• . ..,=:- .• , • 4. • . . . ,•• • . • . . • • - . . • -. • . . • 1 4 - . • . ._.......,, . . ...... ... .- . . .. . , • . . . _ ... 4 - . .. . . . • ..,, , . .. . . ~•_. • . --'4-V Th.,ORTY—SIXTH YEAR. No. - 3. '• 4 . ..+- 'i, Ft - It\ N 17i:Es • ru ILE CA./VEVA '1'1;1 LKl' Ct V Elt-s, CR lit tiCILTS, 1.1 NEN FLo' t:OVltltt•Ntir,, 31ultl:ENS; PANIASKs. SILK CUR I N • N or: L 4 nips w;si)()V k Oct 1 '1) 10-filit• STRAWBRIDtrE & GripTILIER'S l• • GRAND CLOSING SALE FOR THE 'SEASON. The .Greatest Bargains we have ever 'Offered One Hundrett and. Eighty-Five Thousand Wori'3 of Dry. Goods to tie _ SoLi icv I hirty Days. ~~ •thir til:,goifir. :it •:!.e.:...n.".,re.e10g almost every clew/ Ipt lon yr jilty ( k q)•••.., I tool:ago for the Fen.. sori.vid we have !Setert:V.p , :4l at once. We offer . $40,000 worth olitlack Silks and Velvets.. $25,000 worth of Cclorsd .2ilks. • • $40,000 worth Ftraign Dress Fabrics . .$40,000 warlb of Cloak'n2, - s and Cloaks. . $23190) wari'l of fins Tir.vis and Blan!4-2.ts $20,000 w..1:11 of. Linea Ginis and flannels. Ec., &:., _ 'Never WT: such 311 0tr,r,..,t to get .s !Inc quality Black Sill: at sue!' low prices. lierur ranch nn opportnatt- offered to gtt a new Light Shades We,t,llag mul Evertinii rillth at a 5 we are F plaz, them. Dress liolols at Almost Half Price, XsTIIACIIANS., ; . DLMIC TIEAVEIIS. ~ . • VELVETEENS AND WHITE CORDUROYS' t fl , • ewhete to thene.ted .Stntem 'flip Ivopie from tar rind, near are respectfully In vited to iihrde In the Bargains we offer In this Clott ing Say. .• • SIR.A.V; DGES CLOTHIER, N. W. Corner E!glith i and Market Sticeta 4 YII I LA DELPII lA. Oct. I, '7O-10-Zitil SI X A .TZATAI D. FIRST PRIZE MEDALS . • THE GREAT • • • I BALTIMORE: PIANO MAUICBOT. wiLLLtm , R. NA BE 6: toP GRAND, QUA= AND lIPEN . GHT - . PIAN •FORTES, BALTI.I I ,IOIIE, 31.9 Tie I'lQ:wale:it% tup.:c been bef.we the public fat !wetly thirty ye:tr.- 4 km' ersai their excellence aloun attained nn nuptire4..k:l pre.emt neome which pra 2100neeS thc_n unequalled. ThAr ToNE'combines great power. sweetness and tine singing quality, our well is great purity.uf lututu.ilon, nett sweetness throngbout the entire peak. Thcir.lol'Cills pliant anti clastie, end l•ntlrelv fn..-r. from the stiffness found - In 114.1 tunny Pianos. In workuianshlp,UnAy ere unequalled, ming note but the very best reponed onatenot. dui Large capital employed In our kursinm.s..ertabilng us to keep con tinually su Immeuse stodt:of lust ber, ce-All our Stat - ARE. riANOi Lutve unr new Im proved Ovm.:Yuys - o r3eALE tied t'so TREBLE. - We would caaspeclal att.n tloa (Dour lode lai procerneuts In GUAM.) P.1.1..N08 and. !...tiVAR . E GRAND. 4 4, Putinited fug. I,IG, bri Piano nen; er than has yet bees(att= EVLAT Pr. 041) FCLt.7 Wanztmctsa son S. ies:mtat.. We have madearranEententa Pm the &lc Wks &role .4grive).i for the mr.t PAIILVit_0110.!1:01 and DIELODEtr.sni - which ire cc...r Whal , “ale and Retail, At towetit factory prices. WM. KNABE & JAS. DL.1.1.20:, Wholesale Depot. Me and :W South 1. nth !street; • Nov Z i '7a•-48:Gal rbibulelphla. IXT Z. EVERIBI'P'3 NEW PATENT SCAM VV. LAS SHOULDER and CR EiT SUP PORTER. No Storm under the arms. Perfect com fort and benefit guarentet4 l . & I North Seventh lit. below ARCM Philadelphia. Trusser; Supporters, Eleatic Stockbur ..lrutetics, ' Lady *Deaden.; July lfi, • 2i-1y ZBE FIRM .or Wit. J. YOUNG - di Ma thematteal Inetrummt MAW*. ounalatAug of Win. Young and Mules 8. Better; was dtalotOed by the death of Wm. J. Young.. The 'undying teryner will eonttnue In the same line of bnaluseastrin .borth 7th a..eoeW et Irllbm, firMai k. haiwir Oet. W-igolna POTTSVILLE, SATURDAY rjotcts. _ . . 1 pENNESYLVA.NIA HALL. ,- ; • , CE-rnix SrLET, l'orz6vmmt. PA: This well k noon andiiilizu far Hotel,biec been cn tirely renovated- art& refuraished, Ls , noiv iipen tor permanent and transient border. i , -.1- . Mae. WARDLE & SON, Proprictora. June 7.'70---vr.tr' , 1 . . . T ULMER! LubinE.R, TO UNDERTAKERS AND CHAIRMAKI:Rs. We have on hand a large let of sea.wured 3 4 . OVA COFFIN WARM; and POPLAR "CHAIR and SET TEE:PLANK. The above Is the bolt quality of IN DIANA LUMlllift. BOAS . 4L - lINUDEN/tI7SIE. July SO. '7tl-3:-tt cur. 4th &Sprung Sts.. 4 .1 :eadittg. Pa. LIIMBEtt! - • 100,000 . CF WEiTERS Lumpt_al Hots 13.A.UVEN".111USII,' Conie.r Sprniv sts., Itetvitag, AVe keep cinhlantly4in hand NI ielllcan Pantl. In diana -Walnut. POplar 'Clinir Plank,:.,( l'ep!nr. and - Ash Lumber, all seasoned. Alm Walnut mum front 12 to lA) Inches , wide and all thleknesselWand the , 3,:, Poplar from 15 to3a I nelmt wide. The qurtflty ~ f the Walnut and Poplar cannot be surpaared In any mar ket. and we are selling lower than the Cit-V-_taarkpi. All partlea In want of any Mild% of faunfbcr would :do well to call and examine our etoc1::. -: - • ' July D. 10• . ' ' 11:4 t f ,------ - , , . Al /LLEit,3I3IIAG STEA M ticamr . /v ± . A. 203 "'LAN/NG ' MILLS. . N.. C. FRE.,CIic & CO -- , - , • , .11.1.,:ri.itrrvu1:114 AZilijl3El LEr....; IN v e t ik eEy MA • -; , •;.7-7- - r-' 5 17 l'...L+-•`"=• _All I:ind • of ill . • Fraine Lum . ber, Pjaik, 11,a(11,' rits4iphig, Sit',rec. , : Flooring, Sithit, .Mouti . AU Ural* 0f. , -Manufactuilag imiabcr, c.n baud. White PiiiC` - rietnlock and 17).11: eat nny length.. Our Milts are 79 affirm belnW iltianmp •rt„ beitig a aving td 51 freight pti.• it,ori legit . Order% tliled promptly, Prlco list :Tat kat hin. July 9, "i'is - Tor Snit anb gd. tiYRIVATE ISA - LE Or A. VALVABLE • .situated sear the town of Llewellyn, Schtly,l -k Connty, containing !H. tterg. 50 axles clear nti'd g( state of cultivation. Ininrov,.nient.ii c na .sist of a new two.stury dwelling house, a new huge stone spring hurt o T and a, Luke barn. Fences In 'a good conclltlon. 'IN hr sohleheap un le•rrn% to Fu norcbasers. A ppis- to PA VI I i'A. ntte omen at iilW,—.9olre, Mike!' re tit.; Pottsville, Pa. Dee. gi,, ;lad FOR aint sirirelaia,;! other impr,,regtAnts; about I acre.. of tl lain( RV:ached. ttireo Ilmrkltns au4 four railroad tritekaall on the premises. sitnitio at White UOl'xdstation on the siditt2.ll And Sun - ituchan na It It. Apply to W 31. F. 31A1Z, 1)r e on thc, FOIEF. • 1:06.1.,EL—A n.'w and first-.einf:c.ToN'y B17; - .4: 7 (IY. • Ternn: rezmon:o)X. Apply 1.,____..2, -, ' " Alay - 7. '7G...P. , -1 f - W.M. IL 14-311114_ iNi l'olltrP fit. ',.. FOR 11.E1 , .17%—Twti011ices In iltt , ,,c-no )(Ike Dui M., lag, corner Second and Nlnlnratong.o Srre,ts. Apply to IiESItY C. ItUSSIM, R3s.l ;17.s,Itttc. Agent.- Is Jtalinnton go Stn., t. . , 'sl4reh tv,tt. . 1 , . , FO BALE-1 N 1 0 lAITS, tlue corner ot I.lovd d West treets,' ..r.h.enanaGnh. Iwo bloetou of hotows on It, in a good For particulars, ripply on the preouls.-+ or by to - JOHN DAVIS a"..0. SIM:NAND:MIT ern - , NOV-W7O-W-:2311!,.. f.", OR SALE OR TO LET.—A of (r itOUN containing about: V. ACIt 1.: 4 . with the- bit Atuate in Tumbling Hun two btlits from. Pottsville. Apply' to WA LIM:, oh the prerr i lse;:, I let t:9,' "N-44-srn. IRON 'WORKS ! IT:ON WORKS 1. OR SA LE OR [1:0 - LEASE. The Schuylkill' Haven Direct Iron 11.1'orks air ofi-er /k1 for'salent half:Volt-original cost, ( l e, a SII be leas. /1 for a term of yv - irs to rempon , inle J•ainles.• Nor 'teems, apply 4.,* CII.II:LESf, Tra , tce, /let .11:r. on. FOR 'SALE.-1 pair Iltraizer 'Rolls, di In. with bed plates, A-c.; I. it.•hoistirig drum; I ft. seretert, `2l ft. long; counter screens, shuti e rtes, shute' , bats; dust ers stack and plate, and a of mine inaciii nery; will be sold cheap. *Anpfs t • . .14 HIE:IMS Cnal Y- - Coal '71.7.01t LEASE.—The 'trite( And known as Robb e- Winebrener Trao, _ situatC,l in 111% - the and Schuylkill Tow/ohips, and ronnnuing 3.30 ner/a/, Is, otlercd for lea,tf upon rmsonablett•rins. Apply to • . lIANNAN,!Agent, Feb '27_, P-t f Pottsville or rat Csibon. • •. 17IRST-CLASS COLLIERY POR'SALE.—A Fir4t-Clas.- Colliery for Talc, tctt r Ica.A., for ..i7; years, on llo• Man:ninth and olllor•vc rp, now 011,T from to 1 , -o can of coal per da,., - Coal I,•Nt qualil s y was In demand at litgliesa pia/ Let Fur part ir;dlar,. enquire of nialoori.ltned. , -• ; FiI.ANK CA E ngineer and E-bOt' Agent,' \ f . s'Azt.—One. finable Breaker fora'lted Ash F. 4.Zolitery, all rm . :inlet. and i 1 ,4 g )0d rieliv;', with. 40 Itorsrtglife, rs, hoisting gearing for p 1,12, &J., C. One 12 11./an, 5 ltorse engitie and bolters, one tlve ton hay graft\ tret bOring rndr; with - bits, dc., all In eoiripicte Under. , "Also. a Net of holbting gearing f3r slope, pines and other articles. Apply to C. NI. Id rti., Agent l4o , Augn.4l.o, sGew-t f 170 R -BALE OR TO LET.—A. 'RED ANII LIERY, in goad Working condition, for Sale, the whole -or n part, to a ;Loud mansging partuir with capital. Alt.eo, a WHITE ASH 001,LIEttl on' the same conditions. A LEASE ON REIT ASH. COAL it.F DS above water level. TENA N 1' HOUSES awl a PLEASANT 111ANSION HOUSE in. acres CHESTNUT TIMBER LAND.. 200 ;neres Susquehanna. _WHITE OAK TIM BEI:, LAND. Bituminous coal mines and timber rands, with Saw-Mill, Houses, store. Ill!: miles .liallroad, Locomotive, I'm's, mar A It.xinit, Pa. Apply to - W. 1911EAFFIL Nov 19, '79— 17-llta • Puttsv Ile, Pa. 1 OR BALE.—A Farm of :kg acres idrh improve ments and stock,situate Otellite Of the S o kdiu24.• kill and Susqueltntina nal [road, 14 mites front nuts elite. 10 acres of the hind are under_eultivation, roes are covered with chestnut sphlut4 of 14 years growth,- Which would make excellent prop tirnb-r, 2.iacre'sarecovered hea t cy t tuber. The I niprove tuentif consist of a suhstantial house a new Swiss Cam out lion ies,anart new AW mill wit liiracerpOw er. Stock con4ists of horse 7, cows, gtaln , kl.ny.:•4llCi If mina. imptementa. The prlce asked can be tisal ed from the timber alone. 'Fermi easy. Apply to JOHN M.SII EAFEit, Esterly'lillluililing, Pot tsv il Ie; or to FERC4I;6 G. I:ARIL/IMA RT,NciM4O Centre. stryt2t, - Pottsville. Au :list 7, ' VALUABLE PROPERTY: FOR SALE. THE BUILDINGS .AND PREMISES • formerly - occupied by the SCHUYLKILL. COUNTY LUMBER/ CO., consisting large brief( and F toue shop, with steam power and tools (or PLANING and MANUFACTURING LUMBfllt; with lumber f.tmlis, abubdant yard room, and ether conveniences fora large business. This property is situated in the Boa:oral! of POT INVILLE, and (lon Li on the Railiceel, and Is otherwise well located. Will be soLD Low and ti , pon easy terms or p:iyment. Apply to - JOHNPOTT; Pottsville,-Pa., - or, BEN J . purr; tns mt. verm i n sr.• pt 10, '7e—:G-tf? . • FOB SALE-TLIE FOLLO\VING . MACMINERY One Five Ton Locomotive, int table for 4-foot gunge rowL Has been used for conveying coal and coal dirt nt the mines, and Is In. good outer. Also—Two Horizontal Pumping Engirail; cylinder. 4 fret stroke,with gearing and /tubs,: and. two lifts of pumps 100 yards each, with 11LIn h plun gers, 13 feet stroke, and two lilts of plimps „Kt yards etwb, one ES-inch, the other 11-inch Plupger, each 7 feetstroke. -- Also—One Winning Engine, r2-inch cy ntler,-1-fcc t stroke, with drum-gearing. and boilers complete. Also—Four sets Breaker Machinery. Also-100 three-ton Slope Wagons, aavily ironed for four feet track. Also—One IS t•2..et Fan awl Engine, pi ill tulnilas boiler complete. The above machinery has been in ..s . crylee, but is in good working order. „dz.. Jan P. Ott). W. SNYDER, Pottsville. Pa: • • 0111Q9 nub elpuu IRON IN 'THE . 13 010 D. Folou's. Ow* brousnoo Acceot—EßON. Conotiosi.—Bo ouroyou set to a rr = rams o oo flee. LP. DINSMORE.' No. Se Dey . St.. New Tat. Soid by Droggioto Muth It 70 . 'llO-Ipeow ;IRTITLEP -1 , YECE A P E 4 Ni D •t•• • N ` A ' V I 1 - 71 ; E N ruFr HEUMATiSM .AN') k ii.:)"•"0. '0 , This vegetable remedy Is the prescription of the eminent Philadelphia PLyalelan and Promecor. JosETH P. ptmxa, M. P., who tics de-oicd I.7:.vests 10 Rheumatism and Neutalitia specially, and Why the Medics* Protesslon paT•Uely . iinuonneed as the. highest authority in lit*am/tile ommlairits.' (See testimony.) It budessantand agropahlcdo the taste and warranted free from minernls Mid to drugs. It is aseleatilleprepamtloa,anliedleal mom, opoly and sratranted under aka NBA CSUI a,perma cient,luirnil, as posi tlvseure ler Inilatarrittory Ithem maim, Cr male Rheumatism, Itheanudism. Ithem mail= of Kidneys !retreat/la to the Heed s Nearal eis ist the. Doily. Aeneas Uftilathedind. Nervous diseases. Mold la Druggists at Si M. pier bottge; six betties fir GO. Medic* Waive, isliboot thane, sent by letter. All *Ware seat by !Coleco collected on Iletbree?r • Depot, Ito.lll frehtlikkgi,, cum' er. ME , IVIORNING;:: . DEOEMBER :31, -037 o: Motijing, stc. FOR THE PRESENT SEASON, We hare theilgneci'and inanuthceured a kale stock of the - • • - • READY-MADE CLOTHING Which we warrant to to' AS FINE AS CUSTOM WORK all rarpects. • • Our preparations fOr tho present season. - have been on the tar. } \ • )), gest and lt mostlibe , raructile, and our present stook is I Gents' -. as superior to nimm tio_ an y forme; one as our GOODS. . former ones 'Finest in have; becgi qUality, of_ to superior. thp greatest to those variety, of other riety, and up , 4 0. h /4 . toge very latest faahion and style. Ernbracing, every- a thing essential to. a gentlemen's toilet - and V. werdrobe. 1 • - CUSTOM DEPT. - 1 Goods of Our own . !raper- . - /.', tatl,l2:—tile newest and best fabrics of English. 447 fg , French. German, and Hothe . 14 1anufasturo. Thillmast skillful " 3078 ; cattors in P1'11104;1. yt fi t n i Plx*"StY/e" and/ i !num, good. worluna'zi. - ship. 1,. per., Children's, fact .f,it guar anteed. with. EMTMETT. satisfac. i 1:1 tion in All .. _ , Et re. . ' Many new styles / spoefs. / - `. made up in the / r et / A // most elegant man ;''''i • 4,' nor, and - securing the .; .' qualities of arability , / and strength; sod desire _..4Ll • ble in.Childiens' Cloth . .... N 4 -. • ing..We .have made IsS t. \ special efforts:in 4 e ' - . , \ this department,. \ 'and ask 'special' 818 . 4 0 , \\; , • . , AteithiFitcrour tl ltio \ E;Vole• Two.u -' '' ' r-i -five styles \ ...\ •', \ of little .. .. . .- 820 4to , \ 0 VER ' , Chestnut St. ‘, t , ' \\ c° ATS „ _PHILADELPHIA, '7' s k 10 .. __.......___ 4\ .1-.7,1.7.m5ri„ ,\\ Clot Diwittgati\liato\ w 6 ' . - 1 . ,NOTE. Ey our. system of Self-Measurement,. casilr undaistood. we enable customers to s6nd their orders in such a way as to SEOURE AS . GOOD - FIT as though 3 , they, carne themselves o our Eitablish. • merit. • . olnsproTed Rules for Self-Meftsure me t, Samples - and Prices sent when re= i qua ted, and PROMPT ATTENTION r &v to all orders, with GUARANTEES ,of en tire satiMaction. - Son 3 WANAM.AKER, • - - 1 818 and .820 Chestnut Strelli, ' PHILADELPHIA. ti?!:er 10, '0: • PLAIN-F-4CTS ! • IVORTIL. fIDIN ; G. . A , ! e, .ellet..l he. -I • : - succe- .ful business, with an ex- - , -: perim' : e . . 4. more than . twenty-, -- _ live .y :' , -s-, enable us to offer. - induce ems, to all whcr 4 ,are . ' ' about, t become-purchaserM . , . . : ... - : -- ciothkg - ,--v.-a -second t no establishment in , 7 the tour:y.. Our garments are --.. .:, all made f : the best materialS, • , carefully'. lected; nothing ut/'-, pound or . Any Way imperfect . is . made u 7 4 ; plkseven in the lowest tra sof goods., .. It ..'i • a well , esta lished fact among clothiers, th t our. Ready-Made ,- Clothing, h - every thing that:* • .. goes to mal:: a superior gal-- ment, -is ur quailed by' -any . = stock of goo • in Philadelphia. -. .,i', '\. Oar assort ent is so large -., r.nd varied -th t every one-can 'be . fittc?,. at on ; Without delay. Our prices arc *ahvays guaran- uaran tced :-.s low, or 'over, than the !ow:-;...st . else-A=llc -._ . We - have also a fine assor , ent of . ' .. - . - ft.-.IY .. -Gzdr in , ePieceylsa ,- - J--, up to order, ner, - , and- at • r than .are ' • f .: ! - , c .. garthents - . a' which will be ma' 'the best ma prices much iloy .usually . charge t 0 made to order. : Samples of got Es? for all kir foWarded by when- request Lions for self .':l3ar!n6ntO, t it :..or seledied, Made StOck press, • wiar redly:: • - 'Persons, can-when v is call and. hir gistentcl aax that 'Pure, ments can. ~ future tine, BENNETT & C '=.„ Tower H 41,51.4? hfq • nitAti.6.*Esatiwt RAJ:sago' Rizmi pE.447/4 . .- Oct 14 75424ra _ r,justiam. • CA-11.4*TS! CA gr .ro:f 0. Purince. rum Aponalmtr—Ano:434 cuoireattoupp, BEI Drugsods. #2l4pre *endow : • otair_itaxiote. • • SNYDER & •. fe-f Na t' 3lll ,l l xdkilettildtSe4 l 4M l 4 l ll4&'' - ;;-tt: ' -- 17vistitesadPIOLOWNasatirdt-V • iii i, • '":4 4 - Ibr the Zafteni blarici of PlenaWads. A* VERY interesting and historical .ad dress was delivered a few evening's ago in,Neve , York.before the New England Soci ety; celebrating the anniversary of th`e landing of the Pilgrim Fathers, IA -Ralph Waldo Emerson. This - .address was nitusu ally interesting inn historical poinf4 View. He gives the folloWing history of, anddraws a distinction between the Pilgrim Fathers Who landed at Plymouth, and the Puritans ,who afterwards landed at Boston. After recounting the difficulties, obstacles and dangeni; which these pioneers in eiviii zation in the western world encountered; we quote the following - portion of this,address ; showing the progress snit how" - the grand work of our nobleltepuhlioVas : . "Gentlenaen -and laigs, vim -know- that lately a careful study of Eglish history has shown a distinction among those earilerset . tiers which adds to the - honor of Plymouth. The English' reformers in Queen Elizabeth's time: were two )elasses, called the Puritans and ; the Brownists - or . Separatists. After the death of Ileury, the Eighth . the Brown ings or Separatists resisted the Established - Church-, n (t held that - the church was a. spl - fituaisoeiption, Christ being its - head: T be . Pu ritans . returning from exile after Eliz abeth had settled the Establishment, were disappointed that 'the principles of. the- Re formation were:not earned -further, but most of, them accepted the ehanges that had been made, except Royal :Supremacy and Uniform ity. of Articles of Religion. These Men re - maining within the church, Elizabeth made -It treason to worship except in accordance with - tife ferm'.preseribed by law, and the Separatiks were brought to the. scaffold.— John .copping, alias Thatelie f, was executed at Bury-St.-Edmonds and- 'great- was the - bravery of John Flenillig i a Welshman, exe - acted by- Archbishop"Whiteriffe -in 1593:—. -These Separatists are thef crigluators and settlers -of Plymouth Colony. .There: *US nothing left for them but flight; their death Was sure if they remained in England. John Robinson, Pastor of Scrooby ;-William Brew st4r, and William Bradford, Governor of Plymouth—these were Separatists. Later, 'under .Archbishorllantroft,; the .Puritans also came under persecution, and - then - they formed the compact to go to America.- In 113:.13, the Puritans said, 'We don't go to New Eugland,as Separa tists from the Church of England, though we cannot but separate from the corruptions •in it.' .The fathers' of Plythoutli were not 'Puri tans,'but Brownists and Separatists, and commonly called by because there was noth in"- but pilgrimage - or fight; before them, qts While those who settled later, as, for instance, the settlers of Boston, Gov. Winthrop, ,and Dudley, and others; were Puritans." •• „ This . thirst for adventure, for war, for cm sadps, for gold 'mines, in a new country s speaks. - to the. imagination' and Offers free swijig to the confined. powers. There_ is al.! ways there and elhewhere. a clais of innova t ion and one of repose. In political economy hit capital ii new..:„_ The,fruit of the last night or two, is al vl3 - .4.. that which - is consumed to: day. Waste England, waste France, '.waste • every city and,everytown,.,and in-a •2.-ear or two there is just much Wheat and harms in the barns - and fields as. before. fr'does .not take sonic men, long to. build. Why, -it is-in the memory of all of us when the solid city of :40'Fr:flu:Ise() went up like a .peddler's booth at a muster, or a camp tent in an army. The plant .rs in Massachusetts -do not appear-to be ham v men : rather com fortable eitiiens, not • I.aecnstomed to the. rough -task of discoverer jinithe3. -exagger ated their troubles. Be. wolves -were many, but early, they. lieved and affirmed they were lions. Cap :du John Smith - .was near to 'death by. being. stung by the inn'st :poisonous tail of -a tisli--'eulled [Laughter.] In a journey from _Boston, Massachusetts, they, fainted from t104p4-- erful odor of sweets fern in the sun. In the expedition, sonic of the adventur ers ate so many strange grapes from the wild vines thnt they. were reeling drank. [Laughter.LWeil, Nature has never indulged in these - exaspirations. • [Laughter] s It-seems to have been the last outrage ever committed by the sting-ray, the fern, or the grapes.- [Laughter.] They have ,been of peaceable behavior ever since. Every en gineer or lumberman is accustomed- to Treats of More danger Tthan. any race except .the hostile Indians. The lions have heverreap peared, but the.awe was real and overpows.”, ering in the 'Superstiiion with which every - d object was magniiied.-; The dangers of. the . ' wilderness -were unckplored, and at the time the terrors of witchcraft, of evil spirits, still clouded the idea of God in the .mmd of the-Purist. The leaders, however, were et mated, polite perrns, men of mark, good estate, and still 'more elevated by devout lives. As cloud on cloud,.:e4 snow, on snow, asthe bird on air, as the planet rests on space in its flight, so do nations of men 'and their institutions rest on- thoughts. The pure -truth Was not to be guessed fretrt the: rude wizard under which went masque rading. "The common eye cannot tell the bird by seeing the egg nor distinguish -the pure truth from the grotesque tenet which shields it. So theSe Englishme f the Middle Ag&,. still _obscuring th i reason, were-filled with Christian. thong t. They had : a culture- Of their. - 'own. They read Thomas a KemplS and Bunyan. :They were the Idealists of England—the Most religious iii a religious era., Who can read the fiery ejaculations of St.. Augustine, a man of al- . -most.as clear sight as any other; of Thomas Kempis, of Bunyan, without feeling- not so much the culture as the higher life they owed to the promptings.of this sentiment .Who can read the highest diarieS of 'Eng-_ lishmen in the time of the Commonwealth and-later Without a.slgli .that we write no diaries tosday?.:]Who shall restore to us the odoriferous Sabbaths which made the hilm .ble roof hsanctuary. \ - . . I trace to tliis religious Sentiment and its culture great and salutary results to' the character of the people of Nev England. Culture of the intellect in the''ilrst place. It was these men who ; five years after their landing in Boston ; fotinded Harvard Lltilver sity. Many and rich are the fruits of that simple statute of the Governing, Court .of .Massachusetts : ! ."Orde ie.'', to the. end that learning maY'not Jib buried in the graves of our fathers, that - every.township after the Lord hath increased the:m. to 59 households, shall appoint-one to teach all the childrea . to read and write," and so forth; "and when they. shall have increased to 100 families, - that they sha set up a7grammar school," to the'end that t ey'rahall be fittedfol. the Uni versity._ The- aberious and rude populatiett of New Eng d alwpyi leaned somewhat to grace and elegance; you sometimes meet among thbm that refinement which no edu. ! cation or habit of study,-can bestow; which makes the elegance of wealth, look stupid, and unites Itself by a natural affinity be the "highest minds of the word; which nourishes itself on Dante, - .lll4chael Angelo, and Milton, and"whatever is pure and sublime on earth; - blab- gave hospitality In that, country to ,„.. . .. of Coleridge and Wordsworth, and .. .... • ;, .. Id. , _ %of Beethoven before his genius -',... „„i ~ ' • , Ine In Great Britain. [Applause.] i-`: I - .. prOperty of the religious spirit, to-be i' , . .- „-..'.- "refining of all influences. -„. . ..-44 . 1t_n.external advantages, no culture of the • .- tes, no habit of cominand,.no assoelatiort i 'With the elegant; or evendepth of affeetion, cart bestow. that delicacy . and'that grandeur of bearing which. belongs 'only to the mind accustomed to celestial conversation Hall else is but gilt pad cosmetics besides ' thiri . as ex pressed in every look and gesture. : A; Dante said, "fleafeannot be separated.from lire, Or beauty from the Eternal," and - - this senti 'meat gives a rich purposato galeyous and . nnuily schemes. ; - . . ,with price Smith tells us that 30 or 40 sail went to trade in fish yearly, but nothing would be done for this plantation till those Broivnists Went to .the Massachusetts ore., The action of Wendelott and Winthro 4 iu secur ing a charter for . Maguachusetts s ows that they felt gdanger which threatened the in stitutions of home. They rushed to make a new England with the hnbltsAf ynuth. The speed and success whicliMistinguiSlied the planting of the Massachusetts colony over any other in history are dne_to two con siderations, naively: the sub-division of the State - into: small corporations of land and power. end the suhslivision of poWer, each men forming s part of that perfect structure growing' out of the necessities of the ocea aloe. lnstruded• by necessity, each little colony organized' Itself after the pattern of the large Myrtle., and -appointed its half con servative and half military ollicera.,- In 1t133 the .General Court appointed Selectmen as townsmen. In 103(a Comnilttee repaired to 43Ioventor fifinlbititi for counsel, and - he told • 'them to .send deputies every year I to revise the btul lam/they became In 1044essentlally llNl•samkair The-GOvernor In Alma ciafferetic4 wmpltea with ihe toirusbuin ' to - their-obedience, and: -4-slilettWArritnie witifkAiihrt his ttlivtitr4 •Anthirritlii•M:49 , 44l lll lo# ;,., - n THE PILGRIM' PA2WEES. TILE TRIALS OF COLON I:DVCATION IN' 'I lASNACHUSETTS.. COLONIAL WIGANIZ.tT LO - • covered, and every IndlVidual was gi en his faiioWeight in the Govertittient.. T i e:paor and the rich . gave counsel ; every , erc& Of land, every bushel of rye hid its v. ' ight ; 'wrath antllove came to the town wee lug in company:: In 1641,. a law as pass d that every man mightintroduee abusin s into 1 , the -public meetings [apple .e]; t ill ., spelled pages of the flowit- recur con , 'in the results; and every symptom of.nk . nness and pique in those 'boats is proof that ustiee was done. If gcxid counsel prevailed, ,:neak lug counsel did not fall to be preSenit ; rind if freedom triumphed, it. was. an ever eating proof of those men's capacity for self- Overn went: In the Church- of 'Boston. al - ..ranks were abolished in the covenant ;- the, stood iu awe of , -:_eseh other as religious in •u, and the elionrs-of ‘uthority were there eira ' I ned. They were4o settle the . titmstittitie t in I .• r the towns, and the; Governor eonspirt. 1" with them tiiiimit his authority. . 1. i • . Winthrop tells hOwilie receiVed gr tuities . from various towns with great( coup - rtand content, and kindnesses from partieul r per-,, sons which he did not refuse les he 1 / 4 ,vtiuldhe ' considered uneourteous; 'but he ireeeived 'them with an overflowing hear eonstinus of his • Own, infirmity - [laughter] , and he be- - seecherat they Will not take ib ill if he• refuses resents private persons, ,except . they 3.• Te members of the Council or i rivate friends; and after that speech. he i•. ta.4 -told , many good- persons were grieVed I*.i•use he never had'any allowance toward the 'charge of his place... The -ambition "of poi 'r then had not theirreediness of -to-day. . It and for im a place of great labOrLatill thel* i ivas no rli eward of money, but great risk of. s ending tis owir estate. • 1n1i123, it was ens - fed, by consent. 'of the freemen .of Yin- Ply. mirth, that - if any man Was eleeted — Vovert or, and would not stand to the election, he sh uld be men•ed - in .C.:O sterling [laughter] 1 to be levied on the goods and chattels of the per :se so Tefusing; and if any Oner Was ;elected o the-office of Counsel, and retu*ii toliold he place, he should be arnereed \fill : a _4lO . sterling-fine. " - - ' • ...." , , i - '', 1 In time, withal), their love fOrhi&person, hey tshk immen.4e pleasure in tiffi . ing out he GoVernor and his eputy andsh s,assist : nts„ and contravening the . coun4e f the lenty!when they urged, asJtAin Col 'Orr did, i r, hat . they,should.make.the Governor ' nd the • Ctiee of - the Assistants perpetual. I An Bos on the inhabibinwould defend elielbother against bad . GottAltiors and the trey ps, and mite naturally - house rents jw in Boston. There never was wanting is till:. of dis. ent and inuoviition *to, priegi!;;th& sides of . onservatism in that town. CApplimse.] I - now that history contains many aCiclines if cruel injustice—the 'murder of t'intkers,* he murder of Minantononmh, the' ' Wheelwright, rsecu ion of . heelwright, and the othe acts :of l e •njustice; but the - seed :of.piespek was A wned., raid it is the honorable- di Ainetidu f that first colony of: Plymouth, of the Pil !rims—not of the Puritans—that. hey did tot persecute;' that those same'perS ns who were driVe&out of Massachusetts then-Over° eceived in Plythouth. They did not !Vanish he Quakers. lApplause.l. -Then I• peOple lid not gather where they hid no "sowed ; hey did not try to unleek,the - treasure of the vorld except by honest labor. TI colony lied its own , borders with a dense ile popula on. than any other American State , • . ,„ • - . - A »EiT.Nskr-eit• BOSTON. -: . 1 • Boston Is sometimes pusliedin a t attitude or virtue to which:as a in , not entitled, and cannot: keep ;. genius of the phiee ; is seen in'their in (mice, the protective power and the . enteneSs of mind which in nature 1.• to oppression. The'rStatti papers thl einanated.froni , •Bo4tOn, from its (j Winthrop dOWn to its Govs. Auk Clatlin, have drawn. admiration, ul -decisions of it CourtS'are reSpectabh speeted. Litc4ary ability was us when We litni . e,fi.ind- it was nes hold. Mather's"Mag,nalia, the p.rst book written by a native in this coin a - Vitality still Which makes it ente readpig. Benjamin Franklin kni to write, and John 'Adams also. .11 July orations I-give up to the corn) of the official bodies who heard then ter], and the American ; sena - Vous days •Of Charming I leave to th, heard them. ~ . .. • , 11.7 ~ I confess I do hot find in Ilostowith till; 'the edge:knoll of our people; a faWshare of originality of thought. Nbt any rxmarkable book of wiridom ; not any broad forieraliztt tion ; .. no national anthem haye they yet con tributed. Nature is--a fru& met her, - and never. giveS. Without measure. Aylien , she has work . to ".do . she . , qualities .then for . that. In Massachusetts she did want big. :poems, I suppose; but -planters, and millers, ii:rd farmers to till and harvest corn. Jios ton never wanted a good principle c t rebel . lion. from . the planting.. of •it until now.. • There is, alWays a minority unconvinced ; some - wheelwright or , defender of wheel wright; some protestor against the cruelty of the magistrate to the QuakerS; .sOine John Adams and Josiah Quincy to undertakeTind perforth the . defense of Capt. PreseOtt in the courts against the uproar of all the prilvinces; . .sonie defender of the.slave against the pbliti clan. and the thcreliant—[applaus]; ,. some champion of the ti.b4 principles of I Utnanity against the rich.; some adVersar, of the. death penalty; Sonfe'Pleader for pea e;. some=- , noble President, who will not stow p to . , in. 'finny- when ' all' were gone mad, 'hitt.. Will stand for liberty and justice,.even if Aeolic [Apt - dense.] ~ , - THE COUNTRY OF T4.F.: PILGRI: l - fear to contiueyour attention 't a t ) long to the annals of this town, thoffil;11: l i nospre;• smiling on the presence of the f lire of t t N e w England { and therefore such d' tails lir not impertinent; but ye will say, tli t never Country liad'Suell a fortune asisten 1 le.ill for tune, as this of OurS, in its geogmPll2; l its his; tory; and the advantageS.which th - Amer; I , lean . has -, over ;all other - natiosiS li,fit.' of them-is the domain. A -great ‘ f try ex, panels our Views Of men anclthing.s...illotim it gives for wide varietr-Of talent. A erica is England spen .through a' magnifyitg %glass. There can be no: famine' in a eountr . rettels ing through _so Many degrees of la itude as ours—no I want : that cannot' be s ipplied. Criticsivgret-theattachnient otthe .uritans to- this •cOuntry,-- without- the. ari4 . 'ocrticy _ which reminds one of the Swiss mountain eer, who, when plaoWn a handsome English mali,„ cried out', "What a pity hcfl has no goitre." [Applause.] , . 'I 1 • The.rifter historian will record the _objee i don of the Puritans town aristocracy' a gain to mankind. .For-what prisfeiliall! tes charac- - lerizes America . IA -.mobility, bf he t institu tions. It is : the perpetual . ins l irrection . which is the :duality which secures their continuity and.rectifies all errors bt perpet . 'nal appeals to the people. - Engle d has a great deal ofeherip wit upon America. She dislikesour.manners, gives us•kindeotnisel, i l and Is .often quite right in her rire. We make the same- ourselves. B 1, s this the real, opinion, of England, whit li e reabl. in Tur.. - Lotinofkr TIMES, Pooch,_ istother journals? Uthirik not,. I rattier - ''li se to read 'Britisti opinions in the nonsense •emi :: gmtion of. English carried on betwi ii.: Lon; don and Neotv-York, the immpos =invest:- ment of British Capital in this ceutsit '. [Al): plause.] The American , Sits ( secure in the table hie vast domain, lee 'its inev; ltable force unlocking itself in elemental or der, day by 'day, year- by year, leeks from his coal fields, : his wheat , bearint-prairies, his gold mines,. to_bis oceans on - either side, and regards with . security not only the-an nexation of English Colonies,.buttheatinex 7 inivrof England.' [Great Applause.] • ' England hics long. beenthe. cashier of..the world, but the English merchant must sdon pais. from India by the Pachleatailioad, and must make hi§ exchanges in .NeW -YOrk. This is but a type of many: othet changes. We read without pain what they ihay to the advantage of England and to theisadva, 1 tage of America; for are not w 4 the heir? "Percy is but tbe factor, my Lord. [Laugh ter.] England;has made herself the founder ! of her colonies, educating the nati ' , 6 popula tion in good -- sehools„putting -then in good employment, aiming to put them ri ii condi tion: to attend to their own atrairs.l .' Colonies haVe grown - to 'enipires, abtliten.kwith her full consent have been released fmM her leg islatiVe anthority. Englandshbuliksay, "Go, I-have given. y - cou English : _equilliti i . English laws, manners-and custonTg. Anglicise your selves it. you can. We see tor conrfeTvds that -her own interest is to asSure hirelratall lio times Of, friendly relations " o 1 America, :winch is one with her by speech by relig ions equality, and by equal eiviligtion. ‘'.lo all the dangers' which are. likely t 4 threaten her from - other:nations; . Americi, sure to. sympathlidNwlih her, and elder' :a . protec nob' as noble to :bestow as tot' eetve. In. estimating nationsit is well to c niftier . the' .nature that is underneath ; _hug, 1 ~England! ' It Is went° consider - . what oritiej ;O. We can i make... There erili6V -- • '''''''-'- -',_ - yet:au : thud - gland . ' - t-o of that \FTTAT ENGLAND IEAS DONE. MEI lIEI GLE COPIESIX.ic-ENTS Which every measure - of reform can instantly e.d \ i, be carried. - • .:. .-,- • • : •: .. I have detain -On oilthe.lsistnir,i4fiut s - , experithent. We 1 ve seen the. little eplany: of Plymouth merge • itseltin the - stiito' or 3fawaehusetts represented - by:. BOstmit ' that •little representative town - has grown Jo a pensti-4 of 274,0t0 souls. . Wiy, have:fieett.lhat, she has. prospered - by • adheringl-to, tliblnoral of her forefathers, and the other Otiei Into which she has selvt her sous- have alinost out-. grown the little toivn from which .thFy.der. parted. 1 know youlwill join mein- the bore • that every child of hers will keep tier name , as Clean* the. sun, and read in distant years the motto on 'her shiel*' - '.... -- Sictitpafribus Sit (Zeus , robbscton... Al,) the. 'families In all - the lands. into Which Our iihildren„ have enal. grated—may they always say, "God be with. tit!' Sictet patribus ~ : it cars eobiseunt.'.' 1, ..-: • -- ,,, , 4 . • . , -. •• - A • . WA LE TE UR 1/7.4 TER FALL, pi:we; Trim , ( great - Kaleteu :Fall, recently dis- .1 - covered by - .Mr. own,. has- a Clear . •leseelk!according to b: ()Metrical observe.- „ tions, taken simultan sly ; by` Air; lirown .' at the bottom,_ and by Mr.. Mitchell, at the , 1 - top, ofso feet: - Above, the 1 9 ohtru glides • smootld •• in a slight 'depression ._of the tablii'• . i of . congl Mende sandstone, and disappears .. over theledge in alsidy,.which is -estimated .• at eight yards in width, and of depth (timer- .'. .lain -in the centre, but . shalloWing rapidly :. towards' either batik. -,When -the - .Fall , Was'. diseovered -in Nprilrilie rooky, charnel Was- completel 2 ,- ei , vered; and the• stream must have had a width or; at - least, 100 yards.:_ During ( the summer it is diminishing \ iti vOlutne, i and, us the Indians- status' thiltit*,. , -, w ill c o ntinu e - to do : : : . 0 till Ochiber, only the 1 ;_, central :tit(' deeper 'portion, about. eue4-biril 'i, • of the *hole, will then: fetnnin. -The . Tbest -.. lime, therefore, for a visit is in spring, - Wtho end Of What - ap• - aws. to be the rainy ieason-- ; . of this elevated i tract.• - •., - . . As th Fall was seen. by the* . exl4e,r , h4l,• party who diieovered it,. nothing be:- • imagined more beautiful. The -cenr-ra—p6r tion, which. is. never' dry, formstilinall. - horse-sh ' or re-entering angle, 'and 'the water in this 1 - pre,4erves its cot sistency for •"a short dist: nee - front the %edge. lint 4..• everywhere-else, and here also at aleW feet from the, top, all semblance • of.water_.disap- . • pears; it breaks . Opfer blosisOnts, hito tine., \,. foam or iiipray, w hid'' , depends In 'the Well- .. known rocket-like forms of the Staubbach • - and - similar •waterfalls,, but Multiplied a .. -, thOusand times, into a small dark pool,. over --" 3t_semi-circular curtain. ..The cavern behind the Fonds the' home of thousands of swat- , : Flows, which issue froni it in the • morning, . • and may be seen returning in ,tbeir:fnulti- tude at, right. The Fallotself is- ode .vast • • slescending COllllllll. of:a. line,. dry-lodilling, : .. snow-white sub Sta nee, bearing a resemblance, . . in color and comasteney to the snow of an avalanche, but Surpassing all avalanches . in size and in the beauty of the forms taken by • ' theinaterial as it fails. „Rainbows olgreat. -- splendor were „observed, true from the front .:. of the Pall in the- morning, one - from the. summit 'in the afternoon ; but thiS last re-: ' . verted, forming, a colored loop, or ring, into Which the whole muss',seemed to precipitate :,' itself, inickdisappear and -And out under- • - death, laiik and foaming-At the gorge mid outlet of the pool. ' - • .: . . Eleven - day s - . were spent in .aseending they ~ Atssequibo,: which, was heavy in: flood,. arid " 2 detained the patty. double the, ine rintlei: .:. pate4loivo , .days brought them* from Tonut-i :• . toeterT, the lowest fall ini the- rehire, to the' .. Paten - lona village. - In • this stage there are five cataracts, two of which, at least, are - in -- • accessible.' Two days were occupied in visit --_ ing the tbotand -summit of the Fall, and in . • descending Witte Settlement, leaying Missrs. - .'l . Brown andßing to Complete the survey mut sketches' of - the country in four days and - a• . • half.-.Nirtterc..a - . ieatrical ss she is but the idepend ,lorthern hostile lat have ? ON ernor few and {bile the and re lit with. , N quite portant itry, has limning ew hoN% le 4th of liments [laugh fore the .se who . :%I . ,iI,II.ji2AWS...'SMAKI 7 .I2S .C:NCROACILINO ON' WOMAN'S SPIIERFL—Tife. Trgis says -there' . , are a half thszen dressmaking establishments' • in New York where the sewing upontir saes • is almost entirely performed by mei', though they are :not visable to ladles .wit call - to give their orders.. In the . second stogy there are big, bushy-headed 'Hungar ians - Anstrimis -and -holes, sewing' with greati rapidity on r fahries'ef • many . hues and -tex tu res.! • ! They earn by the piece from .5.,22 tai per ~7,7 - • week, ,aid as high , us 5311 by: working over hours atl:ls centsinier hoar. - The cutter man of $273 per w , eek, - • • • They NFaryllit age fromjt wen fy-fiVoliti,sllty: and, have till served 'an apprenticeship id • their several 'native countries. In the same establishment am ply's enc.; ployed - oti machines who earn fro $l.l . $1:! , per week.• „ ' Each besets his • dress and- prepares it !'or. - fittiug.~tr'd,,►vhtvr fitted, finlislieji it with ra pidity at all rut ts.'. Two do.i.ei wAnten are , • often - foUnd working upon a dress,„ tc, rkiag . peaceineal at the ilifkrent , parts, : from want of training ; are rarely. perfect. Someeexcel . iu one Or two departments, 'and are ,deficient inofhers •"- • The pribes obtained by the munfor Making adiess vary with th.materiall- A -figured organdie' wits .• shown,•finished in a day an d a quarter, with. • • hems; bands, dimming of waist and drapery,. . high in the neck i • . "Men !dressmakers," men milliners,. men in the cook room, men everywhere! Really -, woman'S sphere is getting narrow—too-nar row even for old time notions. In the burs; ": cry we have go-cart.4 3 , baby-jumPers and ern- . dies tieing wound up, rock themaelvei._: And i - vlrin.the't"elestialti , come-ta-nar aid as --7- 7, - kitchen boys and housekeepers, what. theli ?' Thereis %atone thing left —maternity; ; and I verily i I believe, if it were in the. raugeg les,' that men-,.would catthpass that alsiif:aS d masculine privilege. Everything - -in the line of woman's labor that can be made to pay, -Men are crowding: ' themselves: into.. every , public,- joitrnal tells us there are - • more women, 'Riau, .hen:' A noted' French s"' writer anya that 'the world is • becoming, letn!„ . mine; arid:judging from the present peculiar • adaptability of men to - feminine empley- . metit, we should say that thereis i nkre.truth than , fancy in the assertion. If Our.progres -shit male members of society areTienfira.S- . pining ito become womanly in theirarnploy ments, What shall awe do? It is t4::i`6ii hoped drat tiicsie "vexed questions" about woman's labor wilt some day Work themselves clear, as nisi) tbe muddled brainit in the community - in regard to them.- - -Retki/ufion..,.:. .5: , IFEE -- .._„,_ .. how 'OE' GERMAN ARlllei" Ann .r ED:---..'" , - The Wzsmt ZEITUNG gives a lesliription-cit„ the manufactory of Prussian army - stores at ' .. Berlin, More than.l,loo persons, adults and -.-_•.__,. prnthsof . both sexcii, are engaged fronimcirn- •-,_:- tog tilt night its preparing 00,030 posatids of .. _.,. peas pudding' (erbswurst —literary, pea sau- .1' . 7 sage), and 2,40,000 rations of meatand.. vegel,c' ' table preserves, which are daily.•.deepateliett . by railway. ' The largest . room in the build -' • log- is deVoted to the preparat 'omit paas purl-,' - ding. Sfrin°'s flesh; especially bacon Arid hams, are first eboked•in rye - lie:large sauce, pans. The other comrion en ts of the pi%filour, . =it, and the so-called "lupits," - the, name- • humorously given. by the inventor to the se • . cret ingredient which makes the - article • • keet.,..arid give in s' it a _ recable flaVor. . ' AN,hettire.it.;.ture i m aked'His pour '4 . -- C ---- a - 7 Into pail's; it.nd by, ski ferkmeading,. the pea‘ : sausage Sean: becomes firm, and is- mielased in a covering, not of skin, but of parchment I..y.t..._t'and girls - Yarry the mixtureon- wheel- --..-- . ba'rroWsto the packing roam, where 400 wo- . • men and girlftitfter eleansing the outside - ' from grease, affix on iiiery portion the fol- • loWing 'label :-qPut.terfouneatt.or °rte.:third ' • ' 'of a - sausage, freed from the coating, litto•1 :„ • , pint of cold water, stir it up; and let; it' cOok I -.- tor.ton-minuteS." The sausagesare carefully =-- packed in pairs,i and are sent to the, coopers' .._ „ V. workshop, where they are stoWediritolsolh.- e . ests, nailed up, and'sentft :o The_taitinge .-_ or. wilding becomes in•tirlie as hard as'stone...-- _ • Tli- ...uine:hrtiele is not obtahanble by-the -. pit . , ' though imitationsof • It itre. sold: . Tu t r io, :carrots, and celeri for the we serf . .. serf . --are _dressed and cut. by about 120,,Wrst, - men ' - TIM 2 I, in cases of the preserved'eMid4r -: 120 workmanT-1(0 oxerirmidail3telsugh -Wed, - arid. 27.5 cwt.. of, bacon :daily : Wight .fm%the .- _ mantiTactory.. The, preserves,:„ . already , : cold - ':: erect up,cin cases, are belled lu 06;464%116d ' • . marine-bat hs. !. LabelsrWitli the 0n5;,.,:.,.,7 .. Are - place t t—im t. very cos; . :Aildry , , .is- ---' made - the most otr - the''hotiesheftr& ..Fed-. -- ___. and ,suppViue excellent, br.i404, - -E gi Llteen. - .. saucepans arc: used for prep,ll4ll4';'" ' 117 - _„---4 !Milan) `of =beet - and- nitilzei;, - -Irktet:- is: • much . relished liy, 'thrb.treopik...;Thi,ooor)r t .4 ..cover- aboutsix;acres,•and •* ,;*• .4 . 16-.0 , 0p. - -_ 1 erty of the arkt# 4 , ' There' . ~. , • .. T estalo-' lishmeittstil, Frankfort and ,', i ' - '1.:).1(4, - ' . - ' = . "iiir . l4. l Akanit further particulars Iterrk . xtvws bal., 10011 haa a '..learria6 and w ,any other field gun, tuidgan toojeroddittAr single Ten with ' -41grefitiat- tinly about' lbs.,lf I=MIEJ NE =I 0 Efil 9~~'