- • .I SJ• , : „ , • • , . !NM O California, 'day. Tho country is overrun with prin ters. Arrival ut thL Empire City---r= Vohs I Money was worth from 7to 10 percent. . ! Later. .a. month. Lumber was lower; cargo pri • . Tho - stearnship Empire City, Cnpt. NIVil. cos from $2OO to 275 per M; Bricks in son, arrived at New York yesterdny mor. demand at good prices. Lime, 816 a bar ning about one o'clock, from Chagres, ml. Flour retailed at $3O a barrel. Mess bringing a month's later awl highly in. Pork at $35 to $40.. Butter . per pound, teresting intelligence fr o m California, $ 1 50. Cheese, $l. reaching to the Ist January. 117 e are Coarse short boots were worth $l6 to compelled to condense the news as much $3 - 2 per pair at retail ; while long boots, as rossible. suitable for Sun Francisco street naviga. The tnipire; City left Chagres on the tion, brought from $5O to $96 per pair.- 2Gth ult., and brought $1,133,647 in gold Seamen's %%ages for the rivers and buys, dust on consigmnent, besides ri million in were $lOO a month; foreign voyages, 880 'the trunks of passengers. lief p a e se n. to $lOO. A cornproey has already been 'brined in gers numbered 275. The first legislature of Calirm•nia met at San Francisco, and $500,000 subscribed, San Jose on the 15th December, but there for the purpose of establishing a new line being no quorum, adjourned until the 17th. or ocean steamers, to run between San The ceremony of inaugurating th e gever . Francisco and Panama. nor, Peter H. Burnett, and the lieutenant The project of establishing a steam corn pine, i n munication kith the Sandwich Islands and governor, John McDougnl, took China, which has been lone mooted, is the assembly chamber on the 20th. 0 mooted, The election of U. S. Senators took , now seriously discussed by the merchants place on the 25th, when Col. J. C. Fre mont and Wm. M. Gwin were chosen, the : A A murder was committed in a gambling first on the first ballot and the last on the house called the Bella Union, on the morn. third. Col. Fremont, Mr. Gwin, and ing of the 15th of December, by Reuben' Messrs. Bright and Gilbert, the represen., Withers, of New York City. Arthur C. , tatiyes elect from the State of California ,W. Reynolds was the victim. Withers , in Congress, arrived at Panama in the came into the Bellu Union about 4 o'clock steamship Oregon, from San, Francisco, in the morning, und, taking out a revolv and the two last were among the passen- . er, ordered several persons who were sleep. gers in the Empire City to New York.— ing on the billiard and monte tables, to Col. Fremont was delayed at Panama by quit the house. Ile fired one or two shots, the illness of his lady. Dr. °win took . but no person was injured. Reynolds re passage for New Orleans on the Falcon. j fused to leave the room, and while stand- There were seven candirlates before the; ing at the bar, with hie back to Withers, legislature for U. S. Senators, & the vote! was stabbed by him in the neck, and died en the first ballot stood us follows : instantly. Three th dollars rewar J. C. Fremont, 297. J. Henly, le had been offered for the apprehension of Wm. M. Gwin, 221 J. W. Geary, 5 Withers, but it was supposed lie had es- H. W. Halleck, 141 Robt. Semple, 3 ! taped to the Sandwich Islands. T. Butler King, lot The body of a sailor, named 'Thomas The official vote for the constitution of, Brown, was discovered near the road the State as returned by the Board of can- leading from San Francieco to the Mission, I vassers, was 12,081 for the constitution, I stabbed in 24 places. Mr. J. G. Mariner and 811 against it. The whole number dind on the 24th Dec. from the effects of of votes cast was only about 15,000, the jover dose of laudanum. Mr. Edwin rd election having taken place in the rainy i nitchins, aged 25, of Charlestown, Mass., season. Tho vote for governor was as' was drowned Dec. 23, in attempting to follows: : save s'ome companions who were capsized' P. IL Burnett, 0,783 W M Steuart 019 l in a sail boat, while shooting ducks in the 1,358 harbor. W S Sherwood 3,220 J. W. Geary J. A. Sutter, 2,201 Scattering, 32 It was reported at Stockton that three Americans had been killed in the mines The following is the vote for members! by some Chilians. Considerable excite of Congress: i prevailed there in consequence, and G W Wright 5,451'E J 0 Kewan 1,8'20 ! meat Itrouble was feared. 'F. Gilbert 5,300 P. Halsted 1,281 It M Price 4,040 W E Sharon 1,327 The Oregon reached Acapulco, the Lewis Dent' 2,129 L W Heating 216 great coal depot of the Pacific Mail corn.- W M Shepard 1,773 Scattering 760 ! pany steamers on the west coast of Mexi- P A Morse 2,066 co, on Saturday evening, Jan. 12, and ' remained there until the following evenine The steam-propeller Chesapeake urri-j During the afternoon of Sunday, by inv ee i ved at Pomona en the 18th of Januarv ,l tation of the gallant Captain, a number of and was expected to leave in a few dues i the fair—no, not fait—but lovely sevori for San Francisco. There were several l Las of the town, escorted by the alcalde vessels in Panama, on the 20th ult., await- and the military governor, visited the ship ing passengers for California.partook of a collation. Upon their Lying off the port of Chagres, on were the I and return, n difficulty occurred on the shore afternoon of the 26th of January , between Capt. Pearson and one of his pas• less than five magnificent ocean steamerslsengers, which caused a great excitement, —the Alabama, Falcon, Cherokee, Say ' I and threatened to produce serious cense ern, R. N., and Empire City. The Ala - 1 , quhench d es. It seems tbirt the passenger, ham sailed for New Orleans on the 26th, been an old whaling Captain, u with about 200 passengers ; and the Fat- 1 6e Vi d o insulting a and abusive language tow-' eon, Cherokee and Severn agived durinel , the day. , 0 , eras Captain Pea i,on, and at last struck I him. A scuffle ensued, and in the melee, In the vaults of the British company at the Mexican guard of twelve soldiers, arm- Chagres, ;here was about $BO,OOO, and ed with their muskets and bayonets, were •:',' $1,000,000 in specie was soon expected ordered to disperse the mob collected by 'to arrive from Panama, for the Severn, to-, the row. In doing this, Captain Pearson ken from the mines of Copiapo.received a severe blow from a bayonet o- The steamship Oregon, Capt. Pearson arrived atPanama on the evening of Jan- stir the left eye. Mr. Wm. L. Hobson, of nary 20th, with 208 passengers---90 . the firm of Cross, Hobson & Co., San o in Francis the cabin and 208 in the steerage—having co, received a thrust from a bayo • morning of New net, which grazed his side and pierced his left San Francisco on the -1.-..„..., da . jacket. Several gentlemen were knocked The knocked -1.-..„...,U ;5•... I. ...il ht $1,129,227 ingold down by the soldiers, and one was cruel dust on freight, ana i ise. Ily beaten on the head with a musket, un ..------6 ,f her ps sengers ,must have contained at .._ - til the blood covered his cheek aril coat. mother million of il, , il:,rs ;- •.• :: i: • ,::.- '',T'ir Americans were unarmed, having age passengers are i:::, v, 0 :1 , tih , •l : .,ri in ''''.l lie not been the case, a --eons on board. flad this their pusession 81 ti0,,i , ,i0 ' have ensued. As it was, apiece;prcieo and , slims a two, fiv.., 'en,general massacre . . ! lions wei tweety, an d fifty must c made to return for pistols, a thousand dollart,, lined the trunk 9 of 11) % c y r a f ' , :: attempt the conquest of the town. Th, The message of Governor Burnett 'u delivered on the '2tst 1 ' ..e i cemher. As a I guard, however, was literary production it will at length withdrawn,' % not attract %cry ; and order reigned again . general attention fi, its in Acapulco. In r elegance, cleat:- this affair, no blame nem or comprehens: ' . /lelless. Th e muter-• ' Capt. Pearson, can be attached in be 1 nor seems to be in doubterg. .as to whether the ;sell. The justification of the Mexicepn tl legislature should proceed at once to frame Captain in command of th important laws for ti C guard, for thele - sit: le governance uf the interference, was, that it wa - s done . State or a • • wait the action of Commur osc for 4: re 00 _ oagress t „ ,.. p f mscuing the Capt a i n e e Si on the constitution. I steamer from violence. Th ,e -• The governor estimates thecurrentfortunately,•• The tam uf tl ex. ' , mistook him in the f penses of the State forl firsttne assailant'.ie rac the rut Lie Near at ' $500,000. To meet this li • , tge sum, he 'ins time r recommends the immediate' 4J), one e , imposition of a poll tax and a taxA 11'1111 Tragedy. bp. hasten , upon real and al property,"• person. ; A heart in proportion to its value." ' 1 rendering occurrent W ee '' ive t The governor, also',awe here in to sets recommends the ex- ' whichthe early part of all elusion, in tot ff" o, o ree nee roes . He thinks'in the death of Mar • t atty to , that if Allowed t ' • nun,Wife ofJohn Brennan, eve, w o immigrate they will form I Brennan" or " contrrcts in the Southern 1 as he isf •11' own durii am' lady c / -- Siates for one way of designation from others'' at of lili' ' thus be, to all intents an d asters, and I same Warne. 4 A noise andls not with purposes, slayes.iceedin from ou!c , n On the morning of the 24th o ep ecara . I . g B . rennan's house w tic, generat,c bets fire broke out inn neighbors Ire • qucntly during tlie lie " ttatitk Dennison's E- 1 •). " change, San F • x. noon of Sundayt, some lot Francisco, and in two hours,through last and contifil, nearly a million & ' a half of dollars the evening a nthe , : From two worth night. qi rly part of property was destroyed, The Parke I Parker ! But as this had been.sed to thi comma'', r , di . in years, Brennan h • aving long been i#: - j s d ` - ,' House was among the buildings burned—ited to' the loss by that aloneb • intemperance and' • Jii a " .- ; being 200,000.—1 i cruelty of his II All the buildings,l y, they attract d I except the Delmonicoe less attention than ir jase - hotel, on tPortsmouth square, would have done but for that cause. Washington and all on, alarm was however excited from Sat 'ir s I street, commencing at the ' conti a lo ',';•-; "Eldorado" and ' 1 nuenee of the di her s:e- - • le, running to Mont disturbance and par Montgomery , titularly by the ,e,, were burned. moans which in the .. ' nu' . c ,,,.' .. - 4z „,?,_ at Stockton on Sunda • j began to be heard. About 3 o'clo4 • ..- ' Yi'A',..,n y night,' the morning , destroyed a number .. . iit ib of buildin I property valued at 8150,000. gs, l to Pe thrust out of doorswith 9 - t ee peisonsl ` l Nt!cts for gold hunters for'child, both i n a deplorable and s oaten or t ~.. ~. .. . , the condition. Some of the neighb. nulitctory ey flatter. I I went to the house, but '.r. ,were driv.`f - , on Tuesd , a., the darkness by Brennan, who ' he police a 'he, tiered to have been armed ami. nags of m Ifrom that desperate character ',t, ' the place has been considered midated to possess, 7 my-rive i j n them. On Monday • bad , been. Mrs; Brennan was found to ".-. at all more and covered with bruises from , ( ies 9r O IT pang pertions ofthe Illm . • body an.• ed; arid al1,1! ,c .: - 0 0 tO pumice. ' Sh e l . vf" ''''' rjA ti 1 ! A yom -„ 'Ofii e ettt :bodilyA* • nu enng 't . / 0 13,9 ', . • • -4, 0 MN $ tkh.. 4 • UM 2S! NI !!!. mental insensibility, until 4 o'clock on ' Tuesday morning, when she expired. .1 She left six children—two of whom were much injured, one of them has a hole on the top of the head—made as she says by her hither with the -fire poker. Brennan was _arYiiSted on Monday for "Assault and Battery" (Mrs. Brennan being then li;iing)' a(nd after an examination before • Justice Mat, was committoed to jail._ On Tues day an inquest was held over her body, Justice Joslin as Coroner, which rendered a verdict of murder at the hands of John Brennan, her husband. The unhappy circumstances of Mrs. Brennan in being connected with a husband so brutal has excited much sympathy for years, and Brennan has been two or three times pre vidusly arrested and confined in jail.— connections ate highly respectable and her untimely and awful death much deplored not only by them hut by an exci ted and indignant community.—Carbon dale DClnocral. I' It 4) NI 1 , . Il It 4) I' E. LATEST TELEGRAPHIC DESPATCHES. .M•ont the Phila. Daily &u•s. ARRIVAL 01? THE EUROPA TWO WEEKS LA TER. The steamsl4 Europa, Capt. Lott, ar- . 1 rived at Halifax about 7 o'clock on Fri day evening. She sailed from Liverpool on Saturday the 26th ult., und our advi ces from Europe are, therefore, two weeks later than those previously received. The following are the leading items of her intelligence. LOSS OF THE PACKET 51111' lIOTTINOVER The splendid New York packet ship Hottinguer, Cnpt. Bursley, has fallen a I prey to the fury of the elements, and from the tenor of the last accounts respecting her, n melancholy loss of life attends the disaster. The nottinguer sailed from Liverpool for New York on the Ist January. She had 290 cabin and steerage passengers, together with the captain, and crew of thirty men and boys, and had a very full freight of various descriptions of goods. The H. had only passed as far as Black water Bank, which is off the coast of Wex ford, when she struck on one of those dangerous ledges of rock which lie con cealed in that quarter. This occurred on the morning of the 12th January. On the occurrence of this mishap, a part of 'the crew and all of the passengers were sents ashore. Capt. Bursley and 13 of his men re mained on board of the 11., determined not to leave the ship while there was the remotest chance of saving her. On the following morning, the lOth, the ship float ed off Black Water Bank, and bore away before the wind ; and struck Arklow Bank, where she afterwards went to pieces; and, sad to relate, Captain Bursley and twelve of the noble band who determined to be the last of the ship, met a watery grave. At!, the time the passengers left the ship, her situation seemed to be utterly hopeless.--1 The hold was full of water, and the seal making clear breaches over her. It was! with extreme difficulty and peril that the passengers and seamen were passed to the! boats, the sea breaking with dreadful vio lence on the bank. The passengers were j unable to take anything out of the ship except the clothes they had on at the time. The boats happily succeeded in reaching the shore, although with extreme difficulty, from the height of the seas, and the great distance of seven miles or more from the bank to the land. Capt. Bursley's son, who was on board the Hottinguer up to the time she struck on Blackwater Bank, is a passenger mil board the Europa. The Guy Mannering, for New York, got aground on the outer edge of the Prince's Dock, on Monday. "" SARDINIA. The Sardinian chamber of deputies has approved the treaty of peace concluded at Milan.between the Piedmontese and„ the AtiStrians- It is expected the senate will alO approve it. ROME. It is said the want of money prevent the Pope from returning to his capital, and that France hus ()tiered funds to his holiness. The Archbishop of Bourges is said to be the bearer of this offer, made in the name of the French Episcopacy. A wonderful River in Cann'ln hitherto almost unknown. The following description of an extraor dinary river called the Saguenay, is taken from a phamplet published by •Mr. Burr, explanatory of his beautiful panorama of , the St. Lawrence, a work of art far excee ding that of any other ever exhibited in America. By reference to the old geog raphies we find no mention made of the Saguenay river, yet its importance may he arrived at by the fact, that touristshave given it ns an opinion, that the volume oi l water at its confluence with the St. Law rence, is equal to that of the Mississippi :I —N. Y. Dispatch. This river enters the St. Lawrence 140 1 miles below Quebec, and although a mile wide it appears narrow when compared with the mighty St. Lawrence, which at this point is considerably more than 25 miles in width. The Saguenay is one of the tributaries of the great river; its vol ume of water is immense, and the depth and force of its current is so sensibly felt at its confluence with the St. Lawrence, that for a distance ofseveral miles, vessels are obliged to yield to its influence. It is decidedly the largest river east of the Alle gany Mountains, the St. Lawrence excep ted. From the inky blackness of its wa= ers, and the strange, wild, and romantic character of the scenery along its banks, it may be considered unquestionably the most remarkable river unthis continent.— Whilst we are approaching the lofty por tals of this mysterious stream, a brief de.; scription of the region from whence it de- rives its source, will better enable the rea - subscriber begs leave to announce to the sail ter to form n proper estimate of this great cuizeus of Clearfield .couroy, that ho entinues the FoONoRY BUtrINE::'S at the old wonder of nature. In an immense valley, l ce, rrher, he prepared to :mkt all kinds of forming part of the territory belonging to the Hudson's Bay Company, and a b ou t Mill and Saw-mill castings, toge -42 leagues north from the St. Lawrence, , titer with every kind of Ma is the beautiful Lake of St. John. Its chinery Castings, and wrought form is nearly circular ; its diameter, a- iron work tor Mills 4- Saw mills bout 30 miles; and it serves as a great in the latest and most approved styles, on the reservoir, into which twelve rivers and notice practicable, and on favorable many smaller streams discharge their wa.. I terra.. tors. Sagueny is the only outlet by liavi turned h 9 attention a l m ogt en ti r ely io which this vast collection of water finds Al it hinery Work, nil dutii , g the lost year having added a large number of new and valuable Gnat • its way' to the St. Lawrence. Its szen- Ia ol Saw- M oittertto he feel. j ustified in saying enry is oldie wildest and most startling alit at 1 Ltuv eiecUled by hina ,via g ive stut.fac• description through its whole length, which toil . is about 130 miles from Lake St. John tot An experienced Pattern-maker al ay. e.mnet • Tadousac Bay. Th e first h a lf o f 4 81 led t.% tip the establishment enable u. to make n e r r i ft y , .1,91 7: : pa; ternt souse. liberal Priv e t s T u r d: course lies through a wilderness or hills i covered with pine, the fir, and the spruce, I cAsn 0/Jereare r e.pecift ullu„an i[y e l x'% fuel, and formidable rapids render the navi- ,sill he promptly t 'reined gation hazardous except to experiencedGr.ortet: WELcit. canoemen. But below Chicutinti, I%IIICIII Bellerunle Foundry Jan. 25 1,953 is 08 miles from its mouth, it is naviga-1 WIIDSESALE TIN WARE ble for the largest vessels. From Ila ! Ha! Bay, downwards, the passage of its W 2 waters is through solid mountains of sein- S”lnwnheri in‘i,e the aIICIIIi O II of COUN ite granite, which seem to have been I ItY AIERC:IIA NTS to their CIiCIII,I9C as• split assunder by the upheavings of an ourtment ul earthquake, thus forming an immense Superior Tin £ canal with bunks of perpendicular rocks, Japanned Ware. towerimg up to 1500 to 2000 feet above E rrping constunt , y on laid the LARGEsT the water, which is about 150 fathoms AszsoRTmENT IN sTATE. and deep nearly the whole distance. Its depth ni i i -ow " BA T " lilan c‘cr ' 11 ; red belore. Ole) at different points has never been aster- I °l " k a cult to 6 " ) e" t he "Pe"' advantages they tfi r tained ; it has been plumbed with a lincF'OßD. of 330 fathoms, 1680 feet, and that too! qf the • LaTe C,,ffcc Put." immediately at the base of the cliff, and ::91 Mu lie, Srt et above Seventh, PHIL no bottom could be (build. The power of language is inadequate to describe this! great specimen of nature's handiwork, nor is it possible to convey to the reader any conception of it, by adducing any oth- A) STATEMENT—Showing the aggregate amount of the Assessme cral townships of Clearfield county, together with the n thereon for State and °minty purposes, actor' REAL ESTATE Cn co I P I C.. TOWNSHIPS, . . ..4. . BeeciiTia, ----- $28353 18994 1 6,234 940 50 1265 . 1 — i66 36 • 1371 - 285 81 Bell, - - 26001 15374 5,000 140 100 3305 145 84 1231 251 95 Boggs, - 16560 7634 3;749 • 225 150 15012760 87 50 981 ,154 64 Borough, 32135 1333'2,0:30' 6000 1030 275!5160 131 90 109 233 22 Bradford, 31644 10363 8,237 100 435 20 1500 152 98 140 2 59 8159 25 Brady, 39960 24418 8,159 230 1626 219 46 220 Burnside, 53380 12579 8,268 1524 I I 230 1370 228 80 215 385 60 • Chest, - 18422 13529 3,531' 1001 400 1 107 14 89 179 91 lCovington, 14724 9828 3,216 I 1612 \B4 04 116 146 90 • Decatur, 21583 7679 2,866 ' I 200 1625 98 20 85 168 76 Ferguson, 152771 200012,7731 . I 301 1 7001 60 881 661 103 75 Fox, - - 19021 1438511,6171 1 201 1 1 53 731 91 89 52 Goshen, - 9038 8579\1,638' 2801 360 58 96 \43 99 47' Girard, - 5575 8605 2,621 2001 50 200 495 51 74 65 87 48' Huston, - 5350 42510 1,108 1 20 146 92 42 244 94 Jordan, - 258851 18326 4,653 ! j 8001 140 491 135 1 246 82 [ Karthaus, - 69051 10688 2,6901 : ' 401 6851, 67 561 711 114 8.1 Lawrence, - 55290 819919,9991 10001 460' 70'5040 233 81 '264 405 01 Morris, - 25757 34851 4,020 I 115 1200 195 19 113 329 14 Penn, - 31111 0457 5,053 17301 505 1375 143 94 L 22 243 69 Pike, - 72570 0551 0,999 195401 991,200 1 5598 331 03 271 571 78 Union, - 10179' 11602.1 2,3.41 I ' - 1,657 • 150' I 5781 71 031 541 120 08 NVoodward, 112411 18076 11 , t 1 1 .) 0' 97 19 ' 851 163 39 „ 9,084 70 Deduct Exonerations and Refunds estimated at 1250 %V E the undersigned Commissioners of Clearfield county do certify that the aboveis a correct statement and copy of the Assessments made by the several As. I sessors of.Clearfield county, and returned to this office, and that the amount of two thousand eight hundred and thirty-four dollars and seventy cents is the nett amount that can be realized for State purposes out of said assessment—said statement being made both for County and State purposes, Witness our hands and seals of office this . '2,d day ofhinuary, A. D. 1850 kttest—ll. IL 13Eissia., Cl'k Belhionte Foundry. Feb. 1 1850 —3m 4),A111.V/IV:a% i.m,uds are I , treby t aunonVd tuy• mg. sel'mg or in any v‘ny meddling ‘‘ll, - tam VOKI. OXEN, now m Ilre ro , ..e”sion of ol lirmlairk! 11,1111, tiNt.II I slung w mt. au i arc 111 •on ori'y ROBERT MA NLENt uly 23, lug —6tn •-• .... rio 0 .-.. -i = (1. 4 6 cla g 44 .-.- •••• P° 3 r) 0 .: ••••-: cpcD CD Ron . r Po Tl•li 18.50. pectfully tin noun ilie public geuer,dlly . . •101 a.. m Cut 1% here he hu. nn ,ormh.e terlll4-- ;, 1 I•lsr , Allt•re in 4'.. MEE CM nititred •Itr II ul Jacob IVitntirr I I lite Und the pUb• ,out r. and the er --and on the 1 43 t 55%% o r I; • W. S. II xt hatigt. for LEY, 9113.1a11//1 in'ornit that lie ham corn titres, in the chop utile, cog and res public patronage.— an furnish work to need to enII, to their keep on bend Windsor Chairs hulmered Omits wade 'id, and Chamber and Bed Chairs. be converted frum the oeil in two minutes, and Icumpass that can be unr• i It s ,panicularly ennoble Professional gentlemen- Jo in the neatest manner and and Vela mount..of T ling -to Law. N "Z O. 0 cD BE 1 JAMES ELDER, BENJ. BONSALL, Comm'rs SAMUEL WAY, CAUTION. hereby given, to rill persons against purchasing I or meddling in any way vtith a JuDGmr.Nr obtained before E:sq. Evens, in Com ermillet vi bleb /Junes J.dinstnii hna ngainsi me, dared about the 12th of Febrile ry, 18.19, as it is an unjust debt, ob tained by unfair mean.. and I am ibeiefure deters mined net to pay Pam : Judgment unless umpolled by law. JAMES ROBINS. Penn tp., Jan. 15, 1E 4 50. • NEW CABINET 86 CHAIR rillantifactoi". subscriber respectfully informybe public that he has commenced the above men. cloned business, in nll its rnriotts brunches. to rho borough ul Cumrfield, directly opposite the 1110 dot Church. o.here he is prepared to manutuc. !lire CABINET-WARE AND CIIAIRS n the moo durable manner. Ile hopes by strict attention to businepe, to merit and receive u 'hare pubic 1.• I rnulag P. irrcoFFINS mode to order on the shortest no* 'C. J C CAMPBELL, • Cearfield, June 18, 1819. NED.— TWO Jurne men at the aline W Tti v. 1.0 ran have stoinly employm. and at lair wages. None but gaud ‘Norkinett 'teed apply- Jan. 17, 'SU DRY GOODS! DRY GOODS! OUlt Dry Goods, '.tilt ore of the West end most approved ao yles, have beet' selected on ; srcount of !tuts Dr:AUTY and DURABILITY. Among 1 diem may be found French. English and American BROADCLOTHS of every shode 0. pare and color—gravy Pi. lot noel Beaver CLOTHS—Drab, Green and Blue BLANKETS for Overcoats—Black and Woe CASSINIERFS —SATTINET TS of every descriptioo—S,llt. SAL I. cabsonere. Vc!YRII Marsodles nod other V ESTI NGS— Velvet cord, Mode. Bark. Siripod, Figured and changeable A LPACAS--Fr ench, Earlaton and Domestic GING II A Also Pedaloes, Cashmeres. Gale Plaids. Linsey', Al, rinol. French and other Coaking.--Suatyll, (it choice lot) all %soul and cotton Flannels, vol.( JUN. dirt Iss. Tithing", Blankets, Muslin". 111Lwery, Gloves, &c. &r. • 'iVe make no t barge r,r slitmilig our goods, no Louie 5.. d vv.otioe bier priers nod quality. CR ANS (Si BROTHER. Cur.' en.% t:le Boot & shoe 1.1 7 7 C., MAKING. rplur 3:11 s-ri I rr * Jte'y in the emph , y 01 Richard Mossor, , d Ow. 1,4,p) re,perthilly informs his friends end the nubln., that lie lies ruunnenced the oboe, 111/blliete. ut the HOMO, Meta lately Uel•Uplell,1 1 1 plies Goodi,llo. Ile (Litters himself that lie ran In 11 on trAlin tot y manner, any order thot ho may he fit vored ccilh. Etlher Coarse or Fins %%urk tnadr in thr most l'ahluunoble and .t..'4:n.leable innnnet i vy 4341,2M1tig Mnde to order, in t ity style. RICHARD GLENNAN Clear v 30. INV). Axe Factory. THE subscriber having leased the Axe Fuctory of L. R. Carter, near Clear‘ field, respecti.,lly ottani:lces to the people of Clean field and the ohjoining youtaiies that he is nu w it operation, and ready to supply all orders for Axes, Chissels, Adzes, la. Alen.bents and Lumbermen are Zrespeetfully in. cued to dcat %%oh 111111, UN he in determined to de his %%orl: to ar good style. and on as reasonab:o terms as they ern supply themselves olsewhera. Country produce, mind even CASH seldom t red to exchange dot tsurh. JACOU .WARNER. Clearfield. Nov. '24, 1849. 4m Money Found. W AS found on Friday, Dee. 28th, 1849, on the ult; Turnpike, hem ech Philijpaburi end Clearfield Creek, a GLASS BEAD PURSE, containing about Five Dollere in silver tt being one half englo /11 gold and the balance in silver A6(l, a note of obligation with t h e eig nature of Joseph hid ogs upon it. The owner can have the seine by yelling on the subscriber in Brady township, proving .proverty and paling the cherges. IV l41;1.1141 RISHEL. Jan 9 MO.— pd OXEN and TiflißEß. SLED FOR SALE. .• L _ m in.: subscriber Lifers to WI on tery occo . ro• mntlnting terms. n Irtiter of LARGE OXEN (girth raven feet) and stuul"Venrly rot busiutss-- , and also a TIMBER SLED. pet now. Apply inuncilints4 to w,,;- IBATgTi Ft, I.LgwroS., Cloarfivld Jan• 11, 1849. ' 8 1 12511
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