The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, June 16, 1855, Image 3

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ion Uzi* n 2 ri , f4ol l trP;iltAiVej
ft .P on glieta.'ls.eftpllnteee netting Ow
fra ,„„ c t Busigen rea l ' eet)t, thie'esti•
eiseetits, hut ie en elf , citict; aid it',
4401attt l a rgely arsalla Ike wastes ii.Seheit:
-f which metiers it out of the ettoettlata.
idetr ating sieWin AO. the Co Wry; : Zit fele
l a ye oniti OapitaPsta wolfed
-6e tAti r .
/id/. • • ,
, FOB THE MINICIIIIP MrIINAL: ' -
To J. Lzwis, Mt. Ctu;nel: ... . - . ;
.tc F. Davis, Ashland: • . L. L.
oIDRHICIC LArDgnasulf, Tamaqua , , •
moles A. Gonratr; Tremont: ' .
-
sr IL PAWNER, comer Fifth and Chestnut
ge, Philadelphia :
I. Csau, South 3d a lieet; Philadephia:
Ass A Co., Sooth 3d street, Philadelphia: '
O . ER e. Ins rs, N. E comer Third and Race
ts, Philadelphia: ..
_..
F. Soares, Coal Merchant, 52,i :Walnut St.,
leipli.
In. BARNES, Gilst.y's Buildinlie, corner Broad
' a d Condi:odt street, New York:
1. ,, y B. pAtmsn, Tribune Building,N.York:
0 , i C o ., 1112 Nassau street, New York:
)1. arresultt, 119 Nassau street, Ns; YOrk :
,xi:Fa & See e a. t., Appleton's B uildings, Broad-
New York:
1.
li., P A L R, Court street, Boston:
PETTESOILLO State street, Boston:
lo are a uthorised to recieve subscriptions, ad.
lemen t,, ,Le., for the Miners' Journal, and re
for the same.
;;BIISIIIES B TIOTICE3.
,AC STItAITCH, of West Branch valley, in
;Dusty, hes been appointed — Adminietnitcir to
!we of Charles Strwich. • .
ADVERTISER in another column lit de.;
of managing" a Colliery, and will.inrest
if necessary, , y •
E LOCUST GAP and Summit Improvement
vies want two Coal Breakers created. See
ement.
CTlON.—Harris lc, Severn, caution the pub.
to negotiate note of $ll9. See Over.
:03131ISSION,Rft'S Sale of Real Estate will
!I at the Cciert lloyse in; this Borough, on
31 proximo. See .adrertieement for Orden-
fhb CANAL.--Propoials will be, received
e ogee of this Company, in Philadelphia,
the 10th proximo, for enlarging the Canal
Lebanon to Reading.
,CADIAN INSTITUTE.—This educational
liehrucnt located at Orwigsburg,, has entered
the second year of its existence. Nte -ask
ikla to partirnlitrs,'which wilt be found in an
i!ement iu another cniumn.
-sine MAN.--The Mayor of Wellsville,
zot drunk not long since; when sobered,
nt before a squire, informed` won hitii-
Liais fine, and resigned his office.
HAMPSHIItE. — On Thursday, the Sen.
est into an election for U. S. Senators,
Hon. James Bell;'was chosen for the
'term, and Hon. Man P. Hale for the
indl(4poi: make .any particular headway
.st MayOr Dow. The Coroner's Jury jus•
his couise in.the first instance, and sub
ntly the Court acquitted him of all
TIONSL DirtsioN Sows OF TEMPERANCE.
Annual meeting of this, importint and
Ord • organization was held at Charles :
;. C., last week. , The attendance was
and the proceedings marked by an
fitness and enthusiasm, which rendered
lextremely attractive.
Ina..I.NCF Ie'RSIONT. it is stated that
iquor Law of thitt State was never more
rin Vermont than now. ' It is doing
work in the cities and large' towns. A
d rumseller,. when brought before the
iJury, said, "It is a pity I was disttirbed.
people *ere becoming so well trained that
took liquors from me which were two
cater. If I,had been let alone, I think
"6111 d drink ciyitr water before six months:"
l IGYArt REI RENIENT OF A CONGREGA•
-In Toronto, on Snuday morning last;
Church or the Hdly Trinity, the creed
haunted, instead Of being repeated in
'4l manner. More than half of 'the con
,ioa immediately left the church, and
more were much dissatisfied at this at
to introduce, Pliseyistic observances in
worship : to speak plainer, Roman Cath,
'‘s.ervances.
LANCASTER RILII DEMONSTRATION.--
ffair took place on Saturday last, and
complete failure. A miserable proces
xs formed, accompanied by brass'(l)
and paraded throtigh the principal
under command of Captain
. Whiskey.
bons were adopted styling the new li
wan "illegal" enactment, &c. It was
.loas and disgraceful affair throughout,
aced many of the participants to hang
ds and blush for shame. .
e lYnoxo Box.—The runiites and po
emagogues, who endeavored to ‘‘,44
Ycal Now, the• authdr of, the Maine
Law, have found themselves in the
box, and hhe a strange dog, ben corn.
to shrink back into their dens, An in
tion of the matter could not • substati
single charge laid at Neal Dow's door,
• public'now perceive that rumsellers;
'clers and abettors„ are awfully given to
[ Hi.
met.
{.K
Witi
rat,
and
te,
11,&•
rug INnicus.—A large quantity of
, onoits drug is imported yearly into
J. It is chiefly used for adulterating
ne pound of the drug being equal 'to
nshels of malt, so far as
use
!e are concerned, The use of it is
en, however, by act_of Parliament, un
penalty of £2OO to the brewer, and
o the druggist who sells it to a brewer.
3tiful busiuesa truly, that tolerates a
e use of which is forbidden by!law.---
rgular that the force of public opinion
I Britain, has not ere this, stoppedithe
manufacture.
LAn PHASE.-A year since', the Reg
ised us in round terms forour well
opposition to foreigners, and foreign
in political matters. Now, the same
I , y a marvellous somersault, exhibits to
blic, alunny phase in its career. It
~p is die course it condemned so heart-•
weive month since in 00 :Perfectly
howei-er, for the papers of, this County
ne by one into the Icad‘of the - Hi/rem'
• Truth is mighty, and must prevail ;
Reg' i,tfee is an illustriation of a singe
unexpected conversion from error to
atirely correct thinking upori the mat-
Tchich it abused us so earnestly a year
'ItINTIKG.—Our arrangements are so
that we are enabled to turn ont every
ion of plain and fancy Job Printing,
ie equal, and in some instances •supe.
I , miler work executed in the principal
.the Union. The whole Journal es
nent, both, in the Newspaper_and Job
tots, comprises practical ,printers, in
'''ratio n , whose experience` and ability
'warrant of the Satisfaction they are
to affurd oar patrons. Samples of
can be examined at our office;
will challenge criticism, andcorn
admiration, in point of workmanlike
and neatness of execution. • clur . abil
to'n out Jobs of the most unexception,
satisfactory character, insures US,
gratified to state, that liberal patron
i,ich is creraceorded to 'superior work
—fmailetk•rnii.
TEE • • 11 , 411
Cot 4iPlein
embarked npen to Central
AgnirkalkiNini‘ altOr ro#. 6 r ' •:o 6 1008
constant, 6.,n7:04461,:g1141itii
!.ye4 *linnet) of9m-web of the NicainVa
Transit, e;itiiiitany; OE Miele
Sam. . The eenniellem of. Col . ,lQpney:nth
this .,..i s t a ka#Fb c1kaP.144..taa4.;
foliougoog teethetriee, has giveo; pai l ;
1
it j P O ,P I 44T ral a b r it- Y.; whi rk. fa r edilsea'all
pre~iou aaveduresi:endniiinfe one ofJ
:the lines' of Clio illee3. — „ ' '
• Col e Kionoi to t . ottijo 6f-Penosylvatem—
He was hewn iwWyoming.ivallevand his
ter was the'fira.ehild born after the:Celebra
ted and bloody massaotN..oickdTilec.ll'
that rontidig 'l"getelittiteepot,' - iiimutli 6'
'night* 4 , BFie;l:iqt* io'filla?eiP : ::olOW;fiv;ok
such aiOCl4 and reared .'att atmosphere
which Inspires revatszttic 'adventure and , manly
daring,' Col. Kinney has proven himself a
man of extraordinary personal qualities. In
Texas, his name is cotispicuonsly historical—
having been connected with every movement
which resulted in its secession from Mexico, in
the war. and independent Republic which fol
lowed, until its final admission into the Union.
Ile was no less distinguished in tbe field than
in the council—both as a "Texan Ranger"
and a Tcr an , member of Congress, he exhibi
ted abilities - far, ali4e imdiocrity. When the
war with e Meirico broke out, from his immense
landed possessions in its !proximity; he was
enabled almost Wholly to 'sustain the army
with cattle and provisions ; and although
many millions of dollars of government money
have poised through his bands, in the course
"of his varied dealings with it, yet his accounts
have always been audited satisfactorily, and
to the last sixpence. His explorations in
California, and the reports to Congress of his
expeditions, are equalled only by those or col t
Fremont ; and it is doubtful which` of the
has exhibited more of human endtirtinceio pri
, vation, and r devotion to the cause of civilized
progress.
What the results (or immediate, charade!)
of Cot K.'s present expedition may.be, can
only be surmised; but we more than doubt
,
the fi libustering 'feature geaerally attributed
to it. There are other interests at Nicaragua,
which are in direct conflict with the peaceable
improvement of the country; anti the opposi
tion of . the Transit Company, which fomented
the recent ridiculous performance'at Greytown,
was at the bottom of the no less ridiculous
movements of the • GovernMent vessels in the
New York Haibor, which Col. K., by a skilful
coup d'dizt, has so entirely eiaded. •
Arr ANTI-PROHIBITION' LAW Mzerisc was
held in Reading on the 4th, a notice of which
we gave laSt week. 'We see by the Reading
Gazette that it was a large and enthu*stic
gathering. It seems that there wOAiekdis
tinction:of party, but Whigs ana „ D.emocrats
attended without regard f to other - L4Sues than
those for which the meeting lwas held. An
other meeting of a similar kind has been held
in Lancaster, which is spoken of as still larger
and more spirited than the one at'Reading.--
Gazelle. ;
It is a fact of which we are aware, that on
the question_ of a Prohibitory Liquor Law,
both the Whig and Democratic parties are , di•
vided. As regards the Democratic party, we
are also eogaitant of the fact, that the ) honest
and most' worthy portibn of it, in every sec
tion of the 'Union, is in favor of Temperance.
We have an' Hinstration of the assertion, in
an incident which occurred in this borough
on the . day of the Berks County Rum Meeti
ing. .A Democratic. , resident of Hamburg
'was accosted by one of our citizens, who-ezi
pressed surprise that his Hamburg friend wa 4
not at Reading, attending the rum 4emons,tra,
tiod. His replywas noble,—"l would not b 4
in Reading to-day for five 'hundred dollars
people would think I went to attend the Runi
Meeting." He could hardly endure even the
thought of the shame, the disgrace that wculd
attach to his name, if seen in such an assem
blage. The Gazette can hardly be oblivion
to the . fact, when it iufera that Whigs we
prominent in the meeting, that all the princi
tt
pal officers
_and speakers of this disgraceful
affair, were Democratic politicians. It wa,t
unquestionably a Democratic political rum
rabble gathering; and notwithstanding th s
efforts of the Organs of that God-forsake
crew, to squirm out of the responsibility( and
disgrace which attaches to meetings of tit,
character of the recent Berks and Lancast4
gatherings, they may rest . assured the effort c
will prove abortive. The public understand
them too welL . ' 1
folks in
Tire FOREIGN intelligence, per steamshij
Atlantic, the most important points of which
we publish in another column, is exceeding
interesting. • The successes of the Allied force-6,
in the Crimea; rind the movement of the Hui
sian 'peace party, renders it not improbabl,6
that, peace may be consummated ere long.-i-
This, however, is. exceedingly problematica I
Pelessier, the French commander, is now th
pet of the, ZonaveS, that 44 dare•devil " portion
of the French army. He has, it appears, the
I
ken Canrobert' s place, irot because his pred •
cessor's personal courage was doubted; but,
cause, Canrobert wanted that Devil in hi
which' Ne:T, and Murat,' and Roche, and- A :
• gefruu, and Bieber, and Moreau', andDavous
rend Lannea, and Lasalle,"aiill Pejo], 'and E -
celrnans, and even Westerman had, and whi
Pelissier has. • A Parisian correspondent f
the Courier & Enquirer, says that Canrobe t
would head a charge and thonnt a breat es
fearlessly as Pelessier, but he would not °tini
ly and unrelentlessly suffocate in a cave—r/s .
Pelessier did - twelve hundred fellow huoiria
beings, of all ages and of both sexes. Brae
as Hoce, Moreau or Bieber, Pelissier has not
their humanity. Daring—rembiseless--bloody
—he is, it is feared, "tile Man" for the occasion.
If he possess talent, and be live, he will cl.-
cupy a distinguished place in history. . . I
Ora SEMI-XNNUAL VOitl3lE.-412 the , firit .
week of the corning Month, Jely, the aerni 4
annual volume of the MINERS' JOURNAL will
commence, affording those who wish to sub.
scribe for the remainder of the year, an op
pOrtunity for so doing. Our readers of course,
are aware of the outlet for superabundant
matter which we now possess, in the WEDNEs.
DAY Dou.sa Jotieser. and the opportunity
also offers of subscribing to that paper, for the
remainder of the year, in connection with the .
MINERS' Jouttrai. We are fully determined to
spare no expense nor effort to render As MI
NERS' JOURNAL anti WEDNESDAY DOLLARJOIIR,
NAL fully worthy of public coadence and sup
port: Although our expenses are muchinereas
ed and double those of any two papers in the
county, our price is still the same for the MI
NERS' JOURNAL, and that asked for the 'WEI).-
NESHAT JOrassr., much cheaper for the
amount of reading given, that any other pa
per puhiished ,here. Our European corre
spondence will be a decided feature in the
next semi-annual volume of the MINERS' Jona-
NAL, and will afford an illustration to our
large number of patrons, of our desire to;• af
ford full satisfaction.
MESARs. Etes....--Deai Sir :—;49onld you please
let me hare room for a few words of very great
need_in your ttseful paper. I would like to call
tho attention of our Chief Burgessto the - erOwds
of idlers who nightly assemble on the . Corner .of
Contra and Market Ste., in front of Mr. Heaton's
Jewelry Store, thereby annoying passers-by, in
sulting females, and indeed doing everything to
disgrace a person who has to go on that side of tile
street.. I think if, you would call the , attention of
nor Chief Burgesti to this, it would soon disperse
the crowd who assemble there. By publishing
this yoti' will greatly oblige.
Potftrille, Ju . Ne 14th, 1855.
We agree with the titer that the nuisa' noel
complained of is quite as great as represent-,
ed, and ought to be abated. The law forbids!
persona assembling on any person's paved
went without express permission—and if they
refuse to leave, the offenders can be arrested
and committed, in the - same manner as if
•oltilty of other offencee.
[CONXVITICATED.)
Dzcsscr.
AN Etiici l w '.-441, ',4 ale“... aiii_rhi'
Proceedinoolv -
arimptiooftrai
only ititheltew . . anrileetahriabi
'he itith orii *At at e geintiiiititis brill 7
-folleiring,did nolilie Prise of Philadlifp isayn. .
" Pea:oo* 0444eiit'schYlts . :! . ... •
It aPP,!I that Volt+ Pii
. T 1 . 11 "0"IPOli
Aroubleti bY . the slaie4 questa% ariituaTinia.•
Aey,.44 , 31,Cornmittei, 4 a vn4 cell tn. 14,
..... •
. reportedSe followire-'..4 ... , • i '• '
' Ras;)ilst4' That tha ithas;rican Parisl having
arisen : 4o4lli rain/ran . in sPiteoroppasititus
of the Whig_and beim. » tic ~.cannot
„be held in any i p3liutiiii . • ..... .1.4t40.1the - i)V -
Doxiouincts,or vailar .- . 440401 AM
the Systernaticiigitit n o th e ; slavery question
bY thcio parties has ale Lied Sectional hostili
ty into a positive elern -.11 of_politicid power,
and brought oar insaitn ', . into Peril- It has
therefore become the irti , , tive dirty of the
' tkinerietui party to in v .3e, for the purpose"
of Rini peace to the eptintry and perpetuity
to the on. That as Opulence has idiom'
it is impossible to re , eile‘opinicso ex;
treme as those which . to the tants,
and as there can be no ' h onor in siting
to the laws, the NatiOmil Council bas`' deemed
; 1
it the bestpuunnten ofl moron justice and
of future peace to abid d maintain the ex
isting laws upon the 's ect of slaeery, as , a
final and conclusive 30.4 inentuf that subject
in r_ipiritnad in edit .'
Renfredr- That reg t a .. ' .g itthe hiiiltestduty
'to avow these opinions u ,V. n a subject so int
portantrria distinct awl nequivoeal terms, it
is hereby declaired, as thesense of this Nation
al Council; that Congress' possesses no power
under the Constitutioni legislate upon the
inhjectlof slavery in the totes, or to - exclude
any State from adniission into the trnion be- - ,
*lnn her Coostitutioadoes or does not recog
nize the institution of Slavery as a Part of her
social system ; and expressly preeermitting
eu . expressions of opinion upon theipower of
co g reys to establish orl prohibit Slavery in
an t erritory . It is th e setisepf tbiiNational
CO ' cil that Congress ought not to legistnte
u n the subject of Slavery within the tern
to es of' the United S and that any inter
fe ace ;of Congress midi. Slavery as; it exists
in e District of Columb a' would 14 a viola
tio of thespixit and late Won of tha , compact
,by high the State of Ma land ceded the Die
tn p to the'United States and a breach of the
national faith. '', ' 'I
I,
Vinority Report.--T minority resolution
ire4as follows:—Reso ~Iluit the!repeal of'
Missouri Comproinise was aninfraction of
• plighted faith of the Nation, and that it
lild be restored, and tat if efforts to that
tet shall ; fail, Congress should , ,refuse toad
any State toleratinglavery which shall
T.,
Formed out of any po 'on of , the', territory
J which that intsituti 4 was excluded by
41 t Conipromise. 1 1.
he minority resolutious;were signed by the
re resentativesofPennsylania,Ohio, Connec
tic t, Maine, Massachus etts, Rhode Island,
Ve moat, tedium, Wisconsin,-Michigan Illi
no —twelVe in a ll . Delaware and New Jersey
als endorsed the first clause. New York,
al' e of the Free States, went for the majority
res lutionsi and united' with Minnesota and the
; Di 'ct of, Columbia, enabled the :;South to,
'ca the nmprity report Committee.
a diacussing die 1 resolutions, Gob. Gardi
ci
'tie declard that n''' i her he nor his State, nor
m
amajority of the f... States would abide -by
theresolutions first ported. The pitrtycoeld
not:tarry a village hi MaSsiichasetts'xin them.
He (charged the NOW York Delegationrth
'deserting the North.' The Iresolutions of the
majority will undoubtedly piss. _ .
1
,
SWINpLIN ' G OPERATION4By a le ter trom
NeW.York we are infonnedthat'n stiamp, cal
ling hiMself "G. li z igerti l n" has been engvig
,
ed in c0 11 eeting sittscriptio a and money on
'account, of, the Hintz' .Tdu : al. Wehave no
agept in that city of the a eve name. The
names of our agent i s,for thitt and other cities,
are ;stated in our ell:anti, and no Other per
sons are authorized io Collect sub'Scriptions
and receive moneySfor. thislpiper. Frequent
ly, subscribers send ' us tin!ines of friends as
subscribmi to the Jiittioitat;' that is,cdrrect, and
welappteciate 'the attention ' but no Perscn.ex
ceilt. thOse named pittinintlyin out. columns
as agents' at a distai4 art. authorbied lky us
1, r .
to solicit aubseTiPt4ans for the Miners' l i .lour.
nal. Our friends in and ini i t oldie State, will
we trust, in future tit: on tlier guard:a,gOnst a
repetitiOn Of this operationl
on the, r iart,f it
responsible'personal • / ;,' 1.
1
inairels of the tritde of;
this St4e, is exhibit!ed in the fact that shovels,
flour, wheat, barley) oats arid potatoes, are be
ing: shipped to a mkrket in the Atlantic States
and Atistralia. ptese . anomalies. of t trade
tv
sht'hOw well founded is the old establishe d law' , in politi6l ecorionity; relating to detnand
and supply. A prbduciUg countryi'may for
years export its productiti and yeti be i com
pelled, without a failure of its,crops, to import
similar; products. It ie not two yekrs singe,
says a contemporary, it was stated by political
economist!, by the, press !generallY ? and on
the flobr of Congress, that California would
always be a great Outlet P . n.. our brCadstuffs ;
and thtit she could,never become ati agricul
tur'al country. Now, she is not only a produ
cing brit an exporting country of breads taffs.
Such are s'onie of the astounding anomalies o
trade. ; 1
THE , AUSSACIII7gTTS LEGISLATU4E.—This
body, On the'day of its , recent' adjOurnment,
• •
passed, , the following amendment to tbe
,Con
stitution. of that Siate, by *an over! helming
•
majority in both branches:
,! • !
"No :person shall be eligible to of& in thi
Commonw,ealth, unless:he Shall b re been
born within :the jurisdiction of tb United .
States Of America, or unless he shall have been
the-child of an American citizen bop durin
the temporary absence pf one or both of hi
parenti from the United State; and iio perso
shall be entitled to rote in this Commonwealth,
unless he shall haft! been; a residelit within
the jurisdiction of the United States,' for twe e ri.
ty-one years, and legally naturalized.
Provided :That persons of foreign birth„
who may have been drily and legally natural,
ized or otherwise rinaliffed before.the adoptio n .
of this amendment shill be entitled' to dote
in this CommonwerilthP 1 ! • !
• -
,
. A gAii..OAD -WA , '
---An excitement has
.
been created, among tile 'many folks in the
vicinity ofigeranton, Pa r , dialog the few da3s
past, by an ratempt onithe vitt of one of the
Contractors to coerce he Ctimpani into the
payment of some sso,poo, alleged tofibe due
,from endeitatimates Ulnae by Eng't McNeill
:and his assistants ditri g thel progress of the
work. The road-bed * finished or nearly 443,1
says the Iferaldond th e Company are de
alrous of laying the tr ek open it. rrhe,Con
tactor refuse.s to give tup until' hi s demands
are complied with, anhas stationed a large
whoa number of men, who a ordered to resist any
person Who attempts take possession Of-it.
Some of their are sup l ed with revolvers and
threatentO shoot the rst man Who, presents
himself witlCa hostile 1 "tention. ' •
lIMENSE SntrxErrEilor SPECIE have recent
ly been niade to Euro .e. The Atlantic took
ont about: two niillio s; the Africa, which
sailed the week previously, nearly million;
ancl.the Boston steameY, last week, h,irl nearly
a million more—makitig nearly four millions
in two weeks, a,, ,, aist wo i millions and three
quarters received f ralik•rnial With such
f in
a drain, money mu t not only become scarce
but' the money markel t s must necesirtrily sui
fer 'another attack oficostiveness.—fPhilada;
Ledger. ! r i '
The above fact me is the particular atten
tion of the ed itor'of the Gazette. The shrive
twelve linei completely refute the (sr:potent of
,
his recent columns of words, on th effect of
, , ••
deporting the country's money to foreign land&
Abandon mere twaddle,, Gazette, and study
practical common senie, ' . _
TAVERNS IVITROVT it E3l.—The COndetsPoS
Journal says that Hon. Hebert fj.... White,
President'Judge of that district, "and a bets
to lawyerlhan one - half the membdrs of the
Soprenie (art, has always held thin doctrine
144: 4
(that a license cannot be claimed ail a righ )
and as the, fruit of such an opinion, no •
hare beta granted in Ibtter County Once Jai
nary, 1852." The Jparna/ further fsays that
they have had better public houses in Conclet
port since license., were refused than they err
had befire.; It is certainly an absurdity f.cp
insist upon the necessity of rum as an accom
patitiment of t the conduet of a pubii6 house.!
Prqrr exeition directediwillie right gassier
to accommodate his omits, would prore'aru
ply rcnutmtive to any itasonahlo landloo.
'_ ; 1
‘41.1 -. 1. -4. v; • •
iti gram 'crew.;
CrixofP Po 31 ortherk o# l 4 fth,t sl !
vania, 'atie excel l ent . rittabarg pipes
,P 4
e consequent fall in.:o* !,
Surisioai.of elmotteurir*,d4ou are ikr;
narkabli cheap,--hatteebeint*oted at 1 - ?1,
Uenti
444144 /2 cCP4I; in. Pro'
ii 41 4" 1 !1;4. 1 , 9 singularfact :thUt Potts-,
rifle priCits' Of . Prosisioukare, first to go up,
ind.laefio matter west 'the condition
Jof, the Provision market be generalty.-
There is sot the - -t of
this mas
I
OHIO
America organ'.
rention recently in /Cleveland, 40? members
bting present, representing a Aoutinal mem
bership 41130,000: Xt.lstid down among oth
ers, the following principles, as firming a part
of the platform upon whicli•it stands! ,"The
maintenance of the Union paramount to all
other coosidergions; Oisithful adherence to
the comOutil' in. Of the Thnon end disavowal
of all responsibility for;and all intention o r
imerferitig With slaver} in the States, but de-I
mendinglits extinction iren the general goy-,
entrnenti t holthianthoritt and that there shall'
be no more slaie territory and no more Slave
States." I -
TUN 4%001E8 AND aNDNei , N./nov=lsr.
The Archbishop has put4did,, and the Cath
olic booksellers of the PtinCiPal cities are sell
ing, what purports.on ititfaCe to be "the con
troversy between Senate*: brooks and Arch
bishop hiughes, growinglota of the recently
E.,
enacted hurch Property'Bill with an intro
duction F the Most Reir.; ; Srchbishop of New
York." ' he book upotilniamination, proves
to be a rbled and muillatO compilation of
the letters on both sideii,::and is published for
the port:loe of effect with at laity of the Cath
olic Chtbi. The ptibikC will perceive that
the whobook thus beOrnes, a fraud upon
the publi - —a sham itndit Omat,- 7 -in chase
tor throb :bout, as in the Controversy.
. •
• lima; a
wav's-Pts.Wonderful Cure of a
diseased thirton, aged 34, of
Fulton a Brooklyn . Log Island; hie*, York,
was fora long time in a imiy precarions 'state
of healt h owing to'ber ilver , being diseased;
the medical faculty preiciribed for her in vain,
and every remedy she tholight likely to benefit
her she *tide use of witti2tite like ill success.
About tiro months ago, abe!comthenced using
Hollows 's Pills and complied with the prin
ted directions, Which quiekly produced a very
pleasing hangf, in five;treeks, the blopm•of
health w4s again Upon h'Or Cheeks, being per ,
feetly cared, to the agreeUhle surprise of her
friends. These Pills arwalso infallible in all
diseases bf thi) stomach Od hovireht.
I PASTE AM* SC/BSORS.
•
. T .
per-Brisiness in Qtrebeals dull.
*PDeatiks in Baltimoiw4st week; 90.
pfrkii i rs Henrietta G.,liiake of Williamiport,
Ps., comutitted suicide laatiireek.,
Oft - The printers of Cincinnati have formed a
military c i ampany. •
52r•Go l orge V. GortneOtged 19, was &coldest-
tally killeid near Markey oiclifonday.
11.- .
/Mr °spark Wave is thername of s sprightly
sheet just' started at Capejlay.
pIY-34 is Davenport, 4actress, Will leave for
England bout the first of4agust.
Ater•The value of Ameriean cotton exported in
1854, amkitusted to $93,59 6 ,220.
t
pir..F4rmers near Harrisha,rg have, commenced
cutting hey. 4 :3'."'l: 1I •
:• - i : I • 4
IMPTIie railroad capitatin!Connecticutis $23,
675,558.. I i . ;r, ' I •
.ge-wpat the fool dceiS, i the end, the wise
man donqin the beginning I I : I •
. .- i 1 I
Otr Rippiness can be,::teade ;quite as well of
cheap materiels as of coati", oisei. I . •
. ‘ 1
OPPMts. Mowatt Ritcliki, has recently lost en
i- : 1 •
adopted daughter. I
: ' ,
',",' , . •
Agrorti6 Illinois State Fair l is to beheld at Chi
cap), in October. •I. I
• ' 1
-It is said the Bolsters peach crop promi
ses to be unusually large.' l•
,03-Tlie honorable Itile4larray,maid of honor
to Queen Victoria, is in' *otk. •
~..lifiss, E. Canada h"‘ielovered $lOOO dam
,l.
ages from', George Robins xi, in Botetourt county,
Va., for bicach of promi lit allies!.
i,
a-The increase of th : t iso : ulatioe of the Erni-1
ted State4,' from 1790 to 650, without immigra
tion, amounted to 7,354,413 1 souls, .
• 1:• ' I
, AgfrA Anus who murdered Miss Thornton, an
interesting young.girl neaiii4ston, Ala., was last
week bunied to death by ii# infuriated mob. •
...XET-Dion 13ourcicault 04it ies Agnes Robert-.
t
son commence an engageni l iet t the Walnut Street
Theatre, Fhiladelphia;ilits +ins. I •
m
A. Campbell, alPsd 21 years, a tnaeln
Dauphin conntY; drowned on Sun-
Delr .
n'iw Deb it
_
per`P
niat, fro'
d
_..m
lay in the .awaro riveii „pt. lower° city.
33-Martin Eastwood Modemned to death for
the murdir of Edward Brae'n, will he executed at
oi
Buffalo 41 the 29th instant;;
i = 1
jgr-The fashion of wearing hoops in their
dresses htis been revived 'hi the ladies of Phila
delphia. ,^.•:'
.., I
XEr-Mr. John J. Luthei,;now residing in Bed
ford, Pa.,listk lineal doses - 5 . 114mA of Martin Luther,
the reformer, of the eightliteneratioe: \
I I . \ - r
Iltlf•Mrs. Agnes Roberti oS has presented her
husband, 1 • ' iir. Dion' BourOcalult, the .I prolific and
original dramatist, with tianikll sample of London
.
',-
Assurance '
1
- _zfr-D 1 r Chinamen are ' skipped at San Fran
cisco for bine. They are sant per order of rela
tives; an the business te'ithe shippas is profits , .
ble. N olol freight! , :. 1
t i
prl"Th l e: famous "Addres/ o e People," which
t '
was written by Charlotte Cards*
and which was
found upon her person at'dol time of her arrest,
after killing Marat, was, 'Mid itk r tsrisrecently for,
about ono hundred and fitly4on , dollars.
I ,, ~] 1 t r
OS-It It a remarkable,fact that every oneefsev
eral Congressmen who wait to Europe recently, In
one of the Collins' Steameri, Voted for the appro
priation le the last Congriein; 5 . ., 'The implication is,
that they lwere provided rime fr4o tickets.
pr . - Th e Baltimore weekly qun Swards prizes
for stories to Miss CarolitiO Chelsborii, of Censo
r deigns, N`ew York; P. J:_Leitton, of Virginia;
Mrs. Agnes Young, of Baltimo , Mdi; Miss Jane
F. Bond, !of Marblehead,- focass4tand Mrs. Maria
I. Owen, Of Spring fi eld, Maes. I • F .
yA Mr. Charles A. Bileklife having abumd
Prentice of the Louisville Voskr'saf, Prentice re
torts is follows :—"Mr. R f le'ltiiffi eall/ us 'an-abo
litionist.' ( The charge is zioi onl false but ungen- I
tleman , y., , T ae troth i s, 1 . v l. w. never h od od alai
part of a gentleman in bin," 4reept wlii!‘ be once bit
off and strlicared a genth4o4 ear.".
,
Pfrßta new arrangelant, made by tee New
York and !New Foundland TelarkOph ComPany, we I
will soon he enabled to hiiVe news froM Liverpool,
within six days. News pia days old from Liver
pool, and eight days old., from San Francisco
(which wilt soon be the ease,)' is crowding the co
teaporaneOus events of n4iirly the wbOle habitable
globe within a little more than a week. .
jOr-The Story of "A Fidthlem Wife,"—which
we public old on the falthr.'of a Baltimore paper,'
last week, was exaggerated in sozna particulars.
Briefly than, the Mr. . F.'4epretentell ea having
been "robbed 'of his happlassa,"although formally
a residers o f Reading, ni claims Philadelphia
so his he e; and the ~ . .idtbless wife" was no
wife at all; but a tnistressl' , ;;This neeOunts for the
maims/ 4ith which Mr:, F. i'reibiquished all
claims to her. - -.. -.. I
08 4 Tlie Roman Ceibalie Archbishop of Cin
ri
einnati i ' ommends total abstinencti in the use
of int o 4 On liquors , to :*4 laity. 4 $ l 3 01 =0,
andAtitoe ' a the OaMe in lnlowicatingllquers dan
prone to #e•morale of SW* eirmed in it; ills-
creditabltitind unnocessa4:as a 'mime of -obtain
ing a livelihood.: His fbt.' ommendition would
' have fair ti ' rdd of operatioriln Schuylkill County';
and with tomo of the pleats who have been re
cently piched r up in the st;iseiets not various cities,
dead druOk i, v. 1 ~
'il,z, • ' .
Air!Tlliee ladies, in eirepany with a gentle
man, at 4 Concert in. Bosan, last Saturday, were
ir
.ii
much an oyed by the rioni* staring of a vulgar
fellow on co seat in ifoni_tif them. Their com
panion, tr , Willing to makOny disturbance, coolly
opened an Umbrella and bold it in. front of the la
dies, shielding them frail! the ill bed fellow's
gaze, and itbe fumes of bittf.rtint; with which be
seemed saturated. A few t tUinates suMetel to com
pel the !nippy to find , anotier seat, W 63 the um
brella war closed. An eirrtual dam Par, truly.
79,04! oi.=- 'of 47,294 toes fin* hitt
_. i .
Ireek.7,Totii'll 1114404; 1,001,46 A 14 airaPirt
061,ssi. II; de: by Canal 5e1,798413 ton* egainse
'. 1$
3014 5 0 Jael Si sate period last Year-1
Me bate so change to notice in the trado—pri-,
ces as* iiw, 04 do dolma is only 'untitled . an
,
apt"particular kinds.; lit One of tint Opera",
tors o:0 Flaking their molting, and `nom are ink • ,
clinctile work only "mein of the time!, • 11
Mc; Nannies dd were!
"drowned by the'
.
retientirabas, are generally inder way again. :
' It ist stated that the Mauch Chunk an Easton!,
Rana triil be °petted *bind the 4th of luly.--'
The reside Sentinel says: I - I '1
The ridge over the Delaware at this • Iplaeo is ,
expected to be finished by the 4th of July, and if ,
realised the whole line "SEW opened to Manch
Chulon that day, end welventare tosaYthe eel.,
ebrati n consequent apon it:will compare With any
thing of the kind that has taken place- in the'
State.l4 1
i 1 ..1
We find the follorbig desetiptiturof thht matt
in • &letter wrings to a Philadelphia paper:
The Lehigh Valley; RailrOed ‘mtainees at the:
town et Mauch Chunk, told following the count&
of the , :Lehigh river down the valley of the same
name,ttenuinates on! the 'aware river, oppo-;
site the town of Beaten, a, 'stance of 48 miles.--.•
The general route of 1 the is direct with an'
average descending grade the direction of the
trade of about 24 feet to te mile, the heaviest
grade on the road being a I vel. This read, is so
far relieved from any oth l ine
- as to bare
-no ri-'
wary for its local business, which must be equal,
ead
to that of the best roads in the State. -The coup- 1
try traversed by the road I certainly one of the,
finest Ond best settled po, ons of Pennsylvania,
trantat
and nq section of the Stat orris a greater quan-,
tity of:the clement of, 'ton than the vat-. 1
ley of the Lehigh. , . . . . ,
'At .illentown this reed krill.connect with the
North4Pennsylvania: Railroad, when finished to
that point, 'giving the Lehigh Coal Operators, ti
direct , communication both Summer and Winter
by Canals and Railroads to Philadelphia and New
York. • 1 1 ! - .
I
f jiA letter from Bosbm s WS that the trade M.
,
dull end prices tow. The ter stites that Con- 1
sumeri aro holding beck ez ting tower prices—.
under the impression probn ty, that one Operators
inten&uiring their Coal a y. • 1 . i
The !Mount Cnrbon,ltailr ad Cotnpaoy have de
clared AL Semi-annualidividdod of 3 per edit. 1
T .0 , t h e i
wEiarn.NG COAL.--4. 1 0 041t011 u anima/lee AZ
relation - to weighing :Coal lua been at ended, so
that no person engaged in .t e business of selling
Coal shall act as weigher.
-
COAL AND /KOS Stems CII.—We find in et
,
April number of th e Mining Itagaike the-follow
ing Iron and Coal StatiStict e gleaned froin public ,
docuMents, which will ! pro interesting to our
.readenl : I,
Re/tition of from to the Trade. r —The ea
tats and gradual diminution of the materiels of
the forest is increasing the annual demand oiCoal l
for the; manufacture of iron:, The interesting feet
is presented by the followinr table, that in North
Aviaries, the consumption of: iron per !head is
greater , than in any other Ktion on the globe,- 1
Mr. CJ. Woern, a membe of the' Swedish diet,.
on a Motion to repeal taxe s , n pig iron, said that
all kinds of iron being redueed into pig iron,
In N. America, consumptiolt is 88 lbs. per bead.
Great Britain, } 81 a
France, i 38 a
Hanover and Oldenburgb, 29 "
German Customs Union, , 24 a l
Switzerland, . 18 If
Sweden ' lll "
Austria, 11 1 a
Russia, , - 8 1 a ,
Estimate of the quantity of Coa: that wou l ld be re.'
geirid to make Iron for railroad car-wheat in'
the Enited States, assushey that the .4sierican
railgoad system (i.e., the I/end/finished, I progree=
einy l and being engineer td in 1854), were now,
reelected, or that the oche is of the rolling stock ,
required renewal triennially. ' 1 •
Yhe:estimate of miles in the whole system has
been vArionsly estimated, 'Kim) over and Some be
low thy, following estimate, which is taken from
date furnished at one of the departments at Wash- 1
ingbm, l and is probably went ate. It is safe to es
timatelpractically eight tone ' of Coal to teanufao-1
tote one ton or wrought iro h, one and a half tone
of coke for one.ton of cast iron, and throb tons of
Coal for one and a, halt tone of coke. - 1
.
Railroads finished, l3,2l9lmiles.
~" progressing, ' 12,928 1 a
" being engineered, 7,000 ( "
1 1
. :. 33,147 1
. .
Therailroati system Is p . bably more raeges- I
bly and economically devel:ped in New ork and.
MassaChusetts than in an} other States of • the,
Union] The:nocraste of these two States 4 taken' .
for onr estimates. The relling stock for these,
States'averages as follows :
4; i s, 1 !
LocOmotive for each 4.08 miles of roattlor 8,124:
for 33,147 miles of IL it.; ; passenger car iutch.
2.549 Odes of road, or 11,5 for 33,147 miles of.
11. 11.; , ;. 1 freight car each 2 19 of a mile, !or 113,.'
550 for 33,247 miles of•R. li.
In this estimate, "freigh cars" include gravel
and bAggage ears; and render the lestimate
safe, the are driving and pilot heels all reduced
to bearing wheels.. •
• 4
The railroad system regalr
for Locomotives and tend.
Passenger ears,
Freight, as above,
3
' Stal wheels required, ' r 1 131,176
• ,A railroad bearing-whe .l weighs about 500
Tounds. 1,131,176 wheels. , t 500 pounds', require'
A 65,5813,000 pounds of ireit, or 282,794: tons of
2;000 Tounds. It will cotisequetitly require (at
three tons of Coal per ton (if Iron) 1,063,382 tons
of. Coal to make Iron for railroad{ wheels{ once In
three ?ears, or about one ninth ofl the whole Uni
ted States' production for 1854, which is eitimated,
including the Western States, at 9'4207,583 tons,
I
-AOV4,. S COTIA COAL, TRALOZ.—Tie Pieteu, Noira,
Scotia* correspondent ;of dm Bost4in Post, under
date of June 4th, says thatlthe shipment! of Coal,
from that port, to the Unite(d States for the month
of May, amounts to 7902 chaldroes, beio4 en ad
vance en last year. In cobsequenee of the low
rates of freight to the United States, a large num-.
bar of; provincial vessels fatended for the Coal
trade are now loading at the out ports with Um;
ber for Europe; the result cif which will be an ad-
Vance en freights, and the necessity for chartering .
AineriCan vessels. { ~
{ . ~
DAL I IIIIOIII3 AND 7115 Coat TRADE.—Acommit
tee of the directors and stockholders of the North- .
ern.Cehtral Railway Company was heldlat Bar
num's Motel, in Baltimore, on Friday evening, at
which i the subject of tiro proposed extension of
the road to Sunbury and the Shamokin coal re-' 1
giens ras discusied, and farther preliminary iir-'
rangements. made to promdta the important ob-, 1
jeets the company have in view. Sub-committee s'
were selected to take the initiatory iteps to carry:
out the great object of the Completion and eaten.'
, sten of this road, so important to the interests of
' Baltimore. The sale of they company's Wilds, an .
the placing of the road extension under { eontract,, {
'will bei the principal duties 4 the sub-cotimittees.'
I I
! Y Bost= Coal Trade. ,1
ECorr . re' Fed from the Boston Courier, Jeiie' 1214.] '
Cargd Wei of Maori come at 45 50, and Sidecy . $5 23
V rhaldron, cash ; 100 ehaldrotia Cannel 411 5, and 60
°el:Laid:tu, do., small, at 50 iiiVetilatiren•
1 . . WitOLICIAS CU.
Canner, - - - • • lit chat . 10 50 gs 12 06
7feweaatl, gr, - • - - do •••• id
Oriel .J.{ - - . -. • - do • —{ OS ——{
Sydney?- , • - • - do 5 , 25 fia 650
Pictou 1 - - • - • do 5 60 ; ter 576
Bridgeport - . • • • do —•-; @—
lal
Virginia - - - .- - do —165
Schuylkill, white ash, - - "ip ton 559® 5 75
_ di' red ash - • do '- 5 7d, 6 e 6 00,
Letkigh-; lump -{ • - do 6 26; ago 6 50 { .
Tarkawanna - - , r do 575 0 600
=I
Cannel - -
Newcastle, came
do line
Oriel?! - • -
Scotch ;; ' • -
Welsh !. -
Cdin ,
dbeo°ln: and,
pi"
'do ; emuse ne Inn; p
Sldrieri , • - - -
Plrtou,'eoerse - • •
do -
Lackawan t„Elne na, lump - -
-
Lehla,ht lump - • •
'White ash, lump - - -
Anthracite, white and red ash,
,NB* YORK Coat t lilaux.zi
Coal cOntiattes very dull, tli
atockefl,—aa cargo of Sydrui
Abthfacite coltinuer stead,
taut witek. '
'RIEO9O3D, JUNE 16.—a
brisk its the shipments indir
iavo been sold a shade hi
White Ash rangeifrom $4,1
from. $4,25 to $4,621 per to r,
ing toAnality. At these n
.., ,
mer o Qght to complain.
.. • : :: Report of 85
V . roui Melumint, *gibe we,
944 1845:.
to, 1 - TONSVO I . ' " son
Alban] , 260INiw liwrie4 Conn., . 590
Ale Va., • , 2DitiNew_ London -." ! let
Astoriti, N. Y.. ' ' 2001 Ne I
eport, R.:., ; 10
Bolllm4ror • 1054ieiwport, Dd., ' 1 e 0
/Won r •
C0 2,914148w York 4tßeoklyn, 6,285'
Bridgeport, your,. : 46tbNclwich, Corm, - ! .410;
Bridgeport, N. J., 40!Peteraburg, Va., i ea:
Xen 200191Oment, N. Y., 192
Cambridge, Mast, 18110211.044 1 • 135
Canard', N. .7., . . 40 1 . - 445
Carpenters Landing,. ;811,Pettamonth, ' 80
Obviation, & C., I,ls2iPoughkeetale, • 1 482
ChariastloWn, 312 m., =3'Ptovklance, i 850
Cbelledir ' " '334 Point Comfort, Vs; - 40
Chester, thL, - ,78 Rahway, N.'.l, . 10
Derby, plum, . 76Jled Dant, t , ! 00
Dighton, It. 1— • - . 1761.1tichmend, : 1 140
rail Blier, “ I,4ritrondont, N. T., f - 459
Mid kie, N. V., 01 RA:Mbum Mast, ! ^4O
Fort Woshingtort, N. Y 4 191,3ae0, Maine, . , • 295
Georgetown, D. C., : 25715a1em Maoq ` . 1,176
OnonpOint, N. y., • ' Wo24iallatiory,,Mara, . 0 5
e
liutford, . I 556 ton, Mut, N. Yi, t4l„
Hastings, N. Y., , 214 =ton, Mom., , 150 -
Havant, ' ' -SW , , , 20
' Ilerendraw, N. Y., 251 Warwiek, Itsia.„ - DM
ituusoo, .• ' 2 , 452 Washington, r _Llik
Dalmsifhtum Ps., ..... WaslAngton, N. C. 30 -
Wags N. 'Y . t 216 Ws Mao, _ O
males, .310 West Mester, N. T., 27
Lansin erg, R. Y. .207 Wan t Fartna, " 140
Leipde Del, • :29 Wllatingtoi, N. C 76
K. • ,s awn„—, Del.,' 46 .
tarnille, N. 14, -- • 1 • i ; ,' --i
Cuba; '! ' ' 1 Sar week, : - .l . Pri
Nano: Mars., !191 Pb,lei 810110 1 11' 676,30
NO* Dillard - irk, N. J., ;280List year, i • ! 421,4..
:,t - 1 .' 1 ".,
.k. 'T
Cr • 1 [
- • s.
4 0 /414 1 0 011 Riglusa,b" ,
• Berstosi t !* • - - •". - ISD
horidesoi, • ' - ' • i ' • '
Album • • ' • • - "*)
lialthroll, - • - • - 0k 75
New Hawn, - • • "; • ' ' •
- • nall Rawl slat Canal. • •
• Qs:lathy et cod •Nat by Bailtesd sad Canal, tat the
Teak smiles ao Thatiday erodes last:l
••• • ,
Part Carboiti q
rottrville, A
Auburn,
Port faintest.
Total.tx the
S6l ?OS 03
•
Total by *Mal and Railroad, i0n5,1,503,6i1l 10
Shipments to same perkid last year:
• - . ow, - Torn.
• 41.381 17 MAU 11
*MO RI 307 036 lti
Total byllailecm; 1814,
Ouial
"
87 , -Raitrogid,
Byceanal,
Increase in um,
Bates of Toll and Transportation' on
lAll O =, To Jogs 30,1655: • I ricee .!
To Pul•miond, lL 00 8*
$1 05 R.
r1 ( 80 * it : 75
To Pidlad's., 190 185 170 1'651
Spring Nibs .1 65 • 160 , 1
.45 45
Beading,- 120 . 116 I 105 :1.05
Rates of Toll by Canal to Jane 30, "SSW
From PS. Carbon. M. Cirrtwes. & Amts. Ft. Clinton:
To Mad's, 80 • 70 77 65 i
Offing Mills, =7O -89 ' 67 ' 60 _
Norristown, ; 65 ,64 62 64
Hassling,- 48 .47- 45 -• • -41
Hates of SProlght by Canals
Aron Pt. C. If XL C. ft Harcn
To New York, $l, 90 $1 85
To Mad's., • - 90. 85 ,
Schuylkill Comity' iisikeads...lB36 I 1
The following. la the quantity of Coal tnuzeted
the different Itaihnsde In Illehoilltnt County, the week
. .
ending on Thorettsy mating Ind' •
Sine NW sad 8. !Wen IL R., =3O 02
Mt. Carbon " 2,654 07
Schuylkill Vallep " 8,912 02
M. Carbon k Pt. Parboil " 13,632 07
1/111 Creek
Utile &tinylkEll
COrkall‘ 31. Coal Tiaasportsilaa.;
Amount traturported during the month of Mai, ;1895 :
■oats. rota..
8,745 00 23,284 00
2,105 00 7470 00,
tinlon Cana/
Saittars Railroad,
. : Labt gh Coal Tradat. I
Sent from The I,ehigh Region, for the week ending WI
urday evening last: I I
. . • wets. tor= c
Summit Mles, • 3493 03 5 8 ,523 00
n
East Lehigb4 J i 952 ot 12,073 16
Room Run Mines, 1,001 09 20,969 09
Bearer Meadow, 342'16 14,868 11
Spring Mountain Coil, - 3,635 01 39.924 13
Coleraln Coal, 1,319 os Assn 13
Stafford Coal, . 1,517 03 ,4,430 OS
Bast Sugar Loaf Company, 584 14 . 9,991 10
New York and Lehightlompany, 1 7,577 oci
A. Lathrop's Pas Coat, l ' 81 9 og
Hazleton Mal Company, 2,5F3 01 33,991 19
Cranberry Coal Company, ' 1,717 Ri . 19,94.4 oil
Diamond Coal Company, . • 408 11 5,216 el
Duel Mountain Mal, - 1,021 02 • 15,249 04,
Villtabano Coal Company, 1,09 3 '00 7,054 lti
Total,
Last year,
Tnerraae In 1855, an far,
Cumberland (ldd.) Coal Trade for IS$5
For the last seek:
Total, •
dame period last year,
laminae In 1845 ss far.
COAL STOCKS,' I
AND Napa. SCHUYLKILL CO. STOCKS,
anuncsio wErsts BY A. E. iratoa • co., roams.
RAILROAD&
Philadelphia, ltrading Pottsville'
Mine Hill and Schuylkill Haven ` -
Mount Carbon - • - -
Mount Carbon and Port Carbon •
Kill Creek - - - . - •
Schuylkill Valley - - • •
Lorberry Creek • • • -
Swat:fa
' CANALS.
Schuylkill Navigation - • -...
•Schrtylkill Navigation, Preferred - -
Union Canal - - - •
Union Canal, Preferred -. • -
Del.& Hudson Coal & Tmnsportat'n Co.'
RAILROAD & COAL COMPANIES.
Little Schuylkill Nay., R. R. &Coll Co.
Lehigh t & Navigation Co. - -
Ilarleton Coal Co. - -
Buck ,Mountain Coal Co. .• . • -
Pennsylvania Coal & A. IL Co. -
Dauphin Coal it R. R. Co. - -
Lykena Valley Coal &R. R. Co. - •
Beaver Meadows Coal At. IL R. Co.
COAL' COMPANIES.
gored Improvement - •
North American Coal Co., Preferred - •
• " ' " Common
Delaware tioddCO. • • - • -
Cumberland Coal Co. - - -
New Creek Coal Co. -
_ MISCELLANEOUS.
Minerva Sank - •
Parmera' Bank - -
Pottsville Gas Co. -
Pottsville Water Co. -
Lumber and Car Co. - •
air The Stock of all Coal Companles
the above Ust, when fictrithhed by Woe
publication.
NEW ADV RTMENTS
• ARCADIAN INSTITUTE. ' 1 ,
mIIIS FLOURISHING . Institution,
1. heated at Orwigsburg, Pa., has entered upon thel
second year of its existence. The fine 'scenery of the:
surrounding country, the healthy, quiet and retired Icor;
tion of the village are not surpassed by any In the Stated
It is easy of access, beingwithin two milesof the Philai
del phis and Reading lisilroad, to and from whidh a stso
runs twice every day. .
IN ; d
The males and females are taught and boarded in
crate departments. - .
The PhilosoPhical epperatualcanntrisee instraments
the finest and most improved style. Each etndentshonld
have several suits of clothing of a plain style, a 'Bible, a.
few towels, napkins, an umbrella, a pair of slipperl.l
blacking and shoe-brushes, and very little spending!
money.
The scholastic year is divided into two sessions. ! Tha l
first session of the year commences on the 15th of April,!
and continues :41. weeks: the second opens on the 15th of
October, and continues 22weeks. There is a vacation of
4 weeks at the end of each session.
Pupils mu enter at any time. • .
44 for wheels
1129,984
1 92,792
908,400'
•
rait smixtos.
Terma English and Mathematical - - .- $lO 00
Languages with the Eng. k o Tath - - 20 OD
Instruction on the Piano F te, extra - . , 20 00 '
Use of Instrument - - ' - 400
Boarding, ($2 50 per week.) - - - - 65 00
airlityment to be iaade Quarfely, is adeance-lio,
For I urther information, address
, ELIAS SCHNEIDER, Priamixt/.
Qrwigaburg. June 16, '65 241 y !
TyHE Commissioners of Schuylkill;
County will hold a public sale on MONDAY, the 23d 1
of July next, at the Court House, in the borough of,
Pottsville,. for the. purpose of selling all such unabated
lands and lots as well as real estate, that has been petr-i
chased by them at Treasurer's sale, agreeably to the act,l,
of Assembly, and hare been held by them far liveyears'
and upwards—a list of which Is hereunto annexed. 1 Sale
to commence at 10 o'clock. A. M., on said day, and con.:
Gnu° from day to day until all is sold.
UNION TOWNSHIP.
194 acres John Illicall ' 1400 acres John Fields ! 1
400 " William Willman' 1105 " John lerNalti
. TREMONT TOWNSHIP. •.! 1
233 se 106 p Greenewald an NO so Henri Ihuhler. .
George i 193 '! Michael Seltzer
52 "52p do •do 1200 " Striarphler,l & Co.
283 " 106 pdo do 200 " Gresnerwald* Le
ueorge
150 "MI Seltzer estate „ I
- RUSH
400 le J. P. ambit, deed
600 " Daniel Meterly
308 " lmao Stauffer.
400 " John, L. Coho
400 " Wilibun Haller
400 " George Body, Jr.,
400 " Henry Hoy •
3.4
of 400 ac Philip Hoy
400 " Abraham Hoy
400 " Robert Olken '
NORWKOIAN
215 ac Jacob Brick
1 house and lot, D. Will
1 house and lot, W. Turner
1 house and lot, T. Stark
1 house and lot, T. Mttnden
1 house and lot, W. Marshall
1 house and lot, A. Hower
1 house and lot, M. Lather'
1 hones and lot, Wm. Wal ,
hag&
1 house and lot, Jae. Kline
1 house and lot,D. Grmder
- -
VI awl. 18 00, Cdi
do 12 00,0
do 10 00, €e
do 12 00, (4
do.
do 10 00,
tou 8 00,
do 7b',®
9 00
do, 9 00, @
do 700 800;
do 7 00
do, 7 50
do , _ 760'®
do • 700 44 7 tei,
do 7000
,—Jurra 13.4--Toreimr,
market big over-t
cold at $5,75, 4 mos.:
•
y at the rata quoted;
• I •
I
SCHUYLKILL TOWNSHIP. ' • ',
45 at property of ltepp 112 ac,Deniel Marty
1 lot, Patriek Clark 205 No Am & Shoemaker
1 lot, John Csmaskey • 1 lot, Nc 23, John M'Alfrey
.1 lot, John nosey 1 lot, William B. Hull • ,
1 lot, John WAfrey, - • 103 ie Henry Kepner*
I lob, David Evans - . 150 ae Joseph Mitchell- I ,
1 lot, PhiUM Thomas ' . 198 ea B. Carp : '
,
1 lot, Jamb Williams , - 100 at William Malley: 1
I,lot, Wm. Reinhart, 1 lot, No. 13, John Haley :
•I lot, No. 112. Wan. Spencer 1 lot. No.loo, J. Camaskey I
75se George Bernhard 1 lot, Mi. 21, Fatrisk Oat '1
100 ac Adam Kaibitla ' I lot, No. 109 Wm. Reinhard
NORTH MANIIKIM TOWNSHIP. - ' :I
60 ae Thomas Fitch • an Bickel & Stunner,
2;0 se Jacob Huntsinger,jr, 288 se Jacob Iluntsineer, Jr.
8 se Bowen & Brieti at 51lehael Boym
.
300 acJ. IllekertandWUl 183.5 e 0, Kimmel &Ji nee
Shcener' maker : 1
309 at F. W. Hughes i I
''' ' SCHUYLKILL HAVEN. 'Ai
I lot, Frederick Zernbeid 2 houses and lots, F.Zenbel
4 lots, J. Delbert & H. Sayler 1 house and 2 hats, O.
1 lot, F. C. Kroll, deceased - Macke_ y
2 lots, G.W. Cummings flot, Wil l Price -1 1
8 lots, Joshua Lippencott % lot, John Hughes, estate
1 lot, John Hughes, estate ,4 ace, 40 pJoehtua Lippencot4
PINEGROTE TOWNSHIP.
100 se Jacob Mann% , 1111, , A. B. Stephan. i
DM se do do 1 : H. Contain=
100 ae do 'do I. " Joel Huber
1 lok,No.'BB,John Pain 2 " ; • John P. Heim
1 " Edward TobLva 1 " • . Patrick Neely
BARRY TOWNSHIP.
.
1000 ac John Pott . 1 . 224 se Peter Fittest ..
15 se John Green & Hain 300 se John Heiser - 1
40 at Jeremiah Reed A Co. 101 to Jacob S. Shiner
224
at P. Filbert, J. *man 163 at William Silver
,1 _
PORTER TOWNSHIP.'
134 ao Hiram Kimmel
1 61 ae Daniel Hai
446 se John Beard 130 ae George G.
40 as Peter Brown ICO ac, Peter Yilhert ;
' - BRANCH TOWNSHIP. ;-
98 ae Daniel Ederly • '6O at Christian tahet4each
195 se James Cramp& Ilro. 200 ao Ludwig , Hun , , •
600 ac Anthony Miller A Knobs
1 Boma and lot, John Kelley 335 ea Zadoek & BsecM
LOWER NIABLiNTONOO TOWNSHIP. 1
406 ae Christian Trozall 909 se Barbara Artille •
406 se Fronde Artilla ' 1150 an William One;
• , lIINERSYILILB. ?
1 lot, Barney Kelley 1 lot, Oeorim Deese i ,
1 lot, Nathan Kelley . / lots, ham Kern I,
1 lot, John . Kelley •
NEW CASTLE TO . SHIP.
zunti l le , •
60 se Daniel Estemiy 1 150 se Seitser &
EAST BRUNSWICK TOWNSHIP-4000 as Darman A I
Bator. : 1
SOUTH MAINIIKIM.IOS se-Abraham Bertolet.
POTTSTILLE-9 lota and/acmes, O.W. YannhanCestats.
WEST PENN-1b se SWIM A Blebmim.
- S{ISAAC STRAUCH, i
. . •
Cbsaistimtert. , JACOB KLINE.
Al — -
le trade is not ver?
ate, and some eargoa
• u than quoted Wei.:
2 to $4,60, and Red Aehl
of 2240 lbs., accord:,
tee fur fuel no coneu.
jontelita
ending Baturisy, Jan*
=II
sanactus. • , ,autu..!
' -4 rw
17
swim 11,601'16
809 01D00 CIO
1,04 17 1,533 0 1 ?
427,11111. - 27in - r -- 2
' 43 2 11111
. toes, 70,144 01
68444 01 1,168,114 o 6
1,369,969
tans; 19.5,164 11
" 11.106 06
s. 1,066 10
20.318 15 won 14
39,841 19 280424 19
wen. Tem
14,20 oo 197.068 od
20,185 00 185,191 00
COMMISSIONERS' SALE
Of Real Estate.,
IWNSHIP. '
iOO se John Smlth '
100 " Wllllam Andeuried
200 " Braun), 0..11111er k P
Shappel
218 " hum Stauffer , -
too " J. P. Probst, deed
SO" John Seltzer
100" Daniel Estee,
150 " Daniel Esterly
TOWIISIIIP.
1 house and lot, Geo. Frautt l ,'
1 tame and lot, A. Point
1 house and lot, Pat. Case
1 house and lot, Win. Blunt
I I house and lot, base; Dun.;
lap, estate ,
1 house snd lot, O. Uelliun.l,
gle
-1 house and lot, RalphlrethJ,
erskine
1 house ind ha, Benrjr Canal
wen__
- f ANDREW a WILEON 1
. ,
P. K.M. Etritps Clerk. . .,
Commtssionenr Otke. Pottsville') 1 :
, June lath, '35 Jude ifl. '35, :alt
BILSCELLAAtEOUS; I
elOtiatir RAND *DANKO: j.
A PULL Set of solitiit batid Bpitsks
fkr4iiinagotantor nuat. A t
mardi 31. , Book taelrisr"
VA (LIAR DIALOGUES. 'l .
t i tIMILIAIL Dialogues, and other 'pie
cal, to PsOink Ina Posir7•l2kOk s ted ibr Sondoy Wood
os tiorti, *Moot doicondostiozial distinction/ Tor
sale ritearby • tin& coy/ or dam, by
April 14;1. • lb- 3e 4 B. DAYNAN.
• 'JAMES - 1C MUDtr_
House *eigulhituts4 Made * Papa. Maga,
VORWMON street; first house from
11 °atm fias raw storunneauota
T ikaa itisits, to at Lb. lowest
can pricei. Anapptesttee w.atee.
Yoetsv,ll4..garch 31.1856 . [Elec.-M.13 41 J 13.1 ,
• . .
L., ICE! ICE!!
THETHE 4 ..
'sub' scriber havaiimproved ad
fined his tr•honses at the Tcrinblinkßtt Dildit. is
non prepoired to farnbhconsnmere with pertB wa
ter lee duringi.the entire /MON baying k
nee, be will be,ible to furnish it mi . the reasonible
terms: The patronage of the raffle is reepectrany, so-
netted. Ortlattf ap t with Frederick C. Wing, Onnbe•
tioner. sill te tly attended to. i i 1
April 14, 1 -13.4 f •- • GIEMIII L MM.
10E4. ICE!! . 101E111
RE Isubseiber informs the eitizenti
r Tof Pvtig4e , luta eideitY , that that he has taken:Usk
re. ' the York Store, thrtnerly to
Maurice 11.414n00n, sad Is• prepared. to supply tam le s,
Hotel keepoldeetloners, *c.,l ulth Pule 8 14 et
water Ire, thraernent the iessen, In inch gnantitiee se
they auly rO m pllre, st any hoar, and St reesonsble rates,—
Ire reveeiy eoiletts the patromine Or the :
• J 1111.03111. MANIA.
Mu
Mirth 11, 18 - I 11-3 m I
I . ! !LATE ; ItOOFINC. •
TrrilE undersigned, havini been largkily,
engaged to the above named business, In and around
anniana, Sir tite last few years, is derdnias of extending
his work to.Porlei and elsewhere in the vintity. l i Re
keeps always n hand a large assortment of Slates, and,
guarantees: th ' to tel of the hest itielity—iruch as trill
not fade or dent'', : ills roans Is warranted to Delight
'and durable. the beat traria:ten only are enstdoyed, end
the east is hat* Wain/ adira..ce on that of shingle& t,
' throw of Biro coed Railroad re*, Thisielwa.
March 31,1866 . 134 g es , , , ,
rt..a605 . 0 ,
tenia.
650,4300 10
77,352 1:0
217,141 01
314,141
2
00
19209 19
PAINTING, CLAZINO & PAPERINCI:6‘
.11) 1 A.NIEd NAGLE would respectfullY.
Jur inforin his friendi and the public that n • nesi re, i
moved his establishnumt into lintel greet, opponital*..
Nicholas's whore he will be happy to receive *Mery
ftw all kinds of ; business in his line. lie keeps always on.
hand an asSorttoent of
Paper Hangings, Glass,Paiaia Numaladfliaaa,
all of which:he will - furnish at the lowest rate., and he
pledges hioiself that he will execrate ell work entrutted
to his care pions y, in the best style, and at reasonable
rates. Lie the Writes the people pnetally to sire
him a call. ' Pottsville, April lt4, lid .Ifrern
lift MISSING BRIDE'. • '
imbhahed, Miriam, the, Ave4g
elf 011 or Bride, by Sirs. Itinithvieetk.
Sister Bose, by pherlea Diekens-1234 cents.
Tho Watching% hy_J. A.M.
Peep from the *grey, or the Parish Sketch Book. ;
Banerat's Literary and Historical Miscellany.
Blanche Deerwhod, 2 vols.
Ellen Norbirry,i by; Emerson Bennett.
Thoughts, Mentories and Panties, by firs t ;amieson;
Kate Ayiesfordby Charles J. Peterson. i ;
Kenneth, or t Rear Guard of the Grand Army, by the
author of th Heir of Radcliffe.
The Castle Builders, by author of Heir of Rodelifle. •
Life of Sam Houston, illustrated.
The Pith Eitunnan, by Dr. Tyng.
Our Countrymen, : or Brief Memoirs of Eminent AMMI
Cllll4 by Loring-100 portraits.
Trieoloreti hkefehes in Paris, during 1851-2-3. , • •
Prinie's Travel; in Europe sod the East, 2 Vols. .
For sale hy ~ B. BANNAN.
43,d44 1/
NEW LUMBER YARD..
Schuylkill Haven.
ALM & FRITZ, respectfully invi te Pthe attecalon of Builders and others, to their Imp
assortment.cif &armed and Green Lumber, which they
will be prepared to thrash by the latter end of Match
next, at the lotted pyssible rates, FOR CASH!! _
Our stock cohidsts of WRITE and. Yeklaw Pin BOJJ}DS,
PASNIL end lIMILOCT... Also heavy stui such as Dim,
Joins, Itarnmi, SCUCTLINGI4 POsta,lc. We have also or
dered a large imsortment of different qualities of JOU'
and Lar Balsams. Picarrs, eseuxo-Larns. Pause: End
Fun, toOther with all other materials belonging to the
Umber Vide.i. • I
Ono of the firm being. a practical builder. we dither
ourselves no barb* selected our stale' in such a manner
as to give eolith satidaetion. Our hearyiumberhas been
sawed to order,ithus preventing much waste to the put.
chsser or blinder. ''
Call and examine before purchasing elsewhere. fard
opposite Dr. Pair's offlee. Pell. PALM, -
I. • EDWIN S. nun
'Schuylkill Haven, February 24,1814 8-Iy
11'3°7 00
45%
I 74
21
3I
PAPER HANGINGS STCIRS.
60
50
50
60
00
.114 E sul)se . riber. respectfully informs
fdands and the that he has purchased
establishment, ot his father, where he will continue,
at the old stand to Centre street, opposite the Town Hell,
The Paper-Waving, Book Otatiouoiy Buda*
in di ifs redone hist:Kites. • • • •
Hsi has recently received, from the different mannate•
tuners, a large end varied assortment of PAPER.HANGL
'NOS, embracing &Lithe latest styles for Parlors, Hal*
Chambers, ,te., With suitable herders, Deeonitiona.
Also, a full tuutortment of Curtain Paper, Fire Scrota',
e
'PAPER MOWING
Of every description executed at the aborted noticiOn
superior mennqr..on the most reasonable terms.
Ile also keep! on hand all the SCHOOL BOOKS in lien.
eras use; with variety of Stationery, de., de., at very
low prices.
Air Cash paid for HAGS, in large or smell quanUties.
JOEL N. VAN METER. _
Pottrrille, A di 21,12:15 183 m
12 1
12C
Ihoi
ff]
Era
18
00
120 4
21
00
62
30
20
65
ed
theii
CIIBAEXAPS OP . rzurNsmveine.±
13
ARNES' . MAP OF PENNSYLVA
aIs and ekiolning States, on rollers—very cheaP;
Villain' map bf the United States; on Milers , ditto: i •
Bunny's new , ioap of the United States and Territories.
Guide. Book thrbugh the United States, with descriptkins
of the Staten cities ac.,,'With large map. .
Mitchell's; !A-T.lll4M's .4 , Phelps' new Travelers' Glides
through tierKnited States- ' •. i
The Westeitaourist's and Emigrant's Guide.
Traveler's andZurist's Route Book through . the United
• States. : v ,
}lees Refired I> of the United States and the Omni.
des, compiled from the latest surveys.
Ensign A Thayr'S Guide through-the Western Staten
im fr mi
Railroad and T :unship map of Ohio. 7
Shaeffrr's new pof Schuylkill county, in pocket item,
on rolleri or
Colton's new! 'lea of maps of--the separate States. ! ,
Persons go ink west, and traveler's generally, are lei.
ted to call and lesernine these new and useful maps ,end
guide book* at'- . •;, B. BANNAN'S
, • leak aid Stational! 41.4ine.
June 9, IS h : =....
IPRINTEIt, BOOKSELLER, L STATION-
I gJU,' KR, Centre Street, Potty/We, pa,,, reap&
fully asks the attention of Merchants,
e. Teachers, and the public generally, to the
large assottmetit of books As., offered at his new stirs,
comprising irtaitderd- works for_ the professkros, Chtuch
Books for erery;denoniination, German and Engllab, , .
GIST, ItioccLuttfitOes, JIMMILZ, TOT •ATD OCHO6L 1100104
Obtained directly from the publishers, by special arrange.
mat, and at this Trade Sales—lmported and dontestlefamt
ey and staple stationery.
Stationers' Fish Calory and 'Japcinne4 Mire, Jbney
Goods..ife.
These goods ere 'all new end desirable,' and have been
eelected with ;t i t care from the fall stoelutof the largest
importing hp and American Manufacturers in New
York and Philadelphia; also, a largeassortment of
It
;Slunk AmPeng Ba*Alt•
Of their own manufacture, embracing a general variety,
from the CommOn half-bound to the extra superfine, neat-.
ly ruled and sukb.ntially bound, with bends and tire*
small blank Me*vandum end Pas Books, Cypheri_egand
Copy Books, Thus Rolls, Bills of lading, Cal slam,
Checks, Drafts, tomnl=.Notes, Ac. •
i Book Job Printing
Of every desert on, neatly executed; Blank Rooksrmtled
to any pattern and bound to order; Music Magasines end
other publicatikut bound In every style of Plain and Or ,
namentel Bind, rag; the most durable and elegant.
. Rios bought Par cash, or received inetchangelbr gads.
E. GARRIGUES. •
ANOTH - R LIST OF NEW BOOKS.
perm Subscriber , in view of the ton-.
appredatkna of the extrema low I -7r )
Mat whictitua is seiner his large as- ,aj
imrtment of staWard nalacellanaons hooka
denim to call attention to the following
additional
ID AT l'illt
Rom /
In) it Beano of, Fanny Feral rani. 12.1n0., 100 ;1; 87
Wolfeit's ':by Irving. I !minium{ 123 iI 00
My' Coartatilp pad its Consequences, by , : '
Chetallet-Wii off, I vol. 12m0., , i 123 ; !112
Ituth Hen, la domestic story, by fanny tern, 123 1 100
!-1
Fanny. Fern's lst and . 24 settee,. ~
eaeb , , • IZS OO
Life of . ~ivirltten by himself, 12 n0., 128 , ;100
Life ofßorite roily. by Pertoa,l se& 120x.,1 25 '1 00
Christ In ,by Robert Tuentrall. D.D., 150 100
Coedit, of by Mend Heather, D. D., 150 100
Miss ' a :rotls ; ees Iteeamnanae, 1:;, vol.
'i
;;
do I 6 . : ele of %den, I vol. Dan., 102 - 114
'do , do jWoman'a Prlatinhip,•lvol. ; '
1200., t t: , . - ' 125 ', 15
do I do lions 3.;.,41 vei. ,12n0,, 125 ,15
do 1 de - peeing and - Mlsania, I
volJani., ;, . z . 125 i 73
Stand` a Itebietions, I vol. 3vick, ; i. , 200 . 126
Night* in aMO Ifonse, .: ' • 2 00. -TOO
'Mayo'* Berber, a Romance cif Morxeo,i 125 1 . ; 62
Mooreslcllati;Wars of the Vaned Mates,
I vol. eve., ii ~ • ' , 200. itoo
Web:let's Mettotutry, Harper's edition,' 350. 13 7.5
Waved? , Noveli, 3 vole., 1 7.80 . :376
Madly ti Life of Mary Queen of Fkots,i ISO '• ~ 73
!
do! do 1: 'Ern Josephine, , 160 . • 75
Life of Field 51:. • the Duke of Welling-
_
toni illustrand,. - ;. 350 11 50
Dorton edition ;of the poets, , 350 1 175
Journo7 t°L COO Old Africa, do t•,.., 150 I 1 25
Ida slay, priTtilngs Actual and possible, - 125 ,I OD
Nineveh, Assytta lit ♦ ul Syria, i t 125 ; I
Lanehi of the :Weems, by Bayard Tayldr , 125. ,1 10 00 0
Kittols History: of, Palestine, - ; • 150 ' I
1 00
Ilugh kallatr's KY School and 15e.boolatistets,I 26 . 00
do I do Tootnts of the Creator,l 25 ;': 75
•do I do Old Red Bandanna • I 21. i; 75
Motitshine's Works. - eve., ; ,!--- 300 1200
Wbitcheed'a Mod John and Cbmies,Wee•
• -1.
ley. '; - T; i . ' 125 .75
llann ules elents 04qm:deter, by Haab- 1
A Saber, I I ' • I 800 500
Gnat men are 4 (neat events; Diustrattd. 260 126
WaylanTe Memoir of Dr. Judson. 2 'yd., 300 250
Grime's kiesmerian and Magic Rkaluctian 12 2 ;60
'Spark's Life . sant Wdthip of Wathlnitiou. '
12, rots .; it ; 18 00 • 1400
Tappet's Pro:nand Poetical Works, 2 v01.;,a 60 1 2 00
"ter. !John , Cunnings' Porilar Works; pe -
. . To t, c ; , 75 1' 62
Paley 's complete, Works, ' ;• . 225 ;1 00
Shelley's do S. do - • 222 ' 100
Vhs.Opies,de i., :do ' 3 vol.. 675 1 860
Marshall's lA* or . Washinton, 2 vol.. 450 1 260
Spectator, 6 rd., 'beep,. - , 600 igao
Jamieson . / Clihraeteristics of Nromed.6 00 , 300
Tod:? Johannes and yfilker'sDkiloniries,2 50 '1
150
Coolo I Ernyelopedla 0111setal Receipts , r 25 .5 100
Poo a Animas:4 the Atlantan Ham • .1W 1 112
Daniel Welaties , complete Watts, 8 ids. '
. o h BT o °" Adslioel
. 7 : . do do , 9 von.
. British tostOlttle & Nimes elepla MI •
ttons z 42 . .4, nett ekothoe, per e o t,
„. - 100, i i
Hannan Moor* !replete Worts , ern., elt , !, .•
edge. ' , 1 ' • ; 600 1,271 i
Bennett 's poultry Book, . • 100 I • egt
Modern ItritleliEsollies-Maanitey,Wilsen, ,
Allison, Sydney Smith, Carlyle, Mena-, '
Cosh, Ac:,B '
Arvinte ilac
ins, - I 12 00 1,8 00
sel of - Anecdote, cloth, 300 1 224 ,
Bneyelo la, 14 voL, sheep, 30 00 ;18 00
Pastas,ll& i ' , . 100 1 . ZS
Bemis's lb , lons ihr the Plano Ports, .2550 :;1 59
Dick's ton Waits, 5 vol.. 1 r 3 00,
Encyclopedia Religious Knowledge, 4OO ' 3 50-
Washb*m Irving's complete Works, IS ;
vol., .• li •; 10 no :515 00
. . . ,
CooiDer's com i tlate Works, I 2 v 0 1 .., • • , • 15 00 .
112 90
Cluldsmitti's n • do 4 vat, 1 600 ! 400
, Addison's; do •do 6 tot, 750 600
Corinne, by de Steel,. ; 125 ! • 87.
Penal, Palk Brest Britain half tall; 400 ; 300
Moore's 341 11 oath. 13 plates, half "If, 600 I'3 So
Dowlints Mallory of Botasnlsto, - . 300 1I 50
litnallett's eel Works, Bra., ! - . 260 f I 50
tieldins's ' do gym. '
oa t*
W ti - 7 vols., • , I 10 50 600
Any week. ' t Owl's:ld VIII be pious's& at wrreSpOint
luglost pieta at I B. BANZIAN'S
, - Civap *sok and HatiounT Pore.
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Mama; red, bug, 266 200402 06 2.4612 80
artata " • • 261 26762 03 .2 60 260
Rya, " 1 61• 460 t 100
Ownorldte, " 107 118 4117.1 121 • . /06.1 00
" pilaw " - 107 107161 00- i--106
Oats, , 664 tow* • • .40 ea
Chem, per . •1 #
9.: 4708 1c . -11 • 0 1 A 034 , 1%616
:re Peet, " ..4" 1630
•1 9342 1 60
thatter,dalrjr, " • 10.24
ff=a. per ;AIL 6 4:4 11141
OA, 'sperm, 0 , 210 1 go
" whale. " 77 ' • 83
linseed, • a 4
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Railroad Ears,
English Rella
Amartean Bar, ••• •• •
Railed,
Blooms,
Castings,' ton
Boiler Plates,tio,l, 100
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gonad,
B. R. Pplkes,
STIJL;
American,
lingliala, • ,
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COPPSII.
Sbastldng,
Rods,
Old,
Pig Galena. 100 ft.'
Mater Conilty, a.
.
Foreign, ,
Bar, Kal, • I -
Al!cmacias anma!motre
SOCOUIOU of Delegates from Twelve Stan.
•
KNOW soltirmworo colt vENTION.•
We perceife that delegates 4om: twelve of
the Norther4*) States, comprehending all .'
New England, and the whole' of the west, ,
have seceded from the Nadonil Council of
the Orderer Know Nothings at Philadelphia,
in consequence ,of the platform adopted in dd..,
fiance of northern sentiment. They , have
held a meeting'st the House, .'and
adopted a' creed of 'PrincipleS,„,Whicli they.
have signed and published. Pennsylvania,,
New Jersey and New York •doLriet appear
among the seceders, but it is well understood ,
that portions of the delegations front Pennsyl;
vania and New Jersey will secede also. ;New' .
York will remain, as her delegatioq does not
believe in northern rights. So also some scat
tering delegates from — New England. and the
West; but the bulk of the North harient loose` ,
from the Connell, leaving the . South to enjoy„
its ultraisms alone. z.
On Thursday, the Conventfon retnoved the
pledge of secrecy from its doings; and ire
seeded to complete the platform. The subl
jest of the naturalization laws was settled, and .
in this, the platform is not so exclusive as the
present native test.
~
' SimidtaneOus with this striking 'event, are
revived the proceedings of a meeting in Cleve
land of a national repreSentative body of the
order of Know Somethings,which takes ground
in favor of l the restoration of the : Missouri
Compromise p r Pretestintism, and, nci Oroserip
tion on aecohnt of birth place. Every north
ern State isllargely represented there; also,
several slave States, including Virginia ind -
Kentucky. Lit is thought that the result: of
these movements will he th e formation of a
great northern party to demand the restora
tion of the Missouri Compromise. iThe body
assembled at Cleveland is to assume' the name.
of "the Republican party," and it has anor
ganization in• seven of the New England 'and
Western States sufficiently powerful to war
rant the belief that it will be" able to (tarry
them. In factit is stated that in th4se St.ttes
it has taken the place of the Know Nothing
party.
amportont from t urope.
.r:~:i~'I•~~~~#4~~7•r~:~~: , :ir~,r~~;rye
THE WAR RACING FIERCELY.'
The gee; Men of Operethinii.-..
The intelligence per steamship Atlantic, zit
New York, from Liverpool, is unusually bur-)
portan!.. By this arrival we lare in . possession
of LiverpOol dates to the 2d inst. : The intel
ligence showi that the Allies have mitred
several important advantages. The;new cam
paign has been commenced in earnest The,
two parties seem determined to measure their
strength. The prominent items ma.lle stun!
med up thus: ,
L A series of sanguinary conflicts took
place before Sevastopol on the nights of the
22d and 23d of May, in which the' Russiing
lost eight thousand men, killed and iwounded,
and the French took and retained an imPor
iant position of defence, the Place :c l / 4 nneC.
2. Tho Allies made a rapid and unexpected
advance; and seized and retained the Russian
lines on the Tchernaya, without much loss
while the Russians retreated to tte hills.
. .
3. The . Expedition of the •Allies against
Bertsch was fulli successful. The 'place tra
taken with - hide - or no opposition;the Russiati3
having, on the approach of the 'English furl
French, blown up the the forts and burne4
four steamers, thirty transports and half a
million of sacks of breadstuffs.
4. The French had established.* camp at .
Tchorgonn, about ten miles east of Sevasto
pol, and between the two branches . of thu
Tchernays.,
. 5. BelgittmOt is said; will thrash 20,00(?
men to the Allies.
?MUM- SIIVNG
6. France'and England bare deClined any
furtfier Conference at.Vieann,
It thus appears that the new plan of opera
tionslialready under way, and that the , ad
vantages are decidedly with the Weitern Pow.
era. Perhaps the most significantfitet by thiA
arrival, is that which - announces the rapid'ad
vance of tbe English and - French; and their
occupation (Stile %mien lines on the Teller
nays, and the retreat of their opponents to'the
hills. This shows that they had taken tolho
field, had become the assailants of the Ens•
siert covering army, and had, inlncty achieved
a victory. The forces of the Allies, according
to the
,most authentic adviees, may be thus
summed
French troops in the, Crimea,
British troops, '
Turkish troops at &Tatar*
Sardinian tronpa,
215;000
Additional reinforcements were eontintlanY
pouring in, so that the probability is, that at
this time, the joint forces amount'to 250,000
men. They were also in excellent health and
fine spirits, the weather was fine, and the Ap
pointment of General Peliasier had infused
new entbusitunn ipto the ranker'
Choleis is prevailing among the Allied troops
to some extent. •
t The Allied ships have destroyed a large
number of Russian merebantznen. ,
Mailand. •
Miss,!tightingale t who had been laid up by
an attack of fever, is reported to be recover
ing. . _ ' • • -
arrance. •
The successes already gained tinder Gen-
Pelissier's tonimand seem to liroduce great
hopes in the minds of the Paiimanspublic..
Spats.
gip ur Madrid news is to the 30th ;,-; tworebela
had been shot, and the provinces reFirted
tranquil.
Italy . .
The eruption of Vesuvius has subsided.
Some excitement appears to be; felt at, Tu
rin; as to the - way in which the Court of Rome
would act After the decision_of. the Senate on
the Conient Bill. It is stated that the coun
try is prepared for the worst—even fix; ex
nicati
comma on. ;
• 1 Sweden. ~
Great preperations are making for tntr,and
Nab recruits are being enlisted and exercised
as fast as 4-y can be procured.
itiaaata..
•
Advices from St.. Petersburg to the 28th
state that there is now a strong party in favor
of rite conclusion of pence.
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