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mmBBgg—Li-ii-Jllii,' " 1 gggggag r"-_ _ , ,v ■ . - vfZ. ' r ■ ; — ■— ' W»Umi O. " .......v . ... — - / s • ■ ••• yt M JtiL Jhfc8viA /jtL f„N nSf * jBBT iHf T - r I MBI — vy T fSTf H IflgL /- **-1 £ V X-/4 fiH 0H M| Ml J9HL J^H.' MBRjaW MSBk. M KflA M9BL a k J ASM, BSB a AuSlSW /. A z * . \, ABA AflL' jfe k . Jf MMagjl flHk ■ jHHLA Disff pT i»»y V"*Ct • AND SUSQUEHANNA ANTHRACITE JOURNAL. %e '.i^;r'"-r ' *"'' ' i** .0 - - . /- —1 — ~ 1 ' 7 •" —=— ;— a Ifletkltj fcnnlrft to Jitms, littrriurt, fjjt Jthrrnntilt, ftlining, affrfrnnirnl, nnir %imhirol Snfrist af{Jit Cotmtq,Snstrncian, Imnsmtnf, fa.~)~€mSulfur !« . VOLUME 4.--NUMBER 35. PITTSTON, PA., FRIDAY. APRIL 28, 1854. WHOLE NUMBER 191 1BE PITTSTON GAZETTE, D. S. KOON, Attorney-at-Law. Office with James Helm, Esq., PITTSTON, PA. who hold their nightly visits by the bed of sickncs.-, find with the prescription a ternpertnce tract; let the light of tho truth flash through all the dark corners of the State, as did the light of day at the command of Jehovah. 51 Ifartj initfr a ftlaral. and overcome all obstacles. Amelia, the elder of the two, was celebrated in her circle for dancing j her eyes were as bright as diamonds, and her hair, which curled profusely over a snowy forehead, w«s as black as jet—her figure Was »vm. metrical, her grace proverbial.- Caroline, the younger sister, was lair, and Iter soft blue eyes arid gentle demeanor often won hearts which would hold out fearlessly against the bolder attacks of her more sprightly sparkling sister. Jn tlw ball-room Amelia 'afrnctvd all at tension, and seemed to revel in the sunshine of the gBise sho excited. Caroline shunned, or seemed to shun, the looks which were riveted upon her mild and gentle countenance—but peoplo did not always live in ball rooms, nor establish their characters in crowded assemblies. And Caroline, in her own home, mild, amiable and affectionate as she was, drew around her the tender and deeper feelings of the heart. Caroline had formed the first, the ruling attachment of her life— Melfort had won her! had gained her cs- who, as has already been remarked, iri addition to his crown and his dignity, possessed n person bo fine, n Iaco so handtome, and a figure so elegant, that the court resounded with murmurs of admirt}- tion—not tjuite unmixed With envy—at thi beautiful performance of their gracious kiny nnd his graceful partner. Baron Stifnncroup, who was tall, solemn, formal and gray, was not particular? ly adapted to waltzing, citi.cr by cge or station, figure or activity; Cho wjjqt Dbro* the motions, and Caroline was as we!! pleased as the B.ron when she found herself reestablished at her gallant father's side, whence the prfemier had drawn her J but Amelia's career was not yei ended ; she was destined to bo the bolle of the evening. •. In spite of etiquet'p, in spile of the various claims which should have engaged the royul attention, the king condescended to place her arm on his, and lead her, "notfiw irig lotli," to the room where refreshments were served ; hero lie presented her—he himself-—with-fee; hers offered her ft wafer, while she stood, the wonder of the gazing company, alono with him, and doing what very much resembled flirting in the centre of a circle, whose sacred verge no subject's foot dure cruss. But even tliis was not all ; fn the plentitude of royal grace and condescension, his .Majesty even plucked a hsve blowrj r'«9 from one of tho vases which wen ranged, along the plateau, and, with 8 speech full of—more than gallantry—sentiment prest-nted it to his fair partner, from whom it seemed he parted most reluctantly when he surrendered her to the care o! her father. •D■ D AND BEAUTIFUL AND CURIOUS. «i«ucbaB« AntkracHe Jourual AN ACROSTIC. THE Ft'BI/lSftED WEEKL? BY GEOR'JE M. RICHART. [We flnj the following curious piece of poetry In a late number of the Preabvterian Mngn/.iue. The initial capital lettera ipell " My bout li In tbu glorious crura or Chrief," ami the words In italic, when read from top to bottom, and from the bottom to tlic top, make the Lord's Prayw:—J EVENTS OF A NIGHT. And lei not ihe drunkards in our land bo passed by ; but let them be sought oi't and made to " lift up their heads fur their redemption draweth nigh." A kind word will securo the heariv cooperation of many a poor drunken outcast. Bring them out; let them act ; let Ihem mount Jjio stand and tell tho story of their wrongs, ami though they be of stammering lips and lisping tongue, vet shall their, bloated face and beggared looks plead with an eloquence not to be withstood. Let our politicians also be made to understand distinctly that a hearty sympathy with the principles of the Maine Law, is a tin qua ncn for elevation to oflsce. Tl»ere is ore point, however, on which we are in danger of making a latal mistake : our cause is weakest in the cities and large towns, and strongest in the country. Our cities are almost entirely overrun with a population which comes from the old countries to secure liberties, and not the least among these, if we may judge from appearances, is the liberty to drink rum. From this olnss of people we shall receive our greatest numerical opposition. In the rural district* far less is known of the evils of intemperance, and thus we may be led to uncier.ettima'.e those evils, and have our atuulion turned aside to other matters of less importance. Let us not think that there is no suiT«-ring bee an so we see none. Would toOod it were so ! Cut there are hearts that feel keenly tho tangs of the destroyer. Yes, there is sadness and sorrow which is all the more Litter because it must be borno alone. There are those who once moved in circles of refinement, the admiration of every eye, who are now wearing out their days in the midst of gloom and obscurity ; the miserable wives of miserable drunkards, removed from the sympathy of all who once smiled on their pathway. But think you that because that suffering is withdrawn from sight, it is any tho less keenly felt. Ah! could we know the intense inlerei* which is felt in this movement in many a lowly habitation, and could we know the prayers and bitter tears which are nightly poured out before Heaven for our success, it would move a heart of stone. BV T1IE0D0KE HOOK. OjUt (a Jnkim' "w Brick Buildtnf, Cw» i*r Stutt e/ S*tktrl»nU't Start—uf stairs. DR. E. SHELP, T*« cC®a**tt* k JorRNAL1' l« published eDeryPHday, at Two Dollar# par annum. Two Dollars and Fifty ' Ci»u«Ulb« chiMMtlf notpiitl wfttbta thtyoiir. paper vUl be discouliuuod untU ell arrearages are paid AbvitaTiskXKrrs are inserted conspicuously at On* Doi.- iar per square of fourteen lines for three insert! ont and Twemv-rtv* Crxts addltionalforevervBui»*eC|ii«fii aesriinn A libera J deduction to those whoadvertiae for six month* or tbe whole year. Nj«s Work.—We hmvn connected with our establishment a woll selected auortmeul «»f Job Tvpr which will ena bis in to execute, In the neatest style every variety of printing. SURGEON DENTIST, SCRAN TON. Some years before this history begins and ends—for it is as brief as the life of a butteifly—the old king of Bavaria having mken a particular dislike to his palace of Starenberg, gave the veteran General Klinkenberg permission to Inhabit a certain portion of the building. To this quiet retreat the general and his two daughters, Amelia and Caroline, forthwith retired, and there they resided until the period at which I have the honor of introducing them to the reader. Nothing could be more agreeable to the ancient warrior, after his active services, than this domicile, and as for the young ladies, they were absolutely charmed with it, from its beauties, and its proximity to Munich. Make known the Gospel truths, our father, King; Yield us thy grace, dear/CifA*r, from above ; niess us with hearts which feelingly con sing Out life thou art ft* ever, God of love. Aifsuune our griel in kn*f#r Christ, we pmy. Since tbe bright prince of hmvm and glory died I Take all our shame, mid hallowid the display, In first be lug man, and then being crucified. N. B.—Da. H., will spend from the 53d to tbe 3®lh of each month In Plttston, and wfli be found at the 44 Batler House" when lie w:!lbe bappy to attend to nil who inny require his servient. [8epi. •, 1053. C. H. GORMAN 8 Co., Stupendous God ! thy grace and power make known In Jeeua' name let all the world rejoice ; New labors in thy heavenly kingdom own, Thnt bleased kingdom, for ihy silnts the choice! Mow vile to come to I bee. i# rll our cry, KuemCosto thy self, nun till that's thine t Graceless our ir»7/, our lives for vanity, Lonthiug Ihy truths, be ing eat lu design. O, God, thy will be done from earth 4o heaven ; R»clinlii{ on the gospel, let ue live, In earth from sins delDvtr ed and forgivon, Oh a* thvsulf, Atf teach us to forgive. Uniesu it's power temptation doth destroy Sure is our f«ll into the depths of wo; Carnnl in mind, we've not u glimpse of Joy, iCuiwed against heaven in ni no hope can flow O, giee us gr ice iiikI lead us on thy way; Shine on us with thy love and give us puce; fcielf iLbd this siii which rise against us slay ; Oh ! grant each diy our treepa ts es may ouse. Forgive our evil deed* thai oft we do, Cteiviuce us daily ot' them to our shame, flety) us With heavenly bread ; forgive US too Recurrent Iihim, and we adore lb) nouie., lu thy forgive ness wo as saints can die, Hinoe for its and oor trespasses m* high, Tfcy Son our Savior bled on CaJvan-. PITTSTON, PA., .4gents for Tapscott's General Emigration and Foreign Exchange. Persons residing in the 33iisinrffs Cnrb. country, and wishing to engage passage or send money to their friends ill any purl of Europe may do so with safety by applying a the Po«t-Oflice. Tapscott 8 Co's. receipt will be furnishd ti» re. urn mail. IPitlitoa, Aug. iti, 1863. « r.i-- ■ o C—4 • a c w fc\3 Is •« ® S 1*5:1 « « * £ a. J: £££.£«: DR. J. A. HANN, Office in Or. Curtis' Drug Store, Main Street, [ag PITTSTON, Pa December 17, lfc?32. j\f S3"* ;i-l atD t—* r-—i UJ CO i«l ,Jn H * Ui £ Eg-,* MJ-.C 2 vn sa.fc: B©*r HC ««« C © 2 tT ~ «-» ,3(TD §l«!? Xtn 77Z T-, -O • IU. E" J3 C3 Ill this Bavarian [Inmpton Court, lime passed delightfully ; tlie mornings were spent much a* morning* usually arc, when handsome accomplished women, and agree, able well educated men Bssociule much together ; and though captain Sleinf'elt and lieutenant Melfort had not yet ventured to hint at any "ulterior objects," the friendship which actually existed between the four happy ones seemed only to require • declaration on the part of the beaux to convert it into a scntiuent more tender, and infinitely more delightful—and so things went on. Jn the midst oi this agreeable intercoursc, varied hy the visits of tlie general's friend* from Muniuh, and his neighbors at Siarenberg, an event occurred which agitated the whole country, and chnntrcd the (ace of "wtrjirs in general,"—the king of Bavaria died ! On every side were grief and desolation —the shops ol Munich were closed - the teem, her regard, Jier love ; ond these sentiments were founded upon a near and constant observation ol his inind and manners, character and disposition. She had no disguise in avowing the feeling he had inspired ; she spoke of him, felt for him, thought of liira as a brother ; it was only when ho was absent that she could at all appreciate the value she set upon his so. ciety ; and when the royal command to tho ball arrived, it pained her to the very Iteart. Stetnfelt was not invited; but Amelia, although she would have been better pleased if he had been of the party, felt no regret lil;e Caroline's, which could for a moment counterbalance the pleasure sh? an - ticipated at court—a sphere well suited, in her ardent mind, for a girl of her birth, ap. pearance and Accomplishments; and she rallied her more sensitive sister upon the regret she expressed, and the sorrow she too evidently it-it, at Melfor'.'* absence. DR. G. W. MASSER, (Late of Mauch Cliutii,) OFFERS hid Profe«»iomil ncrvice* to lh« people of Scranton mid Vicinity. Ollicc ut Wak*r Df- Boyil'C Drug Store, SafjuUmi, 1'a. Derrniber 3, 1852—ly. St Ci -.2 C3 . J 18*111 f: m6-a.CCO.Ot4»J £ 6 a n C«SH8flICAT»B8 COAL OFFICJ0 OP D.P. FULLER 8 Co. For the Qautte. A few Ward* fsr the Maine Law. o Q I u «* [ — 1-ioS E„- |i2 S a. s 2 g I | - a '5 c. « -S ] C • v*. J ® « « 5}» - s « -t i1 = ? 'C ' C _ -2 i-s5 «s | c V ® c 3. c • - East «/8 Jtfaw street, nearly opposite lioiektey 4" Beyea's Hare. Pittntnn, April I, ltD53. Mm. Editor :—If an apoloey is demanded lor culling your atteotion at this time lo the Maine Law, it is found in the (act that there are to day not less llian tew thousand wives and widows in Pennsylvania alone, whose homes have been rendered more than desolate by tfae ravages of strong drink. A PRICE 8 CO., ®381D E®a®MOT8» Ogee— West side Main street, PitUton Luzerne county, Va. Augit*130, 180-2. tr. liut as the /lower blooms which the sun has ripened, even when that sun is set, Amelia, seated bv the General's side, attracted crowds of gazers even though the king had left her ; and she remained en» joying, and holding affectionately iu her hand the rose which had Ijpen conferred upon her bv the monarch. t=J • »—■» S§- JOB PRINTING J. BOWKLEY 8 BEYEA, Coal Merchants, I shall not attempt to show that Rum is useless as a beverage, nor tliat intemperance excludes men from Heaven; for the physical wreck which it makes of man, the decay which crecps over the nation piven up to it* use, and the wide, wasting moral ruin which it indicts upon society, were most graphically set forth by iho venerable Dr. Beecher and his co laborers, more than a quarter of a century since, and no one bow calls them in'question— Nor need 1 speak ol the desolation which it has wrought in the domestic circle, for all ilDia has been most vividly portrayed aga.ru anii again bv 'those who have experienced it. So, too, its fearful efficiency in the destruction of properly, and human life, ic illustrated bv the murders, collisions, explosions and shipwrecks which it occasions. OF EVERY DESCRIPTION Officl Corner of Main and /tail tlouj Sl'Cti PrrriTov, Lczkrne County, Pa. Angunt IG, 1850. —tf. great bells tolled heavily—ihc flags hung hulf stall' high—the sorrowing creatures of the monarch's bounty bowed their heads and wept—minute guns from the batteries boomed upon the ear, and muffled drums announced lliecereutony with which, in all tho pomp of solemn woe, the mortal remains of the good king were deposited in the stately tomb of his anoestors. And then all was smiles and congratulations— "tip«y dance and revelry"—the shops in Munich were opened, the cannon fired sal voa from tiie •batteries, the beljs rang merrily, the flag* vera hoisted to /the very trucks—and the sorrowing c rest urea of the old king's bounty dried their fears and doffed their sables, and .dressing their faces in smrles. hufrfed to Phe pnfivee to bcslime its new occupant with their venal adorations."What a king we have got nov cried one, who would never have been a judge of kings if the late monarch had not made him what he was. "What wisdom !" soys a sccond. '•What goodness!" cries a llwrd. "What tasie !" exclaims a lourth. "How affable!" a fifth. "How unlike the o!d kingt" a sixth. And thas, not content with inking the good "the gods provide," they sought to ingratiate themselves with their new master by instituting comparisons between themselves and their old one ; which, to snv noihing of the taste ol ihe system, as likely to pleoso his majesty, savored not a little of that which is sometimes lound even Front the momem their going was decided upon, the activity of prepara'ion evinced by Amelia,strongly contras8d as it was by the placid sufferance of Caroline, under the suggestion of the leading merchand des modem of Munich, gave strong evidence of her desire for conquest; all the colors of the rainbow were dried, and those in every light, in order to ascertain what " best became her;" friends were appealed to, neighbors called into council; and it was not until the day before the ball that the dress in which »he ivas actually to appear wao fully and finally decided upon. What the police regulations of Munich were, upon theso occasions, history has lint recorded—or whether the instructions of ihe Bavarian green cloth, for the regulation of carriages, merely directed that riic company should beset down with their horses' heads opposite to theii tails ; suffice it to say, that amidst a sort ol civil warfare, eminently destructive to the panntls, and seriously injurious to tho poles, the General and the two Miss«s Klinkeuberg were *aCfcly deposited at the palace. At the foot of the golden and marble staircase which forms one of the splendid features of this immense building, and which, upon this occasion, was lined by body guards, and plentifully sprinkled over with porters and pages, they were received and ushered up to the great hall, which, together with the hall of antiquities, was most magnificently illuminated ; nud after passing through a suit of apartments, each vieing with the preceding one in brilliancy (concluded next week). Hopefulness and Health. The influence of hope cn menial vigor and physical health ha$ never recieveCj| sufficient attention frqin the physieigns Of metaphysicians. There is no emo'.unj more conducive to success and huppjnj?£t in life and nona.wlpse rljeot. ia, mow 'fa-D vorable to longevity. Dr. Alocot makes the following soundly philosophical remark on the rufluwroo of hope, from which \rp may infer of cultivating its organ in the brain Neatly and ezpailitiously executed at this OFFICE. On rcaiouablc leruw. COOPER 8 VANZANDT, jy Blanks of nU Mnu't atieavt on ha*Cl. t: PORTERS AND DEALERS IN foreign Wines and Liquors No. 21 New Street, Now York. tuifHUf B ©SSOT IV Pittstoii Gazette Printing Office, K. Tl'JD b9 IUt oOOPER, Amg**l 30, 1650.—If. CHAS. A. V4NZAKDT, JR IMttxtou, Pa. B. A. GOULD 8 CO. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS, No. 221 Washington Street, Cornex ot lJui it is not merely the wretched wife and children of die inebriate who watch our progress with intercut, but the internperaic themselves arc pleading for this law. I could givo you the names of men livjng within a single hour's ride of this place— men of property and influence, but ihe slaves ot strong drink, who feeling their chain*, are actually stimulating their neighbors 10 greater exertion for the suppression by low of this unholy traffic ; and shall tliey be gratified, or shall we coolly turn our backs upon them, and consign them to the tender mcrcics of the rumseller ? Da. C F. HARVEY, Hope moderately indulged, communities a mild but delightful sensation to the ivliole region of the hArt, and elevates Hid strengthen* both mind arid body.— What we call-vital or nearly so, through svery part ol the system. The result is a state of things approximating more nearly to what is usually called perfect health than anything Known. It preserves tha mind from violent emotions, agitations or depressiocs and enables us to excercise it# noblest power with a tranquil vigor. It lends to keep the body in u regular atxi propar dischacge of its functions ; without the least sensation of difficulty or embarrassment. " In these circumstances, says Dr. Oocati in his excellent Treatise on the passions,1'respiration is free and easy neither requiring conscious exertion, nor even a thought.—The action of the heart and arteries, with subsequent circulation ol the blood, |s regular and placid, neither too rapid nor too indolent ; neiher labored or oppressed. Perspiration is neither de» ficient nor loo excessive. Aliments are sought with a proper appetite, enjoyed with n high relish, and digested with case and facillity. Every secretion and excretion is properly performed. The body is free from dullness, pain, oppression every speccics of and a certain vivacity and vigor not to be described reign through the system. 9VMMH MIflif Barclay Street, *. A. GOULO, J .t. a. o*ui.iD. i HEW YORK Franklin Street, next door to Dr. Doolittlc, WILKF.S-UARtt.li, P*. November II, 1HW. • (D Wc invite 'the attention ofCmw.try Mcr •hants nnil other* to our full anil deilrnhle nlock o Keixly.innde Clotfiin;;. which vie offer nt very low raten. Merchant* visiting the city for the purpose of purchasing Goods in our line, would do well to live us a calf before puriha»iug cUewhexe. September C, 1850.—Cf. Nor need I arpiie what no sober thir.k-ing man will ilony—that total abs'inence from all that intoxicates is the only remedy that will work a cure for all tlir«eevils. But how shall teetotalism be made to prevail ? 1 answer, by moral suasion, and when thai fails, by that suasion which tlio Maine Law carrics with it—a rhetoric potent in convincing those who carry their consciences in their pockets. It ihcro is a skeptic on these points, let him take the tour of Muine, and mark well the emply prisons mid alna houses, and his skepticism will vanish like the siiadoe of night at the blush of {Homing. A'l! these things have become historical fact", not now to be eslished by laborious argument. We have now well nifch passed the point for discus *ion, and entered upon that perioJ which requires action rather than argument. Our work is already cut to our'hands, and the great business before us now jj, jo secure the adoption an'? tnforcrnicn'. of tho Maine Law v.i our o'vn loved Pennsylvania. To accomplish this, we must get the facis before the .people. Let Ihem under, stand tha law will do for lis ; the di munition of tho security of life and property, and the public prosperity which will'result from the law; and they will with one aocord, rise up and demand it.— We have the truth on our side, and we have sufficient talent also, to secure the adoption and .execution of the law before another year has pa«sCd away, and if all our forces can be brought into tho field, the victory is ours. BALDWIN 8 BRADY'S jyj'um ft AND GENERAL STAGE OFFICE, J oil unoHi Well# 8 Co , MANUFACTURERS AND WHOLESALE DEALERS IN BOOTS, 33DS3 aB ILSamaiSEi No. if CourtUndt Street, (Fint door «»C** tie Mcrjuinls' Iloltl.) iimm w. *ou««ov, t 4 *- ,n K. VKI.LI, ( .V. YORK. \ C. T. fltWON. January 21, Itlil. _lZ._ So. 108,R:\ee Street, MA AC W- BAI.DWIS. ) WAMUF.I. A. IlllWJY. D :j.,u..r Han % i ami lllujiusV.irg, To. 1 THUMB OJtE DOJ-L.Ui t'EK DAY D*UrcU II. 1053. Why may we not have the law this year f The law we must and will have, lor it is dealiikod to become the iaw, not only of Pennsylvania, but of nil iho world ; and why shall we not have it here in Pennsylvania this year t ORIGG3, ZABRISKIE A LOVELi, WHOLESALE GROCERS AND ■COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Wo. 25a, Washington Street : Shall we rest taiisfieil because the spoiler has not yet entered ouf door ? God on ly knows how soon bo may ! Oh ! there are husbands, tlws.ro ore fathers, there are sons and brothers as dear to their families as any of you are to yours, whom the speedy passage of this law would save from temporal and eternal ruin ; but who a year iience may be bf.yond the reach of hope. Oh ! could every soul within the sound of human voice be pjrsuaded this day, be. fore high Heaven, to consecrate his influence to this glorious work, what an impetus would bo given it. A friend who is now ilie staaach advocate of freedom, a lew venrs since maintained that irhe po®r colored man was but the connecting link between the human race and the brute creation ; but now lie blushes at the bare mention of his tolly. So, too. those in '04 who stand up to oppose the Maine Law, in '75, will blush and hang their heads for shame at the bare remcmbranoe ol their deed. (Between Murray «nCl RobinwnSli.) M.Gihoqs, ) Zaurukik, D till! KM O. I«'JVfciLL. ) NEW-YORK. [Aug. 12, ldM-ly. JOHN GILBERT A. CO. Wholesale Druggists, WYOMING HOUSE, No 177 North Third Street, A few doors above Vine Street, East side, in Munich—ingratitude of decoration and oonipany, tbey reached (near the bhuiab depot) The new king, in the bloom of \outh, handsome, graceful, gay, accomplished, mounted his milk-white charter. and attended bv all his court, ourvettcd and ram- the throne room, in which 4he visitors were presented to his majesty, previous to pro ceeding to the ball. . His majesty's recaption ot I he veteran Scvanton, l*a. J. O. BURGESS, Proprlotor. |C|r Charges Moderule. •spurnbe *3. 18M- rillLADELPHIA. IOil* fltl.BERT, SILAS M. WEKTZ, consr*nTi.Y ok Hand, a large assortment OF Drug", Medicines, Clicmicals, Full«»' hnd Dyrrt Articles, l'aints, Oils, Window Glass, and Painters' Articl«»,* ApothwarU*' Glassware, Patent M?iicints, if'O., Cf-c. „ August 1850— ly. - ~ 11 • # bled through the streets— what coiidcseen- General was gracious in the extreme—bu sion ! flags and banners were waving on when lit* royal eyes fell upon the animu ihe parapets, nnd "flower# were scattered nDd countenance wjd sylph like.form o from llic windows. The next day he per. Amelia, tho king seemed thunder strkik ambulated t-ho town, accompanied only by en. His majesty was graciously pleased it lis brown'si mbrellu—what affability ! His t0 express his-admiration aloud, and spoke majesty held levees ; the palace was thrown ol her beamy in a very audible tone tc open and the receptions were innumerable Baron Stiffincroijp and tho Countess ol —tor his late lather had been some time Muggenktein,' who were near him. Ol before his death infirm and ill, and had Caroline, flipping $aid nothing ; he merely therefore lived principally at Nymphen- bestowed upon her one of those gentle ap berg, his favorite residence, which he had proving smiles which great personages splendidly decorated and tastefully impro with white teeth are frequently pleased tc ved. To Nymphenberg the new king look confer; but of Amelia he continued tc a decided aversion ; it was closed intmcdi- rave—continued to point her out to eaoli ately on his accession, and count Slaphau. new guest with whom he was on familial sen, who had regulated all his father's af- terms, until at last, hismsjesty having gone fairs there, was dismissed. Sliffincroup through the ceremony of opening tho ball was named prime minister, and Snyder, with her serene highness the Prince* kins, who had never slept from under the WiVhelminn of Stumps Giggenstein, Am» palace roof for more than twenty years, )ja herself approached by one of hii was sent embassador to the court of Ash. Majesty's chamberlains, who announced tc autee_ her delighted ears that tho sovereign had All that the king did was approved by been graciously pleased, to select her foi the people. Ho remodelled the Bavarian his partner in ihe nest quadrille. code of laws—he corrected abuses in (he What tho Bavarian etiquette upon at slate he changed the color of ihe pages striking and singular an occasion actually pantaloons from pea green and silver to might be, we do not pretend to understand white and gold-rkn reversed all his faih. but it was by no means difficult to per cr's decrees he altered the uniform of ceive, by the looks and gestures of the fiv« the foot soldiers—he granted universal hundred beauties of the court, that tin liberty of concience, and gave a ball once royal attention had created a sensation.^ in every week ; and, strange to say, great Its immediate effect upon Caroline Klin as were the deeds of this illustrious mnn konberg was astounding ; for no sooner dii arch, no act oC his royal life is so nearly Baron Stiffinoroup, ptime minister in. tlx connected with the subject matter of this Bavaainn cabinet, perceive his Ma jest} story as the last named manifestation of lead the elder Miss Klinkenberg to thi his royal grace and bounty. highest place in the dance, than he bustlet To one of tho.«o balls were rnviud Gen- through the illusion* itaasw. era! Klinkenbcrg and his two charming ted tho hand ol the aeuond ,Mws Klink daughters, an event parked with oonse- berg asI,is partner in the same quences which none of the parties most As for Ameha, frontMM t deeply concerned in the slightest degree felt the pressure of the white k U glove ol ... , ,|, anticipated, hut which, if we hav» a little the right hand of Bavaria upon the it was a Portland lady that said she wouk natianoe we shall see eventually proved thetio leather on her own left rand, she a poor sailor, and to which a nautiof the highest importanoe. ■"D»» nothing, understood nothing th%t she Q(j fDj«nj replied, but you would make an General Klinkenberg was no courtier, heard, was _conscious of nothing in tho MCejient male though. and at 5; but "a'tshl «" Mill are about' "sixty divorce case, I « anoe the voung actuallv.on her feel swinging about the pending before-ibe. Sii»r*«w Court of the 53-.. l» will, her «v«mign, Jitll* iiiale o/ £h.-Cie ijand. m „ J t f ..—«»«• Mf* **~ ' ... » j.-,* I'm jp* * if ' "vf" **—*• ' ..... 1 SCKAFI'ON HOUSE, OPPOSITE SCRANT0S9* r(.ATI'S EI'JB'-, SCRAiMOM( r.\, © fe KRE83LER, Proprietor. Geo. w. aacaxt-rsK© 8 -Co. ©'MtBSSa, _ „ k 103 Murray, near Went Street, New Yoik GKO. W. BraisbiiP, dav,d be, den {Aug. S, l«30--*y*. Epitaph.—Copied from an old tomb» stone in Winchester, England : "Here lie* Sir Jons Thollop, lie iimtKi the utoncu roll up, -And (Jed took his eoul lip, Ami hid body filled the hole up."J " x B \ carriage Will bo in readiness to convey gm;stD V» this iiounx, on llio arrival of Hui a» the "silroad Depot. «C«D;. $"?£*$ ?88'8 HYDE PARK, PA, A new Lollabye Song for the Nilraery has just been issued, commencing : Oh ! rock do cradle Lucy, Rock de cradle, Lucv 3tone. ' Cut rock de liaby in it, ' * A nd let men's punts nlone. ©©©TT3 ft® S$1©S3 B7 HENRY HUFFORD, •apt. 23, I8M, 6m Iloxv many young mon ihero are in the counting room, the ofliups of ihe lawyer nod physician, in the wot It shop and the field, who would find this a noble cause in which to .de*iJop thoir talents, and who would do much in stirring up the people in places neglected by men of more experience. Indeed, melhiiiks we have wrll nigh power enough here in our loved Wy. omiiiis Valley, to turn the balance in the Stater An army of a thousand teachers, scattered in a thousand districts, distributing tracts and circulating petitions—who can tell what they might accomplish 1 But in order to bring out our whole strength in this direction, let there be conventions held in every county in the State, and let the people come in masses from every town and listen to tho thrilling eloquince of sucfa wien as Dow, Gough, Carev and Jewell. Then let the best talent of the county be put in requisition In ad dress tho people in the several towns in the county. Let the people al«o assemble in the several school districts and discuss the waiter freely among themselves. Let temperance tracts be distributed. Twelve hundred pages of twenty different kinds of Maine Law tracts can lie had ©( the A merican Tewperanco Union of New York Ci- ] IV, post paid! for a dollar ; and who it too n'oqr jo devote » single dollar to thi» great and glorious pause 1 Jv*t the temperance lrao's then be acatusred oy«r the St*te, like the Mitonju t»fqrp the rising temprat; let lha tW*J«r. as t)« the rail car, fio4 tUt* * WMT»perano« tract; let fan? »l (to* #9t*D ft"*1 pare! a (fifrtfftTtHC* tM* » let tnb» . ... * -«■» 1 AT JVIIOLESAI.fi. FROTHINGHAM, NEWELL A CO. WYOMING HOTEL, (Late W. 51. Newell 8 Co.) HAVE tnAen '.lie Capacious Store So.57 Broadyum, where they will keep an extensive .loci of HOOTS and SHOES of tip best stylo and quality, which they offer on favorable term.. Merchant! of the Wyoming \ alley are partlcuarjy invited to call find examine ourstoc*. Jte* York, January I, 1851.—tf. Let u* go forth then to the conflict, arm ed with the truth, and let the whole Siaje be moved to its foundations, and w hen the law is submitted to the people, let there come from the north and the south, the west and the east,one long and loud thunderous ate ! and not a twelvu month shall elapse ero the broad folds of the temperano« banner shall be flung out to the brcrze, and triumphantly wave over another proud Slate redeemed from the ourseof Intpmperancc. John T. Moruan. Pittston Ferry, fly O. W. MEBCEftEAC, JVo. 333, Greenwich street, near Duane NEW YORK. Take ihe hand ot tho friendless. Smile on the sad and dejectcd. Sympathise wittf Iboae in trouble' Strivo everywhere to diffuse around you sunshine and jov. If you do this you will be sure to be beloved. * Jul* 15, 1853 WS. wmm, fashionable Barber and Hair Dresser. ia the Room adjoining Cohen's Clothing Store ant! opposite the Eagle Hotel, Pittston, Pa. WOULD respectfully inform the public that he has talicn tho Shop formerly occupied Dy Lyman Fojj. where he would be pleased to wait on thi:m. Pittston, Nor. 1853. EVERTS 8 CtJRTIW, WHOLESALE DEALERS IN FISH, FRUIT, OILS 8 PROVISIONS, and rroducc and Commission Merchant*, No. 248, Fulton Street, near Washington Market, New York. E A O. woulJ call the attention of merchant, of Northern Pcnn.ytvania to their of Fi.h, Kruit, Oil. anrt Prow.ion., whichthcy will .oil neon a. favorable term. a. any how* in New Yort city. — An adopted citizen wrote homo that he was employed by the stale. On coming over they found it just as he had slated—ho was up at Sing-Sing serving out a sentence for ljl'c. (£7- " 1 wouldn't marry an eastern man if I had to live an old maid all my life," exclaimed a buxom country lass. '•Why not," exclaimed her astonished companion"Because every paper you piok up contains an account of the failure of lit# eastern mails.'' ;—There is a geuileman in the legislature who can be trusted with any secret— for nothing he oan say will be belioved.— Ohio Paper. EAGLE HOTEL. GEORGE LAZARUS, PITTSTOX, PA. KML. P. BVF.»T«, t CHU- O. CtvT'W. S March 88, 1861-ly. —No man can do anything n?ninst his \Vill, said a metaphysician. "Faith" aai4 Pat "I hod a brother who went to Botany Bay against ,his will, faith an' ho did." ' D- y - —A Lawyer on his death-bed, willed his whole property to a lunatic asylum, aaying that ho desired it should go to th# same class of person* ho took it From. Brown 8 Lazarus, Ftruiarding and Commissioit Merchants pjTTST.ON. PA. on signed 19 lljoCr care forwarded with Uospatcp» A;.t 1850.,: m 1 Architecture, The man up in York Staip. thirty years old, who boasts that he never took a newspaper, says lhat Santa Anna if ho persist* in his struggle with Russia, \vil! bo surs, to lote all "the territory of th£ Boi-phorus and be excluded from the navigation of the Amazon Sea. THOSE wanting anything designated above win plcnse give the subscriber a rail, wlw D• prepared to rauKO cfruwing* for huilJingn, wntn r„riHc»uon«. j-c. May be found by inquiring at STKMle Hotel GEO. W. {.UNO. rituton. January 2nCl. IBM. O. R. aOHMAN, VI- »f Respectfully tenders his Professional aervtcae Ifilbfi citixena of Pulsion and vicinity. Office nearly opposite lite Post Office, FiUston. Aug. 3,1850. IT- "NAILS 8 SPIKES. YUSTr«eiv«lMKD for ,«"•CD«. 100 Kail, and A£ «* * lhe n' 8D«■ *■ lazaeub. —A gentleman the other day in speaking of a prop*ny that -had pasted through the hands ot several brothers and back again to the owner; coolly remarked that they wore merely playing hill with BARGAINS! BAjtfftlXS !1 Asacond addition of new goods are'iustarn«iM at the which.a»at«s.tho stock Uiya *irt 4ciit+U ' GEORGE W OR1SWOLD. . RESIDENT DENTIST, oC Carboadala. One doaf fcoaa Sweet 1 Rajnor, on Mains Btrocl. BEI'L'S Beat PL AWES, manufactured to ordar, for sate by hit."
Object Description
Title | Pittston Gazette and Susquehanna Anthracite Journal |
Masthead | Pittston Gazette and Susquehanna Anthracite Journal, Volume 4 Number 35, April 28, 1854 |
Volume | 4 |
Issue | 35 |
Subject | Pittston Gazette newspaper |
Description | The collection contains the archive of the Pittston Gazette, a northeastern Pennsylvania newspaper published from 1850 through 1965. This archive spans 1850-1907 and is significant to genealogists and historians focused on northeastern Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Pittston Gazette |
Physical Description | microfilm |
Date | 1854-04-28 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the West Pittston Public Library, 200 Exeter Ave, West Pittston, PA 18643. Phone: (570) 654-9847. Email: wplibrary@luzernelibraries.org |
Contributing Institution | West Pittston Public Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Description
Title | Pittston Gazette and Susquehanna Anthracite Journal |
Masthead | Pittston Gazette and Susquehanna Anthracite Journal, Volume 4 Number 35, April 28, 1854 |
Volume | 4 |
Issue | 35 |
Subject | Pittston Gazette newspaper |
Description | The collection contains the archive of the Pittston Gazette, a northeastern Pennsylvania newspaper published from 1850 through 1965. This archive spans 1850-1907 and is significant to genealogists and historians focused on northeastern Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Pittston Gazette |
Physical Description | microfilm |
Date | 1854-04-28 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | PGS_18540428_001.tif |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the West Pittston Public Library, 200 Exeter Ave, West Pittston, PA 18643. Phone: (570) 654-9847. Email: wplibrary@luzernelibraries.org |
Contributing Institution | West Pittston Public Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Full Text | mmBBgg—Li-ii-Jllii,' " 1 gggggag r"-_ _ , ,v ■ . - vfZ. ' r ■ ; — ■— ' W»Umi O. " .......v . ... — - / s • ■ ••• yt M JtiL Jhfc8viA /jtL f„N nSf * jBBT iHf T - r I MBI — vy T fSTf H IflgL /- **-1 £ V X-/4 fiH 0H M| Ml J9HL J^H.' MBRjaW MSBk. M KflA M9BL a k J ASM, BSB a AuSlSW /. A z * . \, ABA AflL' jfe k . Jf MMagjl flHk ■ jHHLA Disff pT i»»y V"*Ct • AND SUSQUEHANNA ANTHRACITE JOURNAL. %e '.i^;r'"-r ' *"'' ' i** .0 - - . /- —1 — ~ 1 ' 7 •" —=— ;— a Ifletkltj fcnnlrft to Jitms, littrriurt, fjjt Jthrrnntilt, ftlining, affrfrnnirnl, nnir %imhirol Snfrist af{Jit Cotmtq,Snstrncian, Imnsmtnf, fa.~)~€mSulfur !« . VOLUME 4.--NUMBER 35. PITTSTON, PA., FRIDAY. APRIL 28, 1854. WHOLE NUMBER 191 1BE PITTSTON GAZETTE, D. S. KOON, Attorney-at-Law. Office with James Helm, Esq., PITTSTON, PA. who hold their nightly visits by the bed of sickncs.-, find with the prescription a ternpertnce tract; let the light of tho truth flash through all the dark corners of the State, as did the light of day at the command of Jehovah. 51 Ifartj initfr a ftlaral. and overcome all obstacles. Amelia, the elder of the two, was celebrated in her circle for dancing j her eyes were as bright as diamonds, and her hair, which curled profusely over a snowy forehead, w«s as black as jet—her figure Was »vm. metrical, her grace proverbial.- Caroline, the younger sister, was lair, and Iter soft blue eyes arid gentle demeanor often won hearts which would hold out fearlessly against the bolder attacks of her more sprightly sparkling sister. Jn tlw ball-room Amelia 'afrnctvd all at tension, and seemed to revel in the sunshine of the gBise sho excited. Caroline shunned, or seemed to shun, the looks which were riveted upon her mild and gentle countenance—but peoplo did not always live in ball rooms, nor establish their characters in crowded assemblies. And Caroline, in her own home, mild, amiable and affectionate as she was, drew around her the tender and deeper feelings of the heart. Caroline had formed the first, the ruling attachment of her life— Melfort had won her! had gained her cs- who, as has already been remarked, iri addition to his crown and his dignity, possessed n person bo fine, n Iaco so handtome, and a figure so elegant, that the court resounded with murmurs of admirt}- tion—not tjuite unmixed With envy—at thi beautiful performance of their gracious kiny nnd his graceful partner. Baron Stifnncroup, who was tall, solemn, formal and gray, was not particular? ly adapted to waltzing, citi.cr by cge or station, figure or activity; Cho wjjqt Dbro* the motions, and Caroline was as we!! pleased as the B.ron when she found herself reestablished at her gallant father's side, whence the prfemier had drawn her J but Amelia's career was not yei ended ; she was destined to bo the bolle of the evening. •. In spite of etiquet'p, in spile of the various claims which should have engaged the royul attention, the king condescended to place her arm on his, and lead her, "notfiw irig lotli," to the room where refreshments were served ; hero lie presented her—he himself-—with-fee; hers offered her ft wafer, while she stood, the wonder of the gazing company, alono with him, and doing what very much resembled flirting in the centre of a circle, whose sacred verge no subject's foot dure cruss. But even tliis was not all ; fn the plentitude of royal grace and condescension, his .Majesty even plucked a hsve blowrj r'«9 from one of tho vases which wen ranged, along the plateau, and, with 8 speech full of—more than gallantry—sentiment prest-nted it to his fair partner, from whom it seemed he parted most reluctantly when he surrendered her to the care o! her father. •D■ D AND BEAUTIFUL AND CURIOUS. «i«ucbaB« AntkracHe Jourual AN ACROSTIC. THE Ft'BI/lSftED WEEKL? BY GEOR'JE M. RICHART. [We flnj the following curious piece of poetry In a late number of the Preabvterian Mngn/.iue. The initial capital lettera ipell " My bout li In tbu glorious crura or Chrief," ami the words In italic, when read from top to bottom, and from the bottom to tlic top, make the Lord's Prayw:—J EVENTS OF A NIGHT. And lei not ihe drunkards in our land bo passed by ; but let them be sought oi't and made to " lift up their heads fur their redemption draweth nigh." A kind word will securo the heariv cooperation of many a poor drunken outcast. Bring them out; let them act ; let Ihem mount Jjio stand and tell tho story of their wrongs, ami though they be of stammering lips and lisping tongue, vet shall their, bloated face and beggared looks plead with an eloquence not to be withstood. Let our politicians also be made to understand distinctly that a hearty sympathy with the principles of the Maine Law, is a tin qua ncn for elevation to oflsce. Tl»ere is ore point, however, on which we are in danger of making a latal mistake : our cause is weakest in the cities and large towns, and strongest in the country. Our cities are almost entirely overrun with a population which comes from the old countries to secure liberties, and not the least among these, if we may judge from appearances, is the liberty to drink rum. From this olnss of people we shall receive our greatest numerical opposition. In the rural district* far less is known of the evils of intemperance, and thus we may be led to uncier.ettima'.e those evils, and have our atuulion turned aside to other matters of less importance. Let us not think that there is no suiT«-ring bee an so we see none. Would toOod it were so ! Cut there are hearts that feel keenly tho tangs of the destroyer. Yes, there is sadness and sorrow which is all the more Litter because it must be borno alone. There are those who once moved in circles of refinement, the admiration of every eye, who are now wearing out their days in the midst of gloom and obscurity ; the miserable wives of miserable drunkards, removed from the sympathy of all who once smiled on their pathway. But think you that because that suffering is withdrawn from sight, it is any tho less keenly felt. Ah! could we know the intense inlerei* which is felt in this movement in many a lowly habitation, and could we know the prayers and bitter tears which are nightly poured out before Heaven for our success, it would move a heart of stone. BV T1IE0D0KE HOOK. OjUt (a Jnkim' "w Brick Buildtnf, Cw» i*r Stutt e/ S*tktrl»nU't Start—uf stairs. DR. E. SHELP, T*« cC®a**tt* k JorRNAL1' l« published eDeryPHday, at Two Dollar# par annum. Two Dollars and Fifty ' Ci»u«Ulb« chiMMtlf notpiitl wfttbta thtyoiir. paper vUl be discouliuuod untU ell arrearages are paid AbvitaTiskXKrrs are inserted conspicuously at On* Doi.- iar per square of fourteen lines for three insert! ont and Twemv-rtv* Crxts addltionalforevervBui»*eC|ii«fii aesriinn A libera J deduction to those whoadvertiae for six month* or tbe whole year. Nj«s Work.—We hmvn connected with our establishment a woll selected auortmeul «»f Job Tvpr which will ena bis in to execute, In the neatest style every variety of printing. SURGEON DENTIST, SCRAN TON. Some years before this history begins and ends—for it is as brief as the life of a butteifly—the old king of Bavaria having mken a particular dislike to his palace of Starenberg, gave the veteran General Klinkenberg permission to Inhabit a certain portion of the building. To this quiet retreat the general and his two daughters, Amelia and Caroline, forthwith retired, and there they resided until the period at which I have the honor of introducing them to the reader. Nothing could be more agreeable to the ancient warrior, after his active services, than this domicile, and as for the young ladies, they were absolutely charmed with it, from its beauties, and its proximity to Munich. Make known the Gospel truths, our father, King; Yield us thy grace, dear/CifA*r, from above ; niess us with hearts which feelingly con sing Out life thou art ft* ever, God of love. Aifsuune our griel in kn*f#r Christ, we pmy. Since tbe bright prince of hmvm and glory died I Take all our shame, mid hallowid the display, In first be lug man, and then being crucified. N. B.—Da. H., will spend from the 53d to tbe 3®lh of each month In Plttston, and wfli be found at the 44 Batler House" when lie w:!lbe bappy to attend to nil who inny require his servient. [8epi. •, 1053. C. H. GORMAN 8 Co., Stupendous God ! thy grace and power make known In Jeeua' name let all the world rejoice ; New labors in thy heavenly kingdom own, Thnt bleased kingdom, for ihy silnts the choice! Mow vile to come to I bee. i# rll our cry, KuemCosto thy self, nun till that's thine t Graceless our ir»7/, our lives for vanity, Lonthiug Ihy truths, be ing eat lu design. O, God, thy will be done from earth 4o heaven ; R»clinlii{ on the gospel, let ue live, In earth from sins delDvtr ed and forgivon, Oh a* thvsulf, Atf teach us to forgive. Uniesu it's power temptation doth destroy Sure is our f«ll into the depths of wo; Carnnl in mind, we've not u glimpse of Joy, iCuiwed against heaven in ni no hope can flow O, giee us gr ice iiikI lead us on thy way; Shine on us with thy love and give us puce; fcielf iLbd this siii which rise against us slay ; Oh ! grant each diy our treepa ts es may ouse. Forgive our evil deed* thai oft we do, Cteiviuce us daily ot' them to our shame, flety) us With heavenly bread ; forgive US too Recurrent Iihim, and we adore lb) nouie., lu thy forgive ness wo as saints can die, Hinoe for its and oor trespasses m* high, Tfcy Son our Savior bled on CaJvan-. PITTSTON, PA., .4gents for Tapscott's General Emigration and Foreign Exchange. Persons residing in the 33iisinrffs Cnrb. country, and wishing to engage passage or send money to their friends ill any purl of Europe may do so with safety by applying a the Po«t-Oflice. Tapscott 8 Co's. receipt will be furnishd ti» re. urn mail. IPitlitoa, Aug. iti, 1863. « r.i-- ■ o C—4 • a c w fc\3 Is •« ® S 1*5:1 « « * £ a. J: £££.£«: DR. J. A. HANN, Office in Or. Curtis' Drug Store, Main Street, [ag PITTSTON, Pa December 17, lfc?32. j\f S3"* ;i-l atD t—* r-—i UJ CO i«l ,Jn H * Ui £ Eg-,* MJ-.C 2 vn sa.fc: B©*r HC ««« C © 2 tT ~ «-» ,3(TD §l«!? Xtn 77Z T-, -O • IU. E" J3 C3 Ill this Bavarian [Inmpton Court, lime passed delightfully ; tlie mornings were spent much a* morning* usually arc, when handsome accomplished women, and agree, able well educated men Bssociule much together ; and though captain Sleinf'elt and lieutenant Melfort had not yet ventured to hint at any "ulterior objects," the friendship which actually existed between the four happy ones seemed only to require • declaration on the part of the beaux to convert it into a scntiuent more tender, and infinitely more delightful—and so things went on. Jn the midst oi this agreeable intercoursc, varied hy the visits of tlie general's friend* from Muniuh, and his neighbors at Siarenberg, an event occurred which agitated the whole country, and chnntrcd the (ace of "wtrjirs in general,"—the king of Bavaria died ! On every side were grief and desolation —the shops ol Munich were closed - the teem, her regard, Jier love ; ond these sentiments were founded upon a near and constant observation ol his inind and manners, character and disposition. She had no disguise in avowing the feeling he had inspired ; she spoke of him, felt for him, thought of liira as a brother ; it was only when ho was absent that she could at all appreciate the value she set upon his so. ciety ; and when the royal command to tho ball arrived, it pained her to the very Iteart. Stetnfelt was not invited; but Amelia, although she would have been better pleased if he had been of the party, felt no regret lil;e Caroline's, which could for a moment counterbalance the pleasure sh? an - ticipated at court—a sphere well suited, in her ardent mind, for a girl of her birth, ap. pearance and Accomplishments; and she rallied her more sensitive sister upon the regret she expressed, and the sorrow she too evidently it-it, at Melfor'.'* absence. DR. G. W. MASSER, (Late of Mauch Cliutii,) OFFERS hid Profe«»iomil ncrvice* to lh« people of Scranton mid Vicinity. Ollicc ut Wak*r Df- Boyil'C Drug Store, SafjuUmi, 1'a. Derrniber 3, 1852—ly. St Ci -.2 C3 . J 18*111 f: m6-a.CCO.Ot4»J £ 6 a n C«SH8flICAT»B8 COAL OFFICJ0 OP D.P. FULLER 8 Co. For the Qautte. A few Ward* fsr the Maine Law. o Q I u «* [ — 1-ioS E„- |i2 S a. s 2 g I | - a '5 c. « -S ] C • v*. J ® « « 5}» - s « -t i1 = ? 'C ' C _ -2 i-s5 «s | c V ® c 3. c • - East «/8 Jtfaw street, nearly opposite lioiektey 4" Beyea's Hare. Pittntnn, April I, ltD53. Mm. Editor :—If an apoloey is demanded lor culling your atteotion at this time lo the Maine Law, it is found in the (act that there are to day not less llian tew thousand wives and widows in Pennsylvania alone, whose homes have been rendered more than desolate by tfae ravages of strong drink. A PRICE 8 CO., ®381D E®a®MOT8» Ogee— West side Main street, PitUton Luzerne county, Va. Augit*130, 180-2. tr. liut as the /lower blooms which the sun has ripened, even when that sun is set, Amelia, seated bv the General's side, attracted crowds of gazers even though the king had left her ; and she remained en» joying, and holding affectionately iu her hand the rose which had Ijpen conferred upon her bv the monarch. t=J • »—■» S§- JOB PRINTING J. BOWKLEY 8 BEYEA, Coal Merchants, I shall not attempt to show that Rum is useless as a beverage, nor tliat intemperance excludes men from Heaven; for the physical wreck which it makes of man, the decay which crecps over the nation piven up to it* use, and the wide, wasting moral ruin which it indicts upon society, were most graphically set forth by iho venerable Dr. Beecher and his co laborers, more than a quarter of a century since, and no one bow calls them in'question— Nor need 1 speak ol the desolation which it has wrought in the domestic circle, for all ilDia has been most vividly portrayed aga.ru anii again bv 'those who have experienced it. So, too, its fearful efficiency in the destruction of properly, and human life, ic illustrated bv the murders, collisions, explosions and shipwrecks which it occasions. OF EVERY DESCRIPTION Officl Corner of Main and /tail tlouj Sl'Cti PrrriTov, Lczkrne County, Pa. Angunt IG, 1850. —tf. great bells tolled heavily—ihc flags hung hulf stall' high—the sorrowing creatures of the monarch's bounty bowed their heads and wept—minute guns from the batteries boomed upon the ear, and muffled drums announced lliecereutony with which, in all tho pomp of solemn woe, the mortal remains of the good king were deposited in the stately tomb of his anoestors. And then all was smiles and congratulations— "tip«y dance and revelry"—the shops in Munich were opened, the cannon fired sal voa from tiie •batteries, the beljs rang merrily, the flag* vera hoisted to /the very trucks—and the sorrowing c rest urea of the old king's bounty dried their fears and doffed their sables, and .dressing their faces in smrles. hufrfed to Phe pnfivee to bcslime its new occupant with their venal adorations."What a king we have got nov cried one, who would never have been a judge of kings if the late monarch had not made him what he was. "What wisdom !" soys a sccond. '•What goodness!" cries a llwrd. "What tasie !" exclaims a lourth. "How affable!" a fifth. "How unlike the o!d kingt" a sixth. And thas, not content with inking the good "the gods provide," they sought to ingratiate themselves with their new master by instituting comparisons between themselves and their old one ; which, to snv noihing of the taste ol ihe system, as likely to pleoso his majesty, savored not a little of that which is sometimes lound even Front the momem their going was decided upon, the activity of prepara'ion evinced by Amelia,strongly contras8d as it was by the placid sufferance of Caroline, under the suggestion of the leading merchand des modem of Munich, gave strong evidence of her desire for conquest; all the colors of the rainbow were dried, and those in every light, in order to ascertain what " best became her;" friends were appealed to, neighbors called into council; and it was not until the day before the ball that the dress in which »he ivas actually to appear wao fully and finally decided upon. What the police regulations of Munich were, upon theso occasions, history has lint recorded—or whether the instructions of ihe Bavarian green cloth, for the regulation of carriages, merely directed that riic company should beset down with their horses' heads opposite to theii tails ; suffice it to say, that amidst a sort ol civil warfare, eminently destructive to the panntls, and seriously injurious to tho poles, the General and the two Miss«s Klinkeuberg were *aCfcly deposited at the palace. At the foot of the golden and marble staircase which forms one of the splendid features of this immense building, and which, upon this occasion, was lined by body guards, and plentifully sprinkled over with porters and pages, they were received and ushered up to the great hall, which, together with the hall of antiquities, was most magnificently illuminated ; nud after passing through a suit of apartments, each vieing with the preceding one in brilliancy (concluded next week). Hopefulness and Health. The influence of hope cn menial vigor and physical health ha$ never recieveCj| sufficient attention frqin the physieigns Of metaphysicians. There is no emo'.unj more conducive to success and huppjnj?£t in life and nona.wlpse rljeot. ia, mow 'fa-D vorable to longevity. Dr. Alocot makes the following soundly philosophical remark on the rufluwroo of hope, from which \rp may infer of cultivating its organ in the brain Neatly and ezpailitiously executed at this OFFICE. On rcaiouablc leruw. COOPER 8 VANZANDT, jy Blanks of nU Mnu't atieavt on ha*Cl. t: PORTERS AND DEALERS IN foreign Wines and Liquors No. 21 New Street, Now York. tuifHUf B ©SSOT IV Pittstoii Gazette Printing Office, K. Tl'JD b9 IUt oOOPER, Amg**l 30, 1650.—If. CHAS. A. V4NZAKDT, JR IMttxtou, Pa. B. A. GOULD 8 CO. WHOLESALE CLOTHIERS, No. 221 Washington Street, Cornex ot lJui it is not merely the wretched wife and children of die inebriate who watch our progress with intercut, but the internperaic themselves arc pleading for this law. I could givo you the names of men livjng within a single hour's ride of this place— men of property and influence, but ihe slaves ot strong drink, who feeling their chain*, are actually stimulating their neighbors 10 greater exertion for the suppression by low of this unholy traffic ; and shall tliey be gratified, or shall we coolly turn our backs upon them, and consign them to the tender mcrcics of the rumseller ? Da. C F. HARVEY, Hope moderately indulged, communities a mild but delightful sensation to the ivliole region of the hArt, and elevates Hid strengthen* both mind arid body.— What we call-vital or nearly so, through svery part ol the system. The result is a state of things approximating more nearly to what is usually called perfect health than anything Known. It preserves tha mind from violent emotions, agitations or depressiocs and enables us to excercise it# noblest power with a tranquil vigor. It lends to keep the body in u regular atxi propar dischacge of its functions ; without the least sensation of difficulty or embarrassment. " In these circumstances, says Dr. Oocati in his excellent Treatise on the passions,1'respiration is free and easy neither requiring conscious exertion, nor even a thought.—The action of the heart and arteries, with subsequent circulation ol the blood, |s regular and placid, neither too rapid nor too indolent ; neiher labored or oppressed. Perspiration is neither de» ficient nor loo excessive. Aliments are sought with a proper appetite, enjoyed with n high relish, and digested with case and facillity. Every secretion and excretion is properly performed. The body is free from dullness, pain, oppression every speccics of and a certain vivacity and vigor not to be described reign through the system. 9VMMH MIflif Barclay Street, *. A. GOULO, J .t. a. o*ui.iD. i HEW YORK Franklin Street, next door to Dr. Doolittlc, WILKF.S-UARtt.li, P*. November II, 1HW. • (D Wc invite 'the attention ofCmw.try Mcr •hants nnil other* to our full anil deilrnhle nlock o Keixly.innde Clotfiin;;. which vie offer nt very low raten. Merchant* visiting the city for the purpose of purchasing Goods in our line, would do well to live us a calf before puriha»iug cUewhexe. September C, 1850.—Cf. Nor need I arpiie what no sober thir.k-ing man will ilony—that total abs'inence from all that intoxicates is the only remedy that will work a cure for all tlir«eevils. But how shall teetotalism be made to prevail ? 1 answer, by moral suasion, and when thai fails, by that suasion which tlio Maine Law carrics with it—a rhetoric potent in convincing those who carry their consciences in their pockets. It ihcro is a skeptic on these points, let him take the tour of Muine, and mark well the emply prisons mid alna houses, and his skepticism will vanish like the siiadoe of night at the blush of {Homing. A'l! these things have become historical fact", not now to be eslished by laborious argument. We have now well nifch passed the point for discus *ion, and entered upon that perioJ which requires action rather than argument. Our work is already cut to our'hands, and the great business before us now jj, jo secure the adoption an'? tnforcrnicn'. of tho Maine Law v.i our o'vn loved Pennsylvania. To accomplish this, we must get the facis before the .people. Let Ihem under, stand tha law will do for lis ; the di munition of tho security of life and property, and the public prosperity which will'result from the law; and they will with one aocord, rise up and demand it.— We have the truth on our side, and we have sufficient talent also, to secure the adoption and .execution of the law before another year has pa«sCd away, and if all our forces can be brought into tho field, the victory is ours. BALDWIN 8 BRADY'S jyj'um ft AND GENERAL STAGE OFFICE, J oil unoHi Well# 8 Co , MANUFACTURERS AND WHOLESALE DEALERS IN BOOTS, 33DS3 aB ILSamaiSEi No. if CourtUndt Street, (Fint door «»C** tie Mcrjuinls' Iloltl.) iimm w. *ou««ov, t 4 *- ,n K. VKI.LI, ( .V. YORK. \ C. T. fltWON. January 21, Itlil. _lZ._ So. 108,R:\ee Street, MA AC W- BAI.DWIS. ) WAMUF.I. A. IlllWJY. D :j.,u..r Han % i ami lllujiusV.irg, To. 1 THUMB OJtE DOJ-L.Ui t'EK DAY D*UrcU II. 1053. Why may we not have the law this year f The law we must and will have, lor it is dealiikod to become the iaw, not only of Pennsylvania, but of nil iho world ; and why shall we not have it here in Pennsylvania this year t ORIGG3, ZABRISKIE A LOVELi, WHOLESALE GROCERS AND ■COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Wo. 25a, Washington Street : Shall we rest taiisfieil because the spoiler has not yet entered ouf door ? God on ly knows how soon bo may ! Oh ! there are husbands, tlws.ro ore fathers, there are sons and brothers as dear to their families as any of you are to yours, whom the speedy passage of this law would save from temporal and eternal ruin ; but who a year iience may be bf.yond the reach of hope. Oh ! could every soul within the sound of human voice be pjrsuaded this day, be. fore high Heaven, to consecrate his influence to this glorious work, what an impetus would bo given it. A friend who is now ilie staaach advocate of freedom, a lew venrs since maintained that irhe po®r colored man was but the connecting link between the human race and the brute creation ; but now lie blushes at the bare mention of his tolly. So, too. those in '04 who stand up to oppose the Maine Law, in '75, will blush and hang their heads for shame at the bare remcmbranoe ol their deed. (Between Murray «nCl RobinwnSli.) M.Gihoqs, ) Zaurukik, D till! KM O. I«'JVfciLL. ) NEW-YORK. [Aug. 12, ldM-ly. JOHN GILBERT A. CO. Wholesale Druggists, WYOMING HOUSE, No 177 North Third Street, A few doors above Vine Street, East side, in Munich—ingratitude of decoration and oonipany, tbey reached (near the bhuiab depot) The new king, in the bloom of \outh, handsome, graceful, gay, accomplished, mounted his milk-white charter. and attended bv all his court, ourvettcd and ram- the throne room, in which 4he visitors were presented to his majesty, previous to pro ceeding to the ball. . His majesty's recaption ot I he veteran Scvanton, l*a. J. O. BURGESS, Proprlotor. |C|r Charges Moderule. •spurnbe *3. 18M- rillLADELPHIA. IOil* fltl.BERT, SILAS M. WEKTZ, consr*nTi.Y ok Hand, a large assortment OF Drug", Medicines, Clicmicals, Full«»' hnd Dyrrt Articles, l'aints, Oils, Window Glass, and Painters' Articl«»,* ApothwarU*' Glassware, Patent M?iicints, if'O., Cf-c. „ August 1850— ly. - ~ 11 • # bled through the streets— what coiidcseen- General was gracious in the extreme—bu sion ! flags and banners were waving on when lit* royal eyes fell upon the animu ihe parapets, nnd "flower# were scattered nDd countenance wjd sylph like.form o from llic windows. The next day he per. Amelia, tho king seemed thunder strkik ambulated t-ho town, accompanied only by en. His majesty was graciously pleased it lis brown'si mbrellu—what affability ! His t0 express his-admiration aloud, and spoke majesty held levees ; the palace was thrown ol her beamy in a very audible tone tc open and the receptions were innumerable Baron Stiffincroijp and tho Countess ol —tor his late lather had been some time Muggenktein,' who were near him. Ol before his death infirm and ill, and had Caroline, flipping $aid nothing ; he merely therefore lived principally at Nymphen- bestowed upon her one of those gentle ap berg, his favorite residence, which he had proving smiles which great personages splendidly decorated and tastefully impro with white teeth are frequently pleased tc ved. To Nymphenberg the new king look confer; but of Amelia he continued tc a decided aversion ; it was closed intmcdi- rave—continued to point her out to eaoli ately on his accession, and count Slaphau. new guest with whom he was on familial sen, who had regulated all his father's af- terms, until at last, hismsjesty having gone fairs there, was dismissed. Sliffincroup through the ceremony of opening tho ball was named prime minister, and Snyder, with her serene highness the Prince* kins, who had never slept from under the WiVhelminn of Stumps Giggenstein, Am» palace roof for more than twenty years, )ja herself approached by one of hii was sent embassador to the court of Ash. Majesty's chamberlains, who announced tc autee_ her delighted ears that tho sovereign had All that the king did was approved by been graciously pleased, to select her foi the people. Ho remodelled the Bavarian his partner in ihe nest quadrille. code of laws—he corrected abuses in (he What tho Bavarian etiquette upon at slate he changed the color of ihe pages striking and singular an occasion actually pantaloons from pea green and silver to might be, we do not pretend to understand white and gold-rkn reversed all his faih. but it was by no means difficult to per cr's decrees he altered the uniform of ceive, by the looks and gestures of the fiv« the foot soldiers—he granted universal hundred beauties of the court, that tin liberty of concience, and gave a ball once royal attention had created a sensation.^ in every week ; and, strange to say, great Its immediate effect upon Caroline Klin as were the deeds of this illustrious mnn konberg was astounding ; for no sooner dii arch, no act oC his royal life is so nearly Baron Stiffinoroup, ptime minister in. tlx connected with the subject matter of this Bavaainn cabinet, perceive his Ma jest} story as the last named manifestation of lead the elder Miss Klinkenberg to thi his royal grace and bounty. highest place in the dance, than he bustlet To one of tho.«o balls were rnviud Gen- through the illusion* itaasw. era! Klinkenbcrg and his two charming ted tho hand ol the aeuond ,Mws Klink daughters, an event parked with oonse- berg asI,is partner in the same quences which none of the parties most As for Ameha, frontMM t deeply concerned in the slightest degree felt the pressure of the white k U glove ol ... , ,|, anticipated, hut which, if we hav» a little the right hand of Bavaria upon the it was a Portland lady that said she wouk natianoe we shall see eventually proved thetio leather on her own left rand, she a poor sailor, and to which a nautiof the highest importanoe. ■"D»» nothing, understood nothing th%t she Q(j fDj«nj replied, but you would make an General Klinkenberg was no courtier, heard, was _conscious of nothing in tho MCejient male though. and at 5; but "a'tshl «" Mill are about' "sixty divorce case, I « anoe the voung actuallv.on her feel swinging about the pending before-ibe. Sii»r*«w Court of the 53-.. l» will, her «v«mign, Jitll* iiiale o/ £h.-Cie ijand. m „ J t f ..—«»«• Mf* **~ ' ... » j.-,* I'm jp* * if ' "vf" **—*• ' ..... 1 SCKAFI'ON HOUSE, OPPOSITE SCRANT0S9* r(.ATI'S EI'JB'-, SCRAiMOM( r.\, © fe KRE83LER, Proprietor. Geo. w. aacaxt-rsK© 8 -Co. ©'MtBSSa, _ „ k 103 Murray, near Went Street, New Yoik GKO. W. BraisbiiP, dav,d be, den {Aug. S, l«30--*y*. Epitaph.—Copied from an old tomb» stone in Winchester, England : "Here lie* Sir Jons Thollop, lie iimtKi the utoncu roll up, -And (Jed took his eoul lip, Ami hid body filled the hole up."J " x B \ carriage Will bo in readiness to convey gm;stD V» this iiounx, on llio arrival of Hui a» the "silroad Depot. «C«D;. $"?£*$ ?88'8 HYDE PARK, PA, A new Lollabye Song for the Nilraery has just been issued, commencing : Oh ! rock do cradle Lucy, Rock de cradle, Lucv 3tone. ' Cut rock de liaby in it, ' * A nd let men's punts nlone. ©©©TT3 ft® S$1©S3 B7 HENRY HUFFORD, •apt. 23, I8M, 6m Iloxv many young mon ihero are in the counting room, the ofliups of ihe lawyer nod physician, in the wot It shop and the field, who would find this a noble cause in which to .de*iJop thoir talents, and who would do much in stirring up the people in places neglected by men of more experience. Indeed, melhiiiks we have wrll nigh power enough here in our loved Wy. omiiiis Valley, to turn the balance in the Stater An army of a thousand teachers, scattered in a thousand districts, distributing tracts and circulating petitions—who can tell what they might accomplish 1 But in order to bring out our whole strength in this direction, let there be conventions held in every county in the State, and let the people come in masses from every town and listen to tho thrilling eloquince of sucfa wien as Dow, Gough, Carev and Jewell. Then let the best talent of the county be put in requisition In ad dress tho people in the several towns in the county. Let the people al«o assemble in the several school districts and discuss the waiter freely among themselves. Let temperance tracts be distributed. Twelve hundred pages of twenty different kinds of Maine Law tracts can lie had ©( the A merican Tewperanco Union of New York Ci- ] IV, post paid! for a dollar ; and who it too n'oqr jo devote » single dollar to thi» great and glorious pause 1 Jv*t the temperance lrao's then be acatusred oy«r the St*te, like the Mitonju t»fqrp the rising temprat; let lha tW*J«r. as t)« the rail car, fio4 tUt* * WMT»perano« tract; let fan? »l (to* #9t*D ft"*1 pare! a (fifrtfftTtHC* tM* » let tnb» . ... * -«■» 1 AT JVIIOLESAI.fi. FROTHINGHAM, NEWELL A CO. WYOMING HOTEL, (Late W. 51. Newell 8 Co.) HAVE tnAen '.lie Capacious Store So.57 Broadyum, where they will keep an extensive .loci of HOOTS and SHOES of tip best stylo and quality, which they offer on favorable term.. Merchant! of the Wyoming \ alley are partlcuarjy invited to call find examine ourstoc*. Jte* York, January I, 1851.—tf. Let u* go forth then to the conflict, arm ed with the truth, and let the whole Siaje be moved to its foundations, and w hen the law is submitted to the people, let there come from the north and the south, the west and the east,one long and loud thunderous ate ! and not a twelvu month shall elapse ero the broad folds of the temperano« banner shall be flung out to the brcrze, and triumphantly wave over another proud Slate redeemed from the ourseof Intpmperancc. John T. Moruan. Pittston Ferry, fly O. W. MEBCEftEAC, JVo. 333, Greenwich street, near Duane NEW YORK. Take ihe hand ot tho friendless. Smile on the sad and dejectcd. Sympathise wittf Iboae in trouble' Strivo everywhere to diffuse around you sunshine and jov. If you do this you will be sure to be beloved. * Jul* 15, 1853 WS. wmm, fashionable Barber and Hair Dresser. ia the Room adjoining Cohen's Clothing Store ant! opposite the Eagle Hotel, Pittston, Pa. WOULD respectfully inform the public that he has talicn tho Shop formerly occupied Dy Lyman Fojj. where he would be pleased to wait on thi:m. Pittston, Nor. 1853. EVERTS 8 CtJRTIW, WHOLESALE DEALERS IN FISH, FRUIT, OILS 8 PROVISIONS, and rroducc and Commission Merchant*, No. 248, Fulton Street, near Washington Market, New York. E A O. woulJ call the attention of merchant, of Northern Pcnn.ytvania to their of Fi.h, Kruit, Oil. anrt Prow.ion., whichthcy will .oil neon a. favorable term. a. any how* in New Yort city. — An adopted citizen wrote homo that he was employed by the stale. On coming over they found it just as he had slated—ho was up at Sing-Sing serving out a sentence for ljl'c. (£7- " 1 wouldn't marry an eastern man if I had to live an old maid all my life," exclaimed a buxom country lass. '•Why not," exclaimed her astonished companion"Because every paper you piok up contains an account of the failure of lit# eastern mails.'' ;—There is a geuileman in the legislature who can be trusted with any secret— for nothing he oan say will be belioved.— Ohio Paper. EAGLE HOTEL. GEORGE LAZARUS, PITTSTOX, PA. KML. P. BVF.»T«, t CHU- O. CtvT'W. S March 88, 1861-ly. —No man can do anything n?ninst his \Vill, said a metaphysician. "Faith" aai4 Pat "I hod a brother who went to Botany Bay against ,his will, faith an' ho did." ' D- y - —A Lawyer on his death-bed, willed his whole property to a lunatic asylum, aaying that ho desired it should go to th# same class of person* ho took it From. Brown 8 Lazarus, Ftruiarding and Commissioit Merchants pjTTST.ON. PA. on signed 19 lljoCr care forwarded with Uospatcp» A;.t 1850.,: m 1 Architecture, The man up in York Staip. thirty years old, who boasts that he never took a newspaper, says lhat Santa Anna if ho persist* in his struggle with Russia, \vil! bo surs, to lote all "the territory of th£ Boi-phorus and be excluded from the navigation of the Amazon Sea. THOSE wanting anything designated above win plcnse give the subscriber a rail, wlw D• prepared to rauKO cfruwing* for huilJingn, wntn r„riHc»uon«. j-c. May be found by inquiring at STKMle Hotel GEO. W. {.UNO. rituton. January 2nCl. IBM. O. R. aOHMAN, VI- »f Respectfully tenders his Professional aervtcae Ifilbfi citixena of Pulsion and vicinity. Office nearly opposite lite Post Office, FiUston. Aug. 3,1850. IT- "NAILS 8 SPIKES. YUSTr«eiv«lMKD for ,«"•CD«. 100 Kail, and A£ «* * lhe n' 8D«■ *■ lazaeub. —A gentleman the other day in speaking of a prop*ny that -had pasted through the hands ot several brothers and back again to the owner; coolly remarked that they wore merely playing hill with BARGAINS! BAjtfftlXS !1 Asacond addition of new goods are'iustarn«iM at the which.a»at«s.tho stock Uiya *irt 4ciit+U ' GEORGE W OR1SWOLD. . RESIDENT DENTIST, oC Carboadala. One doaf fcoaa Sweet 1 Rajnor, on Mains Btrocl. BEI'L'S Beat PL AWES, manufactured to ordar, for sate by hit." |
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