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NP SUSQUEHANNA Dollars fir ftnnsBt/, Je NUMJJKK 285 "6—rNF1 —1 —■—■ ister -fte'r his diu chusetu was the Worcester 8py, first •eithf lublished in this pity, during 1770, but re. W moyed to the western part of the Bute on the occupation of Boston by ijie Briti»!i troops. Our country, tbe young* est in the world, outstrips all others io the number of publications and pewaptpere sold. The number pf copies of newspapers printed here is four times greater (nan in Great Britain, though England has twice as many magazines. The number 6f religious newspapers here, and the extent of eir circulation,, form * striking sopiai racteristlo.—Phita. Bun. ■ ■ A Sensation at the Oape. . Limerick Chronicle publishes the letter from Cape Town, dated has been in • great state the last month. : ft »ae .hat a very rlob gentlemen had be Lightning yteamer, rejoicing l.kqown name of MoQtefjbre, as the great firm. The ked attention was paid him every. showed a certificate purporting m the Rothsobilds authorising for .limited credit, whioh was of oourse y dune by all the Bankers. He «5athia n.oney in all directions. Ilaoes frequent and grand than ever . gentlemen riders hurried from ers—myself among the rest : 24 ride tor tb* Woutefiore Stakes, Champagne Wits as common bee/, and the Moniefiore dreve course in a carriage/with four ■the cynosure of all *yes.:D file film "ducR," end tbe gentle*- jgular "brick," although ne saw D (eei high, wore spectacles, h«4 le-— only half the proper cun - the toes of both havit g he taiil) by tbe railway i gave a graod dinner, bo room enough lor so magn fioeot a perordered tbe lower rooms of the .uoeked into one—sucfi a din. notations, bill of fare, and promusic, were done in sold ; lown ; his health ya» drunk to yvtiioh he responded in a speech, and as the scpaU hour delightful guests Tt*rC »nd carried bim eQ Ihefcr tbe WDm Jj» AritMnph, to i a right good &How.' tan actually kissed him, his brother. The dfoeer a ball—the ball, like the ... magnificent—the room was —and Montefiore out stoop #U (tractions—dinner succeeded Ainuer-- ■ tlie Cspe gentlemen wero Cng him a dinner, which »e tune of three guimM # 0 their surpass. £t last ho tat he had an engagement at nust be off. He acoordiDgly ssage, and pyt his trap* on ladies faimed, and all e*pres"(■ The vessel went to aea, ey of ,t|)e Rotsohild had pqt Hopes revived—-he pro- lady—was fortunately 1 few hours af;ar he was »r-vfely lodged ,»fD gaolL on the of debt, btajiifity grapery. 1 forgot,to tell you rrival at Cape To*n» the Jior, of the bank .falls fl on sted he would patroijjjpi hi* 3 did not -fvl .to,flo tp Wie »0. Thus was the Cape arfully and wonderfully I »m .lo|d,bas .been Ion papers at having ijhl«d Jew, wearing speotei the name of Mem Solphe same. He yras brp't the 16th, and remanded received frpm IJnglanjl -IPLE—JP}!# . ap article pp pf.tfie governs too muoh..— - to go to bed (hey «|t certain articles fqr food m, parents forgetting e guard in a child, i ah animal. So we delicate organization, — when they should go.tp (is—sleeping often in warm when the sleeping roprp dark, jind eating Cbet cakes, and drinking he infinite detriment A. The iryusy •thus er be repaired; 1st constructed *1 ft.ft »o run •at. Parents sboald "■o safe guide "to a, • he of)ild,is jmr. poisoned .dalio*. seated at a modern Save, and give it ask. 'jrawice. But it Have.nMKvy ,ild has ar. exalted idea of the dge and tbe power of ,its jDar«nt. net stand* in the child's mind ,»» the d of courage and and 'he .other, of love and gopjinesa. Tbe . ng ot trust is perfect. They do •bout their «vn supporter th«irJrt5IM»Jtt-' - ilold wants- -There .»a MMMM, patriots, gprtainty .that *ve?y thingfjrUl J*JfM|/ atv itertown. At the ol, WUght and pfocufed ,tgr ,P*reoU oommoocement of tho revolutionary war, for 'f? 'j*? tb'W-aeyae.eetpeaceijalo ■*) fiu- the United States. Of this number only wok new or trouble diminisb this feellM. en oom|DelI*d eight were committed to the British Oov- It grows stronger then. Trouble sends " when ernmcnl, but five others w»fe brought the cluld right borne to the parental h«-. over. Tho oldest existiog paper in Mass. som. ***■ CITE JOURNAL. A a tBttkltj JOtmapnptT—( fmnttii to jCtnra, £if?rntmt, folitira, tjjt JfitmMt, Alining, ®ttjuw nrol of tjj t Country tetrttrtian, tasemtnt, Kt.)-i VOLUME 6.-*FUMBEK 25. RUAItl 29, 185G. PITTSTON, PA., F WH( pttsto* Cj5a}etU, ■gnsmcss CnriJs. (Sjwtct |3ocfnt. In ihe evening of Iw.-r, t. a! evening prayer, in he b,.. the wish thai tiio Father of rn»roies \fo. in his t"Docl linte, afford him tome opportu niiy of being useful to ethers, he a deep sleep. From the Amurlcan Maaaengur. Edward Jeur.or. A Urriole diseosa had for ages afflicted the world. As early as the tenth century, ilhazes, a physician ot Bagdad, in Persia, wrote an account of its nature and fatal consequences. Throughout India and Arabia it was ftyetj earliojr looked ppnn *yitlD horrorgradually it spread towards the West; Prance, opoii), and IDiiglCuid* irbturn, knew by sid experie&oe lis fearful power, it crossed the broad Atlantic with the Spaniards to Peru ; it (jlled the beautiful cities of duataniala and Mexico wjili mourning and woe. The savages of North America fell "like leaves of the forest" before its silent but deadly stroke. Strong men and little Children alike became its victim ; and the castlc of the noble and the hovel ol the peasant ware equally subject to it* coll.— It did not come like the plague, after long years of absence, but it was always in tjie different countries—a universal scourge and terror. When once stricken, the sufferer generally lingered for eight or nine duys, an object of disgust and drrad to all about him, but recovery was almost unknown. This circumstance, together with its fearfully conianious power, had mud-'' the small pox in object ol /ear to all, while at' the same lime it had excited the 'intense interest and clove study of ujany eminent medical men. glish, ther# were 250,000 native Protestant Christians. l.i the first year of British rale, 8000 heathen temples tver# built in one province in sixteen y.ears, more than half the natiVe proteslant Christians abandoned iMf and in 1881 the whole number of Christians In connexion with the Protestant oammission was said to be only 18,046! ■ D — JOB PKfflTJNG AND RULING. AND ' Susquehanna Anthracite Journal. PlTHLISHEl) WIHLV BV Ocorgo 3Vt. Xlloliart, Jl.ikimi' «*« Urick BuiltUng, onr dtor Sintlk of Clark'* lStor*—ti/1 Stairs. ■ ■ fc JnuiuWH uulDH«h«dcvtDryl'rWay, t»i» puranuum. Two Dotlnrii huCI fifty u cbarxcdtf ampnirt wlilt»»ihu rw»». luntll aliarruurn*v» arC |D»M WE have reeot tly procured endlii** nftw In operation tn our office, w UuUug NjMMMifor the purpowe of maiinfttetnrlng til kind* of ftuted Work, tacit um Oh« ck Rdlttf Pa| und Ti mo Rolls, Minltig Alnrtrnctt, and JwWld everything belonging Jo Uio4 C;la»s ol york, nearly all of WM» hro* hfthertabwai sent to ♦ho elty. Wo Crnn rule pnj»or mail manner of way*, with hoib tbobineami red lines, and do the printing as required, We hope to have It born* In inltid by tHwo needing wirh Job*. W'v bolUve we hunw produced the lir*i mid only lyork of tbia description evtr executed III Northern Pennsylvania. The maehfues for this felnd of work are expensive ; and Wr lru«l Ihote bavin# it to do will glvo u* a trial. Apyihlog in Ibe aWie of Itlatik work or primiirtr wehnferally prc|»ur« d otirxoives to exfoutet we lru*i, to the satisfaction of all. We have had a steady pntclfcnl exjierieitfp in our business tbr nearly twelve years—tuul if onr work «loe« not give saiiaiuctiou we will be auawtrable for it. We are dtg tormined fo apnre neither efforts or expanse lo make our printing facilities adequate to the demands of the rapidly growing btadueas Of thin valley. [For the Pittstoh Oazetto The Dying Bard to hla Muse. He awake ip the night, as if from a dream, under the strong impression lhat the French and Bavarian army was approaching. Ho could not shake oil' this, impression ; but with the hape ot being rid of it, he /ose, hastily dressed himself, and sirollfd up tlie mouiitain path. The o.Dol air did him good, and he continued his walk till h« climbed to the signal pile,— Flans walked around tho pile : but » hern wore the watchers 1 They were nowhere to bo seen ; perhaps they were busied with the festivities of the village. fDlear the pile was on old pine tree, and in its hollow stem the tinder \ya» lajd ready. Hans paused by the hollow tree, and as ho listened, a singular sound caught his attention, lie beard a loDv and stealthy tread, then the click of muxkrts; 'and two soldiers crept along the clifF. Seeing no one for flans was hidden by the old tree, they /grave the signal to some comrades in the distance. •« I.'lxoiic. Myftnrp, wild harp of »nCl sweet Muiid, TU tiitio Ihnt music tlirob should ccirne, Tlx'timid that swept thoe, death butxxrnd; ?liu »uui ihuUirilkHlUDoe,»UCtat tuixwci-. tuM '0 «t Tw Eloquent end Trui. Tho following flno passage occurred In the reply of Mr. Banks to Mr. Zolllcoffbr'a queries : OO. S. Itoon, A TTOJINE Y A T LA TF, PITTSTOK, PA. omeo with James Helm, Esq in I'pjter Ptinion lis u'«r—tho zephyr* brnulh thru utraytxi IJght o'er thee, iui fromISNpn wings Tis o'«r—ibe storm of lif« that mode Such wuitiug music 'inid tliy strings. " No, sir ! The constitution of tho TTnited States, is an Instrument, not of immediate, but of ultimate and universal Freedom. It was so contemplated by the jfreat men who framed it; and tho world has so regarded It. Tho national flag is its sy&h#I, that makes the land over which it floats, in whatever quarter of the globe ay lonjj as it covers an American citizen, American Territory, It is tho Banner of ultimata and universal liberty—its white and red folds are symbols of Revolutionary trials, of the crests of victory and tho blood of sacrifice.— Mayjts Starry Union forever stand as lustrous and imperishable as the golden flres of God's firmanent. [Great applause.] Tiso'er—1'tl« wall—now real forgot, Thoa oulyjuy, my litu could stay ; Thy sloiy brisf, thy liumblf lot, U tolvi, aweol harp; ho hushed for ny». By G. W. MERCERAU, Ifa. 833, Greenwich street, uear J)uom BLANKS! BLANKS! "Cape Town of excitement fo announced arrived in I in the we' agent for t most mar' where. He to be frr hi in up readii tered were mart before, an all quar' staited to value £5P as Cape about the ceu out-riders—tlx ladies called man • r only 6ve k deformed legs, pliroeot ot feet, been cut o(T (ten engine. lb was iarg' son—so he hotel to be koocked tier!—the gramme of over 100 sai alter dinner, very neat advanced, hit. him in a chair, shoulders round the tuiui of 'He's One old gentleman and oalled him wh followed bv dinner, wm crowdei er a;" and « shamec thoy dii head, n, annount Ceylon i took his board ; sed their and the p gone in posed for refused ; rested am minor «he ver one ol that, on t principal him, and bank~wl amount ol oaieer of made Jew tised in tl sconded— cles, answ mon—no up to the until Iolli about the Jul* 15, 1853 NEW YORK The following li»t of Ulnnks uiny iilwnyt (D« found at our ofljee; uild will I..- sC.|Cl ttpou Um tin»t ruttttouublu UsrtJia : NAMES OP M,AVK8. Warrant*, Hamilton*, l'romtoury Note*, Juditmfiil Note®, Check Rolls, Tliou Roll*. Illrtnk hood*; Mortgage*, 4-c.,Ac. Q. M. RICH ART, Tiao'er In death tho poet aleepn.— Yet hnahed I* not thut music thrill. Fond .Memory's baud that wild harp sweep*, its *id, rweeltchoca linger atUl. 11. a . W U I T N E Y , M. D. 1DHY8I0IAN AND 80 KG EON- Office at his J. residence in Kingston, Pa. [iuarMi'55-ly Shorfff Sale*, (Jonatable HAtt lea, Judgment Contracts, " trtHMtrfl, " Douda, Marriage Certificates, Ex tendons. Attachments, tiuhpoenax, "oso. w. GUI SWOLD, RESIDENT DENTIST. CAUDONIIAt.K, PA. ■ftn« (lnor from Swoel fe Ruyaor, on Sluin ftreot fTf" C!»sli pitWJ fiDrol*««W. PRINTING OFFOE MELODIES, (iii/.i-ttp oOm, Jenkins' Block,) lMlimim, Nov. 1(1, IBM -If. ( ■t tbi riniMii. Han* saw instantly the plot nnd tha dan Her. The secret of the signal pile had hern revealed to the enemy. A party hail been sfnt forward to destroy il; the army was ma-ohing to attack the village. With no thought at h'Bown peril, and perhaps recalling the proverb his mother hud quoted, he seized the tinder, struck the light, and flung the blading turpentine brand into the pile. -Ft o oil" B indor , JV.rIA Katt Oirner of fntln \f*arc and M*in Hirer H'llkt.-r IIn i rDr. ROBERT BAUR, TELEGRAPH OFFICE, Tull up, my Boys, turn quick the * rounce ' And lot the work begin ; Xbe world Ih prising on without, And we uiu-6 " pre*»" within— J ... «r« who glide tho public iniud, If uvo influence far and wide, And a!l our deeds aro good, although The 14 doyii's "at onr aide. A MODEL DUN. An editor out west thus talks to Ws non-payfog subscribers and patrons. If this appeal does not bring ,in the " pewtor," wo think he need never dun second time. fJtCTIfHF Krninos .common, Gilt, awl Jfnhogrnn'r.ofna X wsttti'il and plate. maCtii to oitlrr, of any sis*. Jul) Diluting nentty sXecilUfd. A lnri(*t»tjlu.*4lon of common itnd fine phlluft'F,,7lnu I lank Hook*. -!inUoii«rj,«ovols,fcc..«l*fu»».oii band. J11u17. Irian. ______ Pittslon Gazette Printing Office, BUTLER HOUSE. PITTSTON, LUZERNE COUNTY, PA Ed *arj Jenner was the son of an En •glish clergyman, who diud when hit !i tU boy was scarcely five years old. The eld. est brother, Rev. Stephen Jenner, took ihe child to his home, and watched over btrn with nil a father's love. .liail been the good minister's earnest desire thai Edward should be educated a physician, and therefore, after a fetf years pi boarding school, he was placed with Mr. Ludlow, "a surgeon in a neighboring town, that he riiight early become familiar with the names ar.d nature ot medicines. At twenty yeurs of age he went to London, and for iwD yen/* was uuder the instruction of the celebrated John Hunter. By his careful and diligent study, he w in the affection of his teacher, who through'all his after-career proved a warm liiend. " Friends, Patrons, Subscribers and Advertisers:— Ifear us for our debts, get ready that you muy pay , trust us, we are in need— and have regard for our need, for you hare long beon trusted; acknowledge your indebtedness, and dive into your pockets that you may promptly fork over. If there bo any among you—one single patron—that don't owe us something, then to biiu we aay, »t p inaid,:—consider yourself a gontloman. Jf (he rest wish to know why we dun them, this is our answer. Not that we oare about cash ourselves, but creditors do. Would you rather that we go to jail, and yon go free, that you pay your debts and wo all keop moving ? As we have agreed, ye have worked/or you— as wo have contracted, we bare furnished oar paper -to you, but aa you Aon't pay, *e dun you—Here are the agreements for job-work, .contrasts for subscriptions, promises of long credits, and dons for de ferred payment. Who is there so mean that he don't take a paper? If any, he needn't speak—we Jont mean him.— Who is there so green that he don't advertise? If any let htm slide; he ata't the chap either. Who is there so bad that lie don't pay the printer ? Jf any, let him shout—for he is the man we 're after; Ilis name Legion,—He has been owing us for one, two or three years— long enough to make us poor, and himself rich at our expense. If the above appeal to his conscience doesn't awake him to a sens* ofjustice, we shall have to try the law, and «oe what vjrtqe tboro is In writs and constables. JoHti'ii 11 n.km an,. Proprietor. tUe *' ArisLet," *"Dw "Dy boys! Who are lujyt tf proud than we 1 \Vhile wait the anxious crowd-without., Tuo force of power to nee \ Bo pull away —nouo am so groat, At they who run tbo "car," And who Uitve dignity like those ■\\ ho pftietice at the bar. MICHAEL B. BROWN, MERCHANT TAILOR, E A (i L H HOTEL, Betwenn the stores of ,;nmes Wolsli and James Brown, I'ine street, 1'itUlon. Pa. , FitUton, Fa, Tho two soldiers, whose baefes wete then turned to the pile, waiting the arrival of thoir comrades, were seized with fear; but lliey soon saw there were oo iocs in ambush — none but a single youth running diwn the mountain path. They fired and lodged a bullet in the boy's shoulder.— Yet the signal-fire was blading high, and the whole country' would be routed. It (JUFFORD &t POLEN, PitoyaiEToaa Nov. 11), l«5i Pittslon, Jan. 18, 1856 WASHINGTON G. NUGENT, M. D. I ) rriiwctfulty oilers his services as j»by*ii-.ian Jl\ ondndrgeon to tlic inhabiianls ot Pittston itpd vicinity. OIBce at B. Hull's Stoia. K.r.fKBK\'i;ns—I'aul B. Goddard, M D., IMiila. Wm. Corson. M D., Norristuwn, Pa., Messrs. Wells & Bean; Pittston. Nov. *13, ItiSWy _ II YDE r A RK II6TEL, Hyde Park, Pa. E. B. B U It N U A M, P k o v a i e t o k Nov.!. IMS. And ye who twirl the u roller * there, lie quick you inky uian, fOltl time i» rolling ou himself, bo bout him if you cnu ; Ba our.ilul of tlie light undahodo, Of every hiud and toil ; Keep up your * color" all the thuo— Kali Tutl—we'li inibw nwiil. B R Y A NT HOUSE, was ulrcady aroused from mounldin-lop to mountai(w-mp. Tho plan of Ihe advancing army Wps defeated, an.l u hasty escape liillnwcd. ♦ J. BOWKIEY 8l LEYSHOM, . COAL MHUCllAWVS~-()fJict Corner of Main Great Bend, Pa. ADDISON li It Y A N T, Proprietor. September Wt, 1854.—ly. _ &&KA N TON HO U 8/2 i anil ItailriMd Streets, Ui4D*, Pa. Angudt 16, IH50. —-tf. Though UIkK iuufllo U our *»Ui»dj' And ri on» in our 'ease,' Wu w mbl uot cru4tt 'alur' ou Ujinm Wbo till our lower plnic; TUo Kulphiug world i«* fed by u% Wbo rutuil know U*b/»*. be re, nD feodiug UmU wo 4 feed' ouraclvcs, Nor du*ra our faro loo d«iir. DR. H. WENT2EL •OormnJi Physician \\TO\Jrespectfully announce to the. peo»V j.lc of Pittston «n.l vicinity that after an *li*enee of aonm ui.mtlu he has returned and prr- M uwntly located in the place, He will I'o happy « wull upon liny rrijiiinng; hi« pri»t'e..«ionnl servi».•«. Thankful for pint fav.irvM will enjeav Cr ,te merit a Continuance of the wime. ,Olfirn, at Pifdarick Half's. ll*»s, fait I and bleejiuii. made his way tu ilia village. Tlio people, with their arms, were mustering thick and fast. All Dvas consternation. The irq"'iry was ove:y where lieiud, " Who lighted tlie pile/" " It was I " said at lasi a fuint, aiinoat expiring voice, "ffo Dr Hans touered smdM them, saying, '• the enemy—the French were there." lie faltered, and sank upon the ground. "Take rue to Having completed his studies, arid being pronounced competent to minister to ihC- sick and suflering among his It-How.men, he reipoved to his native plaoc where he coninj,i;r)(bud practice ol his profession, thuugp only twenty-three. ljlis learning, success, andJUndjie.-s of manner, soon rpade him popular, and his visits were extended to a large circuit ol country.— Cases ol small-pox often came under his cure, and caused him much anxious thought. Boreuton, Pa. D . K . K II KBSLER, Proprietor. N. II.—A iM'liireartliiuMto convey miuM* tu tliiitliuoiCu,uit the arrival ui Uw*|wuaa»err Iruta ut Ilia It.iilrnail li. [..li. I St |'l. S3, IBM-ly W1L1TE SWAN HOTEL By Baldwin A Brady. IDS RACK STREET, l'Ull.A«KU'tt(A, PENNA Pull oul, iny boys, turn the founte,' And lbii» llio ' chime' we'11 Join; \VtD have de|Dv»aiu* in ibo 'bank,1 Ourdravtiri iir« full of 'colli Ami who «IirU inoro quietly u»C A •njiuro" mid u 4du»b,' itu.'*n, Keb, 17.1H51 tt lw4A« 11. fUi.nwiw.] July VO, I*fl5, If. [8AHL'K1. A. Hkady my rnoilier," saiJ he, •' at last I have not Deen Useless." They stoopctl to lift Iiim. " What is this?" they cried, ■" he has been shot.— It is true ; Hans, the cripple, has saved us." Thuy carried Hans to his mother, and laid bi'P before her. As she bowed in piigiiish over his pole face, 11.ins open ed his eyes and said, " It is not now dear, muther, you should weep for me; I am happy now. Yes, mother, it is true, O. K. GORMAN & Co., If YOM ixC; nCD T/■: /,, W y o M I .X C! HO V s A' prrrsTo.v, pa O ir #•!»»•« ir»* fof rwb Yft sonit iuium wo do kpri-M* so much, for Tapwott'ii H*n«al Kmi/rtilion nml Foraii'n K*elian«« Persons reniClinj{ in the a .tu airy, ami wishing to encage |iii*aa«e or hpiiiI mono* to their frien.U in nny part of Europe may J.I »Di with safety l«v applvln! a the I'ost-Olliee. TapmoU 4- Ca'l. reeeipt furnish.! hv ro firn mall. | PMtston, A.UC. sili, SrrantoH. l*n. While a young boy, he had overheard n woman remark, that "she could'nt have the small pox, becauso she had had the kinepox." The incident was never foigottrn. Years afterwards he called to to mind that no instance ol thedi«ea«e had occurred among the dairymen of the neighborhood ; while the kine pox, similar in nature, but seldom latul in ii* rosult*, was common among ihern. The kine pox, as its name indicates, prevailed among cattle and the dairymen in milking and taking care ol them also contracted it. TI.O itidaratKiHHt wottki r»«|»«MuHlf aalMMHMSe lo lliu uullUr Ili.it lie li.il r.icniilij ii..rcl..i»«l Hie abov«H"tel uiiil will e .iiltuiw III Kive I" lis m.m»ir«lne,il l.ia liwl rnreriil uUwilioil— a« i» "i ll known l.i ili« ttuljlic. Uiu c*t«u»iv« iltuiaiirtluiitt »il llic iMUlini. HI. f ft. r ! llie most inii|ihj Hcniifcnusluiliiii ill almost uuy iinniimr .if irimsiK—iHi ra laallUm will lie ixmiliiuei! l* i:ti Ui- elfi.ru nl llic |.r..|irl»- lor :iDit hlw nervunts lo reinlur Itui .i.iii' one nf lliu very Ursi in lie- Siale, ill point nf eliUu in«ai|iUt«uc.) i/t vniii' "l! jrrcs aUemlut! lu by direful »tli».s. u, U L Ki; froprultr. glisffllanu. Miss M. J. WliTIIKKBY, From I be LUtlo Pilgrim THE CRIPPLE. In the New Haven Courier, Grant Thorburn relates that in a conversation with Aaron about the voting in Congress in 1604, when Jeffreson and Burr had an equal number of votes ;lor President, .the House eoutinuing to vote through pany weeks, declaring their sitting permanent,' and bavioir their beds set up ip the lobby And their food brought from the hotels— and (bus they .continued eating and drinking and waking merry, and charging tMb lovreigii people about fifty thousand d D1— lars per day.4or.tbe sport. - Burr remarked, that at that moment of disprder, when the government was without a head, with five hundred trusty soldiers he could have seized on the government and proclaimed hitnseli its protector. "It was thus," he continued,."ibat.Qliver Cromwell drove out .the tiniDlia() Parliament, and declared him soil" Protector ; it was thus that Napoleon llonpparte, with a company of grenadiers, drove out the Council ol ,Five Hundred, proolaiming himself Emperor, it is thus," aaid he, "that all popular governments .hwe perished, and lhu« w.ill perish the American." We thiuk it Burr could be consulted spiritually now, he would have changed his opinion. The experiment ol our gov~- ernment has now become a certain taot.— Phila. Suit. Anectdote of Aaron Burr. TEACHER OF VOCAL & INSTRUMENTAL A $roH,V OF THE ,TV(t()J.. God bas his pitta For every man." PirfKTON, 1.1 7.KRKK Co.. PD. fff"Term coininimelmt MutHl»y,July 30,1HJ5. II S 1 c . rtrrnuttDi», May 1ft, 1855.—if PORT GRIFFITH HOUSE, A soldier's widow lived in n little hut near n mountain .village. Her only child was u poor cripple. Hans was a kindhearted boy. IIj loved his mother and would gladly have helped her bear the burdens ot poverty, but that feebleness forbade it. lie could not even join in the rude sports of the mountaineers. At the age ot fifteen years, he tell keenly the fact that he was useless to his mother and to the world. You see he had it lor me, though we di not It miw what it was. * E Sl B BEVAN Wholesale Liquor Merchants, Port Griffith, I»uz»ruo Co., Fa M I OII A l'l L P H I LB I N. I'RM'kiktok. subscriber having completed hi* pewtav- L r.ru home, at Port GtilTitli, i« prepared to arco n-nodate travellers and the public generally, in (he lieat manner nn«l on reasonable terms. The rC»C»?n* are convenient, and lhe proprietor will Cuare no efforts to make bis guests consforUUe. l{in Bar is supplied with excellent liquors, and .is table with an abundance ot the best the mar- Huns did nut recover from his wound, hut he lived long enough to know that lie had been of use to his village and to the country ; he lived to see grateful mothers embrace his mother, to hear that sho should ba considered a sacred and honored bequest to the community which her son had pruDerved at the cost of his own life. Dr. Jenner immediately began to make inquiries on the subject, and alter much observation and many experiments, convincod himselt that a person once having the kine-pox would never take the other, however much exposed lo if. (OP/'-'s/Tf. T//r n.T.s/jv) X* JL ttaton, I~* o n. n a . Wines, Brandies, Gin, Whiskeys, (Irish A Scotch Whi.-keys.) Pure JaiB«"-a ttuDn, cohtanUy on hand. I.'ujuorJ reclifi:; i in the most careful anil approved manner. Retail Dealers are invited to give them a call as they feci confident thni from their extensive assortment they can sapply all engaged in the trad# nt as low rates uj tlx; same can be done in -he cities. Pittston Dec. 8, 1851,—1 y. ■ch afford From this he formed the ideaol producing the lighter sickness in each individual in the community, by an easy prouess culled vaccination ; thus preserving them from the deadly influence of small pox, And limiting, if not entirely suppressing, its fearful ravages. Good stabling attached. MIOHARL HILBIN, port Griffith, June 2, 1851 tf 1; was at this period that Napoleon Dnnaparte was making his power felt throughout Liurope. H had decreed that 'l'yrol should belong to Bavaria, and not to Austria, and sent a French and Uavari an army to accomplish his purpose. The Austrian* rmreaied. The Tyroleae resisted valieutly. Men, women and children of th« mountain land were filled w.ith z«al in defence ot their homes. 'On one occasion, ten.thousand,French and Bavarian troops .wore destroyed in a single mountain pass, by an immense avalanche of rocks and trees prepared and hurled upon them by %n unseen foe. A secret arrangement existed between the Tyrolese, by which the approach of the enemy was to be communicated from village lo villoge by signalJiret, from one mountain heighl to another, and maleriaU were laid ready to gi*e instant alarm. The village where Hans and his moth er lived was in the direct line of the route the French army would take, and the people were full of anxiety and 'fear. All were preparing for the expected atruggle. The widow and her' crippled son alone seemed to have no part ibut to sit still and wait. " Ah, Han*," she aaid one evening. " it is well for us now that .you' can be of-little use they would else make a soldier of you." This struck a tender chord. Tlio tears rolled down his cheek. *'Another, tj am useless," cried Hans ip bitter grief. " Look around our village— all ate busy, all ready to strive for home and fatherland—J am useless." Great emergencies like those which met Hans, cannot exist in tho history of all. To all, however, lbe Tyrohee motto tnay epeak, and all will experience ,its truth.— None need stand useless members of God's greiti family. JTpetc work for every one to do, if he will look out lor it. So long as there is ignorance to jtistftiqt, want to relieve, sorrow to soothe, let there be no drones in the hive, no idlers in lhe great vineyard of tlu world. EXCHANGE AND BANKING OFFICE. rpHK subscribers .have opened an oflioe of Cfe I posit, discount and exchange, in this place, of Wyoming avenue, opposite the Wyoming House two doors northeast of Mr. Chase's store. MASON, MLSYLEUT Cfc Co. Scranton, May 18, 1855. DR J. A. HANN, Offi-o In Dr. Dorr's Drug Store, Mam Street. PITTSTON, if a December 17, 1852. it was in 1776 that -he,commenced his invesligaiious, but such was the ignorance and superstition of the common people, and the prejudices pf the higher classes ibut for .twenty years |ie toiled on unnoticed and almost, unknown, tiis statements in the public journals and newspapers were considered as the daydreams of an idle, fanciful man, and lhe only attoiHion shown tliem was ridicule and contempt. O. R. GORMAN, M. P. ,{.c«pectfu|]y tcniicra his Profe»»lonuUervicc« to the citizens of PitUton and vicinity. Office in the Post Ltfice, lUUtlan. illg.2, 1H!)0. l*\ A. PRICE & CO,, COAL MERCHANTS. OJiee—Wesl side Main street, PULslon Luterne county, P«• AugmttO.lHCT. .. tf- ENGINEERING AND SURVEYING. The do-as -you. Like Princ New York Independent, -in the phvsicial degeneracy ' people, speaks as fpllou' '' The child's will If tbey dp not choose lip; Jf they choose they must have lh( that instinct is no m wnaiever it may be isee them in their keeping late hoprr bed with the birdsand lighted rooms, should be cool anc bread, pudding ant hot tea and coffee to of nerves and stoma early done can nev machine imperfectly can never be made ' David Schooley. WOULD r. npeclfully luuumuce ui 11m puWio Unl lie Ml ill continues tlio n«BUO0 of tfin above prohsCuDn, in all its branche*, and hold* himself in ivudinets* atoll time* to attend to any buaiuo** in the lioo ol 1. In tho above narrative, which was the more useful to-his country, the poor crippled boy who lighted the firo on the nioumain lop, or a common, able-bodied soldier ) Being provided with a full ami complete set of instrument*, and hiving had nmple experietice, ho Hitler* him «olf capable of in any aud evary department of calling. Office yi K,«r of ttotler** 8tore, up^Hatra. Survey in*,Engineering, Drafting Fashionable Barber and Hair I tester Out genius, aided by patient industry, at lust triumphed. In 17D8 he published hU celebrated work, entitled, "An Inquiry into the Cause and Effect* ot Kinepox," which is now found in almost every physician's library, and is considered outof the best ever written on the subject Attention was gradually culled to ihu.niat. ier, and after sorpe hesitation bis plan was adopted in the hospitals and other public establishments of Europe and America. England delayed longest to yield its sanction to the great discovery, but Dr. Jenner lived to see his hopes, realized, and hi« fellow-men freed from one fearful destroyer. For a few years public honors were heaped upop fjifp, but a! the £ge of seventy four, in January, 183p, he was glad to lay them all aside and go to his long rest. Out Door North of Butler House, l-ITTSToh. PA. 2. If-any one feels very anxious to be useful in some way, and labors very diligently tor this object, may notany ouo be successful 1 Amerioaa Newspapers 4C4KC « HA YD EN, li TtO Til Kits, WBOLEdALfi dealer* in ThnriWlt. Jiiul*;uiauries, £ .C*ood», YV atcl»e», Jewelry, SILVER AND PLATED WARE, The first newspaper published in North America was printed in Boston, 1690.—- Otily one eopj of that paper was known to be in existence. It was deposited in the State Pap«r Office in London, and was about the size of an ordinary sheet of letter paper. It was stopped by the Government. The Boston News Letter was the first regular paper. It was first issued in 1704, and .was printed by John Allen, in Pud. dipg .Lane. The contents of some of the eprlj numbers were very peculiar. It haij a speech of Queen Anne to Parlia-pent. delivered 120 days previously, and thi: -was the latest naws from England la oni of the early uumbers, there was an an npuuceniem that by order qf ;he Postmaster general of North Amerioa, thi post between Boston and New York set out once a fortnight. Negro men, womei and children were advertised lo be soh and a oall was marie upon a woman whi had stolen a piece of fino lace worth 14« a yard, and upon another who conveyed i piece of fine caliao under her riding-hood to return the same, or to be exposed in thi newspapers. This pioneer paper was pub lished .74 years ; it the leading Tor paper, prior to the Revolution. The ton Guzette was the organ of the and was issued ' -W" rgf Oualomers oilDaidtDt} lo wiih the itimoal car" aswJ despatch. Vtibnc patronage resiteclfuily solicited. inly *D. 14«. »»»■ K K N N E U " S 3. Should persons choose a useful occupation because they love to be useful, or will it nnswer just as well, to choose a very useful employment because we can make more money in suoh an employment?OoM Pane, n*hln«r Tnckli, Jw., *c. -Morchnula ami •Peddlers KttpnUwi on liberal terms. Wm. lluy'lom J . S Trsey Hay.too, John Mayden. ( I «*"■ H.iyden. New Alillordvr«i»M Not. 0,1855. ITVtRY AND EXCHANGE. NEAR THK TOST OPFIOK, SCHASTON, PA. Heatly nl fill tin's Iti aecmnmodnle with the test pf nurses and vehicles. ScranUm, Fet. gi, .lSM-ty- , Tlie old Butler Sta*d. GOODS FOR THE PEOPLE! ON hand and for stile at.tlAkt'S Drug Store opposite th« Baain. (Junr W, 1855. HYDRAULIC ■CEMENT A Touching Scans, — C*"- subscribers won)') iMHMMf to Ike cMlsmiS of X FHtHon nml vicinity, that they havo Just received , from the city and opemM a large and varied supply of DRY GOODS, GROCERIES & HARDWARE, which limy are » Urn* »t prtorn u low ua lliey can b« pnrchaaed for in northern IVmtsylvititia. A special care haa Intuit taken la the selection of their Mock, lo pnwtlH such goods as are beat calculated to meet the wants of Lite people of Uie mining region, ami - The Miner aod Laboring Mao will Ibid here full value for bis woue, io such urtictea aa alj lumillus aland In luted Of. Theirguods bai v been pnji hosed upon terms wkioh enable Ihetn lo a,'11 „t Hates, and those who giv« them a trial will llud this lo be no Idle saying, but worthy of full belief la anything needed In the Grocery and Provision, or Dry Woods iiue /-if jo step ff\ au.l wjaniine ottr ttawmmout. PULEN, COOL k Co. A correspondent of the Glmira Republican says that it) a trip over the New York and Erie road, an incident occur red that touched every .beholdpr'js heart with pity. A comparatively yopng ladv dressed in deep mourn jug—her -hjjibaqd having recenily died—was traveling .-Sopthward, having in hor euro and keeping a youog daughter ot soma six years. The little girl was as bright eyed as an autumnal sky and delicate as a hyacinth—her emaciated finger* as delicate and transparent as the pearls of Ceylon. Touohingly Lieautitul was the affection of her heart for ttie mother, whose solicitude for the daughter's cemfurt was unceasingly manifested.— Looking ever and anon from the car Ufindow saying: "Mother, ! am weary, when shall we get home V Alter a time she fell into a gentle slumber and awakening suddenly—a radlent smile overspread herfeatures, she exclaimed pointing upward,— "Mother, there is papa !—home .at last!'' and expired. ltwasy«t many a weary mile to the mother's home, but ihe angels pitying the I idle sufferer, gathered her to IVradiwj of InDooeuoe. "This is the setD know that instinct is child, particularly wh rounded on all sides wjt cies. To ask a child table what it would what .it asks for, merely for it, »• a very common D is a* cruel as it it, common, on the children. OBO. W. BRAINERD * Qo. 103 Murray, near Welt SWoot, Now Yorlr Oito. W. BKAINKRD, lApf. 'J, 1MD0-Iy*. DAVID BSI.DJiN A man who;ki any degree relieves ||ie sulleringt) of mankind ifi a public benefactor, and the name of Dr. (Edward Jenner wilt bo one ot the most honored. JAMB8 li. SELFRIDGE, Hktlttci' DotMr in • " My boy, my kind, dear «on. you are not uvelern to me." TOBACCO, SNUFF AND CIGARS (No. 58 North Third St., 3 dnor» above Arch st. " res, to you; I cannot work for you, cannot support you iu old age. Why wu* 1 made mother 1" E. A. II. PHILADELPHIA. 0OW* TOWN Grocery and Provision Store ♦Union, Ni»-8, ma. C• Hush, Hani," said bin mother ; "thenn repining thoughts are wrootf. You will live to find the truth of the old proverb: CHam;uns Relapsing into Paganism. —It is said thai since Ceylon become subject to the Christian Quoen of Englaiil, it has boconin much more of a heathen country than it was before. Three hundred years ago the Portuguese made great of forts to convert the natives to the [toman Catholic 'faith. Then the Dutch had possession of the island. They divided it intc 240 parishes; built numerous churches, translated numerous portions of the Bittlf into the native tongues, maintained ropean missionaries, and even aony iho natives to be baptised. In 1795 . the uland fell into the band* of the K«- NEW JEWELRY SUTHERLAND, dealer in Gnrcerica, Pro. 5 *i»ion«, Flour, Feed, if-c., in K'. 0. ''lurk's wilding nearly opposite the " Keystone Stor»," Main street, littston J»«. Uoode flol'i Jpr ready pay only, and fat extremely low price*. " Small profit* nnd quic k salts," i« th6 invito fey which I u«i determined .to »uc- L'CC(f, Pituton, Nov. 2ftth, 1H55.—W E would cMl tf"' attention of (ha pulillc I Ju» a New and Improve.] pl»n or ijSjrOnK i.rUUelal ■v*h on Outtn b» !D»»«■ Thl» to ..rpwlor to any no vet I»«d for temporary or dllHcult oww-iiM'l nurchimwi lh« right C■D u« the Improvcil Gatta rercha. partial or fnll.eU.of u*th will hi. plan with «»«**, rr^^c. ,\j77 tfj WUkaabarra, M. A.VV YANKEE NOTION SIOBE JAMKS would most roapoclfully announce tolha ■ People of Pfttston ami vicinity, that lu» ban opened a v ery dealrabto atoalt Of .bDw«*iry, Yankoe Notions, CloiUing, BooU.Shopa. llalV'apK, l'bliing Tack.li;, I'aU'nt Jtovdiri. Pistols, Looking Ghwsua, &e., &cM In tt»e W«t end of UuiHh and Lamb's Brick Building, nearly oppobil© the offlco of Ihp Ptmnnylvuuia Coal Company. frucn along practical experience in o?cry dfpartmont of hit pursuit, ho tlaiws himself prepared to conduct hurt«« hs at anon rattm and in Mich a manner as to make his ustbe r.aironoge of All clnsaes. Ilolng ' —of At- " Ood has hi« plan For erery m»n." Llitle did Hans think that ere a tew weeks had passed, tbia trulb waa to be virility 1 in a remarkable maitnf-r. Easter holiday*, tbe femive time of Switzerland oame. The people lost their fears pi invasion in sporU of the season. All were busy in, the merry-making all but liana. He aloud alone ou the porch of bia mountain hut overlooking the ' village. ■BfiiiMt.1 jgi -~r- — , UiraDrit):or ul a lure J u»lulClialiuiuui 01 , huu icrlptioug - sssiiliis liim » CMll, •McHiuiin* n» Uiem»»4*es. i isM.ty.
Object Description
Title | Pittston Gazette and Susquehanna Anthracite Journal |
Masthead | Pittston Gazette and Susquehanna Anthracite Journal, Volume 6 Number 25, February 29, 1856 |
Volume | 6 |
Issue | 25 |
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 | 1856-02-29 |
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 6 Number 25, February 29, 1856 |
Volume | 6 |
Issue | 25 |
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 | 1856-02-29 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | PGS_18560229_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 | NP SUSQUEHANNA Dollars fir ftnnsBt/, Je NUMJJKK 285 "6—rNF1 —1 —■—■ ister -fte'r his diu chusetu was the Worcester 8py, first •eithf lublished in this pity, during 1770, but re. W moyed to the western part of the Bute on the occupation of Boston by ijie Briti»!i troops. Our country, tbe young* est in the world, outstrips all others io the number of publications and pewaptpere sold. The number pf copies of newspapers printed here is four times greater (nan in Great Britain, though England has twice as many magazines. The number 6f religious newspapers here, and the extent of eir circulation,, form * striking sopiai racteristlo.—Phita. Bun. ■ ■ A Sensation at the Oape. . Limerick Chronicle publishes the letter from Cape Town, dated has been in • great state the last month. : ft »ae .hat a very rlob gentlemen had be Lightning yteamer, rejoicing l.kqown name of MoQtefjbre, as the great firm. The ked attention was paid him every. showed a certificate purporting m the Rothsobilds authorising for .limited credit, whioh was of oourse y dune by all the Bankers. He «5athia n.oney in all directions. Ilaoes frequent and grand than ever . gentlemen riders hurried from ers—myself among the rest : 24 ride tor tb* Woutefiore Stakes, Champagne Wits as common bee/, and the Moniefiore dreve course in a carriage/with four ■the cynosure of all *yes.:D file film "ducR," end tbe gentle*- jgular "brick," although ne saw D (eei high, wore spectacles, h«4 le-— only half the proper cun - the toes of both havit g he taiil) by tbe railway i gave a graod dinner, bo room enough lor so magn fioeot a perordered tbe lower rooms of the .uoeked into one—sucfi a din. notations, bill of fare, and promusic, were done in sold ; lown ; his health ya» drunk to yvtiioh he responded in a speech, and as the scpaU hour delightful guests Tt*rC »nd carried bim eQ Ihefcr tbe WDm Jj» AritMnph, to i a right good &How.' tan actually kissed him, his brother. The dfoeer a ball—the ball, like the ... magnificent—the room was —and Montefiore out stoop #U (tractions—dinner succeeded Ainuer-- ■ tlie Cspe gentlemen wero Cng him a dinner, which »e tune of three guimM # 0 their surpass. £t last ho tat he had an engagement at nust be off. He acoordiDgly ssage, and pyt his trap* on ladies faimed, and all e*pres"(■ The vessel went to aea, ey of ,t|)e Rotsohild had pqt Hopes revived—-he pro- lady—was fortunately 1 few hours af;ar he was »r-vfely lodged ,»fD gaolL on the of debt, btajiifity grapery. 1 forgot,to tell you rrival at Cape To*n» the Jior, of the bank .falls fl on sted he would patroijjjpi hi* 3 did not -fvl .to,flo tp Wie »0. Thus was the Cape arfully and wonderfully I »m .lo|d,bas .been Ion papers at having ijhl«d Jew, wearing speotei the name of Mem Solphe same. He yras brp't the 16th, and remanded received frpm IJnglanjl -IPLE—JP}!# . ap article pp pf.tfie governs too muoh..— - to go to bed (hey «|t certain articles fqr food m, parents forgetting e guard in a child, i ah animal. So we delicate organization, — when they should go.tp (is—sleeping often in warm when the sleeping roprp dark, jind eating Cbet cakes, and drinking he infinite detriment A. The iryusy •thus er be repaired; 1st constructed *1 ft.ft »o run •at. Parents sboald "■o safe guide "to a, • he of)ild,is jmr. poisoned .dalio*. seated at a modern Save, and give it ask. 'jrawice. But it Have.nMKvy ,ild has ar. exalted idea of the dge and tbe power of ,its jDar«nt. net stand* in the child's mind ,»» the d of courage and and 'he .other, of love and gopjinesa. Tbe . ng ot trust is perfect. They do •bout their «vn supporter th«irJrt5IM»Jtt-' - ilold wants- -There .»a MMMM, patriots, gprtainty .that *ve?y thingfjrUl J*JfM|/ atv itertown. At the ol, WUght and pfocufed ,tgr ,P*reoU oommoocement of tho revolutionary war, for 'f? 'j*? tb'W-aeyae.eetpeaceijalo ■*) fiu- the United States. Of this number only wok new or trouble diminisb this feellM. en oom|DelI*d eight were committed to the British Oov- It grows stronger then. Trouble sends " when ernmcnl, but five others w»fe brought the cluld right borne to the parental h«-. over. Tho oldest existiog paper in Mass. som. ***■ CITE JOURNAL. A a tBttkltj JOtmapnptT—( fmnttii to jCtnra, £if?rntmt, folitira, tjjt JfitmMt, Alining, ®ttjuw nrol of tjj t Country tetrttrtian, tasemtnt, Kt.)-i VOLUME 6.-*FUMBEK 25. RUAItl 29, 185G. PITTSTON, PA., F WH( pttsto* Cj5a}etU, ■gnsmcss CnriJs. (Sjwtct |3ocfnt. In ihe evening of Iw.-r, t. a! evening prayer, in he b,.. the wish thai tiio Father of rn»roies \fo. in his t"Docl linte, afford him tome opportu niiy of being useful to ethers, he a deep sleep. From the Amurlcan Maaaengur. Edward Jeur.or. A Urriole diseosa had for ages afflicted the world. As early as the tenth century, ilhazes, a physician ot Bagdad, in Persia, wrote an account of its nature and fatal consequences. Throughout India and Arabia it was ftyetj earliojr looked ppnn *yitlD horrorgradually it spread towards the West; Prance, opoii), and IDiiglCuid* irbturn, knew by sid experie&oe lis fearful power, it crossed the broad Atlantic with the Spaniards to Peru ; it (jlled the beautiful cities of duataniala and Mexico wjili mourning and woe. The savages of North America fell "like leaves of the forest" before its silent but deadly stroke. Strong men and little Children alike became its victim ; and the castlc of the noble and the hovel ol the peasant ware equally subject to it* coll.— It did not come like the plague, after long years of absence, but it was always in tjie different countries—a universal scourge and terror. When once stricken, the sufferer generally lingered for eight or nine duys, an object of disgust and drrad to all about him, but recovery was almost unknown. This circumstance, together with its fearfully conianious power, had mud-'' the small pox in object ol /ear to all, while at' the same lime it had excited the 'intense interest and clove study of ujany eminent medical men. glish, ther# were 250,000 native Protestant Christians. l.i the first year of British rale, 8000 heathen temples tver# built in one province in sixteen y.ears, more than half the natiVe proteslant Christians abandoned iMf and in 1881 the whole number of Christians In connexion with the Protestant oammission was said to be only 18,046! ■ D — JOB PKfflTJNG AND RULING. AND ' Susquehanna Anthracite Journal. PlTHLISHEl) WIHLV BV Ocorgo 3Vt. Xlloliart, Jl.ikimi' «*« Urick BuiltUng, onr dtor Sintlk of Clark'* lStor*—ti/1 Stairs. ■ ■ fc JnuiuWH uulDH«h«dcvtDryl'rWay, t»i» puranuum. Two Dotlnrii huCI fifty u cbarxcdtf ampnirt wlilt»»ihu rw»». luntll aliarruurn*v» arC |D»M WE have reeot tly procured endlii** nftw In operation tn our office, w UuUug NjMMMifor the purpowe of maiinfttetnrlng til kind* of ftuted Work, tacit um Oh« ck Rdlttf Pa| und Ti mo Rolls, Minltig Alnrtrnctt, and JwWld everything belonging Jo Uio4 C;la»s ol york, nearly all of WM» hro* hfthertabwai sent to ♦ho elty. Wo Crnn rule pnj»or mail manner of way*, with hoib tbobineami red lines, and do the printing as required, We hope to have It born* In inltid by tHwo needing wirh Job*. W'v bolUve we hunw produced the lir*i mid only lyork of tbia description evtr executed III Northern Pennsylvania. The maehfues for this felnd of work are expensive ; and Wr lru«l Ihote bavin# it to do will glvo u* a trial. Apyihlog in Ibe aWie of Itlatik work or primiirtr wehnferally prc|»ur« d otirxoives to exfoutet we lru*i, to the satisfaction of all. We have had a steady pntclfcnl exjierieitfp in our business tbr nearly twelve years—tuul if onr work «loe« not give saiiaiuctiou we will be auawtrable for it. We are dtg tormined fo apnre neither efforts or expanse lo make our printing facilities adequate to the demands of the rapidly growing btadueas Of thin valley. [For the Pittstoh Oazetto The Dying Bard to hla Muse. He awake ip the night, as if from a dream, under the strong impression lhat the French and Bavarian army was approaching. Ho could not shake oil' this, impression ; but with the hape ot being rid of it, he /ose, hastily dressed himself, and sirollfd up tlie mouiitain path. The o.Dol air did him good, and he continued his walk till h« climbed to the signal pile,— Flans walked around tho pile : but » hern wore the watchers 1 They were nowhere to bo seen ; perhaps they were busied with the festivities of the village. fDlear the pile was on old pine tree, and in its hollow stem the tinder \ya» lajd ready. Hans paused by the hollow tree, and as ho listened, a singular sound caught his attention, lie beard a loDv and stealthy tread, then the click of muxkrts; 'and two soldiers crept along the clifF. Seeing no one for flans was hidden by the old tree, they /grave the signal to some comrades in the distance. •« I.'lxoiic. Myftnrp, wild harp of »nCl sweet Muiid, TU tiitio Ihnt music tlirob should ccirne, Tlx'timid that swept thoe, death butxxrnd; ?liu »uui ihuUirilkHlUDoe,»UCtat tuixwci-. tuM '0 «t Tw Eloquent end Trui. Tho following flno passage occurred In the reply of Mr. Banks to Mr. Zolllcoffbr'a queries : OO. S. Itoon, A TTOJINE Y A T LA TF, PITTSTOK, PA. omeo with James Helm, Esq in I'pjter Ptinion lis u'«r—tho zephyr* brnulh thru utraytxi IJght o'er thee, iui fromISNpn wings Tis o'«r—ibe storm of lif« that mode Such wuitiug music 'inid tliy strings. " No, sir ! The constitution of tho TTnited States, is an Instrument, not of immediate, but of ultimate and universal Freedom. It was so contemplated by the jfreat men who framed it; and tho world has so regarded It. Tho national flag is its sy&h#I, that makes the land over which it floats, in whatever quarter of the globe ay lonjj as it covers an American citizen, American Territory, It is tho Banner of ultimata and universal liberty—its white and red folds are symbols of Revolutionary trials, of the crests of victory and tho blood of sacrifice.— Mayjts Starry Union forever stand as lustrous and imperishable as the golden flres of God's firmanent. [Great applause.] Tiso'er—1'tl« wall—now real forgot, Thoa oulyjuy, my litu could stay ; Thy sloiy brisf, thy liumblf lot, U tolvi, aweol harp; ho hushed for ny». By G. W. MERCERAU, Ifa. 833, Greenwich street, uear J)uom BLANKS! BLANKS! "Cape Town of excitement fo announced arrived in I in the we' agent for t most mar' where. He to be frr hi in up readii tered were mart before, an all quar' staited to value £5P as Cape about the ceu out-riders—tlx ladies called man • r only 6ve k deformed legs, pliroeot ot feet, been cut o(T (ten engine. lb was iarg' son—so he hotel to be koocked tier!—the gramme of over 100 sai alter dinner, very neat advanced, hit. him in a chair, shoulders round the tuiui of 'He's One old gentleman and oalled him wh followed bv dinner, wm crowdei er a;" and « shamec thoy dii head, n, annount Ceylon i took his board ; sed their and the p gone in posed for refused ; rested am minor «he ver one ol that, on t principal him, and bank~wl amount ol oaieer of made Jew tised in tl sconded— cles, answ mon—no up to the until Iolli about the Jul* 15, 1853 NEW YORK The following li»t of Ulnnks uiny iilwnyt (D« found at our ofljee; uild will I..- sC.|Cl ttpou Um tin»t ruttttouublu UsrtJia : NAMES OP M,AVK8. Warrant*, Hamilton*, l'romtoury Note*, Juditmfiil Note®, Check Rolls, Tliou Roll*. Illrtnk hood*; Mortgage*, 4-c.,Ac. Q. M. RICH ART, Tiao'er In death tho poet aleepn.— Yet hnahed I* not thut music thrill. Fond .Memory's baud that wild harp sweep*, its *id, rweeltchoca linger atUl. 11. a . W U I T N E Y , M. D. 1DHY8I0IAN AND 80 KG EON- Office at his J. residence in Kingston, Pa. [iuarMi'55-ly Shorfff Sale*, (Jonatable HAtt lea, Judgment Contracts, " trtHMtrfl, " Douda, Marriage Certificates, Ex tendons. Attachments, tiuhpoenax, "oso. w. GUI SWOLD, RESIDENT DENTIST. CAUDONIIAt.K, PA. ■ftn« (lnor from Swoel fe Ruyaor, on Sluin ftreot fTf" C!»sli pitWJ fiDrol*««W. PRINTING OFFOE MELODIES, (iii/.i-ttp oOm, Jenkins' Block,) lMlimim, Nov. 1(1, IBM -If. ( ■t tbi riniMii. Han* saw instantly the plot nnd tha dan Her. The secret of the signal pile had hern revealed to the enemy. A party hail been sfnt forward to destroy il; the army was ma-ohing to attack the village. With no thought at h'Bown peril, and perhaps recalling the proverb his mother hud quoted, he seized the tinder, struck the light, and flung the blading turpentine brand into the pile. -Ft o oil" B indor , JV.rIA Katt Oirner of fntln \f*arc and M*in Hirer H'llkt.-r IIn i rDr. ROBERT BAUR, TELEGRAPH OFFICE, Tull up, my Boys, turn quick the * rounce ' And lot the work begin ; Xbe world Ih prising on without, And we uiu-6 " pre*»" within— J ... «r« who glide tho public iniud, If uvo influence far and wide, And a!l our deeds aro good, although The 14 doyii's "at onr aide. A MODEL DUN. An editor out west thus talks to Ws non-payfog subscribers and patrons. If this appeal does not bring ,in the " pewtor," wo think he need never dun second time. fJtCTIfHF Krninos .common, Gilt, awl Jfnhogrnn'r.ofna X wsttti'il and plate. maCtii to oitlrr, of any sis*. Jul) Diluting nentty sXecilUfd. A lnri(*t»tjlu.*4lon of common itnd fine phlluft'F,,7lnu I lank Hook*. -!inUoii«rj,«ovols,fcc..«l*fu»».oii band. J11u17. Irian. ______ Pittslon Gazette Printing Office, BUTLER HOUSE. PITTSTON, LUZERNE COUNTY, PA Ed *arj Jenner was the son of an En •glish clergyman, who diud when hit !i tU boy was scarcely five years old. The eld. est brother, Rev. Stephen Jenner, took ihe child to his home, and watched over btrn with nil a father's love. .liail been the good minister's earnest desire thai Edward should be educated a physician, and therefore, after a fetf years pi boarding school, he was placed with Mr. Ludlow, "a surgeon in a neighboring town, that he riiight early become familiar with the names ar.d nature ot medicines. At twenty yeurs of age he went to London, and for iwD yen/* was uuder the instruction of the celebrated John Hunter. By his careful and diligent study, he w in the affection of his teacher, who through'all his after-career proved a warm liiend. " Friends, Patrons, Subscribers and Advertisers:— Ifear us for our debts, get ready that you muy pay , trust us, we are in need— and have regard for our need, for you hare long beon trusted; acknowledge your indebtedness, and dive into your pockets that you may promptly fork over. If there bo any among you—one single patron—that don't owe us something, then to biiu we aay, »t p inaid,:—consider yourself a gontloman. Jf (he rest wish to know why we dun them, this is our answer. Not that we oare about cash ourselves, but creditors do. Would you rather that we go to jail, and yon go free, that you pay your debts and wo all keop moving ? As we have agreed, ye have worked/or you— as wo have contracted, we bare furnished oar paper -to you, but aa you Aon't pay, *e dun you—Here are the agreements for job-work, .contrasts for subscriptions, promises of long credits, and dons for de ferred payment. Who is there so mean that he don't take a paper? If any, he needn't speak—we Jont mean him.— Who is there so green that he don't advertise? If any let htm slide; he ata't the chap either. Who is there so bad that lie don't pay the printer ? Jf any, let him shout—for he is the man we 're after; Ilis name Legion,—He has been owing us for one, two or three years— long enough to make us poor, and himself rich at our expense. If the above appeal to his conscience doesn't awake him to a sens* ofjustice, we shall have to try the law, and «oe what vjrtqe tboro is In writs and constables. JoHti'ii 11 n.km an,. Proprietor. tUe *' ArisLet," *"Dw "Dy boys! Who are lujyt tf proud than we 1 \Vhile wait the anxious crowd-without., Tuo force of power to nee \ Bo pull away —nouo am so groat, At they who run tbo "car," And who Uitve dignity like those ■\\ ho pftietice at the bar. MICHAEL B. BROWN, MERCHANT TAILOR, E A (i L H HOTEL, Betwenn the stores of ,;nmes Wolsli and James Brown, I'ine street, 1'itUlon. Pa. , FitUton, Fa, Tho two soldiers, whose baefes wete then turned to the pile, waiting the arrival of thoir comrades, were seized with fear; but lliey soon saw there were oo iocs in ambush — none but a single youth running diwn the mountain path. They fired and lodged a bullet in the boy's shoulder.— Yet the signal-fire was blading high, and the whole country' would be routed. It (JUFFORD &t POLEN, PitoyaiEToaa Nov. 11), l«5i Pittslon, Jan. 18, 1856 WASHINGTON G. NUGENT, M. D. I ) rriiwctfulty oilers his services as j»by*ii-.ian Jl\ ondndrgeon to tlic inhabiianls ot Pittston itpd vicinity. OIBce at B. Hull's Stoia. K.r.fKBK\'i;ns—I'aul B. Goddard, M D., IMiila. Wm. Corson. M D., Norristuwn, Pa., Messrs. Wells & Bean; Pittston. Nov. *13, ItiSWy _ II YDE r A RK II6TEL, Hyde Park, Pa. E. B. B U It N U A M, P k o v a i e t o k Nov.!. IMS. And ye who twirl the u roller * there, lie quick you inky uian, fOltl time i» rolling ou himself, bo bout him if you cnu ; Ba our.ilul of tlie light undahodo, Of every hiud and toil ; Keep up your * color" all the thuo— Kali Tutl—we'li inibw nwiil. B R Y A NT HOUSE, was ulrcady aroused from mounldin-lop to mountai(w-mp. Tho plan of Ihe advancing army Wps defeated, an.l u hasty escape liillnwcd. ♦ J. BOWKIEY 8l LEYSHOM, . COAL MHUCllAWVS~-()fJict Corner of Main Great Bend, Pa. ADDISON li It Y A N T, Proprietor. September Wt, 1854.—ly. _ &&KA N TON HO U 8/2 i anil ItailriMd Streets, Ui4D*, Pa. Angudt 16, IH50. —-tf. Though UIkK iuufllo U our *»Ui»dj' And ri on» in our 'ease,' Wu w mbl uot cru4tt 'alur' ou Ujinm Wbo till our lower plnic; TUo Kulphiug world i«* fed by u% Wbo rutuil know U*b/»*. be re, nD feodiug UmU wo 4 feed' ouraclvcs, Nor du*ra our faro loo d«iir. DR. H. WENT2EL •OormnJi Physician \\TO\Jrespectfully announce to the. peo»V j.lc of Pittston «n.l vicinity that after an *li*enee of aonm ui.mtlu he has returned and prr- M uwntly located in the place, He will I'o happy « wull upon liny rrijiiinng; hi« pri»t'e..«ionnl servi».•«. Thankful for pint fav.irvM will enjeav Cr ,te merit a Continuance of the wime. ,Olfirn, at Pifdarick Half's. ll*»s, fait I and bleejiuii. made his way tu ilia village. Tlio people, with their arms, were mustering thick and fast. All Dvas consternation. The irq"'iry was ove:y where lieiud, " Who lighted tlie pile/" " It was I " said at lasi a fuint, aiinoat expiring voice, "ffo Dr Hans touered smdM them, saying, '• the enemy—the French were there." lie faltered, and sank upon the ground. "Take rue to Having completed his studies, arid being pronounced competent to minister to ihC- sick and suflering among his It-How.men, he reipoved to his native plaoc where he coninj,i;r)(bud practice ol his profession, thuugp only twenty-three. ljlis learning, success, andJUndjie.-s of manner, soon rpade him popular, and his visits were extended to a large circuit ol country.— Cases ol small-pox often came under his cure, and caused him much anxious thought. Boreuton, Pa. D . K . K II KBSLER, Proprietor. N. II.—A iM'liireartliiuMto convey miuM* tu tliiitliuoiCu,uit the arrival ui Uw*|wuaa»err Iruta ut Ilia It.iilrnail li. [..li. I St |'l. S3, IBM-ly W1L1TE SWAN HOTEL By Baldwin A Brady. IDS RACK STREET, l'Ull.A«KU'tt(A, PENNA Pull oul, iny boys, turn the founte,' And lbii» llio ' chime' we'11 Join; \VtD have de|Dv»aiu* in ibo 'bank,1 Ourdravtiri iir« full of 'colli Ami who «IirU inoro quietly u»C A •njiuro" mid u 4du»b,' itu.'*n, Keb, 17.1H51 tt lw4A« 11. fUi.nwiw.] July VO, I*fl5, If. [8AHL'K1. A. Hkady my rnoilier," saiJ he, •' at last I have not Deen Useless." They stoopctl to lift Iiim. " What is this?" they cried, ■" he has been shot.— It is true ; Hans, the cripple, has saved us." Thuy carried Hans to his mother, and laid bi'P before her. As she bowed in piigiiish over his pole face, 11.ins open ed his eyes and said, " It is not now dear, muther, you should weep for me; I am happy now. Yes, mother, it is true, O. K. GORMAN & Co., If YOM ixC; nCD T/■: /,, W y o M I .X C! HO V s A' prrrsTo.v, pa O ir #•!»»•« ir»* fof rwb Yft sonit iuium wo do kpri-M* so much, for Tapwott'ii H*n«al Kmi/rtilion nml Foraii'n K*elian«« Persons reniClinj{ in the a .tu airy, ami wishing to encage |iii*aa«e or hpiiiI mono* to their frien.U in nny part of Europe may J.I »Di with safety l«v applvln! a the I'ost-Olliee. TapmoU 4- Ca'l. reeeipt furnish.! hv ro firn mall. | PMtston, A.UC. sili, SrrantoH. l*n. While a young boy, he had overheard n woman remark, that "she could'nt have the small pox, becauso she had had the kinepox." The incident was never foigottrn. Years afterwards he called to to mind that no instance ol thedi«ea«e had occurred among the dairymen of the neighborhood ; while the kine pox, similar in nature, but seldom latul in ii* rosult*, was common among ihern. The kine pox, as its name indicates, prevailed among cattle and the dairymen in milking and taking care ol them also contracted it. TI.O itidaratKiHHt wottki r»«|»«MuHlf aalMMHMSe lo lliu uullUr Ili.it lie li.il r.icniilij ii..rcl..i»«l Hie abov«H"tel uiiil will e .iiltuiw III Kive I" lis m.m»ir«lne,il l.ia liwl rnreriil uUwilioil— a« i» "i ll known l.i ili« ttuljlic. Uiu c*t«u»iv« iltuiaiirtluiitt »il llic iMUlini. HI. f ft. r ! llie most inii|ihj Hcniifcnusluiliiii ill almost uuy iinniimr .if irimsiK—iHi ra laallUm will lie ixmiliiuei! l* i:ti Ui- elfi.ru nl llic |.r..|irl»- lor :iDit hlw nervunts lo reinlur Itui .i.iii' one nf lliu very Ursi in lie- Siale, ill point nf eliUu in«ai|iUt«uc.) i/t vniii' "l! jrrcs aUemlut! lu by direful »tli».s. u, U L Ki; froprultr. glisffllanu. Miss M. J. WliTIIKKBY, From I be LUtlo Pilgrim THE CRIPPLE. In the New Haven Courier, Grant Thorburn relates that in a conversation with Aaron about the voting in Congress in 1604, when Jeffreson and Burr had an equal number of votes ;lor President, .the House eoutinuing to vote through pany weeks, declaring their sitting permanent,' and bavioir their beds set up ip the lobby And their food brought from the hotels— and (bus they .continued eating and drinking and waking merry, and charging tMb lovreigii people about fifty thousand d D1— lars per day.4or.tbe sport. - Burr remarked, that at that moment of disprder, when the government was without a head, with five hundred trusty soldiers he could have seized on the government and proclaimed hitnseli its protector. "It was thus," he continued,."ibat.Qliver Cromwell drove out .the tiniDlia() Parliament, and declared him soil" Protector ; it was thus that Napoleon llonpparte, with a company of grenadiers, drove out the Council ol ,Five Hundred, proolaiming himself Emperor, it is thus," aaid he, "that all popular governments .hwe perished, and lhu« w.ill perish the American." We thiuk it Burr could be consulted spiritually now, he would have changed his opinion. The experiment ol our gov~- ernment has now become a certain taot.— Phila. Suit. Anectdote of Aaron Burr. TEACHER OF VOCAL & INSTRUMENTAL A $roH,V OF THE ,TV(t()J.. God bas his pitta For every man." PirfKTON, 1.1 7.KRKK Co.. PD. fff"Term coininimelmt MutHl»y,July 30,1HJ5. II S 1 c . rtrrnuttDi», May 1ft, 1855.—if PORT GRIFFITH HOUSE, A soldier's widow lived in n little hut near n mountain .village. Her only child was u poor cripple. Hans was a kindhearted boy. IIj loved his mother and would gladly have helped her bear the burdens ot poverty, but that feebleness forbade it. lie could not even join in the rude sports of the mountaineers. At the age ot fifteen years, he tell keenly the fact that he was useless to his mother and to the world. You see he had it lor me, though we di not It miw what it was. * E Sl B BEVAN Wholesale Liquor Merchants, Port Griffith, I»uz»ruo Co., Fa M I OII A l'l L P H I LB I N. I'RM'kiktok. subscriber having completed hi* pewtav- L r.ru home, at Port GtilTitli, i« prepared to arco n-nodate travellers and the public generally, in (he lieat manner nn«l on reasonable terms. The rC»C»?n* are convenient, and lhe proprietor will Cuare no efforts to make bis guests consforUUe. l{in Bar is supplied with excellent liquors, and .is table with an abundance ot the best the mar- Huns did nut recover from his wound, hut he lived long enough to know that lie had been of use to his village and to the country ; he lived to see grateful mothers embrace his mother, to hear that sho should ba considered a sacred and honored bequest to the community which her son had pruDerved at the cost of his own life. Dr. Jenner immediately began to make inquiries on the subject, and alter much observation and many experiments, convincod himselt that a person once having the kine-pox would never take the other, however much exposed lo if. (OP/'-'s/Tf. T//r n.T.s/jv) X* JL ttaton, I~* o n. n a . Wines, Brandies, Gin, Whiskeys, (Irish A Scotch Whi.-keys.) Pure JaiB«"-a ttuDn, cohtanUy on hand. I.'ujuorJ reclifi:; i in the most careful anil approved manner. Retail Dealers are invited to give them a call as they feci confident thni from their extensive assortment they can sapply all engaged in the trad# nt as low rates uj tlx; same can be done in -he cities. Pittston Dec. 8, 1851,—1 y. ■ch afford From this he formed the ideaol producing the lighter sickness in each individual in the community, by an easy prouess culled vaccination ; thus preserving them from the deadly influence of small pox, And limiting, if not entirely suppressing, its fearful ravages. Good stabling attached. MIOHARL HILBIN, port Griffith, June 2, 1851 tf 1; was at this period that Napoleon Dnnaparte was making his power felt throughout Liurope. H had decreed that 'l'yrol should belong to Bavaria, and not to Austria, and sent a French and Uavari an army to accomplish his purpose. The Austrian* rmreaied. The Tyroleae resisted valieutly. Men, women and children of th« mountain land were filled w.ith z«al in defence ot their homes. 'On one occasion, ten.thousand,French and Bavarian troops .wore destroyed in a single mountain pass, by an immense avalanche of rocks and trees prepared and hurled upon them by %n unseen foe. A secret arrangement existed between the Tyrolese, by which the approach of the enemy was to be communicated from village lo villoge by signalJiret, from one mountain heighl to another, and maleriaU were laid ready to gi*e instant alarm. The village where Hans and his moth er lived was in the direct line of the route the French army would take, and the people were full of anxiety and 'fear. All were preparing for the expected atruggle. The widow and her' crippled son alone seemed to have no part ibut to sit still and wait. " Ah, Han*," she aaid one evening. " it is well for us now that .you' can be of-little use they would else make a soldier of you." This struck a tender chord. Tlio tears rolled down his cheek. *'Another, tj am useless," cried Hans ip bitter grief. " Look around our village— all ate busy, all ready to strive for home and fatherland—J am useless." Great emergencies like those which met Hans, cannot exist in tho history of all. To all, however, lbe Tyrohee motto tnay epeak, and all will experience ,its truth.— None need stand useless members of God's greiti family. JTpetc work for every one to do, if he will look out lor it. So long as there is ignorance to jtistftiqt, want to relieve, sorrow to soothe, let there be no drones in the hive, no idlers in lhe great vineyard of tlu world. EXCHANGE AND BANKING OFFICE. rpHK subscribers .have opened an oflioe of Cfe I posit, discount and exchange, in this place, of Wyoming avenue, opposite the Wyoming House two doors northeast of Mr. Chase's store. MASON, MLSYLEUT Cfc Co. Scranton, May 18, 1855. DR J. A. HANN, Offi-o In Dr. Dorr's Drug Store, Mam Street. PITTSTON, if a December 17, 1852. it was in 1776 that -he,commenced his invesligaiious, but such was the ignorance and superstition of the common people, and the prejudices pf the higher classes ibut for .twenty years |ie toiled on unnoticed and almost, unknown, tiis statements in the public journals and newspapers were considered as the daydreams of an idle, fanciful man, and lhe only attoiHion shown tliem was ridicule and contempt. O. R. GORMAN, M. P. ,{.c«pectfu|]y tcniicra his Profe»»lonuUervicc« to the citizens of PitUton and vicinity. Office in the Post Ltfice, lUUtlan. illg.2, 1H!)0. l*\ A. PRICE & CO,, COAL MERCHANTS. OJiee—Wesl side Main street, PULslon Luterne county, P«• AugmttO.lHCT. .. tf- ENGINEERING AND SURVEYING. The do-as -you. Like Princ New York Independent, -in the phvsicial degeneracy ' people, speaks as fpllou' '' The child's will If tbey dp not choose lip; Jf they choose they must have lh( that instinct is no m wnaiever it may be isee them in their keeping late hoprr bed with the birdsand lighted rooms, should be cool anc bread, pudding ant hot tea and coffee to of nerves and stoma early done can nev machine imperfectly can never be made ' David Schooley. WOULD r. npeclfully luuumuce ui 11m puWio Unl lie Ml ill continues tlio n«BUO0 of tfin above prohsCuDn, in all its branche*, and hold* himself in ivudinets* atoll time* to attend to any buaiuo** in the lioo ol 1. In tho above narrative, which was the more useful to-his country, the poor crippled boy who lighted the firo on the nioumain lop, or a common, able-bodied soldier ) Being provided with a full ami complete set of instrument*, and hiving had nmple experietice, ho Hitler* him «olf capable of in any aud evary department of calling. Office yi K,«r of ttotler** 8tore, up^Hatra. Survey in*,Engineering, Drafting Fashionable Barber and Hair I tester Out genius, aided by patient industry, at lust triumphed. In 17D8 he published hU celebrated work, entitled, "An Inquiry into the Cause and Effect* ot Kinepox," which is now found in almost every physician's library, and is considered outof the best ever written on the subject Attention was gradually culled to ihu.niat. ier, and after sorpe hesitation bis plan was adopted in the hospitals and other public establishments of Europe and America. England delayed longest to yield its sanction to the great discovery, but Dr. Jenner lived to see his hopes, realized, and hi« fellow-men freed from one fearful destroyer. For a few years public honors were heaped upop fjifp, but a! the £ge of seventy four, in January, 183p, he was glad to lay them all aside and go to his long rest. Out Door North of Butler House, l-ITTSToh. PA. 2. If-any one feels very anxious to be useful in some way, and labors very diligently tor this object, may notany ouo be successful 1 Amerioaa Newspapers 4C4KC « HA YD EN, li TtO Til Kits, WBOLEdALfi dealer* in ThnriWlt. Jiiul*;uiauries, £ .C*ood», YV atcl»e», Jewelry, SILVER AND PLATED WARE, The first newspaper published in North America was printed in Boston, 1690.—- Otily one eopj of that paper was known to be in existence. It was deposited in the State Pap«r Office in London, and was about the size of an ordinary sheet of letter paper. It was stopped by the Government. The Boston News Letter was the first regular paper. It was first issued in 1704, and .was printed by John Allen, in Pud. dipg .Lane. The contents of some of the eprlj numbers were very peculiar. It haij a speech of Queen Anne to Parlia-pent. delivered 120 days previously, and thi: -was the latest naws from England la oni of the early uumbers, there was an an npuuceniem that by order qf ;he Postmaster general of North Amerioa, thi post between Boston and New York set out once a fortnight. Negro men, womei and children were advertised lo be soh and a oall was marie upon a woman whi had stolen a piece of fino lace worth 14« a yard, and upon another who conveyed i piece of fine caliao under her riding-hood to return the same, or to be exposed in thi newspapers. This pioneer paper was pub lished .74 years ; it the leading Tor paper, prior to the Revolution. The ton Guzette was the organ of the and was issued ' -W" rgf Oualomers oilDaidtDt} lo wiih the itimoal car" aswJ despatch. Vtibnc patronage resiteclfuily solicited. inly *D. 14«. »»»■ K K N N E U " S 3. Should persons choose a useful occupation because they love to be useful, or will it nnswer just as well, to choose a very useful employment because we can make more money in suoh an employment?OoM Pane, n*hln«r Tnckli, Jw., *c. -Morchnula ami •Peddlers KttpnUwi on liberal terms. Wm. lluy'lom J . S Trsey Hay.too, John Mayden. ( I «*"■ H.iyden. New Alillordvr«i»M Not. 0,1855. ITVtRY AND EXCHANGE. NEAR THK TOST OPFIOK, SCHASTON, PA. Heatly nl fill tin's Iti aecmnmodnle with the test pf nurses and vehicles. ScranUm, Fet. gi, .lSM-ty- , Tlie old Butler Sta*d. GOODS FOR THE PEOPLE! ON hand and for stile at.tlAkt'S Drug Store opposite th« Baain. (Junr W, 1855. HYDRAULIC ■CEMENT A Touching Scans, — C*"- subscribers won)') iMHMMf to Ike cMlsmiS of X FHtHon nml vicinity, that they havo Just received , from the city and opemM a large and varied supply of DRY GOODS, GROCERIES & HARDWARE, which limy are » Urn* »t prtorn u low ua lliey can b« pnrchaaed for in northern IVmtsylvititia. A special care haa Intuit taken la the selection of their Mock, lo pnwtlH such goods as are beat calculated to meet the wants of Lite people of Uie mining region, ami - The Miner aod Laboring Mao will Ibid here full value for bis woue, io such urtictea aa alj lumillus aland In luted Of. Theirguods bai v been pnji hosed upon terms wkioh enable Ihetn lo a,'11 „t Hates, and those who giv« them a trial will llud this lo be no Idle saying, but worthy of full belief la anything needed In the Grocery and Provision, or Dry Woods iiue /-if jo step ff\ au.l wjaniine ottr ttawmmout. PULEN, COOL k Co. A correspondent of the Glmira Republican says that it) a trip over the New York and Erie road, an incident occur red that touched every .beholdpr'js heart with pity. A comparatively yopng ladv dressed in deep mourn jug—her -hjjibaqd having recenily died—was traveling .-Sopthward, having in hor euro and keeping a youog daughter ot soma six years. The little girl was as bright eyed as an autumnal sky and delicate as a hyacinth—her emaciated finger* as delicate and transparent as the pearls of Ceylon. Touohingly Lieautitul was the affection of her heart for ttie mother, whose solicitude for the daughter's cemfurt was unceasingly manifested.— Looking ever and anon from the car Ufindow saying: "Mother, ! am weary, when shall we get home V Alter a time she fell into a gentle slumber and awakening suddenly—a radlent smile overspread herfeatures, she exclaimed pointing upward,— "Mother, there is papa !—home .at last!'' and expired. ltwasy«t many a weary mile to the mother's home, but ihe angels pitying the I idle sufferer, gathered her to IVradiwj of InDooeuoe. "This is the setD know that instinct is child, particularly wh rounded on all sides wjt cies. To ask a child table what it would what .it asks for, merely for it, »• a very common D is a* cruel as it it, common, on the children. OBO. W. BRAINERD * Qo. 103 Murray, near Welt SWoot, Now Yorlr Oito. W. BKAINKRD, lApf. 'J, 1MD0-Iy*. DAVID BSI.DJiN A man who;ki any degree relieves ||ie sulleringt) of mankind ifi a public benefactor, and the name of Dr. (Edward Jenner wilt bo one ot the most honored. JAMB8 li. SELFRIDGE, Hktlttci' DotMr in • " My boy, my kind, dear «on. you are not uvelern to me." TOBACCO, SNUFF AND CIGARS (No. 58 North Third St., 3 dnor» above Arch st. " res, to you; I cannot work for you, cannot support you iu old age. Why wu* 1 made mother 1" E. A. II. PHILADELPHIA. 0OW* TOWN Grocery and Provision Store ♦Union, Ni»-8, ma. C• Hush, Hani," said bin mother ; "thenn repining thoughts are wrootf. You will live to find the truth of the old proverb: CHam;uns Relapsing into Paganism. —It is said thai since Ceylon become subject to the Christian Quoen of Englaiil, it has boconin much more of a heathen country than it was before. Three hundred years ago the Portuguese made great of forts to convert the natives to the [toman Catholic 'faith. Then the Dutch had possession of the island. They divided it intc 240 parishes; built numerous churches, translated numerous portions of the Bittlf into the native tongues, maintained ropean missionaries, and even aony iho natives to be baptised. In 1795 . the uland fell into the band* of the K«- NEW JEWELRY SUTHERLAND, dealer in Gnrcerica, Pro. 5 *i»ion«, Flour, Feed, if-c., in K'. 0. ''lurk's wilding nearly opposite the " Keystone Stor»," Main street, littston J»«. Uoode flol'i Jpr ready pay only, and fat extremely low price*. " Small profit* nnd quic k salts," i« th6 invito fey which I u«i determined .to »uc- L'CC(f, Pituton, Nov. 2ftth, 1H55.—W E would cMl tf"' attention of (ha pulillc I Ju» a New and Improve.] pl»n or ijSjrOnK i.rUUelal ■v*h on Outtn b» !D»»«■ Thl» to ..rpwlor to any no vet I»«d for temporary or dllHcult oww-iiM'l nurchimwi lh« right C■D u« the Improvcil Gatta rercha. partial or fnll.eU.of u*th will hi. plan with «»«**, rr^^c. ,\j77 tfj WUkaabarra, M. A.VV YANKEE NOTION SIOBE JAMKS would most roapoclfully announce tolha ■ People of Pfttston ami vicinity, that lu» ban opened a v ery dealrabto atoalt Of .bDw«*iry, Yankoe Notions, CloiUing, BooU.Shopa. llalV'apK, l'bliing Tack.li;, I'aU'nt Jtovdiri. Pistols, Looking Ghwsua, &e., &cM In tt»e W«t end of UuiHh and Lamb's Brick Building, nearly oppobil© the offlco of Ihp Ptmnnylvuuia Coal Company. frucn along practical experience in o?cry dfpartmont of hit pursuit, ho tlaiws himself prepared to conduct hurt«« hs at anon rattm and in Mich a manner as to make his ustbe r.aironoge of All clnsaes. Ilolng ' —of At- " Ood has hi« plan For erery m»n." Llitle did Hans think that ere a tew weeks had passed, tbia trulb waa to be virility 1 in a remarkable maitnf-r. Easter holiday*, tbe femive time of Switzerland oame. The people lost their fears pi invasion in sporU of the season. All were busy in, the merry-making all but liana. He aloud alone ou the porch of bia mountain hut overlooking the ' village. ■BfiiiMt.1 jgi -~r- — , UiraDrit):or ul a lure J u»lulClialiuiuui 01 , huu icrlptioug - sssiiliis liim » CMll, •McHiuiin* n» Uiem»»4*es. i isM.ty. |
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