The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, January 07, 1854, Image 2

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Q
y Morning, Jon. 7.
8 , : Ntl4.llr, Editor and Proplistors
,44 Uri/A Associate Editor.
f G1E144441, XINING LAW:' -7,
B. BANWAX :—Yon are aria:ions to-learn the opin
ions ol your lellowasulptiu In reference to the
General Mining Law. A fiser facts. briefiv stated.
may amid in [orating proper, yiews upon the .sub.
jut. The Coal within five mites -of Pottsville,
aborts watoilevel,is nearly all worked out. Slopes
era temporary in - their. character, reputing new
lino to be milt every few years. involving large
outlays, Mei became vatoelcsa, and are abandoned,
all soon as three fa l low lifts ant worked. emit . *
w h en m um sock, writ be used for centuries, until
all the veins cut, or that can be • cut, by them are
taken out. They requite largv outlay% of m otle y
that cannot be reimbursed Amid they are compla,
zed and lllVlrrld years .10 operation. They there*
.fore requite - agouti and sun credit merely for their
completion. Them are very few localities that
can he opened and put in operation to the Whits
Ash veins for less than Two Handfed Thousand
Rollers, malty wilt require Five Hundred Thou
sand Dollars. Titers ere ad isfid•owatts Wks:thaw
the rasps, or disposition, to spied suoh large
Slims of motley upon their estates. The result is
• inevitable. Thejoartige of the lower Coal field
azusi remain when" it is,-end gradually decline, or
else stock companies Mmil be*unted to raise this
muse, vita &vetoes. the -females resources of
the region. The isbjector miry urge that our esti
mates are too high, end: that the Carey Sbaft, at
ilt
St Lair , is roof of this. Rat we must not4ir
-4
get that th entiera Ms other I lines In the region
situated as faverablybs this. ger men have the
Iwo will, energy and petrel ace of Enoch W.
Manses, few th e libentlit of Henry C. Carey
and his associates, and there is no other plate, so
far as we know, where Eighty Thousand Doltsrs
will sink a shalt and prepare Collieries capable of
mining Titre* Hundred Thousand tons of the best
Coal. as 'the Shalt show/. ever mined in the
County.; such Coal as would iodate Wallace de
Eothermel, and other shippers at Richmond. if
they bad the chance, to ed ranee large amiss alma
ney upon the Cannes In order to secure me sahrs
of the Coal. The Carey cenenY is au exception,
and the parties mu:ceded are forattuths that it ow so.
Other lands dot so wall located must remain cede
veloPed rimy years.'whiferivat reelects absent) and
carry off CM trade. saless some plan be adopted to
b r i ne Dams mita to the County. The friends of
rbeTkvinet much believe thut auch's Lase,
mill coateleale to the desired result.
„The writer presents a, very., specious ar
lutaent, but the facts in tbeitistory of the
Regionwrift cot bear Itimout. ' First, because
hank* all the improvements in the Region
hive been Made by, individtiala—the stOck
holderint Companies among us being mostly
content veilb raising some temporary excite
ment about their property to get rid of their
Investmenti r r t an advanced price, and the
new propriettniaiming in their turn to vic.
tichize °there. The investments of ladividu.
als'alune la the Rvgion. nosti‘amount to over
Titre* million dollars (83,000,000).
And nea4 as a general thing, it is riot our
practical operatOrt, Who ask for the in undue.
tion M Corporations in ouraudst. hut, they
are mostly mere speculators. ,
• The Governor in his Message mentions a
significant fact s , on this eubject,—that since
the enactment of 't.be general law to encour.
age manufactures, in 1849.6 years ago, there
.:, ; bare sayer not been a dozen companies ehar
teted under ; and under fhe• Weneriii
, •
Midina Law of the session of 1853, but one
applibation for mining puiposes, and in that
instince,operations have not been conimen•
cod. ,To which he adds that this Law should
De extended to other tounties Out included in
its provisions. 4•lf the people desire it."—
Aye, there's the rub. I , We insist upon it that
the citizeui of Schuylkill do not want It.
We agree with the , writer that Ehatts are
preferable to slopes, for working the
veins of•thia Region, and that heretofore ado
?much of the burden of the expense of priltxt
'
tag his works has fatten upon the operator,
often crippling il.notlentytly ruinind his Ili.
tart labors ;'but are there not laws enough
• elresdy In oPetallou,ito warrant the associa
' lion of sufficient capital, without the inter
vention of the General Minrog Law!
• Walla not propode io argue the 'question
now. tint merely thr i ow bin these suggestions
in reply to onr correspondent, for the consid•
Sired - on oi the public. Some movement should
be madeitmong the people to ascertain slug
and fair expression of sentiment on this sub
ject,st an early 'day in the Legislative rep
Sian. ' • . .
Late ten from HarrisbuOsParet is that
..or peop e at ould prepare themselves gull!
dickey.
• Q7' DRY Goons irtanc.—The N. York
" Courier gives the follovvini, as the amounts
of dry goods thrown upon the market of 'hill
city, only fur the past five • years, freetioif
omitted
bryGoods Po station Per y p
Year. , or N. York. of U States. Read.
1849 - 50,000.000 21,951.000 2.04
1650 • 58,000,000 23,246,000 , 2.49
18.51 60,000,000 24,250,000 2.48
1652 62,000.000 24,500.000 253
1853 , 92,000,000 25,000,000 3.68
In other, words, comments the writer,
while the Laporte of Dry Goods at New
Yark, in 1849, were equivalent to $2.04 per
head of the aggregate population of the whole
country, they have increased to
.83,66 per
head during tne year 1853, or eighty per
, cent. In 1853, beyond' the proportion in tne
year 1849.
- There has likewise leen en enormous ex
pansion in the consumption of Woolen and
Cotton Goods within a new years past
amounting together to 822.792,000 in 164
when the population was 19,241,000, an
,100, 000 in the year 1853, when th k epo
Cation is about 25,000.000.
- The resources of the country are greats'
than four or five years since, but our imports
horn abroad, especially of articles of mere
loitary, more than keep pace with our in
creased wealth. In the expanded and bank
rapt, year of 1836, the consumption 01 for
eign goods in this country was 1110.93 per
grid: it afterwards felt to $4.25 per head,
{1843) tins has now again increased to $lO.OO
•per head'ici the year 1853:
''"G *NR SCHEME IN CONGRESS.
ii ii
eas that Legislative corruption id not
con nedf to Pennsylvania of tale. The
Wiabington Star in the following makes a
AetiCns charge against the integrity of Con-
Inrii !-the members, we kuoiv, are not im
maculate: ' .
•
" We 'lmo that the atstanees of trim pa
tent rights, which, together yield perhaps a
million per annum in tariffs, have combined
to induce Congress to extend them this win•
ter, t for seven fears longer. They are sajd
to ,have raised. a fund of 8100 . 000 to be die:
tributed at this point to carry through their
object. We hare seep sisal satisfying us of
the truth of this story. Their champagne is
already flowing in Washington like water.
and their atones-backs are also roast•
log" right merrily. Daavy members want
few cool hundreds, or. It may be, thour.
,tads, to bet at faro f We aball shortly give
• all the parucilars of this a:herue, it we can
irbtiuo them."
, trrcarse, nr Ntw Yoair.—Froinan
chi utile in . the Cutiriei, we learn that
.the
whole number of periwig 'arreited in New
York city. during 18.53. and -disposed of in
the three Conrufof Oyer end Terminer, (lens
rll end Speeial Sessions, wee nearly Four
Tho4sand. (3,893) and, 1,343 of whom, do
having ataruinatious and trials, were Ali
charged. 223 men and 29 women have been
attitented . to imprisonment, in the State Prie
run. the aggregate time of sententa . beii3c929
years and one Month. -From these Coins
alma netirly 810.000 in the shape oi fusel:id
:ones We been paid into the City ,Tyeaguty
sinie the first of January 1853.
• Of die 830 eetivictioas to Ostend Sessions,
AIR were upon their eclair/salons and pies;
Inctuding .307 for selltog liquor
without :muse.
:117Asorats POlrglirOL 'o6=lLtiT.
We. ildher from the Polite &mistier, pub
]irked irohe. Philadelphia papers, that, du
nag the year past, over Eight Thousand,
potioot hart been plieed inlhe cells,, inost
41 Wimp were artested for drunkoweiiiad
disciaderly,konduct. '
,
.ET Tre, Maryland Legtslavora assembles
=biennially.. The *Reston for this year coin
.',. . tottittd oc :Wednesday, and is limited 40
*,4:6 ill i g lOth of March. The' Ohio legulaoare
to Mast . Wednesday, . 1
' , I
Wu published a statement of the emu*
meat in New York cityLehout the hue atteeti.'
preacbiog; and the street of Mr, Parsons,
the time of the agitation of the subj%t, and
took omatdon to cdndeaui the course of Arch.
bishop Hughes in this particular instance;
and of the general con tee uf the Rota t ishPriesta
and puss in thus country for the last yeafie
two, rah calculated to work more injury than ,
good to their people. We -now append cm
rohomtiee opinions from threi - -01 the leadi ,
rag mug:opera of the, country, and little
special to them4--Catholics arid
Protestants alike may be p:oilted by their pet,
Ca
fusel:
Now that the case,ol; the Preacher Parsons,
sal/id:due week was elevated into momen
tary consequenee, has pastied iota oblivloile
along with the. apprehensions of those who
feared it might result' in a disturbance of the
public peace, we Cannot help referring to the
spectacle it ushered into the world, Of II
private citizen appearing before the public,
prgclamatioa is hand; side by side with the
head of the City tieVernment. to aid in pre=
serving the public order. In the general oh
licitude that no breadteef be peace should be
committed, the striking assumption of power
manifested by the Archbishop of the Roman'
Catholic Church in coming torward to hold '
in check the riotous temper of a portion of
ourpopulattoo, was Wholly park/served or
overlooked. We allude to thi cirturnete*.
Cie pow, to show what strides itlegitharite
authority um silently and stealthily make iet
the exercise tat irresponsible Rower, even unL
der 'Rroveromeot of the People, without .
provoking rebuke, or evert attracting especial
attention. - • ,
We chose to let the spectacle. pass for the
day,- ilong with the excitement which gave
rise to it, not wishing, even by a suggestion.
to throw any to t:mace *thwart a pur
ostensibly laudable. 'But it is proper, alls
that all is passed; to express our avereion7to
this exhibition of priestly . authority in aulet
the only regular and legitimate magistrates
holding office iy the will 01 the whole pen%
pie.. There is something fearful in the vs:e
rode of an individual holding in big bends
the'moral, power of seraytug thousands and
tens, of thousands of mg to do his bidding.
It is especially learful L 3o.see that power
backed by the weight of spiritual prerogative
claiming to emanate from the Almighty
Himself, and so lending the Outency of su
pernatural' agencies tit ealura.the decrees of
trail and erring, and, it may be, wicked
man. We protest. utterly. 4.gainst its eXer
mee, especially when it touches toe civil ad.
ministration. we protest against any priest- ,
hood rearing its, head alongside of the regu.
lady constituted officers of iustice, - either by
way of coutnenance, sanction 'r
exclaim agaiust the remotest intimation
the bridal of Church and State. (
In the particular case before us, .thet h"
bishop's Ineueatlon was in accordant 'lh
the general desire, and - his recot&u, atm.
.in the side of peace ant order. -to me
spousible and absolute power ohs. ertised,•
But its Exercise is, none the less ectwaable
on that account. On, the coo Y. it makes
suchpower even more dant' .s in its intim
roca and operation. For it ertaia evils are
tolerated in the hope or r-Pectatwa of its
contingency and possibleioud. But let it he
bible authority has
remembered that mese
a flower lot m i n e / Nu noensu rate .wt th its
ability for good—i if an Archbishop may
quell a riot, so, h , Ise, be may foment and
create one. Au tit not b 4 forgotten that
the i d ubnc e o f i ech a proedure as the one
Oefure us. is pemi ce cious; 'even when it is ex
etc/bed with, e best intentions and'for the
must p rals ,aturthy ends. If the Archbishop's
pwaiaEmv uus are to become fastitonoble,
as a does of preserving the public peace.
how t o iig will it be before they will be ;eget
tied,tl scene portions of the curutnunny as
a w eesstly. How lung before their absence.
ut , excioug occasions, will be;the signal for
r yfischßti Ii the custom of ,proclamations
r circular letters from ibis (puree is to ob
tam among us, when agitatitars 'may arise in
the public mind, demanding alpossible elev.
else of the Lull lone of the civil authoritiee.
it may be plautibly argued . thLit.an omission
cf the.sarcerdotal command` may work inft
eite peril ttsthe public tranquility. And how
lung will it be, if the public or munici
pal administration, shall leau in any de
gree upon such control over the inflamma
tory or disorderly elements of society, before
the Mayor may be couitrained to appeal to
the Archbishop of
_the Cathelia Church for
aid in arresting the ravages of some future
spar-yard riot ?
This it a question of germs import, end
in view of these suggestions, we submit that
hereafter' the practice of issuing circular let
ters or proclamations to the. public from
`peace
sources, whenever the public
peace may be thought to be in jelpordy,
oe more honored in the breach Mania the
observance. If the civil authority is tsantll:
cient to rt___lakap*
`better, for the sooner a legitimate remedy
will be supplied.—N. Y. Trtbune.._
. .
•
I
'WEIGHTY OPINIOI'4B.
MVOllte PROCLAMATION.
So far. as the proclamation advises end ex
huts to peace, it is commendable, but there
isa tone and spirit pervading it whieh tan
nut tail to arrest the attention of .every intel-
iigent man. •
In the first place:Ai/treats Csiholicism as
410 isolation, acid ;Catholics as a 'class of ctt•
izens separate and distinct from all other ett
!nos, as though they were another and dis
tinct race, having different dative, different
rights; and owing a different allegiance from
ihe great mass of the people. As it one com
mon prbtection, one panoply of rights, one
system_of laws, one class of duties, were not
common to all. And herein is a great error,
a great collision between Romailism and
Republican institutions, which "Jonre, Arch
bishop tif New. York," seldom fails to make
conspicuous (in all occasions. It is impossi•
ble for Rornauism, as it is with the Atilt
' bishop, to understand how a man's duty, £l5
a citizen, his allegtancOto the State, can be
separated ham Ins duty. as a Christian and
his allegiance to hie church. In our theory
of government the great leading - priuciple is,
that a man's religious faith has nothing to do
with his rights or duties as a.citizeu, nothing
whatever to . do with his, atlegianceth his
country. That the Chutch and Ntate.are en
tirely.and utterly separated, and that all who
.re citizens stack& on a common platform,
and make up the - ; aggregate of the people as
, rie body, over which the guarantees of the
Constitution. and the laws are thrown with
out a single reference, or h ponible•itiguity
a+ to the religions faith of any. Catholi
lain; or Prottstanism, . I ‘ or Mormon] m, ar
Ninhornedanisru—no • matter what creed so
ever may be professed by the inclifititial,
makes iho sort of 'difference; the people - stud
the whole people, constitute an aggregation,
without parts and without individuality.—
Such are the views which our Constitution,
our theory of government,. the spirit of our
instittitions take of
,tnemasse.-of the people.
No line of separation, no distinction of clas
ses or of political or religiousfaith is tolera
ted: Not so with " JonN, Archbishop of
New York." . He insists:that the Catholic
citizen shall be separate,'distinct and apart
IromProtestant and from all Om; citizens,
That they shall be isolate, always'by them.
helves, to be addressed, and governed, and
considered ace 'distinct and independent bOdy,
zoierned by tfigerent conshlerations, and liv
ing under a' different theory of allegintice.L--
&nee his 'proclamations are nut addressed to
theft as citizens having a common Mtereet
is the peace of society, the supremacy of the
law, and theNneservetion of social order.'
but' s Catholics, owing allegianceoo far as
obeying the laws is concerned,' to iome•other
power thaa.that of tke government of the
country. •
In the next
_place the ides that there is a
conspiracy against our Catholic citizens, their
rights, their' property or their lives, is a very
fo iltsh as well as a must wicked absurdity.
We cannot award to the Archbishop bou
nty of motive. in this matter. He is too
well informed. understandi too well the
American people, our institutioos and our
proclivities to believe a thing to entirely
without the range of till probability. A con.
spiricy against the Catholic citizen 1 Aud
'tor what purpose and' to what end I By
whom concocted and bow to be executed !
Bishop lintrze knows, or ought to know,
that such a thi,tig is not only utterly improb-
Welts conception, but absolutely tinpossible
of performance. It is a gross libel• upon the I
American people, upon the country and' the
laws. But it serves to keep up the distinc•
non, to preserve the line of separation.te.
tweet' the Catholic and all other eititens,—
To prevent the growth of a common spas*.
thy, a brotherhood of feeling growing cut'of
a common platform of privilege and a corn.
moo citizenship. It is one of the effects of
our institutions , to break the sway of bigotry,
to loosen the hold of intolerance upon the
human bears, and spread 'abroad kindness
and charity towards all. Hence, When for
' Slivers come' to reside among us, and see
the practical •workings of a systeirt of free
dom in religioni faith, of universal toter..
Lion. their sectarian prejudices become modi
fled from year to peer. The bath oh thinking
and investigating for themselves
i grows up
on them, and in inverse ratio to that growth
it the powered the Priesthood over them
weakened. It is this tendency towards inde-
Indiums in matters of faith, this gradual ,
wearing away ht the power of the Priest
hbod that the Archbishop dreads, Met the
f'.i .
&thole clergy, that Rome itself dreads, and
t it wicked invention of a Protettant con.
s iraOr against our Catholic citizen is retie
ted to, to keep alive prejudices and 'aectatian
bitterness, and through that to keep the Ca.
illielmilepoistos*dieroueirlittes
bing *dm otOvoilsookaiitit of out ilk
vim**, to kelp 'Osal• "Ow( *bhp
spirOkeldat Aspriteen alkomt to
-emu* c a 1, 3 / 4 0160,, Am* and the
theriTary ou U- iblewey42ll
can tb• power af tbe nsideed be primer
(N. 1 . 4 Rfasger.
ThtsdOeumerittuheed severely critfefeed
SAdAustieinnedi-lt WOUPhale talk.
.inselet — pretessiosit and artogance. - The
froutprielateidattispuweroisid boldly lints
Elbe etword;, 'That iliel*N4he day whist the
Rom - anisti cis mi*to bail* by the /*ore
loolreirforward -;to by the bpi and his
'ass& With • " make bug ' Thank 'ea
T , lugs. ,
the day to - not - yet. and - •it PromatantiaM
true to its mission, it will never come.
But is not the tact that proclatnauoni are
Issued at all, a Singular tiottuneuttin ihintk•
tune: of Riudantem, and of the power *ERA
mish priests any 'their Baba - rqiur.
Archbishop ut New York,!' is a sworelnfil•
yet ot temporal
' prince, the Pops of Roily
and.he issues his proclamation to his Sub.'
leas with all the sulfites*. of a viceroy .0r:4;
despotic" sovereign. and it , is-obeyed,
without a murmur. Thus we have *Om.
plum ,is soirriti 0 11 44 *Clang Wind
the siletit broil° rills is more powerful beer
the settjecui ofeta government than WOO&
stained authority of the country. A denoted '
Romanist :wall obey, the comniexidi 'ofQ his
Bishop before the demands of the mink:mai
( - Ir civil law,,when a Conflict between them
occurs. The Mayor of New York mar
his proihamition to ell good citizens is
the peace. This will answer for Prot
but faits as a dead letter on Catholic
His eyes..are turned to ° the Archir
Palace. Ile waits-to hear what I
will sty. - If he is commanded tr
street preacher. be will try to
is told to stay away; he will r
Lord Iq)in'st will is hts
How astonished oui'Pr
zen would be. were B
ur Bishop Potter, or"'"
Remo, or Rev. Mr,
er Protestilut clergyr
antilop directing el
members of their
assay from' bear'
Priest Garliod,
proclamation
of derition,
certain to
reuce.
not love
not rece
with
Will
vii
Inwrigtit,
4pson, Dr.
or any oat
issue his proela-
Pants, or all the
iii flocks, to sLky
top O'Connor,:pr
Sedini ! Stich
. received. with4.ll°ol
, would be all the nacire
tie unwarrantable litefie
not because Protestatitt,to
terate their pastors, anctdo
. admonitions and. wait:dins
. and ireverence, but because they
of no intereference 'With their; "ei•
mina] rights, and especially with
of Individual judgment 'and roe
1. They would , eonsider such' a
Amonition and dictation 'as au
aterference with their right, and with
duties and responsibilities of the coil
government, and as bordering on the alto
gaol pretensions of the priesthOod in former
ages. An 'American Protestant moister
would feel, if he were guilty of such an act,
as it he bad usurped' the powers of the civil
government, degraded the people over whom
God bad made him an overseen; and badatc
ularlied his ministerial vocation.
One cannot but contemplate with alirm
the concentration of such an'imtnefise Power
in our midst, swayed . by a few minde, 4ind
all soiject, to one foreign head. A Ronan
prig `has nothing in common with•the Mass
of the country. He has no iodividuall plop •
erty. no wife and children, no home anch;na
yonallttschnienta. The glory of the Pepe,
the itfilanctment of the Church, the iflefAsed
povier of the prieithood, the. complete
dineol the minds of the people to an enure
and unreasonable oliedience to the comratinds
of the Church—these are hie objectiosind
aims. He seeks for nothing .higher, nothing
'more ennobling. Haying quenched out of
his own bean those natural and humanizing
sympathies which bind men in the feknily
reiauon and to *octal lik e —himself an 116111.7
'ed biing, with nothing to expect or hope
'tor but in the glory and power of the Chirch
—he is a It instrument 'of his master', the
Pope, and must', be, in the very natum of
r f
things, a bitteoe to a government Where
the people rule. He cannot beta republican.
The genius of his Church' frowns upofti all
independent thought and• Action. Obedience
.—uncomplaining, unresisting,. uninqu#ing.
'implicit obedience—is the great, law of, the
Church. Disobedience is a Sin whicii is
hardly forgiyec, - and always severely punish
ed. Vice, senivality; debauchery—thesemay
be overlooked or slightly punished; 04414-
dzence never.
These Priests. thus separate and apartfrOm
the people, hold their positions solely at the
wilt of the Pope. His breath can makefor
unmake them. They are hla . Subjeet4,las
vassals. All their future hopes, as well as
• present position, depend upon him. Their
interests are bound up with that of their
Chief Bishop. They tire the complete; add
wilting instruments of his will.:
We say, then, that no tood patritit can
contemplate without: alarm the ooncenttiition
or such taamilise Aolfaus
that Romanist* are quite as submissiie to
their priests as iniodic, ;countries. ',The
priest is their authority—the "higher !la*"
to them. The number of these subjects of a
priestly power is increasing erinnallitome
three thousand by emigration. They
congregated about our cities in such numbers
as to overawe and niesuurpably contriil the
'municipal authorities. Nearly every one of
our largecities has been on the verge of.':fear
ful riots from• th is cause within the las t
and what lien Instructive fact, the Mayors of
Cincinnati, Baltimore and New Yolk, tc
their attempts to please the Romamits by
Suppressing free discussion, broke the; laws
of the land, and were compelled by in out
raged community to retrace their eteio.. It
is thus Seen that tve cannot trust our anthor
iiies, beset as they ore continually by the
concentrated power of Popery. In thidettug•
gle the people have, no matey but in,thena.
selves. They_must see that their rigtits are
not infringed •at the 'demands of a 'haughty
Catholic priest; and to propitiate -the 'Voters
his nod can control. There is no safety but
In vatchlutuees.—Pittsburgh Gazette.
Irani Affairs.
nr Mr. Myer Set4use, of this piste; has
beat &Amsted Mercianle itipinsufer of tiff Cowl.
tY, for 1854—a good oeliction. ,
Masona.—Getirge H. Meeebe - Esq.,
of Tamaqua, bus been reappointed Diatrio9NPutY
Grand Master for this County ; and Dr. William A..
Robins, of Muteniville, District Deputy 1314 d High
Priest tor the same, These gent!anten bays been:
efficient °dicers end univerntlly popular anion; the;
craft.
lar We want more lor-al reporters ittrougho
out the County., Can't a contributor be 'rduind hx
every 'town, tor our collitnns? We desigtip
the Journal a faithful deguentreotypelitthe:Asyings:
and doings of oat people, and wo zgoeld lOce them'
to become inierested andlette a propoitConSite pride
in it theattelves, Try your hands, triends,
rr Schtiviklt COunty Alms House::--At
stated meeting or the Directore of the Pooi; held at:
the Alms House, Sanitary 3, 1851, the folloeriet
persons were appointed officers fur thd:'.ensuley
Sear:
Charles Mullen, Steward; Edward Lbottgeed;
Clerk; earned U. and B. F. Sharman, Piyeirtans
to the House; Samuel, Berlucky, Out Door l'hy
sioian ; Robert M. Pittpar; Esq., Counsel:.
~
a/Attic/4 to cru:t : regret, we canOol find .
1 -T
zoom for the interesting letter of our remont,
frlend enure—we condones the following hems ; --1
A public examination of the pupils of Mr. C. Ei ! ;
Pinkerton, in Goograiihy, using • Pelton'al ;India.
Napo, was had last lock, and gave mind 'via ,
faction. A Mile soli of J. B. McCreary'. Zia , i+ sel.'d to have poirtieuleAy disimguithei hitaself. l' .
A large meeting of McMillian of Ms wallonci'M
the County was heldo3 Monday everottig lag, is{
*ramble to theta:matt n of a am Cacti, out Of
i,
putt of Schuylkill , uphur and LehanOt. Ti
matter wart referred tit a committee. li
The Tremont Public Sehooties full tOaxcroca. `
12r8cituylkall Female Bslie-80eaty.—t
A 'tiled meeting of ibis Society. was Mild in the
Sei-ontl M. E. Marcie on Monday evening. ;
•
Mt. • ANDREW RVSSEL wu chain'lrian.:
daft Ina gr. Bhowes eystobmig
The mating,wal opened with greyer ki* Rev. 1„'
H. Ceitle; eller *Veit Rev. D. Steolcdilivered
banttful address on tie Origin; Divinity end Liier r
wr.B.i mg lenelss of the Bible. •
The itleiegit egent,lNlr.O."Weillera, beleg ' prof
riewie the following Repori ; e
The pieces cievuswi, nv to Dee: 310,1833; it
Donaldson, Sleek Valley, Vaunt_
_nonnif
Colliery, Muddy Breese, New
Wilddle Creek, Sereues, Addend, Ornate:lr Mt.
oat get and Thookestown.- -
Hp,of Femilue Melted. .
- • " 48
nobs, A l p, 47
. t,
Nov Qf English Bib* 77
, oencien • ," 2S
w o t sb , • it 1. 9
No. of English Testaments sold, i 85
Deviate I" - • " 34
- Whole No. - of Bib* sold. , • . bit
No. of Bibles &ON (Ent)
Whole Ne. Toquums sold, • 173 S'
tad. of ,Tediatuts Finn& Tot) 4
. • - 41' . , • tl ig hingum) ,
Whole No. of Bibles given; - 2
l " Teetaxneets
41 411 . B oo k s
For°Books sold :'
Damian, , ° • . vs,stv,
Total,
, •
- !- • ... •
The society mijositteekiiou
Wo3P meeting in HMI Pig* ainin4MAkintOW:
!treat, awing MOW' rntant otrebenery
- Hoek ThifAmtilit—tirah
IWO &At
••••• alai* to to illostoilks e
.6012e* oi t thio'unwed in s
r!daC 1 ' 400011 dirs Igo, for gosling • ,
l Frvs, Emil., of Friodostborg, is
Pat 1 4 10 * 1 4 two e± 2 iluagFir 1 4." 1
101sfilt. Jaws B. Mote*, bitt omit
ba ins sulroprotty pur
peading s banal bet
~ 0111
E*l:tiesecas sweidentikity appirered%
moles property Roach wikh
fluid to ilia Berk, Co- prioxi. to
11! Itirolo A ,11.00.7-
26 Ong iiipt by Cot.
to Mr. F. B. Kiercber.
iuside• sad out, sad
ITO")
bfougefotir.it. Frank
!TheiCo. Cocomii,i‘
dist•rttte Clerk, by '
eker tearer
p*rior put
w
tkeßetr"
audit:
eta
five
taken the "AmenCartifouse."
present favorable auspices, the
.er his charge, is likely to: be a'
r the travehno column/14%1-
iges.—Among the busideislchan7
*Km, we I note that,
. John Yu:lb:mon of this Owe, Gds ' did out
Colliery, iaoludmg leave sad I.l4iurpsi et St.
to Messrs. Stoic:Me Milo s, Wai. 244aesir.
ituct,-james :Neill, tor the sum of 565,000. •i .
Ralf the "Finwery, Field!' works of tkl, Rich.
;oasis,. between • this place , and New :Castr.e, have
been : transf-rred to.the ownership ot I Juries.
Tagging. Price 530,000.
Mr:Nathan Cleaver has resigned tiLg. icdllector•
ship of the NOUSt Carbon Reilread. - auit Air. At
cline! Brigham been appointed to supply Ithe va•
alai .
Ela
. . .
. car . IVaier . for tAe Borouh.—A piorosp
tioci.was submitted to the Town Council. it their
lasltuteting, come evenings 'ago, mainly to ibis et.
feet,--that application be made to the Vegislature
foOlte chattering of a Witte's . Company !with a .
Cagtitafid $50.000-11100,000, on which Ina Com
cilishould gusiantee to the atockholders a dividend.
of ii per cent--the Comm: to take 310* 4forth'
of stock, anti the Countxc OMmissioncrs 12 0 ,000 :
/F
and it was stated that the eliding Ratlread • Com.
patty Wouldsubseribe 140, 00, provided the pipes
beamsended to Palo Alto. , The water to: be ob.
taihed froM Wolff Creek, the fleservotr.tohe erec
tedort Law . ..ton's Itill, and , st. Clair'and Port Cat
boa also to be tatit,tet.. It watt laid occr. :for. 04.
mtement till - the' - next misting, next ',Tuesday
a.iieek. •••• . ' li•
Wis Merely mention this matter tor the Mforma•
of tbei peOple, in order that the determina
tion of the Council may he 'assisted, as it ahauld
be ;by public sentiment oa the subject.
Soldiers of 'lBl2.—At a large,.aatl re
.
rieetable meeting of the Soldiere ofland oth
T!
ei,citizuna•uf Schuylkill County, bel4, in the Court'
• t
linos's in the Borough of rott,vilkt, on the sth, of
Dtc. 1853, JACOB Ml ICH, li q.,of'ricdene.
bntg, was on motion appointed Poesiouitt, and JOUN
Hkt3t, of Notth Manbeim, and Joun'lni.min, of
Ternoin, were appolted Vico Pa bidetate; and Mt
clestu Farm. of Friedensotirg was appointed Sec
'rclary• I '
, •
•
:Why ion Charles Fietilev,latter :toted
_ ..iereupc „ a 0.... -_
1 ,
the object of the meeting Waif some ,apropriale
ntrnarke, offered the followingmolutkihe, Which
~.. ! ,
Were unanituowle adopted ! : , i 1
r ,
SASO:rtiti, That we approve of the o!,ject of the
ptopoaed National Convention, which:V...lo exam•
ble in Philadelphia, on the :fin Jannary, 1E414.
namely, to take trietouret , ' tor.the peerage of a law.
in the next Congreia, to tenure to the. ilivnig, AS
well as to the widotes and heirs 01 the: deceased.
Others of 1812, such remuneration in,l34tinty land
or Pension, as wiii piece thin upon an equal foot.
leg with others, who have ben•cti their country
either before or after the war of 1812.'' i j '
', Resolved, Theme tender our wergicst thanks.
to the &embers of both houses of .Conorers, who
have endeavdred by, their voles to Elea an littera,
iionin the un e qual provisions of the la* of • 1830,
Icy which the foldiers of 1912' may be placed upon
an equal footg wah oilier defenders or ;the rights
and honor of hen,country. • - 1 , l , -• .
4.Resolvect, hat_we hereby tcr.tier . ! our hearty
thanks to Hoe. Joell3.'Sutherniind, for. the untiring
exertions be has always made to prochrn the pas.
"sage or the late by Congresatolive dm, ihildims of
1 ' 1812, 100 acres of land tweed 0140 sores;:
I ;i:Rttkolvtiel, That C. Loeser, E-q., Cql; John 13ati
nen and Charles Fralley be a committee to make
arrangements with ;the 'PliVadeiphie and Reading
Railroad Company,' for the passage of the Dela
&tee , to the Nations' Convention to and, iron Phil.
adaiphia, sad that the result be made ktiown to the.
Dearitts to be appointed. .
,Resril . That trie fol:owing named : hereon* be
appointod segataaltijtha above easeled National
uonveritio; , with pOwer . lin iticitta'ke: iitclr number'
and to till acsaciee, :—tot. Jacob. Hisatzingor,
Gape. Pete Aurand; John Hippie.. Jacob R. liright;
William ioe. Benjamin Pou t Col. John P.llO.
bath Chart's Fridley, Cot. John Simnigh, William
B. Potts, !duel Fins,' Daniel Raere,artir, Michael
R. Hower Jacob Knatch, C. Loiter. l Col. John ,
D. Leirsig, obit Botiewitz, Cul. Daniel Krebs,Geo..
itlilleill, . pt. William B. !Abe. Oen. 'John K.
-Fiiirewsr,„. „_...4 ~,„IA Cicilit-UTiela: Amp ; ars
! . :my It m . v! . . , rreiidcn t s • .' 1 • •
..--:- . ..
.. - .;• • 1 Michael Frits, :Secretary.
, .
' pot Slatutgcs.—We basrti been at
, m accordance' with our anion) cuitam,
nd &unpile the annexed etailetjca of the
c end Privata) and Cabbala' Oehoole of
h
10 SClOCiLl—Mitt DItAirn.SNT.
Or Sc
imam pan,
to collect c
Daly {Pubi s
We Boroui
PUBS
, Hies ook—Prmcipel, Elias Sehttelder,
:Led occasionally by J. 4.
No of Pupils on roll, "•:e . . 34
:Average ettendanca, I 2r
' No. I.—Prineipal, J. P. Sherman ; A.,tsiant, 3,
•
o. of Pupils on roll, G 9
'kverage attendane i r, tiO
No. 2—Principal; A. K. Browne;; Assistants
MO T. M. Strauch and Mrs. M. A..l3.hfbyshell.
No. of ,pupils on roll, 127
'Average attendaticer 7: 105 •
No. 3.—Principsl,lMks E. H. 14,t;;M.11; Assist
ant,, Miss
No. of Pupils:on roll,
Average attendener,
4.—Principtll,lD. E. German
No. of Pupils on ion,
AVerage attendance, ' . 59
No. s.—Principal,,Aliss, E. F. ; Awls-
tart, Miss E. C. Gerinan
No. of Pupils on roll,
Average attendance,
'• • r
irtmaLs DISi'ARTIIENT
I •
No. I.—Prinipe; 4 l. M 134 Mary INled,aman: ;
instant, Miss Annii I. Lewis. .
No. of Piipils on r9ll, • •i; ,
Average attendance, • 71
No. 2.—Principat,'MiAs Eikte M o d b ai l t r,f;Pmi
sistant, Mies Therestl..Martin
No. of Pupils on roll,
Average attendance, • ,
Mi's 5 As. Mabool
No. of Pupils on roll, I
Average attendance, * ;
4.—Prinyipal,‘Miss E. 13715trafich
No of Pupils on roll.
Average ineridanite, - :•.
No. 5.-:—Principal, 1114aElallie Leiti
No. of Pupils on roll,
Average attendance,
No. fl.+Principal, Miss Sarah 1. , Higley
No. of Pupils on roll,* • . t i' •
Average attendance,
No. 7.—Principal, Mos Elizabistb"E. Dywning
No. of pupils on,roll, b 0
Ai-ersge attendance, ••51
Principal, Samuel! Golden: •
No, of Pupils ori roll, . •'• * •
Avennge attendance, 37: 1
These Agoras are taken I:nm the, ffe ports for the
tingle month of Deoinnher lest. This general eve
ragn attendance is higher throughout :the, year, one
or two months, perhaps, in midTsuinmer only
etteepted,'thari in. December; an uitusueay logo
proportion of the Pupils generanly. dropping :of at
the close of the year, to anticipatiUn of tha holt?
da~i,
Etas Sohnefder is the General
. .i . psiititendent of
all the Public &Win's of the Borough./
Prom his Annual Report up to ;one Ist, 1853,
we leans that the average number of.Siblio School
Pupils in the Borough, for the School year, was in
rooted nonabets 1700. The aggregate cost'et
tuition done for each, was $3,17.:
The
• •
The publioatiow of a cheep Monthly County
School Journal had just been started under: the -
obeli: of the Public &hoe! Teachers In this place.
So far it hassnet with considerablO Success, and is
likely to prove highly beneficial to parents,Teacti•
era and Pupils. •
• InIUVATI 11C10015. ' '
Potuttills Ansiimi—A. P. S. pinasy, Pnacipo
No. of Pupil* OF, roll,' 1 40,
Avenge attendance, 30
The course of instruction mainly . Comprises the
higher branches of English and. thy classics. The
est ood unim i or Irish Schocg in the -Public , .
Sr.hoOle has netusesnly interfered: somewhat
with ;hie insutution. Yoder the circumstances to
presettt, abeam Wily to be cradiumi to the abil
ity and ailiciancy,or tlia Principal.
Young Zadissi Instfteits, camel• of Market aid
Pin : stinat—Mar„ A. Prior, Principal; assisted
by his Wife and Daughter. ' • *.
No. of Pupils on roil,
Mina attodance,'
tba
addition to the ordissty' Enlists houtehei,
ureic We also mills Natural Ph nosophy, Clainis;,
try. the higher Mathematics,' Die` ens', Nage,
Patch ant Latin.;
Yours, Ladies' Salad, aorbei- i - Makin sad
Second snieurrldiss If, A; • Afileo, Pnaeipal;
*nod, oecasntally, by severer of bar most'
aimed poptla I '
No. of Pupils on roll, • • if v ,
Averup attendance,
In this. School the principal Objeat is to Lipari a
• f
a
• 249
DEM
loge, •
3eaece
4shly .re•
(41; ,ittere•
The' property
a late puTnatre..
thst• aervioaa of a
~..aunt, a. 24.t:i . Kier
filled that poti tia a fu
wilt eke dam* to s upply.
it, formerly a Mail:apnt on
. 79
t 133
106
ME
COLORED MISER scaopri.
J. •
stald. ;Mil.,
Ton,
if • • 32 ,
if l icia:g ofn elements.
4 0 Pkt1. 4 ..4 1 4 7,4 4, Mikeitußgo
stied. IV. o , l leltoolefolaalvely foi alibi, and
is 1 4 dulls .0( Ors."Pisiers.", , -
Eirenare attendOce of Pupil.. 180
&tea fOrlAya, - iCsihraini In' basement of
Church, litaltiatAiso street. - Principal, Mr. Can.
doa. 1 1 r
Aecriers sueadiance,ef Papils,, • 75
Gorman. Cirs!Oss Efehl.2l, - (asixed). rtedefick
bell, Principal.:
ot Pupt!*: colt folt, ,
Avistse,.loll4.
atilrnav acilOoLs.
TrinztY tiufrri; (CPIE-42004),Ocatee street. Su
perintendents, Prairies M. gin and Mn. E. Cern
ming. --i - '
No. of Teachttio2.sadele 7; Female, 32.
No. of Pupils 0134011,310-24 alts; 149, Featale,l6l.
Average attend4ol, 2ao
No. of Volumes th Library, ' 609
Associate Rarotrsed Prosbiiterian Church, Mar
ket street. Superintendent, Ames G. Cochran.
No, ot Teacher9l , l_l3-s•Makt, 6; Female, 7. .
No of Pupils " 120
Average attendoti 60
No. of Vols. iti,tiduarr, • 600
Umlian anditnglish Lutheran CAPerch, Third
street. SuperidalideamassCob Kohler (Geruiso.).
and Henry,Zita*MMll (English j . •
No. of Tescli4ra-37--54ale, 18; Female 21: •
Average attencliliite of Teachers, • 30
Pupils 03; FeMale,7s.
riverage attert, - . , 121
Na. of Volt. in f,jibrary. • 300
Baptist Chrirj, Mstuustongo street. Superititen
ddrif;lll.3lB3SlUor.
No. of Tescho*l3—Male, 3,; Fatale, 12. -
No. of Pupils tirpicill, 93---a large proportion of le
males. ,
Average attemlimee, '7.5
No. of Sots. tii - ,4;ibrary, - 450
ft,may. be prOtier to. remark.' that ogruig to the
vocaney of . 'bet ritstorship of this Church lor.neat-
Ir a'yier. Ms id(inrs of the Sunday School were
sctmewhat neer eied, or at least, but 100-ely atten
ded in. _ Sinceitge installation ot the present Pas
tor, Rev. J. If .C'tistle, the School has doubled in
the number Ofittogtils; within three mouths, and a
'spirit awattisd moons those interested that
promises still greater improvement for the figure.
Welsh Conc, r . ..ritionalist CkurcA, Muieravillo
road. Superirdeildent, Thomas Llewellyn . ; Secre
tary, David RI - egetde.
No. of Teacher?, , , 11—Aisle, 13 ; Female, 1.
No. of . Pupils* roll, 100:- being about au equal
proportion cif4lsles and Females..
-Average atten*ce,
ot Vols. tO d itnvy, •
_ _
.The Odiceriiand Tosabers in this School are
changed every:quarter ; a new Suetatetident and
a Secretary l eg tiled 'regularly= apnoea, and all
the Teachers ithanging elaeces in regular prugrea
.
sion. . •
.
. '
The ISiblesi Testaments and Class books gener
ally used, are Welsh, but the - difficulty of procn
ring misellaniOus books in this lan,gunge,fias here.
tofore pievenk the formatiota of, a Library. , About
ILiee montheMo, however, about 100 volumes in
English were,procured, as the nucleus for that in
qtapeef able e dO3mpeatintettt of a Sunduy School ;
..01'd they are'niid to answer the Purpose very well,.
as most of tliA, Children can both talk and read
English. ; , ' •
The Schoolia ripresented Id be in a most pros
:perotis condi*, numbering more pupils, and both
Teaciserapm4inpils being imbued-with a more in.
teretted Juni. 4aterprising spirit,.than has been
known in thelinetitutionfor many years. •
Welch Priittstive Afttitodiss Church, Third St.
Superintendent, Dante' J. Morgan..
No. of Teittiters,,l3—Male, 8 ; Fmree, 5.
No. of .Popil(Cas roll, 48—Male 28; Female 22.
There is Octfregular Library. 15 Bibles, 35 Tea
'laments ane,4o email books, all in the• Welsh
tongue, are item& to the School.
Welsh 'Bnisf4st Church, Minersville road. , Sis
permtendeui, hienry Davis,
NO. of Teanline, 8-44151 e 5; female, 3.
No. of Fopilti.lm roll, 51 -
Average &Reminisce, • „ 45
No regula4Mrary, but there era a' few inheal
humbug boo besides the Bib:attend Testaillcuto,
in Welsh,. pint') in the School.
First Fra44terisin Church, Maluuttongo street.
toperintendini.-11tev J. MeCool.
No. of TeaUhifra,4o.4lale 24; female t .lB.
No. of .Popill;ort roll; • • 350
Average. antiOance, ' • ' 300
Nol of 31'013.-itt Library.. 1800
• •Gerniart. rt 4 &Mein Church. • Superintendent,
Rev. Mr. OhOlioltzer, Priest of the Pariah : assis
ted by Frederik Doll.
No. of Puler 125
7nshCai. churn% MehintOplo street. The
-- C A C lL# 4l4 # l44' t h i Vi ri A
No• of T i la44/1", VC Female, S.
Aierege attendance of Pupils, 390-. Metes • 200;
,Fernehis,ll: l o.
No Libre'rk: .
English ;Littlisran C4urnis, Market street. SU
perintemienOirashington L. Heisler:
Nu: of tetqltql, 28••Xti la 12 ; Female, 16.
No. of roils, • - 193
Average attendance. 130
No-of Volt, Library. 750
Piro ArlivodiJet'hurch,Sectxiti street. Super
indent, Wrll4llufmau.
No. ot Teec‘ers, 35—Males 14; Females, 21,'
NO. of ForiSilion roll, 215—Make, 85, fernales,l3o.
No. of trolsOn Library. 700
henorvt 11f E. Church, Market street. Soperin
„teadent, Rat SC. F. Turner.
NO. of Ciflitiers and Teachers, 30
No. ot Pupils on roll.. 210
No. of in Library: COO
In additi'Mi.to the abot-4 , ratistics of the Sunday
Schools offt4tt Borough, itie lukve also the following
from Tatitttitta-.-it Is to tot regrettact that no snore
from the OrAtty at large:hare been reported
AlatltodisipAurch, Bond street. Superinten-
dent, Al. Beijey.
No. of` Teefiltars, • ' • 38
NO. of ' • ' 300
Average aisitidanoe. • , 210
No. of VoiCm Library, 1090. ,
• 130 colif,eited the'! &today School and Mission
ary A.dvoCkieq are elm subscribed for, and one
copy- of tie" National Magazine.” The amount
Of moneyYttised for the interests of the Sehool, du
ring 1853, Wit 2124,89:
The PoOrille School., it str&enus, might profit
by tut exut4tit Iton of these figures.
ItECArrtnAtioN. '
Public Schools—Ma6,
11: Fem
• ; Colcred,
55?
502
48 •
—llO2
,Pnr2ti: krhoolp. , Ma-, 40
Fangio, 04
38
355
527
2348
SabbatkOehools,
Tom! in taste reeeivi atruetion, 3977
No. of ITOSi. in S. S. Lt nodes, 5709
There ate Fourteen P lic Solsools in operation
the B o gh-1 HighiSchaol, 5 Male ecitiools,
in•
7 FelttaloAit'oolg, and 1 t:oloretl.
There 1141 Seven Privste Sehoole--:1 Academy
for Boys, 11 . Female Set:aunties, 1 Mixed and 3
Catholic Irish and 1- dein,lan): •
• Them ate Thirteen nth Schools-21 Prot
estant, uttAnding 1 ;Watt dc . Germ& 1, and 3
Welsh, 4. 2 RomanrCitholic.
• • .
11351. 1852. 1853.
Public Sefk . o.4a. p 27 1194 .1102
Privale P?oketaant 298 • 250 172
• " 'Citholfe, do., 1220 240 355
Sabbath Selkoota, 1397 1938 2348
S. S. I'o4:keg, ' • ; 9917 - .5709
~.
~
..- '• •''' imgellilillieln
_ iI4EftSVII, AFFAIR'S, I
Cr*. Profractsd M
T es .
has.beno bald in
the PasthiAsst Church, in inervillOGrv.rbrr.
Inereditkßanor, for a= ki pest.'
t*rick Doras, • has -but. :recently
been disoliorged from cilia. meat in our • County
onn charge of tta monk/0 bre wits,
14.4_8dwader, w found 64 at Ulan 6c
Miens; ttOt. DSineravllle. oarloing last -week,
intinnpasue and akin,.
:. A 1 1
' • tir 4E4 of our 1, ntares.bask% g got .
inilos , sa consequently a "woe.;' au I Moo.
day44o4e clewed out an le short Pi stdi•
0 9
cientle*„../Jullstin. . I
We efoidole with you, tOghbor, but have no
remedy ittireserb: ..mtme be to employ only
Tetopertißee , Printers, be . Thu testi owe
+Mows tai,* the innocent its ail mu of the
i
Oil,. Ilstetoperanee is wig its mom di•
ate viet 4, there woold not IV the recess ity
there isAt i *thine Law. I : •
rr Itirle,Lost stated digs of the
. Mis
nersviGi f:ibrary, the folAo g dame were floc
ted tor carom term :. -..
ilsi.' ti
, l'ranitest..a. D. Salt. i - .
Ties kiistisat—e. Chrtst -
' -liga lt SgcregT77-5. E Millar. ,
":
", dirssilYmittli SElta4ll.7 ° , . K. Clement.
.:* Trsestrerer.74.'o. Ittenen. - .
4
Lttnirt.in..4. C.*right. '
,On *fibs the isllowies Mies luta unani-
MonslYitibpisf.: ' ' •
Reteisigi, That we, the ' beta of II *Miners-
OM ,i•i*Y.. , ,bruety . our ae la weri*e.„
meads Miss Unmet messy the joss je Fs ir .,,
Go their gootelowlyirt (inn a omen 6 or the ben
efit-of the Laney, WWI'S - poke 3 ... sembrally
'tor the Mortal Oman. mould. • . -
,Nuotiett, That these .etru be g abetted in
the itatarts.
1 ..='.t : ~. . • ,P-
14 4 4 * V" 4r I , c l-1 ;
•
• • altOx Otis **taut c—soutseimsvirorr.]
1112 *Ways apeereeri - karma( pitifited
to Ttiritrish ltapite ,
would behe4 to wittipoW 6 -teat we waiela a miser of
Ahlermeti, If rotunditfet.the . abdoiseis were !safe.
criterion to go by. IV.elticursiatii:tt i seo,4
eiiiu4-toyedafteralLi 4ttte tusiteo-0 0 4teti the
conatiereiteig fifes was so - "listiftecable—atraw•
gar ''PV/4! hay!. befa Fe"! Tirl!ed Fre ;wale
not !Nen righteiros toga' within the =tines of
Schuylkill 11reen ! • Altd What. did the whole fuss
antount•toll Why, to:pas arrest, and a 560 btiiifor
Au appearseco! keer 'the' Potts
ville osceraswily - so suddenly' the? arm
tad all our'offendera, or Imre they made the 'grand
discovery dial,that.kind of game s thicker on
their
. ovria huntin,g.;iroluali!"! , But prrume
tttlattheir grounds are So much oser-run as to baffle
a'aticcessful pursuit.' 'TiT strain, when the ground
is covered With a newly !alien ehoWi
The Unteerided Dentoorsey of our town Mem a
perfect man) of uncrlintutourneta '{tot &gaining
that their favorite " Willie" is &Stink soon to re
tireio private life, no More to bear4e shackles of
office—knowing the t'grapes to be 'sour t" In the
North-east corner rielhe P utVir jtegtr, Doe. 31,
1853. may be reed the: ”hand writing on the Wall."
But, plus '!eyee they tiave ! bnt see but
speak not."! The reMarks, of Gtistavbs !Bernal:,
Esq kee •particularly. musical. mentioned
the names of Chief Jilstice Black;Judge.l34l,Mr:
Muhlenberg tau Hon i :';Willisin Witte, as heron far
superior, aria terterfie;resi to BI th'e !Gubernatorial
Chair, than' the prei?ent • incambeatr!, Not the
least doubt in the world!! Woutlei Where all those
pledged delegates" aro to come from who are to
ambulate Bigler in March nett' ! f .
Justice Weston beki an Inquest 0h the body of
Richard Willisuis, la rt Tne.day farentien, at the
home of 114 deceaie4.‘ It appears that Williams
was at Masonry's laitera lot SuUtiO. , night, where
be had some difficuttil i(of a religiciu4 or part.saa
nature) wish amen hirithe name of Penick Farrel.
A witness
! iestuied that Farrel Used threatening
language towards Wllhams'on the; tuflit iu rows
bon. tic la gellteg borne about
midnight, much bri*ml. lie said' that "Ferret
knocked him dawn, ;sad that he .Wits. afier wardisfl
kicked and jumped upon." !Ile died le-t TurAay I
morning , and ,SCCUPCO F,lltre . l -of the dead. -The
Jury had ti riSt 'no tem . exam intitibp nicde, which
se-reeled the naafis .violeui iutUrria I
lion of tlitintestirie4;
.There wet Sillier perforation
of the intestines. .The abdomen .i
, as fined with
a fetid evidently the contents of the intes
tines. Tile dee-toed WAS 4 Prowarit. lie Puisea
wit'e and r Aga Verd let :of the Jury, in ~serord
ance wish the abave•named Farrel ho
been arrested and,poniatitted.
ME!
100
90 •
Yours truer; : t'''CNTINET
ve,V,1551:.:
al The Ledket gives aa.Oro tint of -a fa- •
till accident in that ii'ace, ou Mbnday i of -eck.
A man gamed Robinson was engaged with some
others ia raising tht4unifitrick from a well by a
common WindlaFs, 'When one handle broke, and in
its iuddrix backward levoltitilrin, die other handle
struck Robinson cuflie back pf the head, breaking
his skull. He lived but a iewhours after. He was
about 50 years of rii;e, fobi..r and uulustrion.;',and
leaves a wife and flintily. I •
95
1100
f Several loys'skatio6 to'gether on the
SebuYlki; , l. Schuylkill 11 en; one day, last week,
William Varner, about 12 years of lien, ran of Mr.'
VT. Warner, brae in aed • Was in danger of
drowning' but for ilia timely iitt..u,iyteo of .Edwin,
Eon of 1-IC , V. Robiriion, at 16 Fears ofnge,who
bravely perillod liis own life -I'p ace his lilbe
triend*E.,
lORT 'CAHBON :AFk'AIRS
rr las vrIG already .one letter in type from
Port Carbon, and being pressed foi span this week,
we are forced to omitVoz's cenunuaicario? =—Ects.
Journal]
•
Ma. 13 ' 41iNAN ---ter. . we ere a't the commence
meat of Soother year, end I ;tonere by this time
our business men (in the' Coal tastiness, I mean,)
have etas:stained the atnount!of their profit end los
sea for the year that pest, and probably made
some cateu !attune la prospective: That is all per.
tectlif natural, and right, hisC ffom the uncertainty -
of the COM business, the prespective, paper ceou-
latioris included, has aitvays been ahead of the
stern reality. The bumpof hope pis largely (level*
'oped in Coal Operefors, anti at this end of a tolera
bly good, season they are apt to forget the many,
previous fears they • bed to struggle through for!
extstence-in business, end - how many times they
wer« at the vergeS of Bankruptcy. ; In the whole
history of this , Coil Iteiioa . not one single Operator'
has retired with s ponapetency fcir life; but mane
have retired 'through the instremantaluy .of the
Sheral'e:hammers. In nearly all such cases the
blame has- not been deserved by ;them personally;
se their !energi, eaterpriae, induttt7 and perseve
ranee heiv been proverbisi.for a length of time.
The cause is essity traced Ly illy perm at all
acquainted withne be:daces. 4a , the 0.71,00.
Send Dlrkans in improvements land preparatioke
to tuine tin n scale commensurate with the present i
age, and'when these are complete, and-the Noon*,
tors are ready (as they think) to tealise their dreem
of reasyneration.iben comes a vault in their miner,
or their Coal is of inferior quality, and with their
utmost endeavor , , they cannot Make it pa). present
con. , Then again, Coal may be eta prt c below
a living profit, which hes eften i been the case.—
Notwitestaudingall ttlee drawbacks, the men in
the Coalbussaelts go anead, as: if none of these
th Lags eier,Jaappen.
Well, I ray, clear the; track and lot its have a
new leafs to record the history; of another year's'
haiiness;
Port oarson, Jantesiy4. I P"
•
rr At a s t a l e d nte fling of the Beacon Star
, A.
Secnon No 6.4,gdeok i-f Terar+ranee,held at-their
Hall, Port • Fritlaito, Derember.29llt, 1853, the fol
lowing efficert ;were duly eleeted for the ett.uing
quarter :1
W. A.i L. W< E. Chilison; yT. A., G. W . 'fol
der; S., :Edward Smith; A. S., Charles Sityd,:r ;
T., lamb Cutwrtght ; iv. T-, Charles DeVrehtia;
O. WIlli41:11Pott :- U., ;Stophe.a Jones ; W , Jacob
George; A. W.; . Eirtatual.MeQUad/ : W. P. Roto•
ort McQuade. - *lto, SECRETARY.,
Aeligiouo Stittilligtna
• [Uncler plid bend we IprOrio , e collating a week -4 ,y
tun:mark of religious rilaiters, , foreign end domest.
te. Cominunieations fir this department are par.
ticalarly wlicjieJ froM our Ministers and •olher
to tomer; Ott ies ;in thisfountv.--Ed faTO urea[.
fir BarrisirCiitta n, Muhantongo Street; Rev.
J. HARVARD CASTLE, Pastor. i Service every snh•
bath at 1011 &deck A..• 1111., and 7
• •
gi" fatttrry cnoncte(Ertstorat. )—Rev. DAN
IEL NI/amount+, Rector. Seiviee heid regurarly
in this Church ecery Sunday •e i
Mornitig, at 10i ofelpek.
Evening, at 7
.
crT4Enc ho preaching to the English
Lutheran Cniiieh, Market street, every, Sunday
morning and evening. •
prARCHBIt,RoP 1 vG111:6;•Iti about to attic tor
Cuba, wbere at purporArs tpeiulaig the winter.- •
• at- BY A neccsr - r investigation the 6et has come
to itght that there are /lilt 50,000 Mormons in Greet
Britain. ono BIM this] number is being augmented
I
daily. • • .`• •
Ey A Hosts* .C!ailincic in South Boston had
personated Ma Protestant wife to kiln the Roman
Catholic , church, but a tew days since, at the.time
Axed for, her baptism, the woMan in a phrenzy took
a knife and cut her oern throat. It was at first sup
posed that the wound mutt prove fatal, but she is
more:leg.
ATrics r.ro. A Stan' Pagamms.6--In .
Pittsburg, on Wednesday:, Ktnaznsp, the street
p_reachev, held forth I to'n numerous auditory. on
Catholicism. Duringi Ms remarks, several Irish
'men Stumbled, noted with 'bricks and boulders,
I and oontinericed an assault upon limirzanzt, who
I retreated without receiving any injury. No arrest*
I were glade- '• •I • : • •
HOLLOWAY'S PILLS for the vire of Net.'
vous Djfbiiliy, and,Determinstion at Blo.:4 to the
Heed -42toset front e letters from Mr. John Lloyd
of Eiw•vren, Bartsch, Mirienithiliire.—" To Pre.
lessor Eollowey,..sii.: I' think It inyduty, to in
form-you that tar a long period I was afflicted with
giddineSs r and Swimming in the head and eyes. at.
feuded by lose of appetite and generally impaired
health:, Every mewls had felled to give me relief,
and it 'length' it becime se:alarming that . I was
amid of gymg out without an attendant. Mr•.
chemist, of HarleCh, advised me to try
your Pills, which I infmeOiately did, and em happy
to say they effected a perfect;cure, and restored me
to healib and airetign•Li ,
Foi sate by John G. BroWn, Clemens &Bender,
Potteeillelt E. J. P'ry, Tiutumws t' Dr. J. Kellar
Burns, Millersville. '
-;, • I
MoLEAN'S voLpANIg OIL LINIMENT.
Scone, Dniaist, at Mittarsvilla, erisleara,
has olithined..i supply direct'from the proprietor, in
St. Logi,. •
The Voleanfe oil Liniment is truly a cureere
Teti medicine; ind has dons more to alleviate hu
man suEering thin' nnyrerotittr eeei discovered
One or ;two applications will relieve the most re
vert P i ser's,.Bisri.4 or 4train.
TWO Bottles wilt CUM lite finticse Ulcer
BO", of Wllf hl! vtoei seven: Burn or Scald
without *Seer- - ' • . .
4,Ersity Fatal= should *et • supply constant.
1y on tiand to Ue used in time of need.
TO lidlNptS, altering in Coil Mines, we ray
to, yoii 'delay, not tmtli Iron b*ie
. obtained a supply
will Tars a greet deal':of "Mitering and mon
ey by its iiss • -
FOR HORSES, itis the Only' aura: remedy for
L ame a t io ) . Amines, Cuts,inititantit,
Sweltittp, &a. Try it and you will bi convinced.
ar ee witertnement in anotbirt column.
i l idioni aanas:ie uxowe i Ill tatas ; • A I
itlre esebilikimato iirg‘ /2 :•
krw Mute, liikka 4blll !..
neotopereblesto4llls e
itir . maids" wbelk duiscit
Auer.
Mr. doelt ;*
ecriptios&arab*
Rings. Steeetete, ' • •
ell GPM sat s
toloattoi 01101;10=45N want
of at the losteS alas petals.
.. VA . LOWS *lO4 gone
reotype Roves, NO. 120 iS t rcll
low &sib, South side.) Plultedelpi
Persons visuiog the city during
HOLIDAYS, 'Mould call on us ant
more of our superior DA9I.TERBI
Wet Mem ret in Plain ur fermi C
The' rowan= of our style of
as soy ui Phiiadeilphia, aid they sr
mach lower coat, Itow lat
an
to obtain a good picture. Of the . bel
Tetra/ On DOLIAIt. and upwar
Delluotrotypes of clecoeso fiat
copied equal to the originals, and of
or larger, if desired.
HAPPY NEW YEAR.—In the
inerry•making and,arood humor, let
that moderation both indigo, and d,
bats; rational mans at stewing toot'
t'r - New Year. .
It to not our puermu to eatvarsie
ritemperance ; yet a; the met* eireul
t time, be seduced into an °mica
estive•orgons. we may be Permitted'
Vright'a Indian Vegetable Pills as II
ual wedecine in the world for rentovil
ieic m
stomach, lose of appetite; toe
and all other complaints which arise'
.
indulgence_ at the table. '•
Cautiolt.—Storekeepers would do
cite care in buying front pedlars. We
that a man by the aim of Magma,
by the elms of Hiettaad, and another ti l l
of Sines, are offering what purports to be
Indian Vegetable Pills These persot
authorized Agents for this Medicine, and
a i ered cannot be guaranteed as enuine.
nine is far-sate -by' Mrs. E:' U. BEA-
T
BROWN and .1". S. C.. MARTIN; Ph i
Whole9sle Office,. 169 Race Street, Puilap
• . N. B.—The mitotic ,are respectfully is
;that J.C. HUGIWS S of- Pottsville, is Irish
tur thi:i medicine. Sad we cannot guaniotek.
nine the article offend be hint for sale. -1
. '' WILLIAM Wit*
A CAfiD.—Siace the Prortetor'i •
'ivory enlargements have allowed him
his - numerous orders for Lyon'e Kattum.
u;w mtroducpd some new chemical affluti
udd still to the high character of doe'' ,
popular article for Curing, Beautify/us, I
and Restoring The Hair;
Let those now use
Who Dever need before,
And ttiose who always used,
Now use the mom.
Tha Price is still 25 cents, in large
may tie had at any Store in United '
1): S. Barnes, Proprietor, 161 Broad •
Sold by every dealer to F
5: Sons phtladelPhia, Wholesale Agent
POTTSVILLE MARES
Goan ECTED WEEKLY FOR TUC .1
Wheat Flour. bbt 17 ts Red pesebes .
do do 5 001 do do on
Wass t ; bushel . 1 40 Ord lipPissiP
Rye. do 80 Egre,dozei
vorn, - do ',70 I Butter tttt
Oats, do 44 6haulders,
Pntat os t„ Ao•• 75 r elLts
Timothy Set , ' 385 Hay. tor
Clover do 350 Plaster,
. ,
HARRIED: i ''-- '
• _:'• .' . :It
• •
On . Thursday, 19th ult. , by li • M i r a .
TIIOIOB P. FITZBIMMON4 to isk II ,
of Flowery Field, Schuylkill Coucity-1 --,0
; . 1
On the same day_. by the same, WlLLialitili,
Of Pottavltle,to MARGARET VARCO, OI II4II,
Erglabd. 1 . . • — 4 7 i:
Oa 26th December, 183]. by Rev. F .
(Ain
.lOUN TODD to MARTHA WI,LLEY, bots of t s .
villa. . ' ' e :.:,,,,
nn December Ifftb. by the same HANN
BAILEY to CATHERINE PINEER . TO4Iror
Tteitout.
Tn Po.tsollle ou the 2d Inst. , by the n4ltis
W. Edwards . CLCMENT to AN
both of Tainagas.
• M PowWilk, on tbe titb by Um osito.
LLEWELLYN, of Summit toltaft*lpt.
of Pottsvlllii. • 3 -to.
~.
to Pottsville, on the 111th Olt., GEO..
WJf4 - ii,
TON, son Or Peter and Rllsabeth Fashold t ...4
yearr,, 10 months and 9 days - ' .-,;..,.
,/,,.'
In Philadelphia, on the 99tb ult:, Eli. I ANEMI
E. for a number of years • wade ntof t hie t iltil
aged 73 years. .
'3,4. 18.51
rue
41 , °°14 81 0 hp:
06, Tao s w
*MV .
the -Put.
italuottable de
liver Watcher
r " ' PeziNNl.
-oumirankg m ,
14 dry
013'4
DIED
=MM=ii XMOIS.
A STATED blerriNG of Pala
Na. 2115, will be bald en. VONDA I
Jimucry Mb, lesll, at T o'cloCk.
J. 13.V.11tAIITIllr
ODD YELLOW' CIIMETRY
rows ofpureheof leg burial iota la Od
Cumetry. Will apply
1 , 4,611 k -Very at Om hop awe. lowa a
Jolts J. Jmtia, Xtherlyllts Omni
- MN. IT. lea
COAL.
M. BEATTY di lON Wive rem 51
.; . ° Mee of C. W. Pitman. Ces - Tr
below the American House. mime pew
butinest with them mtlipletee call.
JAMES. THOMAS & CO., will also
e! be
the same oltce.
• 401 le. 1951. J
ORGE VITIGIOAN 4 SON, ail
G
Cual, Tamaqua.
Jen. 8. ini3.
OTICS:—CHAIRLIN muse • C
1 trioced their *thee. in . Philadelphia, ft
Pock Street. to No. 1 WALNUT lancet,
between Front and con4lireets.
Philad'a., Jan. 8 653. ,
BUSINESS CAR
EDMONDS. PROi.E.IIISOR.OF MU
131 cher of the Nano, Organ or Melodef
tuned. Any, communication addrested r.
scriber. at his residence, Mansion House
bon, will be punctually attended to.
lice. 24,1t143
EN, FISIIIETto SURVEYOR at ;
11N EER, will tontinue the business of Ms
.r. demur! It, Fisher. Having possession 4
Papyri, Natal and Drab*, be bee uu usu
O
rot the pursuit of his ?Manton. and can
He Information-In erretenee to land In lb
lion.
•
HOWELL FISHER and ALLEN FISH •
continue the buying and selling of Real
have now for sale several valuable Tr • •
Land. ' - ,
Mice. Centre street, four at)ol7 south
syl %%tole Hill, same side, PotlsVllle.
November 19, 1951.
FOR SALE & T OL
__.• . • : • t . ,
DAUPHIN AND 'BUSQ.U.DHANNA
om pi e jl, LROAD has been npenetti between
,vo RENT.—The Residence n ß ol . rr e.
ci _
I . Charles W. Clemens, Esq ,on Cenite.E . _
~. _ il r.
Bt.
• ' d —u fr it ers V ht E : ! ! . T or he ih d e i t-i pa 3 t n tu ln re " o la f ti s. ° 6 l e G r A a rki rs i: l tl r ß E;
•
33.tf
. . • es Plnegroae at o 4 ,clocir, A.R., for Auburn.
, - Uthe Philadelphia train fiom-Pottsville.
•
FOR BALE ,— Two two - story Cane _ aerre—Leivee AubOrn atili o ' clock, M. M :,
Rom e ., with Beek lkuntion %hi ear-. ms; isftiliately after the arryal of the Phitidelphim
ner of Third and Norwegian Streeta.eadr 11 Willy.. , ;: • - ,
20 feet front is 31 feet deep r ain a lot 60 .: -,-, , RATES, 0 , FARE : , .
feet to a' 20 feet alley. • . Tinegrore to Ranwey'a •I 21 miles; 10 Oa,
ALSO FUR BALE, . - Pine rove to White Miss . 54 .. ng ..
AlO Roma. Steam Ellitlem.with aII Rose f Rlnegtoye to Olen Fold' • 1 54 .. 33 ..
Breaker—barebeen in rise n short time.and wiIIUIF inegrois to Reeder', /dill; 12 . " 4ts ..
sold On reasonable lams. The Entine may ha I.R inegrovero Auburn; I
.' •; 18 .. an .. •
" m 1 I nel 4 RHYLler'i . o Machinego it E ll h i p . . COoll pc iial ra P sy ei ev"im ile ill he earia t eU . ie . b` '' 01...5. 01 - 13,40 . ; '
• Htf. id Zit lOU' .mi • , 18.1 y . .
Dee. 91, 1853
liee. Si, MS
.F, , on lIIALE.—The suburbia. offer for
g well known Tavern Stand, Stabling; tee
and inner bu tidings altuated in the sown or Poi
Don, richnelklll Cuttaty. at We corner Of Cce
J ackeon ratteets.•
The lot upon which rho improvements
stand lied by MI feet, and is one dale most
desirable business locattcois - in the Borough,.
The purchaser of the above can also, boy
reasonable terms, the property adjoining tt
On. the Mest, which Would vie 110 by tV
grriund and be the most cathodic lot In Pore(
For winos apply to WM..D. HULL, Est
Pon Out
, or J. D. Meredith,
Centre ditcher, Foust
ieftr
Nov. 98, 1!32
fog LEASE.—To • good Tenant.
i Tract or coal Land, blown an the "Telt
situate In Freiley.Townsittp,
of Tremont. It Iles on both sides of the
Estsnsihn to !diddle Creel—contains tiros
11. heavily twittered, and well adapted for t
sive operation. never al veins of Red
have Seen proved and %end to be of first
ty. For fanner Intbrniatton apply to
•
JOHN HAN'
•
°THIRSTER CI
•
November 5,194
VOA SALE... 4 10 len lot on Contra
1.7 O, bi J. WoOn's addtiotf, to Poitsvill
runs from Cent* to Railroad Streit, In'
the foutb by lot 48. Moth, Ent., on tr
23 ft., emery 'For ter= and partk.ola
lb. do wellborn* his Drug Store, Conna
cute. tudl le title will be elven.
- JOHN S. C.
Agent for
A ne1241 . 0,1333. •
li' Oft 11.16*.—The sobicrlber eget
-I: bow , . E Mlle. fone of lb. begs la toi
Mawr Nvit onto conneslools also, a
I t l h rg o64 64 o z ,l 4C to t ' o li r C
olo a r n e, r p e j e ld o r a ll Y l ir t r i N • 13 1
r
i
••• • ' lisbantoogo arrest.
~
o .
.1 nue' 18, I . • ,
..„—........--
taus* sod essisie4l
tutee., is Bannsn's
Eplicoritßeti, Ce
of
TO 'LET
CMBea and
Inp,Opposlte t.
Btreet.l_ Bova
JA.;tlB9
rinTASNW
bandllni to
Onlb (11,Pouse II
Elltate,jsrsactil
D LOTS MA O.
the most sound
lately hid out - on .
red for I le. ap e s
Itu
. at hie ogles lo Mel
ISM
for the owe
Potirrille Ile
SONDA
2. A were Gaa •
sonatas for Ores
Elotas of lbw* •
powtaber'S Weis
ICUOOL
mit of V
iviUU
Dec. 17.1831
1/otl *Tap
o f wanted Detail
whit!' he Invitee
tee s. ere. Ale°.
about ha 4 tie us
Cheep nook
Dee.l7, 11112
Praia PA
, bet bus j eft
pot. at,
of nits
• kis 111
Bahasa Du
kes_ ou 8.1
elkllonety Sun
B
& FOUND.
ptwatra Patteville*ad att. Clair. r Drab
- • WaganCaebtout. Wrtoeeer will leave
• - • iratat lbe'llore Of the riascrlber, will
thaski. WSJ. pzucE, et.
eoi.
4411
MCt
Jan
'COW.--Cade to the pftrillsee of ha
itocr.ll Barritownahtp,t4ettnyl• •
ke. Ire. an the Ith of Deep'''. "11
. I AROS, Ifg4l.l)W.OW,leith •
atom nor seen Ttie ;corner le MP
IQ CO* Towed - - -
rlle bef 'twee, atto
1 04
s, to
Zia
i ov
Zia
kill,
bet
whit.
nq
to
teb
Jul
YELLOW
'pot in ber &ice,
twilit' to tbillubstrib
aid enlinnil- weir
D avie ,
• - doorbe.
UPPrOltbing
•fitin op. or
YPEti t ' and
its. ,
DOLIL.AELS. f.EwARD.-74.0. on ti.•
Fl 5, usu. betwi, 3 mule mottle arid Tubtro.' In*.
I
... I . foot of Um Broad Minot afn. or In ranging
thlll f; 'inn of the Herrman Tries 4,1 don ble-cawil
SILV LEVER , WATCH. with ,*feel chain' aod
IN' figs ander *lli retc Ire - the itinvo r award on
lua
t uirtery of 11.10 th e &u IGer.rtn Mobankontin
p
'lreVt!ttrittle. of at ht. odic!.
MVEL in Ci taLEWll7.rn tilfteet
iBA
lan bigh
•a+ed at a
chauce
atatlau—.
MEM
' relgives
same sae
I im
WANTED.
1 1 CIPAIIIATION WADI TI:0=Of CATUE
aii 11,4NNAL-1. sird about 14 leafs. dile left
brumws, debut/till County,4.o., *Wel two.} tale
She Is lorgeof her ase, brown ban. dare otte
ft!coh, 1100 bktie ;ryes, plaint and agreeable to
htrutenere•end probseir: - deny We: eame , w kW
1 . 01 ;0 dose' befate. Het parquite; win be mode:
`rd .11istions.to any person who kolli give • Meet
I au) • tallith:or respeetivi the :ohltd• addretteil to
M N NAN N AN, St • ClalrT. fLebuytitlaCe.,
I Pa.
ew Voili,Papef4.wlll please notice.
10 ,, 31, 11153 f: 43.3te
01 Our
• • t forget
0 . tim
estap.
peeies of
- t may,
the di•
ate:
, • che,
Wrap,
. • over
" . ,
• At the Salim> M tees, sit mile. from
see nbetetire .lo toOgood,imber,sumey.
. . • !
yinclb`stents per bushel for minlag Moat,
,• ea of tp!is, right stripe fooastint exOploytniot
iventbe;year *round; Foe rbriber Pirr'ell;"
ply to ttbOtHIEW
. .
3 . 103 4.; • 49-tut
taJ~
Wl'
GM
ETIOD4-6,, rneC - TiCdA4 80134 MIN Ea. one
Ily attuneo:ot to lake claigeht the coal work'
sante Krakow Moon CiSllietyi near kitildleport
Townanip; ectruylsill Conhig. Moat be
Wivalated with Workihig large and email veins
pe-fr ventilation of tuluni,ll.llW OliAtt ntrit ep-
Inlaid waive will be to EtOUgli
Bilddtepoit, or lo i " •
MOGULS ear; N toisoN 11
200653 • ; I,; i • 4611.
_ • _
=1
kao
81)
ne.
lad
. ,
I;• ; •
mritED-: imatidoCiirkatAr--A Goou
WOO') Turner, At the p01.119 , 1111e dream , Ylaa
dtd iu who'll °mama esuploy rut nt
Vaud wagro ill 4 , Illy •
• Wm. POLLOCK, As'l..
1e153. • -
~1 43-LL
310 N& CVTLERY7
AND. , PORKB.-Just received by
oubserib■r, a tot of Nurses! and Fark■, pt;-a
&ignor quatitt‘ pot up in . raSee, suitable for Cbrist
tutatid hew and see them at
tthill:tearase Store of the dobscriuot.
fiEOhlik: nninwr.
Mc. - .1 51.tf
fIORM R S —PreinAlm mak les;achlals
ilahave:tattn the prizes at el! the!titate Fairy, end
ai out own Comity Agticultu'ral F4t warn awarded
a premauto, turiaMe .41 the "Lia.au nail I tam Store.
FAANK PUTT.
SELF.SETTING mica/. 07,11A.T T Ps
,_mak t g °,ezu ;Kara: fu übc. LOCAL lot tate by
. -November /4.71:1 53 . I . 47-tr
GAST STSICL; Shea 0 _Plea. Bar trap, Nail
%-/ Rods. Ratispid Iron. &t., for gala at
Town Kali Iron Store. • • iFRANK. PUTT.
k,k AGIIO TERNS::;-Spinetttio4 toz - piesen
the youngste s during di,: tOming hti'idityg, fur
We it the Tcnit?t , Usll Iron'4usr !'Yy
I.
j ;I RAN
N 9 venitier•li. 1353 - , ! 4741.
PUEyi.DEALER deRAP 'RUN,
as
/I..Copper../Imas. tsar DlOrk Tin., Sodder.r
Isplelter - Leart;&e. Orders ireceived fur Braes and
Copper work;end hiachluO furnishing. All. orders
connected with the above line plciuiptly attended to:
or N. Z. Corner Venn atid'Soultil /31.reell.Phitau'a.
dune U. 1,43. , • 4441
VOTICEe—JOSEP,II I'AyTEELBON this day.
.1.1 tarred from the bdinneis of - selling and alupptng
ttal,conduered uader the nun of t.:llAttLpel attL.
/AM & CO.- CHAULEN basing amnia.
led with arra N. P. GOlttrON',erill continue the bust 7
assn as de/11010re, under itushroi of '•
- • CHARLES MALhit & CO„
. Otte Au 13 Walnut dr. •
isu 7. 1851.
011PICC OF Tails Swa•OLIA 0,4114031D•C0..
Pottatiittic. Jim 1etb,1853.
NOTICE ft hareby givet 111'4 the Atmual
tog or Lite cligreliuttleto 014 Lc: clectlua In Vircal-
Old, clot 45.14C(41 3T. tealMicf AO./ 'Secretary,
held It 3 (velvet, PI- tl• it) their Watt, In tUC
Wrote' of tottavitte , , ot Jatiutry
W-actor I.usultag
Of: 0. - MOORE, SCey
53-0.
Mg
" . .
pet. 31,1953,'
ffICCOP TNT EAll *AilitoAD tomeAlvt, t
O
Peitsr/le, Drs. 20, la
Tie Annual meeting of the titosiraold , :ts will Da Lerd
at the ortlenbt Canna W. :aleGtanis. to at4ttantor iq
oa *MIA/ the 9th pi January utrit. , at 2 .
duct F. Witch arclart elnaton fur a President
and rrrelvje dirsciars witt @ti held.
,•• li. ADAM, nee'y. •
'Doe. al; . •, • . 5.2,3;
I
~ '
_
k . oTIC39— ' - .•
.1. 1 11 isgisbta,Fott .-
...... 1
ea. Ili Juia. T.. 1e 33 , riiii. L';•
Williati Gothic ' I 1 . -
1 :• ' eserdeisti L a -c4 4°.1------kiz.lieue T., 1352,Pini1. ice.
,-,,, . *manta Clothle gad ri ' • -
- Jecoo- Coulee Ji • '• 1
The undersigned. Auditor innolnted by tba Codtt
a Coalfaoh Plias of cichtirlitaii C4unty, to disitibiite
inn money Yawed on Anima exacumna anions cue
, Weistreettone entitled td timeline It. will attend for
out , uiptisc al ats olOce.:Ontre direst, ntiore Mir
lei. Potwatite, on the notch. day of JantinlY i 1 854 .
I I o'clock, P.
,M., whiiniatid whcre Owe Interested
stay atoed. ' , .J911:4 T. eitIOEY, Ell, Auditor. .
. I Dec: 24,18 5 J . ' f ; -.: 52.31
-..., ,
,VOT/CB.—The Botril of Liirectore of the Feiin
-01 'pliant.% Training 140100 fin. Idiotic and Feeble
minaid Children, Ineorpc:tatid by the Legislature ,or
-P,enssylvehle, April, 1822, give notice that they will
, new - receive a lew 81.18810141 pupil, under./2 year.
°rage, Intd then inainuntin.i 14a.rly application will
be prceriary to'secure eilCutsbion. e 9 with their pie . -
'sent accotttinodition their; niimber niu.it be quite lim
d ited. Mmileatide may be;be;mode to
lion. OgURUE M. 1 9;ftpliD,'") Committer of.
PfIlL.11" 9; JUdTICE.'i . i .'t Reception.
.•
8: MOIIRId 4VAllyi s i i ' ; ) Phltade,lphia: •
Or to the Prlne , pall of the Institution,
I JAihlEdili.lticllAßlM,
ii• • , 1 - , i i eimantown, ea.
_i . , 63,11
' '
Dec. 24. 1857
ea Chinon a line lima& ecnurLAllas , lot R. WU°. (
L. • PAiladelylid,l2wC. 16 1 e. 1253. j
til
Stated Annual ,ethig of, the Stockholder. of
le ' , Ms Corripany Will be held at,tbetr oltco, In the 11311
(the Fraaalln Inatitute.! P.O. 1,1 South Sk.'VENTII
treet;-an the ath day of let titunth, (J.touuryi) 1851.
10 o'clock In
_the iorenonn,at which a report Lt
01 the protetdlngs of the Board of Manager* will he
thpile.euted, and an elwaioni will be held fur a' Pres..
bl Sem and ten Managers, to coOddet the attains of the
lupprupany fur the year ensiling:
S.AMULL MASON. theeY
• 22-3 t
. r'l:iptec. 21,
4 DII/N/STRATO* NOTiCE.—WIIEbiE.
4ifLAS Letters• of adininistratiop, uu the Estate of
TARMIIFOX, late of the Eofutigh of Putter ille,
1110 e Crusty of stnuAtil, deceased, hare. been
tcl to the Subscriber t - notice is hereby :given
ft perrotri indeit.ed in sad vitae to rotate ow
t and Mate rheum, will preseut them Cot
leznent. -, 1 ADAM SHEHTLE..
• ! Administrator.
Saks
c.. 10, 1853
roderalgned
'sawed into co-parinerebtp In be praerlee;
and have taken the!office lately atcopled by
romps, Sul The &wino* of MC. Hughes,
an by btu entrusted to usi, will receive. ad,
11elie tbai may be Confided to our cut. oar
neatlon. -- WEL .11.; WELLet. . .;
- ;NON
. -
Irons of wltbdrakring from the practice'
In:lbe Courts of this Chanty. f have , con-;
Walled prufessionalbgsinew.tothe care;
vita and Joule llooliatt, Ewe., whom:
10 the manairetdeat Of the same own;
engagements jade ckscharged. .
• F W; 1111011E9.
•; I s 91-tf • ;
EMI
Elig
NOTICES.
be Boots of, Aecoutda of The' tate
IT , lePOTT,.bas , a Dann placed in
undtraiined Or collection; and
'PLUS, call add 'mike payment,
ay. JOLINC. CONRA J.T.
Hist, - i . 30.4f
ittbscribeii hereby Live notice
rlll tia made to;tbs neat Lealsla
tor a chinetora Savings !Ulna
to of Pinter' with 4 capital
lam Mid the privileges of lo
tted Thousand Dollars, and 0: -
iv/est and' iiircelanetng, to hi.
ILLICOAVINGS DANK."
altdotturo
J. „
Whlleey,
J.
Fr7i Y.
„William Pos. • if
John Plnitetim.,
Nathan &ant. •
Rhea that
ty : intend to apy
salon, for ire*
ct..to be lorr
gylkllf Grant
CITZ.BAIV
T+to'l Htlrat
pd. nen se
irpndscd
• it
hi the
,rit., to tn.
if TAMA-
end tiny
taeyeigh tpe
•u*od 1.001-
CM
et
tb
tho melt
, co );
ri : ni e tdar r it e , b
, mule J
0
10
wort. the eh
p[ for bittiet
4
I !
Cre
r/.l' or
i/iinir.
of .111
on ind
E. •
ritgacd
liberal
f}. J.
havj
end :day J
RCI
which all Ka •117
condiutia 'Under t
Mice, Celt
stOla. , Potlaville
: C. NE
Iles 13
e Gib.
.DK •
trait.
ifitl
Street,
VA:Mg.—AD
nev i sarp3o bul
I; Tog Han Iron!
P
.47/
balled
or
Mining ...,:i',4so.oiti6i,,
DEPWITNENT.
... ; • 1,
• , • PRICES oP irrocXB • ' ' -
v...
or Coat and TranipOrteuna: Co m panies in and run
ping Iron:the Antbnunte Coal Yields of Peon - y 1
:yams. , ; - .. . , , _
Corrected i teetialor Ma jifin,,,, , journal .
5 . I • Z. 5 114.141 ar Co.,_l3askerS
RAIL ROADS
•
Rita* •
31Ibe
Slpunt Carbon, •
}Taunt Carbon & Port Carbon,
Mill Creek, I
lichuylkiH V a lley,
Lorberry
Swatant,
EZBEIM
Sehuylklll Navigation,
do , Pyeferred,
talon Cana!, -
do Jo Preferred:
Delaware S. Hudson Coat & Trona.
4 0 0 1 1111i011(..70 . 9. •
RAW ROAD & COAL CO'S. -
Little Schuyiktll Coal Ze R. R. Co.,
j,rhigh Coal Nitvigatton Co.
gazieton Coal Co., •
Wick Mot/up:kin Coat Co.,
Peonsylvania Cad dr. It. R..C0.,
Dauphin Coal &]B.. R. Co.„
Lykena Ireqey Coal & R. R. Co.,
Beaver MeadowsCoal&R. W. Co.,
• COAL COMPANIES.
Fret ItnproVereent Co.,
North Ahaeticau Gill Co., . '
Delaware Canal Co., •
MISCELLANEOU. . •
Miners'
Farmers' Bank,
P.ott‘ville Otis Ck)., .
Yottwille Water CO.,
ATMOSPHERIC TELEGRAPH. i• .
Mr. Bi4hardson, the inventor - of the At' -
rtiospheri Telegrapl . k has placed a workiag
model of his inveuttan irt one of the. MOWS
adjoillitig the Senate Chamber at Washing-_
tau. •It is thus described by the Washington
ekirrespi:milent of the New York. T,mes.
i ."Phe litotlel consists first Of a metal pipe . ,
dr tube, with a bore one inch m diameter, a 0
arranged that it may be opened or closed '.; ,
different iioints for the admission or the ex,J
tiaustiou(4 the atmosphere at will. A plan.
leer or Ogg is made of the same diameter as -
the bore, desigued to run easily Within the
itili..i, and vet so arranged as, to 'prevent the
passage kit the air between its side and the
mne4 surface of the tube. &wiz of this Ohl- •
ger or sl diog plug a miniature mail-bag.
big enough to carry .a President's, Message
or two, /s fastened. A little exhaustion
pump is connectcdwith the telegraph tube
by a-Smaller tube, through which the atmos
phere is (o be withdrawn. . '
~. - When the Plunger with its attached load
ready fur its journey, the telegraph tribe
is clo s ed Land tendered nearly air-tight in that
part ilf.l which is between the plunger and
the pima to which it is designed to be Pm
"wiled. The air in front of the plunger is
then withdrawn by the action of the exhaust
pump, amt 1 . 6 IF Ike uum is created, into which
.the plunger and its load rushes, impelled by
.the pres Sure of the. atmosphere in that part
rjof the pipe which is back of the loaded plun
,ger. Ftir stopping at. way stations, valies
,are inserted at the points where the stopping
is desired, and the operation of exhaustieg
the atmdsphpre and impelling - the load is te- •
seated from point •to point, in the meatier .)
.s..lready ilescrtbed. • i
" It will be seen that its Capacity for
speed .is limited only by the capacity I'of
machinery to exhaust the atmosphere. Bin
;alas work of exhausting may be all Crimple
led while the load is being wade up. To ac
tormlish this, a valve is - placed in front 4
4i::::::,
t N i lh :al
load
Il i
s t i b o e t l i n a g t
p iss i - uay, exhaust the tube; andthen upon
all connections
prepared,
th (1
e t
use, befween the plunger and the vacuum
t Tr-ugh! which it is to be . propelled. Tins
c tug 'the tube over the plunger and lead
b pians (~1 an air-right cap, and raising
9 1 i.vailk• between the. plunger and the vac•
uWhich has already been created, it will
be LI that the load will fly to its ,
Yll' i h a motion as rapid-as that of the
anti I , ,ere. itself. . I
l e inventor is entirely confident theta
" ' - $
.
e
tele ph upon this principle may be con
stru ,at a cost of $2,000 per mile, of quitetik 3
milli ' t capacity to transport the heaviest
mail nd express freight at a rate of speed
equalld . 'by nothing else save the lightning•
itself:? • .•
, - , ,
.I, t IRON MA.v.i.L`r.4.cTuftE. I.
"I"?..fie(tiptiratian and Eztansion. I
\Va . /7e • within the last- few Inniths•
seen freaent allusion to a new ptanyly
which literal coal and iron ore are conifer•
ted at ilke into wrought iron, withourl'az•
sing 1 :4 1 a at the more tedionistep%)dto*ad
tivm the g_metal state:. as now .artuerally
PraaikaCThe process is thus dpler ibed:—
‘. The rturtal coal and crude ori(after bing
crushalatdverized, and rnivtu la suitable
PraPart e put into a holier, like a bag
ry
of stuiiit
m ill ; /ad when etu•
count
fic tend)? :deinituZiect,.zits. 011.11 like so much
. red hot sand,tand,witkOut
red front first tolast.- . Z.Thislttirrstands by
the rpere adhesion and aggregation !of its
particles,' and .the spontaneous welding of
those particle% under the manipulations'of a
pietical pudier; grows into a compact mass;
aridliko a rolling snowball, increases with
every turn fo the. size of„the largest pump.
kin.
This iron pumpkin or ball - of red hot met-'
al brought under a Jorge hammer, is in less . -
than five minutes, converted into a beautiful
bloom, from which can' be manufactured
boiler iron, sheet iron, bar iron, nail' rods.
&c."
It is stated that an appropriate furnare and
pudling oven for thiS process can be et . ectee
for less than one thousand dollars, aad any
man having an nein of coal land, with i - doct..-
iron ore iu its vicinity, and a thousand . .d01....
tars in his pocket, can in less time tit it
would require to erect a saw mill or! fist
'mill, have a furnace running upon lets own,
premisis,,at-the loot of his own coat .
which•shall turn out daily
,two tons , first
rate blooms, at a cost of twenty doll ' per
/
ton—though worth at his own door *en ty .
dollars per ton, thus giving him a *fit of
one hundred doll.,is a day, , ori a cap! of
one thousand dollars. , . l'
1
We were much surprised when' te 'first
read of this invention, and were dis dto
class it among the numerous h ga of
the day. But the Pittsburg editors ' ort us
at is i e
that the furnace is actually in c i ioh n. ,
that city, and that they have wit h .ed I the %
It
process as aboire described. It is rudnly
one of the roost important inventits of !the
age, and will be. invaluable to *sona of
limited means, who own prop . in coal
and iron districts.-.13.a1t. Time,. ' ' I .
• ,
_ _
a:7' 1 1UNTINGIKIN dr - BROAD 1 q 3.: R . Co.
—We have hadbetore us for e tinie a'
Report relating to this Comps*, hteh is so
efficiently presided over by that . onaitebe
persOnification of perseverence, ri. Ayres,
of Harrisburg ; but we have no heretofore
had the leisure to give 1t such examina
tion as a proper notice, of it wo demand.
The coal field to la•likh the rep . refer* is
situated about 27 isles from th borough of
anngdon, in Central Penns vacua, 'and
has been purchased by.a numb of wes4hY
perties..—A Railioad 25 Miles length:- is
.411.1
being built from the coal deposi to the Cen
tral Railroad, Vhich; it iti thou t, Willi be
completed duriig the year, at estimated
cost of 87200 0 0—rincluding t necessary'
.
lateral road. The Company own. about
2,500 icreifof the coal laud. T - e estimated .
superficidarea of coal embracin theta&
it
is 51,2 'acres, which, is houghr,Will •
I,z
yield '1 4,000,000 tons of coaO Summing
the r -to carryieway one million of touS of •
coal year, the deposit would last mire
than, thousand years. A nuniber`M eXper
knits have been Made,: with'i view totrest
thitelative value, .ffir steam PIPP° II "'
of the
aihracite coal, and the .semi-bitnrniaotts
odl from Broad Top—and With very filv.i_r• •
Itle results for the latter.—Lebanon Com".
Tut, LOST Airrs.-:-The art of rrtsltiitg
!the Damascus blade is lost. It is said tboy .
*ere made by welding togetheraltemate styli
and gold wires, And twisting theUl.iti tfie,
process. Their elasticity and kecuuess are
almost
_fabulous. We all lenhember the .
'scene in Scott's novel, where Richard divf;
ded a thick iron bar with a blow Of his sword,
and Saladin cut m two parts s i lk waif
floating in the air. wi!b iti4 Damascus Mods.
•
Chi.
0 the
r ora
G2•RE'9EWAL OP COWS EILVINT.-4t • is .
stated that the Committee on Patents iti
Congress have rinantruotisly reported in - fir
vor of the extension of Samuel - Coles patent
for seven years. reserving to the GoeertP
ment of the 'United States The- night, to make
and manufieture the.repeating arms in all
of their own armories for military and naval
purposes. The reasons for ting it are
stated to be, that the inventor ha grans
not bed
the use of his patent in a profitable degree
votify
10:7"Trtr. S : u narretta , sßoutevvilt. be 0
actual operation next week; when the ears,
will continence running on the Steubenviliel
and Indiana Railroad; and the steamer For-1
est City, which has been purchased for the
Su
will ply as a regular packet between
Steubenville and Pittsburg. The railroad 1
over the Pan Handle of Virginia is alsonear
ly:finished and a Iceomotive is now ruattiag
od it t
••REovt&a weekly eiiikributiOns. ( ro t)
Q" and °ltle t RegiODS L ;!lfe solicited for
this clepartmeat dour paper. .
M
k i"
bis
0 4
tut
t :.
..
: x
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39e e
\
7(l '
39 1
50
50.: „1
50 "
fl 5
. -50 •
50
50 i 23)
50.1 31.1
50 ! 11
150;51
,100 1 t 9
1
MB
50 54 4
50
50
117 50 *
MO 4/7
100 I, 48
.50 1
50 1 37
10 l'
25i IS
:a i
SO