H _ . A i Fali, MHO bir. a PaaSher. : . The ersey Shore Republican contains a long n :ount of the death of Dr. RIENNALD, i forlllEly of Williamsport. It appears from t he sta enient that he was a respectable ia Garda phisician, and resided in Liberty, Tioe . unty, Pn. He was found dead in a stnnl valley of the -Blockhouse Fork deck on Su !ay, the Oult. He had left his resi dence, 'a the Blockhouse, on the Morning - .. of the : dof December, with the intention of risiti..g a pntient who resided on Little Pine', c ; ek. The woods through. which he had to :ravel.were infested by wild beasts of pr r py and it is believed that a panther must lt ve attacked him, as he was most shockitigly mangled. His entire face, With 'the- dheek bones, were turn off' ; the bone of the tin. er jaw. was unbroken, but stripped of all c overing. The throat, and' part of t h e r i g i ' side of the neck, were torn away, and till he erring was stripped ()tithe col ; l a r hen* down to the bone of the right arm, which tas at the shoulder laid bare. Tour or fibe ibs were torn out, of his right side, and nit nuance made through his body, in the-di • don or region of the heart. His gnn la! ix or eight feet from the body,with one bar el discharged. ‘ El. i is proposed to erect in Pottsville, pa. an i sylum for disabled miners, and the canal lc- d railroad companies have been nti pe- 1 0 etle -by nearly. all the operators in the region include in their rates of toll, one cent pekon, to be appropriated to the erec tion of , uch at institution. The proposi tionsw i ; favorably received by both compa nies, a t they have asked the requisite au thority rf the Legislature to make such -ap propria.ion. . PRE: y GOOD FUN.-A Taverner was heard t' say the other day that liquor was the be-1 kind of property he held—,-if he could readily get the cash fox: it, - he al ways k'ew right where to turn it. - For the People's Advocate C ital Puutshatent--Ne. b. To the ditors of the Ageocate : I hay no wish to enter into the disc* sion oft e controversy that is now exciting our co munity ; but as-my opinions and feeliags , re against the punishment by death, offer f s the consideration of Biblical critics, the full wing..; suggestions, with a full and. fixed' de ermination of listening calmly and pntieuti,_ to any remarks in reply ; but with out SU cting myself to the necessity of yin (heating my own views by further investiga tion, or ; esearch. To all the' arguments against taking life for criut , it is replied: we have no option ! it is the ivine law! it is our duty, not Ito speculat,, but to obey ! Let it be proved that a andate lies issued and that is an end of t; e controversy. This I understand to be Jo Jessup's view. Now We hare only to reme.iber, in such a case, that the Bible is one tag and our notions telt another; and as ire divisions of Christendom, and even of 1 he Jews themselves, differ essential ly, mid II claim to be right, and each sect 1, fund; d with cast research mid ability.— lie that down the most will be far from con tideat, . cause lie knows best how little he does k ;w. _Theological controversies, pis evide` t from .reading the book , of JO, ed from the earliest ages, and wire bare cx with as much acuteness, as much oinduct profoun nitud, b thought, and as much energy of him and his friends, under the be !dumean Emirs, as they have ten:, o in profcssingCliristendoin. Ju olge f I understood him, insists that it r guide in all our relations, social, :,t1 political, and that it may he used was . in the days of Galileo. and s, to retard the progress of science, ar • and indubitable evidence is ty - r bee ~ to . he ma-al, a 7; (lIT as C lamb anal cl award that they are nut contradic ice: be sustains the divine, right of iritught 'ors —'ll Judges, , Iline r the clergy formerly sustained the ht of Kings; and he thinks psyco id investigation ought ourOgedn As the - titco st pious and IZ wound in : .doctrine, of all sects,, now admit the ha iony of Scripture with the discove ries of s , "aence, both sides should regard their been cot: lusiorns with distrust; or, at least, charity or each 'other should be inculcated. In the r reek church the Bible is held to sauctio , despotism, but not to require .the OuttiOnittent of death : in republican eoun- Ines it ii exactly reversed. And in England where t crime of Tamar (Judah's 'dough- . ter-in la ) wits -branding or burning in the / fiwe o foreltend ; it 'was , and I believe; yet ,s tit t, thatthe thmtnand, " let her be bn ”. imply means, not burnt to death, but titer y branded. Now whether the Scrip-. tures ' ha e produced the practice, o r the le „Till pin ce produced this construction of the :!criptu , in thitse different countries, I leave. quote , the fact to show the differ ent %liel that site most learned men entck- Lim. I 'ld, the doubts that arise as to the enrretn ss of each or tiny of these constuc tions,lw tdd snake me, extremely cauticius . if I fver6 %member of the legislature, of -put up; its jilopardy any immortal soul, without the clemilit evidence of a'divirie iimndate. The ey. Dr. Cheerer, who is the ablest tiy,te a t I have yet read forthe punishment of deittit admits that "Abe argument from ,s, .'" cli f"`” 19 flowewitat !ignited," its *hole strength ..pecondensed into a single . verse; this Itee Bs - ,6,4,;t4e citadel of „our.orgunient, caffutiat ing iiiid - sweenint ithe4rhole sub- -- _ ..,eping 11, believe Biblical eriticah generally, t-iipabito. f c/earn.iss ind'fullnesr, - ivao priligneisive froinHMoses to not; front Adam to -.. Moses; and 1 - 11a1(. - ngier:.tmen Oaken - in the $. or 'd i iiii- ;Ability “to- Wake,. wise t ti, Dn . through faith in. Christ," by isaasiMiAtatitis. litogressive now lvllys hovel:me:l4nd yet are omuy lof them iniolved,it obscurity; :but iral impremicut or Man's imMtoSP-' soothing to :our *lobes and , our s led .tim,tti believcthif in them'ire More Mai ciiktylcOlulnentatore; groture ages. inny Aintw from th em 11ight than ouraehres,i ''TO go back lippearts to we to lic '- icsoking,f4the; tong the fiend: - -- - - comb prfipkist.l thb: tytt4 o we co to roAnelitlani : Ckto.,ix/44.:10i al f which in the ihrigumlirou be, fxt." tdmi t h 'PS ehitio r” raid . • Lnp unto nil a fin Thor • a Pasba _e • our =en meat hopes, h may rea anti dial yet n hying the mean "Sheliding the blood of, mao,..litAcm,•his blgod 'ltolliedi l i*: ! .:f . "bY :man iiii/Mattd - is, or will, orldielFtekshed.;" , 'Now 1 o,ot must be jobv i to - tis-io any' capaitity tktly,'tiyeb a sentence` is,' ig ' the - English language, scarcely. intelligible. It conveys no mean ing, * and theretbre / our • tranislators thought themselves justified in rendering it "Whom sheddeth man's blood, by man shall his WOW be shed." : And this is about sis.nntural, and probably or near an approachlo the truth as we shall get ? but it is not certainty. ,The verb in the last clause lof the literal trattsla tion-is in the form used for eitherthe present Or future indicative; it is sometitnes used in this form instead of the imperitive, and sometimes stands for it; but this is far from from beingialways the case; and 'whether it does here,. or has only _the force of the fu ture, as it has in Cain's assertion, " Every one thatndeth me shall slay me," depends on the s u bject matter the contest. Of course we cann y t tell, whether the sentence is a I comma' . , an assertion, or a prophetic an -11 nunciati n. The phrase translated "by man," i the Hebrew "h' edam," the word " edam, ' preceded by the letter " beth," which, eons also, in, among, with, &c. A very,dis biguished Hebrew scholar says the preposit on "by" is properly represented by the lett ' 4 ' mem ;" and if he is correct, it is very do btful whether the blood to be shed, is to be shed by man. John Calvin says, the ren ering of" b' edam" " by man," is "a for ed construction," arising from the difficult es; 1 suppose he weans, in which the sub ' ct is involved. - The Septuagint,. Greek version, which was ma 1 elabout three centuries before the coming of IChrist, and, of, course, only em braced he Old Testament, approaches ra ther. ne, rer in a literal translation to our commo, version, than the one I have quoted from tlit Hebrew ; and it is not at atrial probable that from this same source our translation of this verse was obtained. It would 'Mad literally, "He sheddeth (that is. ' he who sheds') the blood' of man for the blood his will be shed." The Samaritan copy ofttlie sante translation has it thus— "for th.p man his.blood will be shed." The presentiVuhr e' ate was published fi rst in 1590, after Pepe Sextus V. had collected the most ancieratlMSS. and best printed copies; had surinnoped a conclave of cardinals, nod in vited an assembly of all the learned ince throughout christendom to their,assistance, had pre,'sided over the whole hiniself. He deciareil it to be the only correct translation, and pit lisped it, with as severe n denunci ation o t all who,questioned it, as Judge Jes sup !lei issued now, against those who differ from On ; and-yet, only two years after his death, pletnent VIII. published another,. with in(re than two thousancrvariations, and pronounced it correct; with the same anath emas .lid the same sanctions. A literal iranslaf on of the Latin Vulgate, in the case noir' be ore us, is "Whoever sheds human • blood, is blood wi ll be shed," making no allusioqi“ to any agent. Martini's Italian version4has it the same, There are some eight o# nine different versions of this Bible that cciijicide with his; one.of Michael-Ser vetus, published in 1.542. I know that the Vidgat I is not considered the best authority by ,PrO l stout Divines,but asthe translations e of itJ trite all made without any reference to this%qutistion ; no apparent motive existed to depart from the truth, and surely in this colour* and under our institutions, Catho lics 'have as good a right to be heard as any other sict—indeed many of them are as zealouti for the death penalty as Judge Jes ' sup liilself. In DiOdatis' Italian version, the verse we are discussing is ” the blood of him wltn sheds the - blood of man, WILL be shed oilman." The French Bible in corn ' shed use, and 'Which Judge Jessup, if he is a member of the American Bible Society, asSists to distribute, has it in this way " who will shid the blood of man, in man, his blood will 4 poured out"— e vidently referring to the mahner of 'the first lite-taking,-and not to the who is to punislifor it: The p, i Hugtienot translation, which is probably the one edited, by Junius and Treinelius was • lung Referred to this, especially by Calvin ists, air being most consistent with their views, math yet it Tenders this passage exact ly the tame as the French Bible !•-4! 'Email. uelSs*denborg renders the text, "He who sheds the blood of man, in man, his blood I shalltie shed ;" "placing the crunma, as it is , in:the Trench version, after the worth "ire arui." t Blaise Paschal who is, I apprehend, a bait* authority than Judge Jessup, or any 1 • other 4 have quoted, cites the passage as IgiVfiii hi the Vulgate, and after discussing it, ,add) tips important conclusion: " This gen era; piphibitiou takes from man all power -oVer the life of man; " but still be is in favor of tto !punishment: of death, and seeks to jusifylliudicial executions, and war, by sub r seque4t!divine emOrnands. Fabre D'Olivet Lone of4fie, best schOlars in Europe translates 'the la 4 clause of !the sentence, - "through man bill blood will be shed." The Manager of : the fJewish sehotil in Paris, who has late lypublished nue*, Version of the Old Tes tament, makes it "wi ll he shed." If I ivas Alit as hamed to ' fill a newspaper with theol-; coy; Irrould mail:4lly these authorittes, but here are ten or twelve distinguished Hebra istir differing from nor common version, and l not one of them Makes the ; verse a clear comni imL , i • I lipe,,it may trot be necessary : to appear! ih . yout ,columns main, because the people gienerally will be tired of the subject, before theologians get halt through. ! PHIVI-SPECTATRESS. IMI • L 1 . . z or. the People's Advoeate. Metisrs. Editorsi: For the consideration of your readers, plfine give the following a place in your papi4 „ D. The IwOrd ondisonsus Government. IloMansl3th 1.45;," Let every map be sntjeei unto the higher powers., For there is ci power bat (if , God. ';'Whopover, there foie, reSisteth the power,- -resisteth the or didianle of God, and they that resist, shell receive unto theniselves damnation; - For riders Ore not a terror to gaol:Um:As, but to the evl; Wilt thOu then not_ be ,afraid of the p owers? Do:that which is good, and thOulalt - have praise for the''saine::-,:Tor *is t minister 0-God to -thee - Airjok 11 Bit ' TIMM, do that which is evil, iie . l riiid ; foi:Milmareth-not-the- -*word ini vain ;-,, for I. ls i ct i r - mi ll i l iter:a God, a revengef to az eclit(443l upoWhin that doeth Evil". Skakiall . atWa liasalle, a Jute diAtinki ;oh! et6rilier se7s, " iiitt in the ecnisesofioy inidinionntiwhliini perfect waiscriptiacof *AI nOaref; 1 0 - 4 4 4 4 ilhii , ‘OPOqie:-sn'd the iteArOf.niiil `government,,. kn- Igor Aini.i, a dinplin in we find in the first six ieries of , . ...:, chapter.;.WithciUt_ slot iotintry,- iMt'w yto alf, , Alits aPtist A he of civil anverei 1.! fistilem k w _, ; and -, c e of a truth wine! en Itrthose who c , headers that th - , ' Weis: the true. p , i; individual ma L ht of ;self-govern r origin of personal 1 .etitc Capacity, de , viol government: his ordinance— , The'delign of 1 , of societilie o iod- . This pro f r aa, and the t p —slag evil the n, i n : . timed with ye d 'I., ri revenger t, i s , c believe, is a xt, ,nd although tl • nt ' ler subject, it is nu own- The i , ec ' red 41 be God h a , the instrume not ,e rod of :disci l of ,traint, nor the y, t the sword, r does he wea nt 0,,116 person, or the . • urpose of inti fort capital pools tt H., .ireth not tl bar ' eri.too, in wl bene, g the sword, . flicti • of death. , I, e ref , lotion of th, nger : etectite wr rum t :.; passage, t lit w ' di the othe of Go, t , :hed upon i,I questions of ject trefore society 1 thee; ortance it Do we as' nptures tel made m creature. d for hi It was not helpmeet for; ini was pro the origin ors' ' itty. D for the origt , of gover 1 meets us ng sad info God's ordina e—" the . I ordained of ." And d has God best ". ed on his m 4 e inent, the !PIO: to to murderer? th '",en,wer is Of the inspire ••iPaul, " H sword in vain. 7...11V0y, the when they • d(inileer thi themselves to* carried o of God's worikto ie left I i l wilderness of it del spec to Voltaire and ` ercario I pies of crimilitiAjurspro I may have Mote Ind Pa tors ? Why likirried sy in pathy fur: the nn.rder • danger of forgeticne :he .:.1 tnitted, and thectred he I a Republican ddtatry li magistrate is th# repres • 1 e of the popular:* regnt the mane of the merit should also reme rth inter of God for g to , is officially as we 0 per ble to Him for 1 i• rid went of death ha n itn to a future stater: I: br) speedily before I*h r o' 'infliction, the tnalOs:ra te ter of the 'divine vikeni. nod there retnainig no pc send any otTetiderAym ev • at. once for his criniiiii at G LATE FISPIDI Santa Anna at 8.2 LI passed Victoria ikiiiu The Clergy reftier bution required- - t to Anna projecte et resigned—Ver id, and but little It Blockade invade 7 ( .Ship. : WASIIIN7 4 , 1 Havanna dates to; t, Charleston, furnish 4«! Mexico, received by du, et from Vera Cruz. 3 Santa Anna still tilez 1 with a force of 22, ID, it is stated, had left h !r had passed Victoria', r was supposed to be ore .. The clergy of Mex tribute the eight mill .raised by them,. and .1 against Santa Anna, ..C! a pronunciamento agai" The new Cabinet, It all resigned. Great jealousies ext.- . ous Generals, and me. organization prevailed Vera Cruz was gi 3000 troops, and were pecting an attack from On ihe . 2ul of Febi 1000 men in the Castl4 Iy supplied with provi formed thought that tl be very feeble& A number of vessel. along the Mexican eimst hie cargoes nt the varickt Freud' ship { richlYfrm tared after being once The mail' brings. Ne% the 11th, but they eontai Explicatory or Mx. SENA,Te. , —It is deeply n majority of the Senate a have felt'themselves so communication which in Washington Unioli, &lune that certain , Sent ntive to the Mexican'wa to expel frowthe:Senat erable editor„of the 117tti Esq. It strikis wilts a' , on the part of grave Se) vengeance on- tin-edito should be employed in to enable- =the itdatinini the . war with vigor.. W cAteg ntoti .oueive ; u 'we 'moat beertileiiep we care not from Whet winch him fw objec Otivilegen. thiviiimpleneent , alrstiriw by our -WOOpirton Mk& If draoitok kb l icither ORAVAnoON,. .irei; (to . .use,the Aanguage of their aged alother*llo ditlle&baluild Make Ibis inquiry,) "in the land of the living t ,". they, or either of titem p nize cainesdirreq nest ed to communic;tte With that Mother, Whop. at an advanced age, itt in straitened eireurn stances, and needs assistance. Her Sons. city some twelve years ago, .since which titneishe has heard nothing of them. IV" Printers would do an act of kindness, by. letting this .inquiry go rouud.—Albany Evening Journal. rence., ti) any !th tiliertiat lays dawn the ty, - according to e Words another never ought to be i nsider man in his - revealedl will of ilosophydesires of go frOm do v. d cot: Hence the livWesrtyfrUtniGillodn'tliine Hence the imag e is the minister this• institution is ' the minister of dice is the protec ttin P i Pre al ss st i :er o e f ig e n v t i y i. gennce—the min execute wrath." tind exposition of e author had in perfeetli , applica agistrate, who is s minister; holds t of punishnient. llinarinn nor the key of ote prison he instrument of it as a mere or adge of his office ; nidation, but for iment of the °lren e sword in vain." ich he is present hows that it is for is not a corrector ADVENTIMES np r POLL KINNEY:-001. Kinney, who traveled almost alone from Victoria toTampico, a diitance . uf2soMiles, in three days, narrowly escaped the strag gling pafties of the Igesieans do iteVettil'oc cusions. The Picayonesays of pith i "He spent part df the night at the otd rachero of 'Croz, wlire' Sanchez was .sta tioned with, twenty dragoons ; yet in the morning he contrived' to give him the slip. He also succeeded in avoiding Romano fal con, the man who is reputed to have killed Col. Cross. At Soto la Marina he found a company of sixty rancheros. He rode 'at once to the alcalde-, 'boldly told him that Gen. Taylor had sent him on a few hours in advance to prepare supplies, and by this rush made out to come Off safely--the ran cheros at once dispersing. Since the Mex ican war broke out, he his ridden thousands and thousands of miles through the country almost alone; his favoriO servant, Catalino, has been killed, he has been himself beset and atnicked time and Eignin yet, by his superior riding, his knoW i ledge of the Span ish language, hyshis promptness and cour age he has so far succeeded in-escaping." criminal, but n . nth." Our reason ten, is, that 'with ponions of the i L , t seines all the r i volved in the sub- CnEAP Porritoz..—We know not when or where the experitnent of comparative freedom was ever more successful than it was in Great Britain under the cheap post age system. The result it, that the annual income to government &Om the mail service, over all expenses, exceeds four millions of dollari, although letters are carried through out the iiingdotn for a penny, in advance, and newspapers for nothing, and both are' deliveredlO individuals, at their doors, with out charge; for the origin of , us that it is God's In a social being. to be alone. A . lided, and here is we seek 'further merit ? the Bible :ins us that it is Iquvers that be are we again inquire, 'ordinance of goy , e the life of tine 'SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE IRISH RELIEF FUNlX—'rjhe following table c.intains a liit of the subscriptions to, the Irish relief Fund, as fur as they have Wen announced : Society of'Friends, Philadelphia, 88,977 Amount collected at Walnutst theatre, 500 New York City, 30,000 . Pittsburg, ! 2,000 New Orleans, . ' fl 7,000 .; Washington city, 1 . 200 Reporters ,in CongresS, 100 Hon. Richard Pakeuham, 590 Jersy City, - ' • 1,000 . St. Louis,i4fo., 1,230 Rochester, N. Y., ' 363 . Utien, 750 Church of the Holy Cross, Boston, 5,387 Society of . Friends, Hopkinton, R. 1., 350 Bishop Duane, New Jersey, . 100 Albany,. 1,040 Baltimore 5,000- in the language beareth not the will Christians, subject, permit the sure ground to wander in the Infirm? Why go o learn the princi ence, when they fur their instrue- I way by mistaken 1., so as to be in !rime he has com as offended ) In e Our own, the i ntudve and agent . He does all iu wealth. But lie t he is the "tnin 'n,'! and that he %wittily accounta ct. The 'Finnish , ediate reference ngs the criminal , Grud,, and* as cts as the minis. 'Take it away, wer in society to r great, to answer id's tribunal. F Rom ;S,AT A Fe.—Dreadful Suferi% aid Dec:A.—The Boon's Lick (Mo.) Times fir the 30th ult.,' mentions the arrival of Mr. Merril, from Santa Fe, out of whose compa ny, thirty in all , , whidli started the 30th of November, three were frozen to death, and several others crippled by frost. The names of the men frozen ,to death were Barden, Low, '' and Thomason , from Buchanan coun ty. The , company name in on fimot, and were tifty-seven days on the route—about tour hundred miles of the journey throtigh, Si snow eight inches deep. _ EXICO. is-. Gen. Taylor arch to Tampico rnish the Contri tion against San em--11rew Cabin- !,., 1 teal 4 t feebly garrison ce expected—The # tore of a French Fe). IR, 1847 lust. received at *ntelligence from 'val of the pack- lined at Sun Luis, li. Gen. Taylor, Sent position, and 6090 , men. He way to Tampico. lad refused to con ,required. to - he • i tl•- • inuch excited 4 voting to get up CIVIL WAR IN MassAc.—The Governor , of Illinois, on the 20th inst., laid . before the i I House of Assembly, the proceedings of a sI meeting held in Mitssac; county. These proceedings state that the Regnlators' are still pursuing their works of beating, tortur ing and akusitior, in esery Oossible'vsny, men, women and cilildren; turning 'them out of doors in the night time, and destroying their habitations. The proceedings go on to say that theyt have lost all confidence in the Le gislature,l,and they c.llll upon the Governor to come to their aid on his own responsibili ty. Theiy threaten, unleis something is done fur their relief, .to fake the: laws int o their own hands. A portion of Illinois, it appears -,?is always to be afflicted with laytr lessness outrage— r the result of inibecih t on the pain of the authorities of the *life, who took no measures to crush such outrages at the beginning. 'ls reported, had between the seri timfusion and dis fled with only tQy dispirited, ex tinericans. there were but they were bnd- The best in - sistanbe would , the;blockade landed vision, s. Obe )arge Istaibeen cap off. Is papers to tIC FROM THE #grettetl that a United States aggrieved at 'rlappea red - pon - the kiken rel. ithice their) r, the - ,AS MUIR 0 business, ek their time, 'vie:Hwes firosecute the "tiro. item, but stanspt; *testes; - ititt of lots - of mailed Total, STEAMSHIPS FROM NEW ORLEANS TOHA vANA.—A! project is on foot nt New Orleans to establish a line of steamships between that city and'Havana, Mid to continue the line to Charges if ii should be found to succeed. J Even running . to Chargei, it is believed, that an excellent.business would be done, as the travel to the Pacific is increasing rapidly, 1 and it would all go through this channel in- l J stead of round Cape Horn, or by the uncer tain &neigh ' packetsnow in the trade. RVIISOLLERS • FINrD.-- , ThMe cheers,' for the ReCarder's Court in' ,ilticti! The Re corder's Court . did a ;“latid.utfice. husinesS" in the line of fining rummies in our city last week, mid in vindicating.th e s upremacy iif , the Excise Law. The follaWinging are the fines imposed, with the, lialtilify of imprison- Mimi .for six monthsi if they are rnot . paid : .Win. - W Ison,sso; P. Cassidy, $15:; - Win. Kirklan ~ ifr $5O; .la es Mapes, $5O; John Adams, 0; A: W. Latour, 00, ;S. Com stock,' 4 9; C.' Schmitt,. $7541 Wirt.i DO it vereatlA,,Ps ' ,M. Giber; $ 10; J. CI, Ames, $10; annal - ,Johnson, $10; IL Glait,, $10; Ev it O. Jowl. $25 ; John Meguade, $25 ; A In Kenting; s l i l 4 ;- D,, L,fing,„:400..; r.. Moe an, $lO ;"W arner , Or.!0.11y..$110 ; IH. Maid, 40 10. Total. . $599. Wilson, who beads the Jir, Owl ,it trial, and the jury .brotsgth him'in,guitlY Wi ( tlmitt being out five Minutes, _ Theialieritersons all_earne, far- Pleaa god Isi!L Tiiii -.7 1v. - ' - iii 7 iii -u n. i ttiotkaak the Cou . it:atal, ttialietice' • me. The decided °what& , chit ' ts, der Baker, and the cold-wateteo; n! lin thejuri,.bol, suggested --* e Is anti ' loafers, that iiiei:,,* It rill and heifer throw thettaselstis iercy of the courrifstOittaititrialij It i ht tO Xity that' bflirrg;RO-1 1 %;500P, OP .caulikt jii I Pitd , :kiel*frr apsay—are.reSpeetaWe- 'dratOti, 1 ward a expecte. by surp of Reco tenaace rani lo just as on the is but ju base ; .; bad bad co mechanical liuriposei, t tuiedt . vitui procured by a selle ire lilt: Reidy. 'this is ph tit iighl..aud Teimeiiiraj Itch our Country readers m b T talk on& AmOng, their , sseigh r&-r . ' : — PAIITOILik. LETTE -2 4 p, the Clergy find' Laity' othe 1 .ey Dear Brfthren:—You aye d übtlesti if Pemosylvalele; : .... . . . 'M h e,n made acquninted with. he so rowfu[ ti ings of famine and'sore stress which a uow reaching ; us from ,clifr rept arts of . E tope, but especially and a ve, aI, froin u linppy Ireland. The visite ion is t once s exttaordinary and so !wort hdin ' atito nl c. I for special pyer to the Oil of iII met. c ( iste ~and also fur special libernlity on t e part of till those who would do gal as tit y have orOortunity. Pettnit me, the affec ionate ly Oki recommend that the clergy of t, is Dio c4e present the case of these afflicted stit Hers, especially. that of the mishit g poor 1 offlreland, to the bonsideratim of th it res plitive congrega6ons; and tit t a ntrilm ti be made in each church .:t' same early day, towards their !. relief. Sli tdd this.rec onliamidation be f complied ith, I would suggest the morniiig of the fi rs!' Sun in ch, (being the. third Sundt, in lent) as th time when this . appeal sb 11 be I made, an when the offerings of tho ' who would fi t f d ir lei id ; rvyh down cethosuuperish,r 1 is o n ti oeb e i l n j ti fie st ye s e adib t i l nv can e g ssp,roet be r b s ee many Il i i o: f rn a d f at i i l e a st are n d T r imes Robins, ! Esq., Tre urer C vention Fund who i after 41m co tin , will make silch dispositio of tli I will be likely to tiecuro the ea lest of git measure of relief. • ! - AtiONZO POTtni t Bietop of the Prot. Epis. Chin' iin 1: WADI:I, Feb.:lB, 1847. i. , • 1 n compliance with the atm ' *, the hocollections in the Episcopal hitn.ll Sl t quehatinn coua ty, Pa., as llows iniSt. Murk's Church, N. Mil rd, }i 149 A. Andrew's j" Springville, M 1 iniSt. -Paul's , " Montrosru 1 .to Blessed is the tnan that co sider polir ; the Lord will deliver hiip in ti "f krouble."—Ps.; xli, 1. 5 t.But . to do gOod; and to cmu for et not ; for with such seer Gees we l pleased,"—Pleb. xiii, 16. I inn us t. B. ' 1) BitEAnt, a di • areeble taste in te mot ma y other unple tit symptoms, ari alwny sal of indigestion. Vhen the food , instead P m rly, Dissolved , iremainv in the tiltoinarl be tines in . .a tnann,er,putrified, a dilleterio ...I cal . Septic Acid,l isgenerated id the 1 wh h. mixing with the fluid of the ontli, i not my to given, liad breath, but also eau e of }wasting of the gumv.atiepo it of t *I- yell ' teeth . Might' s I n di a' , eget not- my cleanse the stomach, and ,owels 1 t i bib: (is and putridhumors; and pelthe hl the also rtstore the digestiveorg, to a ton ; and are therefore rertOß, , ,to remcet bi-- th, and preyentja premature dec yof , • ember, the o*ly - original, and gennin Ve table Pills have the written sigtature Wright, on the top libel oreach bii.x.:§ .41 ,, duts for the sale of Wright's.lntlian VI Palle Montrose, Mills‘& Shermtuii FM get •ies see tulvertisement in anotherolurnl $74,527 Receipts torsi the Peoples' Advoct . , For thevaiek ending Feb 23, . G , ... , ° ee swt, .. i sl,ooipays ti Jol: H. Sherwood;' . 1,001 rin rles P. Chase, ' 1,001 " D. t. Lester, 1,003 " Mgt.(' Jones. ' I,ooi • " Chtfries Wrighter, , ' - 1,001 " Ch`ies Barstow, r . I,no ',_. H. V. Stone, 1.001 " A. V. Harding, ;" 1,00 3 4" Ric { and Blay, 4, • 1 ' 1,007 1 - 1 , 3e ntiah Martin, ' - 1,001 " linlbn De Grafi' i' •.; . 1,01 " MARRIE , C. Troy, Bradfor4 comity, ou the ' 'lust. . Pnrker ,M r. tftrast P. Msrmiws. of. ... county , N. X.l, and Miss RzM4ct B. e former place,', I Binghamton'. l !N. Y. 0n11ie,9.0 1 inst. r.. Sawyer, Amoltrr N.• Buta.sno 1p E. .stns, both of Miontrose. . ; V -NDUE N Friday, the f2th day of Mar ch. nex House of Joseph 11. Woolsey, i 4 Jessu at 10 o'clotk 11. 11,14 will be egad at • Yoke of.Qeeni 2 Corp. Yearlingi,j • 9 Sheep - , Hog, • I. Bob-Sled 'lough, Harrow, Chains an, usehold Articles;. errns of Sale.4Five dollars am t,.Six months t with interest why. di. " - H ' S! HAM -a,' I LBS. H. SIS wanted it ig Oth Feb. 1847. , , GLAS. 1 .1 ( . .i Boxt. Thy 9, 1 1 Bby I :and 10 14 Glass, ju fo . pile by L QNS & - Ca. sktontrose, F b 23,1847 .; ,. .; . .. I CL I VEIL:SE LOVER-SEED, of the large ki LYC/NS 4 23, IC4!. • S : *gimbal!" 1 'County, . l' ILIBLIC NU pi is :hereby ' 'yen . • - . 1 pursuance fit:' l Writ off,P rtitio f im the 'Orphan's Court ' ; '11 and' C unty, and fii , the directed, in big' 1 ,1 held for making partition the i• ..,.",,of Williti 1.,: Hohnes4 1 to of t.' 1 ushiP. in, 4 05 1 -c.0 1. 14,5Y, iie 'wed r i ... widow -au& heirs; of -the. id ; Imes dec'd;' on Wedneida the "o • lklarcli:neut;:ot, :eleven:: clook 1 1 1 f : 11 . 0 0 11 , ok kiledirernikes ,iii- Gib- • sl p aforesaid,. accordinuoit le eel s tidily in "Wady, ease - made' 04 ; v .S • 41. 01estat*,18 1 ) 0 9 0 444 - dOs'i ft o s, to isit:;,'Situatu'in- said ; o , Mon, and- bounded 1)71 ads •,, emietly on' ti e..-Engti o n - . 0 Itlqui 1 : , : , ,leadirii; . 04,,Citiiiiis 4 ;leek 1 t West by; hinds ofiWilliii Tye' b :the - North - Pr; 'audio(' ,t me : i !C - 'igtln'PO I 9 'nollninin !'oile` A, , :shirty 'lie hor Abllre UM, a . .urtenun 'l.;r4 - i' '' ," -... , ..,_,,,, :'•, ..A.V.40 lt, ---. alherilis, t l,.; tAise,r :i1t.11341. f - ' f tl4. , • I. . 1. ll l ost] de w eir in on the 94 1 trL about iberty ' ARE now receiving, Itivgc.nirisritnent. : o ,F 114'.akt, anitAlrititer, GisiOi l , c ivh4,ll 04, wil hell fOr„Cash,l3arter, or approieii;Cr,.. it, as cheari,ati can be boilibtAit• - towns";;* Their assortment contitins'a full stook of Goods 6 0niilli,iept in COuntty D. 10;1846.- =1 , COLE - n od :UPPER LEATHERRki aitlir 1,3 cheap ehoalth; by $-.'S. SIMON'S I - Whites, and Burke &Sitar& Cast Steer Ategl for sate cheap -warranted first , rate, bY Mok NEW -'6ooll:lltitT,l4F WEare tin* t•dceiving large astiortjielit'At wintei.dooaii; to which' e invite tW•ltttiiii‘'' Y tiou of our frieniiiarni the . ; MILLS & ASHERMI4I4- • • DRESS - G;4OS4' SUCH as Cashmeres, - De Lain., Plaidi;Alliseu; fizea great variety jag reeeivellby • 1 . • MILIA3 fk, -SHERMAN. Feb. 3„ 1047 STRAYti) F ROM the enclosure of tbe aubieribdr, on or the first of ICOverober last, five SHEirkgt,ole. old Ewe and fourlastaprigpunbs. Whnever vvlit return said Sheep, or give ' mfartaation wliere thez,Citia: be found, shell be liberally rewarded. PETER svaiks(ide.';', • February '3; 1847 • V MIV Irr IVA„ v • 1074 S. Ve.l3 Vrt ' BY WARNER Bl.OTH:o 4 itg; _Of Great Bend, Pa., J i IS,OOO busbelts- Oars, 10,000 d0.,,18ye, ; 6,000 do.' 'Cora, - 1;000' do. Wheai; ..- 20,000 lbs. each, of butter, ellewie,'Lara, Tag low, Pork, ibr Which tbehigbeat price will be paid. • Great Bend, Jan. 1247. *- ,ed to .f the sulta eat as td lar- 'enn'a. e will ,lies in Fo.RSALE. A GOOD aisOOmont of Iron.of n4 - ,lFizetk and' des! criptian, . 13-40t1(11E. eb.2B rch 7 I ch 17 th the e time ;xi B. 9I11141().14-1:ii Doot S. Shoe Maker—shop hi Saarlea Block;: West side of Publie,l4vehtte. [Cate, oil is • It ;SEARLE (Sci CO3 A good assortment of Dry . Goodg, Onickneyt linydp ware, &c. &C., Vest side, of Pabiio Avenue. JOHN LO lng I.th, and ;f tl i r ei re- n, until it S laid, munch, 1 certain he true ..t and BENJ. SAYRE, • Dealer in Stovesi Hardwire, bry boddo ' Welk aide of Public Avenue. - LYOIS & CHANMERi . •• i t Dealers iu Stationery, Dry;Q, &e. &c.'—Eastside 'of .Public Af rennet le Pills from all Sod, but healthy ^e a bad m teeth. .111ERR.ILL & ROOT, t - Dealers 'in 'I - iats; Caps, Furs, Plough. Paints,',.474-;"c• West side of Public Avenue.. E.W.HAWLEY;' Stilt continues the Blacksinithingbusinesi In its 'Tail ons branches at his old Stand near Kenler's sera Indian f Wm. S. BENTLEY,. Attorney at Las-, at the obi office a fat''. rode wait the Colitt-tiouse. . _ _ I getable lather a- JAMES N; ELDREDGE - Cabinet aud.Chair.Mal.hig: Also Sign. And. Nig Painting, Turning paper . gin Hang, &c. liis old stand on Turnpike st. ' , - 847. No. 74 52 .•. A. CHAMBERLIN ; i ; Attorney at Law, Offioe ocer-tite§tore of.L L> Post & Co„ co • er of Public Aveone and "TurvOikia,t. " 52 104 " . 52 .. 52 • " 6 -PARK di . DIMOCK -I. Physicians Surgeons. Office,• west side lef _the ' Public Avenue ortithe Store of R. Searle 3. co. E. S. FAIT.E. - G. Z. Dtmo•s. .; OEM 36. it 76 39 _, .. , ..• ALNES *. LOCKE, '' --- r i Yashiotuibl9 Tailors, - over Meiril S. Ro4,iiti IfaiStiore. 1 . , ..ETHERIDGE, . 1 Groceries, ; Fruits,, Confectionaries; Druga,-1!4, Paints,roils,:tutd.o., - necks..: ntek-nacks..- MILLS & SHERMAN, Fanner's Stnre: A genett;l variety of goodisalwiya • ott hand:l.om door below the residenetiatJtidger Post, . :by Eld. I ichols, A TLOII, Rev. ,LT Mc- MACK &: ROGER ___ ilt . . Coach, Csrrisge,iind Sleigh Manufacturers, oil Twit- Pikestreet;, tiflthei, old Bean.litcy itasid, are ready to serve euStinners:in the most ratricdsti4of-the nge. , .'l.Artitles in' ut li n e Tconstiiiiiii o'4 ifOr sale, and reintinit done On short notice. , _ ...,: , at the Town notion, . . S. S.. MULFORD It.' SON.. Dealers tity Goods, Crockery.,:Grocgtieit,liiinere Togls, &c. &c, East sitie,:Eublic.Avcitue. . DR. 11. SMITH, , 1, DEICTIgT- r —ets Teeth On dold:Plhteusiperfor;:s all operatfOus on the teeth in the Leg. -Calk 'be found at -L I Searles' on .11dtsndays and Tuei. days of each 'smelt. some Cash proved;ro -und and 'WT. WHITNEY, M D Physician, Surgeon, & Accauchicr. -Beakknee-No. 9., Broadway, (-opposite tbiillitiitist Clanrch;) Jackson *-• ' diatel , ISB at jrrs. JOHN 'GROVVBi': , Fashionablo !Tailor—Two doors peloir?oe Star*. -• Cheap „floc*, !bribe' Peciple 7 A.Publii 14st Bide. I ; LL-4 0, 11 Oan tID by 12 edlol4 M. 1 D. I, for LIAR e by LER. t =I ai 0 4;4'1431k 4iitifit4ll4 Pilk; OffiCe Cce*igthes4llllArthe Crirt Tome • $?•',. 1 111 , ,, .V:i• 41,6- brie ' 4.' 5 4 .11iiivt•- - - wiel:- *Rif of ru l e. , . Kiiglite, InTier• - ike,lBl4o or;,t§i 'M 11111 :- 92 , , ,z , --.—..,-. • if •''''VX - " r 4 ' JERitt, L Dealer in try Goods, Deaneries, DOaltavt'r , = . l l 4, • - ~ and Bookbitalar..-leet ale of Pub l 44 _ el. OST •<• , .. 4 Dc araWarti, Tubho Avenue nett, ..71.11, ' - v#4o,7k the a pstlo:torem, 34, Cill on us still o gi e ; - ! - 4 1" - Ii"'''' *RNER IRRO'IERS; • ALOWITSfuI BIII .I' f ; • 354* , MONTlipq BUSISESSIIPIECT7BII7: HEM EMI -40 Run • retiah-t - t AVI„b 4O 'at - his - sUpg4 . § . 9ohortlietiinoug - h.: where he will- be-happy te'wkiit on . Oustinners. • „11. ron Fonuars, and Flog,* Milikfiktneer*-40intat tlre old'stititOrArl*' rtkid,6i9* of jr Mil MN 'l 4;
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