt media will be atill further entail* and strength ened; and no.'abater expanse will tospared to render it in every, way, did in all royal:Ito, dill mare worthy of the eftraordillWY &YU; With which it haelieen roctilvod:' Harper's 'Hew Monthly Magazine trees its" Beanies to the fliet, that :it presents meta rea ding matter, of s better quality, in s•more gent style, ond„sa, iv, .ohespitr, 9,ltte ; any other publication. ' Subeeribees any pert f the United Ste may nuts rip:nitro the -Biagaisine Mill for three cents ;41, number, •or. titirtyr6inx cente . a year pintas% stelae. of the: Pabliehers, the Booksellers, or Peri.odiold ,dgents, ilea.' 10. , CIOU NTERPANES—WhiIe twill.— ( 9r rilP"rY ioNt KURTZ'S VANS ....le large aasintiiteatjuat oil at Kurtz': cheaieuraor. ' A Vir ri lil , siges4o beiog 10110 so , HI r" "L ti 4 , is .:compelled. to ,reaigWtha, ,oftse.p . onstahle,,and hypo doing Its re. turns to. the citizens ptgettyshorg hie cor .dial thanks for the many favom,end macho of confidence , heetowed on , him. . , I hay d ' d i As o"- aaaw ,li'. Far o"= to 111 c i P Ahe dynes of the °Ace for me, who will attend to the same, wat. wfirru. Jan. 14,10353.-11 , Si REWARD. RAN ; away front the subscriber. ; on Wednesday.itht 18th, lost., ;wl,lll'o. LEON SOWERS; ..arViiidentetl Appren• tict: to the Blackorniihing business: All peranne are here by . warned not to trust said Apprentice on my account,.or id:ller. bar him under penalty db.:hill proceeded against steepen:lz to law. J. h. 1101.TZWOR'ril. Dec. 17.-31. fa IDM2,I2M2 0306t0470 cHicK's smuk Ladies' Dress Goods, cau't be beat I It embragwe Silks and Satins. Bombazines, Cashmeres, De Lainen, De Bkisn. Alpacas, Ginglmins, Calicoes. oStx. Give how a call. Oct. 2U, 1632. eonte Wong AND see a lirst•rate assortment of Pan. 'taloons at SAMSON'S elle price wore, mirth as libel:, French estasittieree, Doe Skin Cosimeres, Finney Cussiineres of every kintrrtientionsblej . , CS#,itiet , 01 all eOlors anti shatleti, and at prices suit all. Ont. ;iv a 20 .12 , te ,A 0 Ov ail kinds . Cap and . Lanni. Vaper of the hest quality, Note Pa pe r , ,y Cards, plain and (nutty En vOiipeir,...Pen., k n Ives, Qu ills, Gold Pens and Penetls, Ste., al Wilt, 6 on hand and for main kw by. 8. Lt. uuFALLEK For Gentlemen's'Wear; WEIICK leas opened a aplei!did assort• " meat of Cloths, Cassimeree t CaSPil nets. Tweeds, Jeans, see for yourselves. and youi will conies, that cheaper goods you never saw. LADIES ! HAVE just received. a very large lot. of M. DE .L.IIIIVES, which I will sell cheaper ilian any other -house in the county. Call and examine them, as it is 11.1 trouble tu show goods. KURTZ'S Cheap Corner itt thaplace to get bargains. Blake's Patent Fire and Water Proof Paint, ASUPERIOR ARTICLE, fur sale at Falmestock's, sign of the RED FRONT. VESTSTVESTS ! VESTS ! WE have on hand a large and very genteel Assortment of Vests, such as Plain and Figured Satins. Cashmeres, Cassmets, Velvets, Plaids, &c., &0.. Re member that SAMSON'S ie the place. Idld4P(ll7 44)174.7)a0 RIBBONS, Hosiery, Gloves , _Needle Worked: Collars, Edgings, Laces, and a thousand or more artides - in itte same line, to be had cheaper than ever at Oct. 29. SC H IOK'S. PARASOLS—tIic bast and cheapest in town. Only come and louk. and you will say so. Give tin a call and you will be convinced there is no humbug about it. KURTZ'S Cheap Corner. Beautiful Fall. Styles 0 Goods fur Ladies' Wear. embracing every variety, just opened and fur sale at astonishing low prices, at Oct. 29. SC HICKS. TO ...P.1113, TO .41.7.1113 • general assorttuent of Revolvers, K Double and Single Barreled Pistols, tan be had at the 011 d itravo store of SAM— SONS. Veva del.:0,08 We , err. CII.OT HS, Car..euleres. (:ahe mots, K rn tuckyJeau-, VESTI;\ Gs 4d al I kinds, Suspenders. Ilat.,lkerehi• A V ATt3., Stockinge, &c., &c., way be gent.: and cheep, at Bonnets and Bount•t Ribbons T,ADIES, it you Nish w nee a beau- Vol assortment ui Bonnets and Buq• net Ribbons, cult at u LANKETS, Flannels of every prin• U and color, and Domestics of - every description cheap at - FA H N ESTOOK'S. Oct. 8, 1852. GPI OH'S I MIFFS ! Asupply of M U F F 8, of a atiperior quality, just received at SUIECK'S. HO ! HO ! TRAVELLERS, EM EM HER as you go aling knl SAMSON has on bend and for sale Trunks, 'Traveling Trunks, Collet - Bags for Ladies and Gentlemen. and at prices that you will think impoonle.' VLS ant: Hosiery. Black and Fan. ‘ ffi l cy Cravats, Ladies' kikuur, and Plush Caps. cheap at Oct. b. FA H N ESTOUKt.. 14N . RENCII WORKED LIOLLARSA SLEEVES, iii great variety, and cheap too; cau be had at ; )lIDDLECOFF'S. Q MS, B,ennets,,l2kbbee"e,, eed;Drer . s Po' Gonde, a,eeledi, aosertmenOeet soileftr ed, end cheap er thep ever, at ' ' • MIODT,teO}"E"S Long B . l!nlyls,nnd,Dr,evn tiOndk ANEW, supply kiss resulttulissd •for *As ,Mary *pip, 1 4, ;8- -F*IIN ES— 'WOK 411. SONS, at the aigu of.tlta RED reativ. • O val • ' OICZP E lot p 41. A' l44°-- f-aiil co.„, 0. you. fermi by •LLEP* ve° isKELLY dc' tio BONNETSiIk and Veivei, 414 a beautiful stook of Eibbetiii fur gale cheap' Oet. ' - FAHNEffrObWir. sackencrianust., rriage., ^- 7 Draw. 'l'rieiniitiga in great varie ty, and cheap at Oct. FA lIN ESTOCK'S. DAILY LINE BETWEEN GETTYSBURG & lIANOVER, THE undersigned has maile_rwringe orients iu run a .DAILY LINE of sigU, c f - Comfortable C(l4ches. betwet4 Gettysburg and lbw river—leaving Gettysburg in Usti . ...riserniug iii.tirne to croauetit wilh the-ears for letti hi rfelphia,llaltirmites HarriebNrg, Pilahurg, and irtiorittiitliato:. towns; • arid returning the sarno.dny alter tiro orris:dui the BAH. turns and Yhjiarte/pilis trains. 1 WY' refit' i. ill apply 11orrq, Ilannyer ; pr to thu undcreigneil. to Gut . tysbiorg. JOHN 14 TATE Getiyoburg, Ott. 8. 18114.--tf CEMECE 150 EMERNMAGII . Is 04mM:wily manulaetaring rill 1:6.414.14i CABlilliT at' Old Establirlnnent, rn 0 1 1,1111 s 11111ttitilire street, seelool etnittre, ontritoor north,4 / the ••Corit viler" !wailing titres, Oettys burg. Pursued ill want ;tt ; :ri /40 1 11W'.,. .. • PURNIIITREv if/ ....1111041r3 will 110 tWeir ' lO call h.r themselves beferr rarehne,htic else- I where. as he is deterttiincill to' 'set( yly:typ: - - not.. k (ntiw.).#1611.44144114141001 PllO. l . D U(%e.i.ket i %w iikaiiteerl• jie • tt r 1 of ,every tlemyripAiott c smote at ther:iitioffl m, e notice. Havinir a, : mid oubeglineinl poorsa. lin will, •nunrny i -nnroes,iln Isw burial ground Li)* icountywAvia*aVieli tra L }:' , .."1; Geuyqbarg, Dm 17. FIRE. INSURANG frHE ""Adams Coney Afortiaritril.n -•• morons. Canspany' located 41 . phip. .tysburg, is now in'succeftalful tikiittionield for lowness thirtates.'enttrunidil 'f(finage men t of Its affairs. and safetv in Itilititalteris, challenges comparison with 'MY, 'otilitr similar company. • All its' operitinne are ! conducted under the personal sitperkialtilt . (if Managers selected by the lEltocliftelderti. c Tha Books Of the Company are at all times' 1 open to the inispeetton of those iriantineip it. As no travelling tigentairre'empldpil, persons ileatiring: to insure Cilia Milmitp-: placation to either of tire %niters, frdtn whom 'all requisite inforntatimt 'mitt; th gained. PC7•Ttic Managers tre' '4 z'' ' ''' .Meuallen— in W. B. Wilson,'. , , -,, 1+ Gtatobarland—livtana McCurdy, ~ ~, • r, 1 rttriben.—Jacob King,.? • •• : ••• Franklin—Andres Heintzeknan, Hamiltonhan—.-Anioe W, Maginly, Liberty—John Nonsidatin, jr., Oxford—John L. Noel, • " Reeding... Henry. A. Picking, Latnnore-1 neon Orient, •• Itotnitloy—.lthreklaink, — Tr - Berwick --Ooeid E. Hollinger, . , Borough—George tivrappe, D , . A, Buehler.. Wm ; H. tile, mpm, A. B: itdrts, 8:R. Rimed!. liohn Christman, Alex.' Cobean, Edeiti Norris, J: B. SkodlY, Valentine Werner. • , sept.LO, 1852—tf, ' • , ETTERS TestatuentarY en the RAP RA tate of JOHN STassi..T. sell , 1 ,01 of Menntjoy township, Adams cottitty,, deed, having been granted to the aubsigi ber, residing in the same township, tio4ce is hereby given to such as are indebted to said estate to make payment without lay, &Id those having claims are requested to present the same, properly authenties. tad, for settlement. SAMUEL DURBORAW, Ex'r. Nov. 5. 1852.-6 t. ETTERS of fitlintnietration, on the MLA ' este te of Eovvann Hames, Idle, of Ilamilton township, Adams ne., ceased, having been granted tetlie stibiatri ber, residing ie,said township, notice is hereby given to thoettindebted to said es tate, to make payment without delay, and to those having claimi present teem pro perly authenticated for settlement.' GEO. HAINES, Adm'i. Dee, al, 0152—et* SCHICK'S. SCHICK'S. A word to the wise is •stifficient. LADIES—ii . you wool to buy ilo! cest.lieet and elieutieto Lc N; Shawls in town. &unit to Kuirrws Chimp Oiii nor,as you will find there the lurge.:l mi,ort went in the counly. rOrt. d. . . 409 11114.1 N W .j► 0 ptirelinea a auperior hit of !Mark. Blue. and Fitful. colored French- Eisgliali. and American Ch.M. Oreiic aid• Frbek Coals. These rims'are well mode. all we lick ul pin is in e and judge; Iris yourselves. Remember tbul.Mme he ISA M. SUN'S Uou ;met store oppuinet Ileuk; \ItE regii to I to call and exam.iiii ill • ,F4l•llllPiTOlr.'li."S 31ous Ile Mtge., Da. nmaceae24 llluilett Clutha. crtive,l4l; Las• tfea t Cant,,, Cluitpq, A ipat•as, aka !ll•trip and Faiie , ;iH sale (alwap.at the eigu,9l,lle• 41,80 Ft.u;s:r. ..1 ,Attrcom ,0000 N. QUA§ mil 5a.6418.. Ajegionw, M. , ; Ili " Saar ex, kiti au. , Bef.,4+t ! td be bail ' , SOHIkAeS. I.3NEIWIINUCE SONS ! wsittirt I ' 7 * res pee tful ly ntluqu the 4Publiic t their sh 1 e* 04,11,121 ctilialltt a Sdi Ij -I)4E/ §. Ol , Jim :oly 144911..ted,00m..;ct ixgains o mq :be 4ed,, /Jell; tteol.,p,Xsiii i ijop 1 i IPO L 411 4 r P r iqg. , liß t furqPurelksolug elsewhere. Vic CI. A I N S.,,SSlsbra•s4,ptinujunt TOO'l'll-PASTE.Vegstallks HAky. OIL, end FA I4{; Y SOAPS, a [relit Imp• ply just upuouttl ••• • ' - ^ sLtruoin% ' quVlity-ahl*nykoli J *nil •ntl 'lotiaile , in GeityabuOg. at slid Foundry at WrOTNCE. I'ol'lo2ll► Lfjt Ratitto T. WARREN & SONa E Ig# A L, or 0/00.0)* At the Farmers' Cheap Corner. A 8. KUR'l'7‘ bus jt . ilit i,e : tufn • Baltiinore lotauthettiu-Ilr f l i t large and desirable to l d §jertvlo l §tittilt Hier 'Cooduc We would invite lil4,;#4lSur tout &II the 1 Althea to our eitteiliteits tumor' went of Dress Silks, , Ilerngu afr. Imbrues, very rich. ,styles, and tigured Alithrits, New Styli Mous do Latura r Lawns, Silk 'Tissue, lieropt Ovid and iigured. Also 4:lngham*, Muslin*. elterltst Tiekitiguor,c. dltrirtSanalLMXillati *EAR Clotho, Caslimeres..SUsoweet;llllllo.4lt VVf!ittgo. ill great , variriy. and Claims , l'ents stuff. at all .j+rihai.^w'fi ltundnuute lass%iriiiithtt of Goods ttfeAlV s ai •I‘wiTi) c:11' • - •oilou A very tirge lot of (;srpet ortutritrit , lit i l prices trout 1114 tit 1111,00 por vitr4:o,'llit I soil look ut them, if you want tolitlX:' r lib% no trouble lo chow Our goods. ~4 , ,,,„ , 11 , 1k,1 , ', Qtsr :,Ossur titteiit of Queens waiilsAttiitiSs -tuff to be, tile canapes' in the count(fot W/o -aro sueetvisigw , litrge..ithliiion Wr tour forth *let 'took'. , 44.)Illittittos re ol every clecttrifttititt. wilirekzt`friiin tliii . ilintiufacturers. .''''::::,,, ~„ Callmerieoi ! Oroceri(iio '::- . . A very 3141114 e estaritnnt of Groceriltia— lite hoot lipougar and levy co ff ee in town; itratrtatoltssiti,letib;'pepper. sotreli, sinews. atc.. all very elms p, Wanted in v144.11114;0 for goods 13utter, Lard, lbws. Eggs, Hsu,* itles, liiiiiiiltlers, Moult, &c.. for M 11641 'situ Ingliest price will lot gkvrti. licr If y to qv:tilt .'to Viiitit''iiiiiiry: Ilt fej"Z'S Chimp corner it'l tlitirice l to 'atilt: . tryiNtr,:kiiiii . V, TRIST-alf" * " * " ---- ;4 -- ) - t -I• t• oi-*.,- fiellE ;HEW. COWL e • A in i!nst and be 3 t anEnrtmenenx FALL , & YYiidT R GOODS- , ' P' AVEAIt, Pr.PliEll) IN 64:TTIpillt /04.- SKELLY & I101.1EBAS:d1) trAKE pleioslue in daltiog iliu Srt s fieir apt the iiiifll;4" .141;iltiptr iixt,loll44l . stuCti l or reeeVtol'rrile'!? eilyi'd;iitdti; 'Yell and finish; eatfituperior quolOy, challenges PVeffispa; "thqr, otua.rpolw comr,usAuguilqiii.o ~ , C10414,4.p1ain atui futreat % wredii aud , Cu*- . singekesi Vistingeil e &la; A NrrB,E;SEA T iv 1. , 410 Agit tad exairoi Ittor "yourtielike..ri ilierleptiq. 10,114461 .du r mulct earefolly,‘e wAtlr rtta to ileasa the iiiium-44:-.014' 4—fruit' t•iiik unistoreetiont tethe-mivet fteititleeat , !It TkII•ORIN*;. isi":111 jib loretteikei. ititeidetr -ttk-as Iterstoiwo *it'll' , the 4teehe. tame of g4)octwdylonteil.... • ~„ VAtili I OPi*4) , tilt I`Ad:i.`md WINTER Mire tiore eeet teed. ; , ' , .(kelysiburg. Llec. ' I 0; I-854; ttt t ..11111aMiii3Wttt • , , ~,,, 4 , -- , --11111-11V4 tliff4Ri FINER Hubieribers width,' t+espeettitity it 'announce to •their , frietidell'alkil •Iliit hublie, that they' titive dektell 'se NEW HARDW ARE' STOitt •iit anlefutitre eta adMitting the rekiilenk•it 4;f DAvrrifZiatiiims. Gettysburg, in tsihirlr'illtsY' Oa , uptihittglill target and genekil stfisiiiiil4St of y ; irt A ROW A R)E: , 11*(11S t IS"; pl e a. . , ' CUTLERY, COACH TRIMMINGS ! spyings,lAkiew,iti. , adidlery, COdar 'W4re SlideF.44lli)#s* Paintst Oils. it i)vestalist •11 General, ineuding (+Very ,Iloil•ril itlithF arlirles in the tibilve line tiriii4Arsii--eo which 'they invite he nitikitiiiit 44'11'400 makers, Blatt sthitlis,tartitiSOW,eibiliili makeni, •Iditoemikent; Sittlillritiztitetllliitit public genertilltel ' ' o '.; E . I ,l r , iis Unt aide& 'halting %e'en, seeeitired - qtith ffehtift earc and purchallied for (.!initiZ: 4, 0 ahtee,(for r the Rinit) mari:st:) ,t io . ' WI „ b „ of shy Oki( of` it Mi . as reavoiNfilt i t &if' they ean'beinirelnised milt tillert.,. ";"" "' Wit partletillirlV•roglield'il‘Mliqed , } WI it friends, :aid eitimAtl • l' •ir ' ij f ''.. , sieer . ) 1 publlii Nein., inhere' ere delerfirit lit' I' llllo l I t ihlisli a eharsmer for 844:1111it'ritiitill`Nit low prices and doing Husiribis mi fairi till. elpfett. . V c , _— OATi • l e d* a Gettysburg, 1 e 13,181:1.—.U. WI N'rEit IS CIIMING A NI) .lew Arnold is rosily tor him ..... LA- ,D is clothing, *tube lio , /. adibduaktiliNell with a large v.iriety, iihreivily itoeltioldestli • tilig oi die W:6101:161 tool quiitstiess suilisibleXisert Il'foll'r wullrositch as thtowitlttugt,(D‘isit , eioi hi. til46k OCitilii: Pa iiitigAtiti. IrrAi,'lltfiil kt,y liektsilk, Currying 1911144'ilte'.1",'11tyief' w molt he ill w sell` 'Aii•tipi•S'ilisit'''elie 'tits& ' girslity can he ritirellinireileidtH l / 4 eliere"klif in the moony ; Also thilitenil,iittfiti' Attie 4t gteiti vitrgety (if elriifl h Sul wens, 1.1 edrry styli wilW . (it lliii figN q ,i.i MOP, from whiell 'bee wtlft liiiiiirurtird; and boys' clothilig iitall'ilescelleiiits made by did best ofirtit‘deltl 4114 Al itukhttra`fie nutwe. Oct. I. 1852 _0 . .. s ~.• I1•fi I, " • -- NEtRODV Imam hidistribett Philadelphia will a likagniticunt ai;- 1 100iiiilat n; • , t!T ILE WGO OD I entibiaettitevety lidwe- Wlileh is-irruitireil .111 sell it stiallii`lit`"?./oui"rigtee, ant! 'reept;vitiorl . M:.; 'vntrJ (Ito •Jiti oYeag . ', ln k • • • t D. 11111)DIXC3Fr''''' • - N0v."19, 1812. ' "" 14,' UN OE It strirt'r i pit 1114:1/S. 'tkit've nu tviisii x ier • • Usql-ma -oXt.e -f r y Col44l4lliiitit,Klo4' member that SAIISON 41flts'auiti' gives Roping. , _...~.___...5,».. Swiss and Muslin "i f clging'S A rin !ME RTIQSO4. Fluu Vtia! Sherri r ' FA lINEISTOCIeb. AEI! lEEE!! r •• =CI