, • - , • jtuntal. LE, PA. GUST . 11, 1855. lIPTS • pttu... ... the 46 11Itners 9 Jour air since last Publication. M. liret , i, to July 1, 1856, $2 00 • 'to July 21, 1856, • , ni2-. , , Peer , 2 00 ~. Helper , Sillie. to Jaguar' , 1, 1856, 3 00 1 , , ticken, to March 3, 1856, • 2 00 I , Trezio ttiJanuary 1, 1856, :••,1 :-•,. 2 00,1 A , Willer, to July 1, 1805. /:'2 00 tnlerger, to July 1, 1655, '." 5.:311',. ?'' : ' 2 00 ', 0,0 r 2 : S e uzinp , r. 1 , ....5. 1 ., to July 1, 1855, 2 00 ..., II uainier, Jr., to July 22, 1856, - 2 00 ..... ...- , ..ai S Ball, to July 28, 1856. , 2 011 ~.. I/0 llaveu, to July I, 1855, ' 2 00 l-:iasca Trout, to July 1, 1855, 2 01.1,. i `,ari Near, to 43 . 1;:y . 1, 1 5 55, • 200 \ IV...l.ulrcai, to July 1, 1855, 2 00 -.! Pr0p ,,, .. to July 1, 1555, . • 2_•00 ii;icl 11. itenuett, to July I. 1855, .2 00 ...1.1 , ,1c.• to July I, 1 8 5 5 , , . ' 200 •;' , ;'r i ce , t' July 1, l'ss, .. . 2 00 -. It 5% , ..n, to July 1, /1855, , 4 00 li,ll...irti, toiJuly I. 1555, . 2„, ou Hex ter. to July 1,1805,2 011 . ;,•,..Btraub. to July 1, 1855, 2,00 ''.; I.:ovret:OV, tt , July 1. 1855, . 2'oo. • 1,,0:1; •,, July 1 18.55 • 2 , 00 Ilir.uit.r. Ji July 1, 1855, 2 00 1,7:,,,,t 11,•i;‘. , •r. to July 1, 1855, - -2 12 1 . : , W.4;••:‘ ,,- . to Junuary I, 1856,, 1 60 1..-aciner. to January 1, 1856, • .1 85 r A , 11...iltwr, to S,•rumb‘a 25, 18'55,- -0 00 ,•:t 1(:1:;:. to July 1, 1505, • 200 ~• ty...tkley, to January 1, 1856, ' 2 00 I:. T::!l,'i'. to January I. 1856, - 2OD ; I i-k.i.11. t, Jilly 1. 1855 . , ' 1 JO i. ,, Ilei.lei, to January I, 1856, . ' 123 ..,. M ~zuliu, . to July 1, 185.5, • ' :1 00 ... p,r,:,rnet. to January 1, 1856, 1 00 ~,. 11. I:. 1.. July 1, 1855, 2 00 i!,..aii ...,o, to July 1, 1855, . 2' 00. r .:,„:. , , .1 my • 1 . , 1555, 2 00 rib , in ti, eliner, to July 1, 1655, • 200 I. Price. to JtitY I. 1555. , 2 00 ••. 11.. 1 ,•'. , u , , to .11,riurtry I, 1656, 2. 00 y l'ionocy. to .lunuary 1, 1556, - . 2 00 ~,, re ri, In, to July 1, 1555, ' 200 . to July 1,1555, ' 2 00 . i.. ~,: t .I..lin•ton. to July 1, 1855, 2 00 . •"• • - t • , ;11‘,1•Iry 1 1856 ' • • 2 00 :1 -, ,l c r, to .I:muury 1, 1656, ' • , 200 ..:,•',..', ', Ray 1, 1t,55, 2 00 . , Lit le!Ill , s, t' July 1. 1855, • -2 00 ~, IV;:i.,MOI. to July 1. 1855, • . 2 00 , 1.-..l.ruiutli , to July 1, 1555, :• . ' 200 Ili. ',pier, toluly I, 1855; • 200 .„:,•• i.,,m,r. to. July 1. 1,855: • 200 ... l'..syttli.; tit 3arch 25, 1556, • - • 200 ::,•'.•l , art, to January 28,1856, 1 00 ..: . 1,21V0aa1 , 1.ir1,..t0 Juiy 1, 1556, 4; 00 Ittli. to July 1,1555, 2 00 ...E..);,.... ,to July 1. 1855, . 2 00 I/ wi.inin. to July 1. 1555, . . 385 ..„, ~; wt,•l,:. toJaly 1, 1855, 2 06 . • ': o .l: , ..ivig:ttiilii Cu.,t to July 1, 1855, '4 00 A 1-::-',. 1., July 1, 15;,5, 2 00 . ..I'l-ii, to Febru ary 3, 1856, . .1 -00 ..",-.1. to rebruary 4, 1856, , 1 00 1 IV:Lrn, r. 1...1a1y 1. 1855, - 100 •-• i:-tcr, to July fl. 1855, , 100 ~ . 4 i...:1 , er, to July 1. 1555;, 2 00 2 00 :.• P., , t , r... , +11. to Smt:Cry 1, 1856 ~, 1 88 r...-.. Sl,tlle. to July 1, 1855, .2 00 V ivi!, II , u-el, to July 1; 1851, .. 400 :'I. Iv. P:,1.1.i.r, to July 1..1555, - 2 00 Jr.-.azsildt. to July 1. 1855, 2 00 to July 1. 1835, . 2 00 d S!irrtl'•', to •July 1, 1835, 2 00 July 1. 18.5.5, 1 00 c.:...!11111. t.; July I, 1555, • • 200 ~,t ilarrctt, to July F. 1855, 4 00 ...,.. Li , .. a nd Trust co„ to Jul ,t 1, 1855, 2 00 .1. I:. .yr, to July I. 1855, 2 00 ...•11 . ,' , 11.:... to July 1, 1855, 2 00 o rn Anymtismn Cotrmxs.--Want of 1;rt,1::..1t.s the, possibility of noticing the new ;favors of alvertisers. We dirt tin attention .6f our readers . - f Adverttemppts; where much 11 1 .11,1 and interesting. -will be ,discoi... THE STATE CriXTR At. TEMPER- t;'ComyrEv.—Copies of this Address - yrati.l at our office. As it ::1:;?- review of-the; urovisionS of-the i.i.iu it Liw, and - its requirements of the. the Address is invaluable to eon ;rim time fur'its e,nforeement is rap ,4 , pmiti•liing, and a thorough understand- Cm! proviions of ;he Law should be Ito: Nov: Liouon Liw.—lt is that this keepers of beer houses and low itt this County, will set, the new Law at Gtiance, on and• atter the Ist • , ,•I!ier, by keeping, their vile•dens open, i•er:ons will save themselves an intl ., •deal f trouble by shutting up shop tn • the law goes into operation for t assured that it trill be enforced, tf_pr. All efforts to remler the new Law inoperative in - this Comity will Mark that. 7rog shop keepers. t NCI: MASS MEETING . ,- 4 Mas. was held WI the evenin f Tof \Vednes• at. Iteading, by the fri - ends of Tem which Was attended by about 1000 Spee - clic.:, were delivered by S.: Mil --tduoilin Co., Rev: P. Coombes, iof ale:phiA, and other gentlemen, well and mitt known to the tritMds of the Cause. weetint; was enthusiastic, quiet and commanded th,e reSp;etful :then .,( even its ointments. Schuylkill Colin ; •';iLl indeed be blessed, were it in a fit to witness such assemblages in the spirit. :We envy Berks the inspiring -.llitlagc of Weil nesilay evening:.. ELl:crioN.—The sham Demoe f thisCOUnty, hold their delegate elec w.day, and the Dersolts selected will . meet lluOdar nvaift.irm a County ticket.— Convent will be a rich affair, as each he compelled td pradu'ee ail :di :t er swear that he has not been, is not, nut be a linos. Nothing: "When meets Greek then - comes the tug of :*..‘ and we anticipate a beautiful row be -111 the Cake and Strtenb factions on Mon . Th,• tin Dentocracy Schuylkill, Moist unrecognizable, it is 30 bound factional disputes. at %which the people and by which they are not in the least ue t;rxmAs; • Fitr.r: PRES—A NEW PA .—,We tillll4Stand that the friends of " It um iti:111 " have purchased the Democratic • a 'Whig paper of this borough, of 11.drOm,aloi will cuilvert.it, ,into a Rum tti. The publisher is to he a Mr. liilmber lailelpitia. It is under the auspices Liquor interest anti the RTV'eries, and advocate; sham democrat c id f o learn that a new Gertn4 paper, to icel '//, Demo , ratir Ilepuble4u, will be ,1 in this hUrougliiit a fen weeks, to ad true Democrat* and American tel institutions. In : other resiteets it neutral.. It willjtowever, give news qiiarteN fairly and impartially, and - ,,artMulur attention to the markets of Counts. lIME • The Baltic's NEW/. 11):! s,l4a:nship BaTcwe are in possess .-.'l,:verptx,: dates to the 28th e3pecially front the seat of war, is of less importance than ••••' , i••••!.1 for several weeks. paSt. There to effect that General Simpsonand r had resigned their commands, groutiiin is not stated. The mat ,m. but doubtful. that Russian sor -4.1 repulsed, and the French .were their ,corks rapidly towards Mala- The anticipation is, that a great , lemonstration will he made against and an endeavor•to inrce.. ; a Way . ;11 e iii,rhor; while la .the same time sev= wiii LL siamitaicously attacked by army. The combined assault, it, is will be uncle by 40,000 troop:is, and 101) =I : ef war. The itussians meanwhile st'reu;gtheniug their defences. In 4 :.:ameiit, the ininisters were supported "on the Turkish Loan Molesworth has been appoin tto the vaeanev occasioned by the retire tof Lard Jolla Russel. The I3ashi-13az ..ki laad revolted atthe . town of Dardanelles, , d , :ciaa,itted great excesses. They dis . themselves over the country, and as . threatetlecl the tuivu with destraction, it - 1,, , , !!= dcdared in a state of iieige. IBM LOMEMIZE parr. Sanguinary election • riota took. thee at' Louisville, Ky., on Monday and • Tuesday forenoon. From accounts of the riots recelied, we learn that ttt, least- twenty persons - have lost their lives in this terrible encounter; butt• . the number of the wounded, and the lois of life, by the burning and sacking of the twelve dwelling houses fired by the mob, is not even njeptured. . Thee riot is said to have been . commenced by the foreigners, and the first outbreak occurred at some distance from the place of holding the polls. but upon this point the accotipts ' l conflict. Tuesday forenoon, through, the efforts of some of the most pro ; minent citizens of Louisville, the rioters were. restrained from further 'acts of violence, and! during the day a large fc of special police was ommized 2 and. two • companies of mill et tary ordered under arms. These precautions doubtless prevented a renewal of th ir bance. It appears that in the First ward, on Mon day morning, while the election ;NM going quietly on, some disturbance arose , at the polls. Mr. Burge, an American, was insulted, stabbed and beaten until it was supposed he was dead, by a party Of Irishmen. The as &miters were immediately arrested and 'lodged injail.' In the-afternoon three Ameri cans were fired upon while quietly paising a German brewery, - several squares from the polls. Une'gentleman, who was riding quietly along with his Wife,-was fired on at the same time several squares below. A perfect,ahower of shot and bullets was rained from the win dows of German houses, and many people were wounded. The foreigners seen in - the whole vicinity were armed, and attempted the indiscriminate slaughter of Americans.— An immense crowd of infuriated Americans assembled, and were ,fired at from the win dews, when they burned the German Brewery, and sacked - several houses. • The most serious' rioting occurred in the Eight ward: - About P. M., as three Ameri cans were quietly: passing along_ Main street, they were set by' ten Irishmen, and fifteen shots were fired by the latter. One Amer-- Can, named Rhodes, was killed, and both the others were wounded. The Irish then took refuge in a house on the corner of Chappell and Market streets, whence they fired, and wounded, several -Americans, and killed two, named Graham and Robson: The firing from the houses was continued , for half an hour, until the Americans procured arms and and reinforcemcnts, and broke open the hous es. They succeeded in capturing - the murder er of Graham, and immediately hung Ile died. In the meantime there was a per fect fusilade from rifles and guns from a row Of Irish houses on the corner of Eleventh and Main streets, on all passing Americans, sev eral of whom were badly wounded. The whole row, known as Quinn's Row, was filled With Irish, all armed. A crowd of Ameri cans assembled, and failing to dislodge them, fired one of the houses and sent for reinforce ments, which soon arrived - With muskets' and a cannon. Several Irishmen in the burning building Were shot and others captured. ' Re ports were heard in the burning buildings, but no attempt was made to put out the fire, and two or three blocks were burned down. Sev other fires also occurred. • The mob finally dispersed, after burning the sign board of the Times othee. There were in all about twenty persons killed, besides a great many badly wounded. Twelve buildings were burned, and several charred human GudieS were, taken from the ruins. The riot was caused thus • . In the First ward, as two gentlemen were riding-in a carriage, they were fired,at . from house c4ntaining • Germans or Irish. One gentleman, was wounded, and the firing was' re pea t e.d4 when Edward W i lia las, watchman of the Se,.pond ward, Joseph Selvage and John 'Latta, Americans, went to the scene of the trouble, and they also were fired at. Latta had his leg badly slatttered by a musket ball, and Selvage and Williams were also wounded. Exaggerated reports then spread to the•lower parts of the city in regard to the aflair, caus ing a large crowd to assemble, thirsting for revenge. They gathered around the house frorn,where the firin , t commenced, took two Germans from it and heat them so badly that their reeoveryis considered very doubtful.— The house was then completely sacked. The - crowd then proceeded to the houses on the corner of Shelby and Madison streets, from whence Germans had been seen firing, riddled two groceries, a beer house and two houses, alit ownedand occupied by Germans, and in . Jared severely several of their imitates. They then went to Jefferso - n street, where a party of gentlemen coming into . the city had been fired upon from a large bt'ewery, sacked the houses around 'it, burned the brewery it it 4 beat a num ber of Germans whom, they captured terribly, .and also shot an Irishman, who died. In the' street below an American was slightly injured IA; a shut, when the Iribmati who fired it was captured, beaten and shot. Shots had been fired from all the houses •,whielt were attacked. The distarbankes were now supposed to be over, as the crowtNatd marched to aim engine house in the*FilthAard with their cannon, and were beginning to iliperse: but a,fter awhile it was; learned that while the trouldeshad been going tut in' the upper part of the city, several persons had been tired on in'the lower part of Main streft, and that at about five o'clock in the afternoon, two Americans had been shot at fri - ink Irish house on the corner of Main and Chapel streets, and this without time slight est provocation being g iven un theit part, as far as could I.e learned; .and this started the disturbances afresh. The - Irishman who shot Rhodes was then taken, and immediately hung, but was cut down before life became extinct. The inmates of a row of Irish houses, owned by a itan Lamed Quinn, fired on a party who were passing by, when they turned upon their assailants, burned: their houses, and killed sev eral, all of whom were Irishmen. Some of the Irishmen in these houses were burned to death. it woman and Quinn are among those who. were killed. Eight to. ten Louses were destroyed, and the number burned to death and killed is said to be from fifteen to twenty. At last accounts the city was quiet, with the military under arms: : The fighting was all at a distance from the 'Polls. The riot origina ted, in the first place; with a few drunken men. Further and Latei Facts. From the Louisville Courier of Aug. 7, we 'extract the following facts. They need no comment from us. They are strung and in disputable, coming as th 6: do from• a paper opposed to the Know. Nothings: We deeply regret to have' to record the scenes of violence. bloodshed, and house-burn- Ing which occurred in ou'r city yesterday. We cannot now express our great . abhorrenco of such things; or can we find space in which to say what what we, Would wish to say upon this subject. A- terrible responsibility rests upon those who have incited th'e tiirei , i population of: the city to the deeds •Of violence which were the commencement of the riots in the First and Eighth wards. \\e are confident th a t those were not occasioned by anything. riots that happened at. any of the several voting places. • The election throughout-the city, as far as we can learn, had passed off with unusual quiet, with the exception of a brutal outrage in the First Ward, of which we shall speak pi+sently. and Some fighting at the. Eighth Ward roll, in which no one was much hurt. The riots' were occasioned by indiscriininate and murderous assaults committed by foreign ers, chiefly Frisk, .upon inofr.:nsive . citizens, peaceably attending to their own business, at some distance from ally of the voting' places. All the circumstances connected with these assaults strongly indicate that they were pre mediated andlustigated bY • other parties thair those by whom they were actually committed We are not now prepared to ,say that they were the consequences only of the incendiary appeals, for some time past publicly • made to our foreign population by some of the leaders of the Anti-American party, or that they were instigated -by direct instructions or men with fiendish hearts, who control ilia great meas . ure•the passions, and are able_to dictate- ac tions to the Germans and Irish who made the I at c All the facts will probably be . ascertained . and then the reponsibility will rest where it properly belongs. The circumstan ces as detailed to us, and the confessions of some of the miserable wretehes who were i made the victims of their insane folly and murderous violence show that these assaults upon unnffendim..! and innocent native born • citizens were premediated, and that the blame attaches to others who are as yet tinnataed. We have not now time to give details. We \assert, however, anttare sure that it will be proyed by 'respectable Witnesses, , that_ every Oct of bloodshed was bqtun forergners.— That in every instance where mortal - violence ensued, the beginning of the riots was au un provoked slaughter by the foreigners of peace able Americans while yaietly passing in the streets at a distance from the polls. • ' This infuriated the populace, and a prompt and terrible resort to mob violence by which many foreigners were killed and much prop- p;MMNMEM - . . as ... ! - -•- : erty destroyed .w - tins.'consequerice.[ In the first ward; about nine, o'clock in the morning, - while the. )1 .el ction was". proceeding : quietly at the pollS; GeOrge Ilerge;h respectable and l a quiet Atneri n citizen. was- brutally asSarilte4 Lysa party} of-liishtliitn, ow - 4ackson. street,. between Se emelt and Greene, without haring giVeriiiity4 evocation, he was knocked down and horribt , beaten with stones and slabs. . . ileatteinflted.te escape from the fiends by whom he was attacked, and ran into :the alley of an . adjoining_hoase, where he was followed by his blond-thirsty assailants, and cut, stab bed, and beaten until he was supposed to be dead, when One of these inhuman brutes de liberately eriened his knife and proceeded to cut the throat of the murdered man. When -this act of violence was made known a party of Americans started in pursuit of the murder-, ers, who were subsequently arrested and lodg ed in jail by the Muyor a n d City Mai Shall. In the; afternoon bet Ween three and four o'clock,' . several •Americins were fired upon and severely wounded while.qnietly riding or walking by the German brewery on Jefferson street, , near the Beargrass bridge. Among ,these were some gentleman - from Jefferson Isiunty and several- respectable citizens. One gentleman who fired :it riding in a buggy with his Wife seated by his side. About the . seine time a perfect shower of shot and bullets were raiued upon every American passer-by from the Windows of some houses occupied by . Germans upon Shelby street, in the neighbor hood of Madison street. , As soon as these occurences were made j . .,known it Was aseertained•that large bodies' of 'foreigners, armed with shot guns arid rifles had assembled iii,the neighborhood of the . brewery and also - on • Shelby st. .An indis eliminate [slaughter of American citizens was apprehended. .An immense crowd of excited. maddened . , infuriated Americans assembled, and were tired at from the windows of the brewery and the houses on Shelby street, and in seeking to arrest thesel offenders several - men were badly wounded and the inceused and infurated,mob burned the brewery and sacked the houses from which the shots were fired. i , In the Bth ward, the most serious • disturl fiances oceured about 6 o'clock in the after noon. A. Mr. Rhodes, in •company' with' two friends, all American citizens, • was quietly passing upon Main street, near Chapel, When they were' set upon by a party of ten Irishmen, who with horible oaths swore they would clean the streets of every American. Fifteen shots were fired upon them. ' RhodeS was killed, and both his companions were wounded, one of them seriously. The Irishmen !then ran. up' Chapel street, and on being pursued, took refuge' in a house at the corner of Chapel and Market streets, whence several shots were fired it the inmates, by which several American citizens were wound ed and . tWo-were killed, a Mr. Graham and a Mr. Ifobs'on. • The firing from this house continued some half hour. The Irish Were armed to the teeth with fire-arms of every description, while the Americans were' almost. totally unarmed, and were obliged to go. to their homes•to procure 'arms to defend themselves and their friends from the Murderous fire of the insane:wretches who bad made. this attack upon them. Be-• tween G and 7 o'clock a - -sufficient force had assembled to capture the Murderer of young Graham; on attempt was made CO hang him, but We- learn that he is still living: In the:Meantime a fusilade of shot guns . and rides' was kept up against any American .passing by the row of houSes at the corner of Eleventh and Main, helotigieg, to an Irishman named Quinn, a brother of Father Quinn, a Roman Catholic Priest. Several: Americans were wounded by shots fired &dm these prem ises. and 'the attentimPof The crowd was given to' them. - They were filled with Irishman, and, with loaded ai;ins as the sequel proved beyond a doubt. 'Au attempt-was made to drive them out, and the houses were fired, whether on the • inside or outside we do not kooW. While burning, the frequent reports showed that they were well provided with fite arms; and the confessions of a poor miserable devil who was rescued by Capt. Stone, proves that they were tilled with arms and contained thirteen kegs of powder provided for the occasion. We lu neither space nor time . : to enter into any ; particulars. A number of Ameri: cans were slain by the foreigners, and a num ber Of fotein•ners met a heavy retribution.— We do not know many have been killed, but have alread heard of some twelve or fifteen in all, and some ;twelve or thirty have been . more or less fttigerously wounded. Witco ls Responsible for the Riot! This a question which most be answered. There is a 'errible responsibility- soinewhere, and the iiroper parties, let them be who they may, =St bear it. One thing at least is now The foreigners in this city, more es pecially the Catholic Irish, from some cause and at some instigation, were armed to the tee.h, and used, their arms ; from botjses, he hind harriers, and from their skulking...places have slMt down reniorselessly unotTending citizens ns"thev passed in the stryets. Of the terrible, the horrible cMnsequenees of these '.assaults we have not the heart to speak. There is tui language too strong— there is no language strong enough, - for its condemnation. It will be the duty. and the ltit ninSt bC sternly performed, of - the Coro ner to thOroughly investigate'the facts. [commuslcATED.] THE AUTHORITIES AND DRUNKENNESS MrsseS Enirons:—r noticed a cominniiiietioh in yonr ,;lourrtrel of last week, complaining that persons have been 'seen intoxicated-in the streets of our Borough recently, ,to whoni.'s the sale of liquor has been stopped by legal notieeJo the dealers. • ' While such facts have nut come-under:. My (mill personal rhservation, yet I do not pretend tie deny them. At the same time I would state that when eye." I Mil pr.ocure tmfilcient evidence to,iscarrant it, I shall not hesitate to prosecute the tiffehilers. It is the duty tit' every citizen to assist- the offi cers of the law in suppressinz this givitt evil; and I rinTectfully call on your eurrespondent 'lmo= per:ince' to furnish' me' such information 'as he may havp, that would enable me to acimmplish the object he seems to desire: With respect, • I • DANIEL P. CHRIST, . . iforehal of . Police: Po - rrslimt.g, Aug. 9. 1855. As Mr. Christ, truly observes, it is the duty of, citizens •to assist the authorities in sup piessing, the traffic, when illegally earrieil Ly givinginforination of places liable to,pros "ecution,l tbr-- selling _ligaors to minors and tlrtinkards,! . THE COAL TRADE. a'togigeli The qttandityof Coal 'sent to market this week by Railroad i 5,59,356 11 tons - , by Canal 2,5,401 12 tuns—fur the week 8'1,788 03 ton 37 Total by 1tai1r0ad!1,415,740 11 tons against 1,256;829 111 —Mitt 596.094 fl tons against 516,- 910 1)6 bins to saute period lost yar. Tlfit shiPmeuts are, heavy this . -week again, the Railroad even_ exceeding- the quantity sent lastveek. Heavy as they are, they only exceed the lquantity sent fur the, corresponding week last Year 2,154 ticus. ' • -• ' Thruti4h the polittmess.of.a friend, wehave pro em-OA tbd shipments of Coal' by the' tilaware and Hudson ei ad the Pennsylvania Canal Companies to July 29th, which show a tau& larger increase than we anticipated: . , \.. : Two!. : Shipped by Delaware k. Hudson Co., 263,000 Es.eess ()Vet last year to saute period, ',.ltS,Otto Do. by Pennsylvania Coal C 0.,., '23S,Otai Excess offer last year to sanielmriod, 90,000 • This will give the increases thisyear as follows: TONS. : . Excess croft' Schuylkill Region to Aug. 9, 232,095 ;" f Lehigh Region to Aug. 4, 62,071 " 1 1 Del. & Hud. Co. to July 29, 95,0tr0 " Null& Goal Co, to July 29, 90,000 Increase so far; tons 472,166 From the other • Regions the increase and de erea,a will about balance each other. • Our readers Will bear in mind, thataithough the increase is larger than we anticipated co far by the Delaware and Hudson Canal, the trade from that Region and alscrlhe Lehigh, were largely obstruct— ed in the early part of last year by freshets, which was. the Principal cause of the high price of Coal last year. This year neither have had any obstruc tions, comparatively speaking, and the' ratio of in ert:nee fat. the balance of the season will be small compared with what it has been so' far. Take for instance the present week, and the shipments from the Schuylkill and the Lehigh, botbt. being • velry heavy, they only exceed the" shipments for. the corresponding week last year 3,690. tons frtm lb / ft Schuylkill, 811(13,699 tans by , T o ikum - dy by the way of the Delaware and End.; sool Canal will no doubt exhibit a similar result. 1 1 :1) m the tiret of December, there remains less thlan three months of the shipping E 4.12.801/ by Ca nnl—aud the market will require en • increase of tick less than 700,000 tons to keep it: regular.— pri6es and the abundant crops are great Rim. ul t ra the revival of busines.! and increased co aumpiion, particularly when wood is becoming scireer and higher in price every year, I WII giro the facts-litelligent dealers and cen sers cite govern themeelveS accordingly. From Richmond we learn,that vessels are plenty, lAMB of freight continua lei, and no steel: is ac cumulating. The present price! of Coal aro firm •~ === in this region, and be' lowerj this aeneon. The tetuteney,h, ratbetaiward than . Aawnword.,-: Our Operators' wouldi rather .prefer; slacking - off thou ta posintheiiworkkat lower rr:tes than Coal mammas at present. , ; It would not pay. Schuylkill ' r ev4Lehligh Coed. MESSRS. Cerruti :..i-tatotieed an article in your paper copied from the l iyeere.fourool, relative to Lehigh Coal which, at lx was truthful se far aa it weal, I would briefly 4E :Another Teasing why Le hkilL igh Coal is preterredjOhe market over Schuyi - . - Ts Was stated that Lehigh Coal was "well pre pared"!,nud being atlAired to "particular aces" was "preferred!" Is not: high Coal harder than Schuylkill? Is there Ot more Caloric. emitted from it than Sebuytkill•P Will not a ton of Le high go farther and ptudnee•more execution than a ton of Schuylkill? -I think [rota my knowledge of the matter, that Lehi4h Coal is cheaper at fifty cents per ton adrance'over Schuylkill; the latter is softer, and when eipoSyd to a strong draft will consume more 'rapidly. at is'.a well established fact that. Coal taken froitt the Eastern end of a Basin is better and harder, than Wit extracted tiara the Western section;; hence, Schuylkill Coal it softer than' f:ehigh;tfibre inflauttnable because there is more sulphur 'and bitumen in it. The Susquehanna Eit•r is ki bar to its Anthra cite properties 'beyond Which it assumed the Bitu minous character. The Schuylkill region is more irregular, broken up anclJaulty; and, Coal is pas sed through the breaker which' on the Lehigh, would be left in the. min Ain I right, Mr. Ban tu= I • JULY 24,1855. i I The above article ;vio ent from the "Mauch Chunk. Gazette." It iirts occasioned by some . comments of ours in thi..foutinal of' the 30th of , June, on an fasidiona ;arficie In the ',Philadelphia Ledger, written, it appears, by a person largely interested in Lehigh Coil Stock, and as - ignorant of the subject of which he wrdte, nsZre could pos sibly wish all the writer), of such Jesuitical and misleading statements be. Any one, at 'all conVeifstuat,ier acqpitinied with the 'entire Anthracite Cofp forMationS'of our State, will readily se r e' that tlit' . ! writer of the 'above is also in the tfrif: on this.:ijubjet, or else be wilfully misrepresents the facts,;,.:: 'Self interest and load prejudice's darken the perception and judgine4 of too many on this sub- Jed- They are not acqii . ainted with the Coal of other districts,raud ntattially Oink that their OV;EI is better than any othef.) . The mistake is gencrat and does not 4pply to any one lecalitY. If We , Spe l ,ak in faver, of the Coal from one RegimiLho the disparagement of iI that from another, there is certain to be a dispute. And, the fact is, that Mir 'readers' and the public generally, are. not satiioently ... inforteed• on this subject, its extent, qualities and ducal character; but the time is coming ithen woi hope to supply this want, and give theta' a fait and impartial work vrith.the desirable knewiedge, baSecLon facts that will profit by investigation; the! reiwilt of which will be to more ermaliso the prices' of Coal and guide the producet, the, merchant, and consumer. . Notwithstanding all the q has been said in favor - of Schuylkill, Lehigh, '4l4land or Wyoming Coal. one Over the other, therii is se near a similarity between the same Whit44Ash.veiris. andWhite•Ash Co'al in each Region, thiit we woald defy the best judges of Coal, after examining ti number of sam ples, and not knowing .f . rom 'what Region they came, to say positiVely froin whence they wore mined. The only distinOion is, that in some local ities it is a trifle harder,:.:tind more dense than oth ers, and at the western eitretnitiis it emerges into the semi-bituniinous oql ; but i 99. theceptre,of . all the Anthracite Uarini it is equzAly as hard, and we also find it more detiie, as we Will Show below. Our paper is not of adocal character, nor is it intended to represent; o advocate any local inter ests exclusively. We 4: { not with, by any unfair means, to advance the; interests of one Region •!4 over that of the other. :An this 1 1 espect i the Jour 'm g' has no prejudices, Rut being 'called upon fur an answer to the article in cfnesion, we shall. as usual, tell the truth, let its lose or! gain by the dis cussion. -. • That the Lehigh Co3l has een "better pre pared" than the Schuylkill we have :admitted, and still admit as a general , ihing ; bkit that sin lies at the door of the'Operattit, and mlk' not be placed 'against the quality et2the Coll, for the brie White Ash mammoth vitM in thud Region contains lean bone and rho, thatijit does in the Lehigh. The Lehigh Coal id a4apted to "particular pur poes" because they 14tve only the one kind of Coal, Whit/3 Ash, whß.:;lue have a variety, and it is only "preferred":-4 ttmsc'who era not acquaint • ed with our hard WhitOA, or Broad Mountain COal, or those who hat been imposed on with "mixed Coal" And that *hich was badly prepared. The writer asks, '.6lsinot Lehigh Coal horde{ than Schuylkill?" No:! .most emphatically no! Lehigh Coal iS not hariha than the Coal from the same . veins here; in ritt k o 'contrary our Broad Mountain, or un:lerlying veins are harder and more den.e than the Lehight: It geological fact, which we think no (Melt allnEguainted with the Coal formations of th O iAnthracito Regions will doubt, that the Coal itOhe deep, compressed Ba sins of the lower vcipsOs heavier than, the Coal in the upper veins of this or, the Lehigh Region —when they arc all ap*ted or lie in shallow ba sins. "Is there not more CrS:foric emitted from it than Schuylkill ?" To thiswe must say no, again = indeed the writer freniwllich wo quote, - iippears to know but little of the Schuylkill Coal; for, as wo will show, the 3,1n40th vein in this section in many places, contoitgs less bone and slate, has larger benches of Coal, is equally as hard, and con. sequently is more denseS'iand equally as pure as . the Lehigh. A dense, 104 and" pare Coal musepro duce more Calorie heat ! ) than a ur impure Coal • because the onc!hocs!not contain so much .„ 'Carbon. and the other ;contains more oshes., Our Red Ash C'oal is pro've4dal fur its excellence for stoves and grates, njulls "preferred" before any other for culinary ptirPOscs.! ' "Will not a ton of Le:high go farther and pro duce more exceutton 04an a ton of Schuylkill?" In answer to this WOuust •say, as we said be fore, that a dense, hard and pure Coal, 'though it requires a stronger drOt to consume it, will go farther and produce trip execution for manufae; taring and steam puri4es, than a soft Coal, oven though it contains ntor#.Carbon to its weight; and this the writer semi'? lik . adinit, for he afterwards adds, froth his kooscfe4e of the matter, that "Le high Coal is cheaper 'tit fifty cents per ton ad vance over the Schuylkill :The Irter," he says, "is ketficr, and when, exposed to a strong draft will consome' l thore rap illy," but the fact is, though we have loam which iii.;:sefter in the upper Red Ash veins—we have!alstO the great Mammoth; and other underlying vcini the Coat of which is as bard as any Coal in l'Oinsylvania, or in the world. Ile further adds as iii established fact (!)•"thiit Coal taken from tite,Eotern end of a_Basin is I:t -ier and harder that' dh4t.which is extracted from the Western section i!lience, , Schuylkill Coal is coffer than Lehigh,!ail more ituflanitnahle, be cause it contains moro i 4ulphur and bitumen!" • .- . ' • . He appears to labor ,iin(ler the finpresiion, and it may lie a general ItaWahe, that the Coal is hard er at the Eastern eltiiinities of all 'Basins than I it is iu the Middle, (it' iii the Western extremities. This is generally trite Ws regards the We.tera ex tremities, hut on the !t!ontrary, the Coal in the deep Basins or tuiddleiif all Regions is, if any thing beerier and har4r than at the Eastern ter- i initiation of the Basin l i( t . But that the Co . al grad- nally grows softer, even from the centre of the Basins, -is apt a fact:thit wilds good in all the An- I thracite lygions ; far it Nanticoke in the Wy,,- ruing Regiooo l ./ I ,Y ?4,1' . ,rs from its Eastern extrem ity beyor.ti Carbondalciand only eight miles from Shiekshinny, its Wtttdn extremity, the Coal is equally as hard; if harder than it is in any portionof the La4Aihwanna Valley; and as regards purity, it would lose nqhiny by the comparison. • That "the Sehuylkiltßegion is more irregular, broken np and faulty/11'4o 'also admit,_ and that Coal is often passed th'rnigh the Brealier, which in the Lehigh would hiqeft in the mine. But be cause these things hate been done, is no good reason why it should i he dune again. The More faulty veins are not Hite worked to that, extent which they formerly l tvere. Oar Cperatols artr confining themselves inure to our large underly ing White Ash veini, which aro more regular, and found more profitable 4 work. ,But we have also a great quantity of Tree, hard Red Ash Coal still, which brings a higher4Priee in. the market, and those who hpfe been Ong it for stores and grates, prefer it to either the Schuylkill or Lehigh White Ash Coal. .'No.siri you are .poiltively'wrong, and as far from being chiLt in regard to the quality and hard ness of mutual, as yal# possibly can be. Raving run over ;the subject with a, hasty glance, we will now, tali° up the separate points and discuss them independently, or in comparison with the two'RegionS,,iaore fur the purpose of giv ing correct informationito our 'readers, than mere ly as an answer to the4rticle in question. Par:pane° Coat..i-nil is notorious that the pre pared Coal which witiOhipped from the Lehigh Region last year, whetr'4onrs was s'uipped in scan dalous order, was Init ktle better than oar own, and the complaints vveta.equally as numerous, or nearly so, against the B' oat from that Region as they were against out'` own. This fact goes to show, that dirt, bone tOid slate, exist in the Le high iiens, as well as elsewhere, and we will give data to prove positively 'that they 'contain more. But now that the eyes onr Operators arc fully =t2=l2lEM==El== MEE opentni 'to the reinens ;i:tonne_ which:they bate hen :suing iii this respect, with the, new ins. prore#lents io itachfuery, -which will, cUable tiutOl to clede and purify'iheir Coal at, a tritlingepent we 101. UP any other Region to send purer er• botterfeoal to market. _ _As we stated in our artiO) of the3oth July, in commenting on someinsintia. _ ting rpmarks in the money colonies of the Phila delphia. Ledger—“Wheri our Broad Mountain Coal is proffered equal to that of the Lehigh, and kept separate from other kinds; it' will comniand `jis high i price as the Lehigh or any other White Ash COaL" Schuylkill Coal, hOwever, is shipped much:hettor this year than it was last: Oar re marks in that article were correct, and we mon mend* reperusal of it in connection with this. The fact that our Lump Coal can at any time be 5 , 314 as Lehigh, is proof enough that oar piW;- pared`•!coal is iqually as good, when free from slats as that from the other ltegion: In fact the Lump; Coal is the - only criterion by which Coal can he judged without the experimental' know(- edge.. , : Eery miner will tell you that it is the best Pin-tido of the rein which crumbles beneath the aition of powder in blasting, and consequently it is that part of the vein which makes the largest portiqn of oar prepared Coat from the White Asti veins,::as but very little of the Lump Coal Otati through uur Breakers. Now this being an altaiit-: ted fiixt, how can it be asserted with the lelMt shadotr of consistency, that the Lehigh prepared Coal better in quality than the Schuylkill? al: ways tcepting impurities, which are not connect ed with the Coal, and shduld not be loft among it. ' The. "why and because" of these impurities ix : isting, in the Schuylkill Coal formerly, more than they did in the Lehigh, is only to be acennntod for.' fx:om the fact, as we before, stated, that oar OpenOors have been most culpably careless, and; the otd modo of mining by "rans'" which is at) . * being generally abindoned. • , Bone AND SLAT i.—Oar veins do not contain in realitj as much bone and slate as the Sumrait, BeavOr Meadow, or - teckavianna veins. do. iOf this fact we can 'speak from experience, having mensiired the different veins earscif, end have klie data On baud to eStablish it, which we will now Wherever we have visited the Collieries on the LAO or Lackawanna, wo have found the tyrant. est ca:re taken to plot' and assort the Coal in the minq, • Tho mining bosses aro particularly strn uonsbt this point; yet netW;ithstanding all this care And precaution in the interior of the worts, on,th'e BreakerS or the Landings, they cannot got clearof all these impuritiei. It certainly would be a 'platter of economy, eminently worthy of the time 'and attention of our Operatens, as svell;. ns those:,of other Itgions, to make and enforce rules which require the Coal to be picked before leaving the breast. !;- Having some experience in the matter, wo know that It can be'done, as well as we know that it•is not Onerally done. It would save a great de4'of cost, and remedy many evils, under which they now luffer. The mina. would not be paid ;for sending out bone and slate instead of coal: The . cost :ef transportation from the breast to the • • Breaker, and from the Breaker to ,the "dirt ban k , would be saved. It would not be put - through. the rolletls and made fine; before the "slate pickers" can get at it, and then sold for Coal, entailing a ded4tion of from;ls to 20 per cent:: fur impuri ties, it c. • r ; Tt4, stratification. of the great mine, or open griaro at Summit Hill, takoh at the Lehigh COO and 'Navigation Company's works, is 6rst, com mencing at the top:-4 feet coal and slate, 13k inch's slate, ebes coal, 3 inches slate, 10 inch es cool, 3 inches slate, 2 feet eotil. 2,,feet 4 inches ilateland 1 - 4ny coal, 1 foot 7 inches coal; 5 inches slate;; 8 inches coal, 6 inches slate, 1 foot 6 inelles coal .11 foot slate and bony coal, 13-inches cord, 2 inehes slate, 1 foot 7 inches coal, 1 inch slate, 1 foot roil, 9 inches bony coal, 9 inches bone and cont.:ifi to 6 feet coal. (great vein,) 10 inches slate end itone, 1 foot 4 inches coat, 1 inch slate, 2 feet cottl,f'2 inches slate, S inches coal, 4 inches slate, 2 feet. 6 inches clear coal, 3 feet grey coal, 4 feet slptei a nd done, 4 feet coal, 1 foot 4 inches slat'e, 3 feet utto,a coal—about 53 feet vein. • Th'e. New Boston vein '(Mammoth) is 87 feet thick, and contains less bone and slate than the s tehiol, bi Summit mines, the largest beriehesjie ing 6', 6, 7 and . l6`feet thick. _ Atha Hazleton: Basin the stratification of Nam : moth vein is at follows feet coal, 1 foot slate 4 7 feet coal, 8 inches slate, and 4 feet bottom coal;'; ; In the upper end of the Beaver Meadow Basin they have 6 feet of coal, rather curly, 4 'inchjts hone, from' 2 to 3 feet coal, (poor - LriOn's coa4) 7 feet cool, 2 inches bone and 4 feet bottom coati' In the lower end of the Beaver_ Ileadow Basin, they have 6 feet bony coal, 6 inches slate, 3 feft coal, (poor man's coal,) 18 inches hoiM, 7 fectieoal, 15 inches bond and slate, 4 feet bottom coal It:twill be perceived that the 'Mammoth vein in . the,tchiet Region contains Gone and Rink as: hell as e'ewhere, and the .only reason why they Send - better prepared Coal to market than we have done is b4eause they '''pick in the mines, on the . "tipit" and in the chutes, and in, many cases they wash it with water. bw,so that the stratification maybe compared, we 'Will give that of our Brood Mountain Coal, (Mr4nrooth) vein. • In the Mill Creek Basin above St. Clair, it ; was formerly worked under the name of; the ".160m . , lar Vein,' whero it Was over 120 feet in perimn 7 dicilar height, the vein being doubled in the hot toin but . the average thickness from slate to late 'was'iabout 60 feet, tho Ugh at some places, as 4 ex tends west ii runs to 80 feet in thickness, white at other places it is much thinner/ The top Ci)al or bench is nearly 25 feet solid coal, nest 20 feet With small slips of hone; 3 inches slate. 10 feet coal, 18 inches bone, and 3 feet bottom coal. This vein In thisi;l3asin,'or roll is often soft and faulty. Init at thiSiplace it was good. In the Mine Hill at;S l aint Clalr,•this•iein ranges from 20 to 50 ftiet in tlilA- nes.f, average 25 feet, stratification as folloivs :- 3 feet top coal, mined, 7 to 10 feet coal, callefl top bent*, 5 inches slate, 2 to 5 foot coal, 5 inches hong, 10 to 20 feet solid coal, called bottetn or blaAing bench, 6 inches slate, and 3, feet inix.Cd coat f . Nearer to Pottsville in the range of the Oak Ytills„ the vein 'varies in size and foratatioV—as ind4d it does in all localities , here . as dell as elsewhere.-and the stratification is as folloWsl:-1 footilnixed coal, 6 feet called top coal, 2 inches bore, 4 feet coal, 2 to 3 inches slate, 12 feet, Solid bot(em coal with small seams of bone in the Mid dle 1 WO might give the site-and stratification in;ath er liiyalities, but the foregoing will be sufficient to Fholi► that there is no more slate and bone in ;this Region, and in fact not ea much as there is:Jo the Lelfigh region. We have not got the stratifica 7 tio.d! and thickness of the Ashland Cont, (31ain meth vein,) but we know that it will comprtrh fa vorp,ly with any other Coal, both as regardstliick nes,S and purity. Some of the purest Coal 34 have evet seen came from Col. Conner's Ashland ;Col liery, but its specific gravity is not equal td..the Mainmoth Broad Mountain, though it is ettiMl to, ign;ii 'greater than the Lehighc Mitletan, Wilkes barfe, Lackawanna Coal. We gave the benches or sit-atification of the Mammoth vein in somb lo .cali'ies of the Wyoming region, in our artielh on different ashes, in our last paper, by which 'it will be seeu 'that the veins in . this Region are as free frot i n bone and slate as they are in-any other. Want of room compels us to close here this' weak.. We will conclude it next wok. • Auto COAL: TietDE.—During 1854, there were sent to market from variouscounties of Ohio, Coal malunting in the aggregate, to 840,000 tons.— .Fran this some estimate may he made of ; the Tulip of the Coal trade to Ohio. • 1- Boar RICHMOND -COAL TRADE, August 3.4-No stocks accumulating—vessels pleat—Whit43Ash $412 ® $4 37i; Red Ash $4137 ® $4 75;1 Le high at, Bristol, 75 ®ss 00 per tenon beard. ?Fein YORK COAL Slinger, August 8. ;Trade rattier dull but no change in prices of Antlinicite. Wi4quote Anthracite at $5 25 @, $6 00 froinlves sel,and $5 50 ® $6 50 from yard, for Whlte and Red Ash. Cumberland no quotations. Foreign— Liv-erpool Orrel $8 50 $8 75—New Castle coarse $7 50—Sydney $5 50 ® 5 62-4ieteu $5 00 ® $5 25 1 . • Boston Cool Trade. [C. !rested fro:tohe Rotten amrier, Augete.2ll.] Cc.nsiderable solos of Piaui& at $5 50 @ $5 75 tik ehal druti, =WI; other kinds gnlbt.. : : WIIOLVELOS PS7CE7. - Ca4el - - - - dud. 10 50 O. 12 00 NeWrastlo, - - - - du 725 7. 37 Orr - - - - - - do Sydney •do 5 25f.',1) 5 '5O Pictinz - do 537 (io 1- 550 'Bridgeport - -- - do H - - • -do __Ectinylkill, white ash, - - lon 550 r 5 75 i'do red as!) • - - do 575 re. .t 600 lump - - • • do 625 tie 650 Lactutwanna - - - - do 75 4f• r- RLTAIL .7C.10.7.9—PLE SON 07 2,000 700N07 1 . Cannel - • - - .0 100 . 1 1 00 •• NeWeastle, coarse - - - 800 :-.- One - - - - du 7 00" ti ;•-•-• Orfti . -•- .do 800 @ Scofc.h - -•- do WeOth - - • do 700 @ Cutaberlard. ran of pit ! - do 650 64 t•-• =do, fine - = - do 7 75- i r•- `do coarse lump -. do • 800 @ Sydney - - - - • do 700 @ Picnon,COanie - • . - - do 750 do fine - • -.; do 500 4,0- r, • -• Lailawannrlunip • .- do 750 @ — gh, lump . - - 50 Wti to ash, lump • - - do 700FP 7 50 Anthracite, white ant red ash, do 0 50 s •!--- filiiptatoist • • '!teek.• radlig Edurpty,: Au. Report of • Frißl3 NlAirnon,l, for the gust 4th, 1553: - - ' Aibatty,• 3921 tITAOI2, Dridgelent-Conn., 4%; Wrest. - Bristol. Pa., 55;; Beldame, , • 42-I Carribrid.ro,. •.•erg Calais, " Charleston . " 747; C.41111:41. - .195 Centreville, 1.. t.! Oast a; ' 519 Cheater, . LT , Dighton, . Deer Island. Kam,' aW Climbed' Clty, N.C., 1% Fail laver, FrankfordL Pa., 17 Vre&rirksburg, Vs., 77 Fittabin.t: 214 Graetwelak, Conn, • • 75 Hartford,. • 19 1 Ilaekensact, N. J., .."Slt Ilaserstraw, 14 ! lloirnecbarr, Ilallowell, Maine, 175. 541 11w4Lon, • Ilarlem. Mase., 13:1 Irvin;;, • 12.4 Jer....y OLT: , Lyni., :07 Middletown. Cann, VI 31111 ville, N.J., Nowbern, N. C., 401 New Haven, 4661 Newport. 314 j Newrwt. 4.01 to - 1 ions. Noel.)lk, TA., ' ,1 :157 New Etrunawlek*, N.J., ;WU New Ydrk k 8t00kitn,5,350 'New licdfoll. . 406 Newark. Vii. J, . : ;140 r New Rochelle, L. I.; ; : 156 Provilimea, ! 4,37Ø Portland, /! . 753 1 Peovineetown. Masi, i 305 Portsmouth, N. IL, i :'.365 Philadelphia, • ; t: . 535 Pier.nont, N. Y.,' . 190 Pawtucket, 411 Richmond, Ta., , Cat Undone, , :125 RoxbOry. ',. -Z4 "Wein. Mass, !: 2,531 4 sagerties, N. Y., t ...CU Savannah, ' ' :200 Slug Sing, - - . - 1.13 Sandwich. Mess., 118 143myrna, Del , ;SO outh Amboy,' 1190 -Itamfortll. Conn.., , , 70 ,tstoo Isimi, _ 145 !Stony. Point. - 103 tratford, COOO., ' 1.00 rr.q... , . 6 Waylf iligtun. -2 . . - 451 Weyinonth: 31.. m., : J 11'eAt :'arms, N. Y., , 142 West Chxst4r, 193 Wilmington, N.C., - .W. 5 %l'i!tr.lrgton, 144., !' 155 fatal for We 40„0'21 Sawn:. 91-2.1.55 Last yeir, 783433 Shipments by Canal, For the week ending; August 9th, 1853: DMITESI,ED On the Lino Philadelphia - - - of Philadelphia - Albans-- • , - - • - New York and vicinity - • - Total fhr week- FREIGHTS. The tolograph ras out of orderyestrWay afternoon, and we Could not procure thelist of freight.; from Port Rich mond. We learn from other sources that freights remain without eltange. ' By Rail Road and Canal:: . _ Qulntity of Coal Font hy 11n1load and Canal, for the week euditig on Thursday evening; last: , IL .ILI OAP. 1p , ,V.6 16 3,267 , 05 29.467 12. 1d33 t 4 C.,IS 11 Port Carbon, ?calm - Me. . Schuylkill Harem, 'Auburn, Port Cliuhni, Total fur the week; Total by Railroad In 185.5, Canal ••, . .. Total by Catial arid RsProud, t0n5,2,005,8i, 05 shipments to same period last year: 1 , ,• WEEK. ',TOTAL By Railroad,. 51.41 M 13 1:130,82919 By Canal, 30.590 03 516.910 O+. I nrreas , > In 18.55, fo far Rates of Toll and Transportatton'i on 1 . MIL GOAD. TO JCNE 30,1855: ' From &gm From From Mt.Cartxm. S. Haven. Pt. Clinhm: Auburn. To Richmond, $2 00 $1 95 $1 80 $1 75. To Philad's., 1 90 1 85 '1 70 1 65 Spring Mills, 165 160 145 : 145 Reading. 1 '..t.) 1 15 • 1 05 1 1.15 Rates of Toll by Cana to June 30,1035: From Pl. Carbon. Mt. r.'..tr Gra. S. Ilarmi. Pt. ainlon To Philad'a., FO ,79 77 i 651 Spring Mills, 70 69 . 67 : CO; • Norristown, 65 64 62'. 41 ' Reading, 48 47 45 r, 411 Rates of Freight by Canal* I Prom Pt. C. & Mt. C. S. Marta. Pt. Clint n. To New York, $1 90 $1 85 t 1 80 ' To Phi!ad'a.. 90 85 I 80 ~. Schuylkill County Railroads-48:0: • Tho fr lowink is the quantity of Coal transp4ted over the different Railroads/11 Schuylkill Comity, tuy:the.,cs'eek ending on Thursday evening last: tt WEER. 70T Hine 11111 and S. 111ve4 It. It., 40.0'2 01 3172.400 01 Mt. etrloon 4.7 1 15 1.0f3;73:1 Schuylkill Valley " I i.SIS 15 325.910 OS Mi. Clr), , ,n k l't.. (3,trbort " 21.1:17 II 4,54,567 It Mill Creek 15.951 15 3i.4.7h5 15 Little Sf!huYlkin " 5.: iS 10 T 4.693 OS CulOn Canal R. It. Coal Transportation Amount transported during tho month of Job!, 1£65: MONTI]. j TOTAL. 10,;(34 17 143. F% (13 13 '17.412 13 Lehigh Coal Trade. :; 111 i n Canal Swataia Etttilmtd S,nt from The Leht,lh Itegion fjr tho week ending Sat urday evening lost: 1 ICY.EIC. • 1 TOTAL: Summit 'lines, : fo.:15:1 17 171,ir.:9 13 East LobiLib. ' 1.440 14 i 23,155 15 Room itun Mines, 2.997 00 140,4-.$ 01 Benrcr. Mesdov, 1,132 19 !2.1,4i50 tks Swing Mountain Coal, 5.811 1$ 153,050 Coal, .. 3 561.05 1470111 Iti Stafford Coat. : , T.):. 10 0,471 IV EaAt Sugsar Loaf Company„ 2.244 01 1 25,771 4.5 Selo York and I, , chi.th Company,l;4A9 19 117447 00 French Am. Coal Company, 142 19 ; 2,01' 0a A. Lathrop - A Pea Coal, i 121 05 L 42.5 10 Ilaslotan Call Company, n,:;39 17 ; 75,912 00 Cranberry Coal Company, 1,144 17 40,0‘iti IS !Almond Coal Company, ' 1007 00, . 12.411 as Buck Mountain Coal, I 2.251 00 136,547 L 7 Iyilkesbarro Coal Company, 1,757 07 771 10 4'1137 13 034.131 00 39,73 S 15 652.6:iti Iti To+l.l. Last Si-s{J Incroaxe In 1t,55, en far, Wyoming Coal Trade. Total shipments to inmast Ist. 1555, 100...54(1 tons. Cumberland Id.) Coal Trade for 165. For thu Last week: W UK. YEAR. 14,92) (A - *.5 , 4t) snm o period lasi year, 19,578 00 i144.74.r2 Increase in IS5r: so far COAL STOCKS, AND OTHER SCHUYLKILL CO. STOCKS C."/BRECTET, WEEKLY BT A. E. NTRAVB k M., ft kI!ZETBA RAILROADS. Philadelidibt.Readin:t t Pottsville I%line 11111 :tud &Ins - Mill Raven Mount Carbon - - - - Mount Carbon and Port Carbon Mill Creek - - • - Valley - - horberry Creek - • - Swatarn CANALS. Scttuylktll Nu igat - Schuylkill Navigation, Preferred - - ; Utii , t) Canal - - - 50 110 1(0.. Union Catial.Vrefi , rrert , - • 54- ,I ' 2 CoalTrangportut'n Co. 100 !131 IntiLman COAL COMIANIE:4. j Little Sehaylkill Nur- IL R. k Ccul Co. 30% Lehi.,:h Coal Nacintian Co. - 50 4i St Cnal Co. - - , 01) Buck :11ountain ("nal Co. - - SU ;dl iOO Pennsylvania Coal .S: R. R. Co.- 100 '112 ) ;1. Pauphin Cnal kR. 11.,C0. . 100 48. Lt: I.ykens Valley Coal A; IL R. C... - 30 oo Beaver Meadows Coal A. R. IL C.. . 1.30 COAL CoMPANIES. Forest Improvement Co. - -j3O , iW 00. NortgCAmeriran Coal Co.. Preferred 125 11$ 10 `•Common 1 1 9 C Dela tir o 41. i :O. • • • - 150 ,00 Cionl'perland Coal r". - - - • 50 1 !20% .30 New Creek Coate.. - - - - 50 MISCELLANEOUS". • Miners' Rank " 50 ILS 1441 Paruicrs Bank 30 , Pottsville Gas CO. 50t 25 1 30 Pottsville Water Co. - - j 25 - 1 IIS Lumber and Car Co 4-Z• The Stock of all Coal Companies will be added to the almvellSt, when furnished by those who desire their publication. NEW ADYERT'MENTS FRESH TURNIP SEED, U , ST received and for sale by , the lb. tor paper, at B. BANN-AN-8 Seed And Bookstore Aupist B, '55 • ; I'2- PRIVATE SALE. , - THE SUBSCRIBER will sell at k private sale a tract of land containing about • Hems with the improvements, consisting a of a two story Plank house. with a finished baßmient. stable and all other necessary out-buildings. and a never-falling well of water at the hack door. This property Is pleasantly located 1 mile. south of Tamaipia, la the village of New England and is wall calculated fo^ a vegetablei garden or small Farm, or suitable for building lots Ahy person 'wishing a eotntlotta , ,ln btnn," aad.n great bar"-: 311 - 1 , tonY have an opportunity by applvbw4.on th e . to Setts-EL or to FREDERICK LALIDEItDRUN. Tamaqua, August 11.'55 RIVERS AND DEILIOUS' C3-I=I.33CIIAL.N CX11.0t719: "WM EQUIPPED FOR Tree TEM laMt, Will exhibit at. NM:A - ILIA:, Filiba Y, Anjult :24th. ; i t - -', , • '19414::: I :. ',.--41;') 'I , . 'r'•::".- -' . ... ~,,, _ 4 -11:-•'4,- , 41- , ,...,- -.........--... 1.-‘, , , , ..:-.4 •,,...„,a, r 5... .„ . 4r * .. 7 . ,,1. , ::',9?; - ' :•'''',:`' ! ifr'e4 _---: - -- 4 ; . 1 . f .."'_' • -7 i-`4_. _ • - .....--_,-- 4 , - - - 'f -,- ; ---- r -----7.7 ::',41 - i - - - -t-,_:, - ., - '4 e,:...; :. *s . . - _,.-...-, ------..---_- ..-.- - _-_, - -t-7-i 21 ....n.- y...... ; . .., . _- - . 3 ---::::-: 7' 47 ";••:" . -?, '41'' .. ., .5.- : - , • This immense EStablishment cost the Proprietors um' sp,ooo DOLLARS: The 1 Cotnpany is composed of • ' II :UV-Ilse Performers ''• Of the most talented that can be had either in Europe or 4 America, namely:, I Madame Camilla Gardner, the Parisianl Eqiestrienne; Madame Wood, the great English Equestrienne: Mons. Paul Cane, from he French and German Theatres; Ma nor Blitz, the Italian Juggler; E. Derions, the American Scene Rider; Iti Rivers. the Unrivalled Principal Act Rider; •E. Woods; the great French Scenic Rider; Mast. GmrgelDerious, the Wonderful Hurdle Rider; Mr. Geo. Stamen, the Acrobatic and Gymnastic Performer; .Master Charles Rivers, General Rider, and the greatest Tumbler in the World: Mourhar_bcrw Pedro, the youthful boy of many forms; Mobs. Gerome, the Sampson of the World: ?dons. La Bards. E. Lewis, T. Rivers. I', Narolai, It- RUgler, 11. Hague, R. Tlitnapson, N. Springer, and ntuiterousaus- Diaries, - i SIG. ANTONIO CAPELENO, who hasjnst atrised frota Russia, having been engaged at an enormous et pqnse will make his first appearabm in America with his i Orissa Russian Sears. 1 These wonderful ittairani performances throughout Prance and Russia have astonished every beholder. For full par ticulars of their perftureances see the bills.. 4 Mears. R. Risers and E. Deriousbeg leave to ahnonnoe that they have brought from Russia and FrlttiO some entire new performers. Also, new comic afterpleccs, nev er befbre perforated in this country. This =breath concern comprisiis , A . One flantireil and ..,Vinety Men and "Arse*, The gorgeous procession wilt enter town or: city every morning at 19 A. M., led by Mr-Wither', New York Blass and Pandalin DAM. Ikon open at 2 *loch in the afternoon, and 7ln the evening. Valeta 25 tehta. No .. . half-price. The above Cadniany will also exhibit at ' ,1 - Schnylkilkaaven, on Monday, August 20th. - Pinegrove, •• Tuesday. " 414. , ''. - Trefabrit.. I " Wednesday," • ttsi, . . Minersvilip, " Shunda y , .., 24. - . Tamaqua. I " Saturday, " :Mth. - Mauch Chboolt, 6 * Monday, " trth• i E. W. PULLER,, . i ~ , Agent and freiviittg Dfmlor. A ugnst it, ',iist 2. - =i PROCLAMATION. varicE is heiehvi given that an Ad jouorne4 Ccat4 let Cooillson Pleas for the trial of clllittr. at Issue In end for the i:.'nunty of Schuylkill, will Laid at Pottsr,ilks to,,the Scow) , afortssid. on 3110,i'.. DAY, the 20tb day of August, A. 1),. ltqlo', at 10 o'clock,' A. M., to couch:4le (oat- Week. Therefore, perslus baiting salts pending, and all per: sena whom duty It ahall be to' appear at said Court will isikif notice, and govern then:waives accordingly. JAMES NAGLS; Siert". Sheriff's Oi9<S>.l";)ttseille,4 Ansust 8,1856 123 t • LADIES' fAIR. At'Boyer'a Hall, Tamaqua.' , PIII.IE LADIES 01: Calvary Church, I. Tamagni, will held a aI7R, for the sale of useful and fancy articles, contprLeing an excellent variety, suit ed to all tastes and conditions -1 The articles are chiefly the handiwork ) of. ladies of thh borough. in addition to. the con tributinnteel many beshtlful specimens' from la- dies in other parts of the Shttel A bountiful supply of seasonable fruits and refrvalimAnts will also be provided. The Fair will open on Tuesday.lieptember 4th, at W o'clock, P. M , to4contlnne open, dny and evening, for three days. • " . . TO CARPENTERS .AND BUILDERS. The Sehuqlkill CoAumber & Manufacturing Co.; T_TAVING now large Shop on juLnalltoeg. Btreetl in fall iiperation aro prepared to furnish to dirpenieri. and blinders, generally, Doom Minds, 'Shutters, Seth Mouldings, Door and Wiud,w Frames, and every aMiele in ode line in the latest style and workmanlike manner, and at a IC:Wing of 25 per tent. on former cost. They hare als4 on hand a isre assort ment of White Pine Planit. 3. 26:. 2,”4..1W„1, 14 inch panel White; Pine BOaltita and I h - bite - Pine Flooring. Yellow do ; do . Yellow do do '.; Dry and Omen iliidcw:k of kinds' for building pur- , . Oak., Maple, Poplar, Chair, Plink and Scantling 4 11Oards; I find % inch. • .. - - 1 . . Ch-rry and Walnut Plank. for railing. Also turned work, inset as bed posts. table legs, bans,- tt.rs, on hand or turni•d to order, and bills of null' Sawed to order at the short.,l notico.t TOII9. orr 4,2. 1.., 00 - (1,473 01 - 43 03 - 'llO 00 - t:39 00 - 14,007 03 One Ten Ilorski Engine with 20 twit holler. all 'complete and in good order, G•- sale, cheitp, by tho Schuylkill Co: Lumber Comps ny. ' I . I'ottprllle, August . 11, ',SS 1 . ' 132-if - 2S, 01 12 Ts, NO DOLIBT, the most wonderful Ldlt.Tocery of this *go of prkgreo., The following Is from a distiuguished. methber of the medical prefirsodock: Pau/. January I, 1o51: 0. Wrxml--11r-ttt . St4;:—Unsolicited, I send you .thls ...ertillestS. After being nearly luld. for a long time. and havim( tried'airthe halts restoratives extant, and having no faith in any, I watt induced, on hearing of .yours, - to give it a trial. I placed myself in the bands of a barber. anti had my head well rubbed with agood.stlff brash. and the Rester:dive theta applied and well rubbed In. till the scalp wa.4.iall a-gloW. This I repeated every tnorning. and in three weeks (he young hair appeared, ind giN,w rapidly from- . August last up to the ipresent time, and Is now thick, black and strmag--soft and pleas ant to the tench. whereas, bef3ro it was harsh and wiry, whatlittle there was of it. and thatiittle there, was dis appearing rapidly. I'still use your Restorative about twirMa week. and 'Mall soon have a good and perfect crop, ,J hair. • NOW I have read of these things—and who has not I—but hale never seen hitherto, any case in which any persou'shair Neal really benefitted by any of the hair tonics. &e.„ of the day; and it gives me phasureto riciord the result of my experiduce: 1 have recommended your preparation to others. an it already has &large and general sale throughout the Territory. 'The people here saw its elTero4, and Itay, confidence in it. All who have used it here Will coiricide withroe in what I have written. The supply you sent us as the wholesale agents for the Territory. is; already exhaust4d, and daily Inquiries are ' made for it. You deserve credit for your discovery. I, fir one , . re: urn you t.haulis forithe benefit it has done me, for I certainly had despaired} long.. long ago, of ever et frting any such result. I onaglatulate you that your fartune sand a large one) Is already made. I ; Yours hastily. J. W.. BOND, -- Firm of Ilend & Kellogg, Druggists. • CkNAL. 5.952 in qtr iu3 17.210 MO 19 1„;56 OS :8,40.1 12 rojist. 11 . - .4,:isa n. tank hi :KS U 3 1,415,7411 11 ,wi,W4II . 95,0 S• 16 1.77:1.740 .05 2,v05.635 05 tans. Th!.ips Brankficid . January 12, 1A55. Prof: ifbed—Dxstt tint:-11aving made trial of your Hair Restorative, it givei me:pleasure to say that Its ef fect haa been excellent in removing inflammation.-dan druff, and a constant .tendonVy to Itching with which I have been troubled from childhood, and has also restored hair, which washecoming gray, to Rs original color., have used no other article With anything like the plea ure and profit. liours'truly, J. li. BRAGG. ' . (Extract of a letter. dated •Irie, Pa.. July 27, 1634.) Me.tArs. 0.'./. Traxttf-Co.---qvas:—Why don't you send IN Its much none of your great. flair Resprative.? We ts an t all that is coming to supply the ordi.rs on hand, and Imre not had a bottle on our shelves for over 14- week; and that has been the case to ice before. Therefore, send is at least one grows of , each kize, as an article so justly eilebrated us your Hair Restorative willsell. Noose send ho by Express. ~ , Yotirs.truly. . 5'2.071 01 13.'0 , 17 'E. wardly side of Sezond streiet. at. the distance of ninety uorthwaT;dly from Twin street. thence nos-Ibis:wily. :don:: School silo- thirty ,f et. theirce,eastwardle and parallel Nr lth - fw in street one hundred :hid ninety fret to Secondestreet. thence,'southwardly . 4 econa street thirty feet, to the place of he tinting. with the appurte-• s. • As tia! property (f SETH W. GEER, Esq., Ad. rainistrator of Dar#l G. • Pqi•is. • ALSO. Al that certain Ant or pleee of ground i isituate in the town of Donaldson. in F.-ailey town .. ship. Schuylkill couuty..bouude4 on the Borth Ly Centre street, on east by lot uninorge Swah,,on the ______ 1 41 74 o ) 00 00 12 .0 00 ;5U 4;1, 50 173 50 ) t ;DO - . 50 i ;IX) " 51) ;5 0 I Erb IX)* 50 I ,00 r,o I zin , 221/ - 50 I j Aaqust 11,'55 PROF. WOOD'S HAIR RESTORATIVE. CAr:TER & DROTITERS, Druggislx SZENZIEMIEM expi,risneod the nude effect nt 'yotir Bair Itestoral4re.• I drop you this' upon the su bj sc t. About two years ago my hair rommonced t thing off and Gray;zurrin I wag fact beet,min.; bald. I met a friend ;Nvho had ttspd yourilestorattso. and stedio no hhGhly of Ito virtu n I 1.:1,1111.1UCM1 to Itry it. althrmah I had hut 111 tie filth, as'l had beforo tried t 4.) many otln,r.retnedies. :I commenced using your Restorative In January last.— few applicationsfitstened My hair firmly. l began to till up, grow out. and turn IRet; to its former . colori,black). At this time it is fully reSterA to its original color, health and appearance, and Y cheerfully reclanmend its, at,o to all. J. D. NorMeng Bilririfronia, .31 , 1rch 9, IS; SIR :—ln c‘ronseq nonce Of having for r-eceral years past. not only ffray. hut perfectly white, I hate .cut It short. and scorn raps to hidi• it from vlew ; but. sumo 3 months Since.' I was induced to use - your Hair Restora tive. and I must. injustice. sac, that its effects wore 'al most iniraculous;, for it has 'changed it gradually to all its former splendor ns to color, and left it so soft and glos s: ns to be more beautiful then it ever was whim undtx tho, influents , of the finest MI.. I - earnestly, thein‘fore, reeommend it to every lady as decidedly the best preps. ratioit, for toilet use, of anything In the world. BETSY SVITIL ; Aridness-0. J. WOOD Sr. Cy.. :1111 Broadway. New York, and 114 Market Street, St. Loui.. Mo., Proprietors; 5.35 7 Itrorr. St S , IN3, Wholesale AVela; Philadelphia; J. C. C liviiir.s. Ilrugiti.,t, Agent l ottAellle, Pa. ' August lb '55 3.2.1 y SHERIFF'S ' of REAL ESTATE.; Y s sundry writs of Vendi ) fiord Exn...tas, herarl Facias. and Fieri Facias. iv-. sued out of the Court of Common Pleas of ..• , chttylkill • county. and to me dieeited, thero will be exys..tzed to pub lic ; sulk, cr outcry, on ; . TURDA Y. SEPTEMBER Ist, 1855. . . At 10 o'cloc'.: In the forenoon, at the Public Irons° of WALTER SElNiStrii, .(Amerimn llouse . 2t la,- rouiri of l'ottocitle. Schuylkill county. the followity• de- Fc.ribell Real Estate,. to a it : Al.l. that certain lot or plural of ground, situate in the lx,rough Ilnersvilla. in 'Schuylkill county, and chi scrit,rl as follows, viz: lleglnnir4: at a stake on the u-erd- south' by Philadelphia street, and on the west hy lot of John'Stein. watlaiiting tifq , feet in width and one hun dred and fifty rei.4 In (Loth, with the appurtenau & , nsisting of a ottand-a-hat f story frame dwelling lunose. ALSO. All that certain ilnt nr piree of ground situate in the town of Donaldann.ll , ralley township. i..clt)11:111 founty. bounded on the n+th by Philadelphia street. on the east by,let of Ludwi4.lntsh;afstall, on the south by (lend s pr i n , s h.„.r., and on the west by lot of.lohn : 4 1tade, containing:lu width 9:o feet. and in depth 130 feet. with the appurtenances. As the property EMANkEL E. ' • / 2! : .1 A bl4ll. All that, certain lot n of ground sit ,i`":* oak. On the nnrthesiterly sidle eom e of tre street- in " .4." the borough of Potthiiile. lit the r.traly of ilrhtilyl kill. bounded iw front by rentra!„4.tr.vt, northerly and easterly by property of Ilenti (leis. and southerly by ground now of tie. 'Philadelphia and Reading Nail Road CO', being forty feet in front en Centre stroet. eighty feet In depth. on the northerly line, and twenty-six feet four inches in width in the rear or easterly line; the northwest corner.of said lot behig eighty feet w.ntherly of the southeast corner of Centre and Union streets; and thenortherly line running at right angles with the front line the distance of eighty feet, and the rear or easterly line running at right angles with said northerly line and parallel with the front line a distance of twenty-six feet . four inches. and the sontJaeriy line extending thence in straight course to the southwesterly corner of said lot. on w hi c h said lot of ground is erected a large two story frame Ten-Pia Alley and Bowling saloon. As the pro perty of tIENRY OEIB. 11; ALSO, all - that certain tract. of. Coal land. situate egtt In the township tf Tremont, In. the eminty of and State of Pennsylrania.formerly In Ptnegrove township. I3erks county, which was granted by th e commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and surveyed on a warrant to John Philip Leslcer and John• Miller, bear ing date July 16th. A. D., titre, and lx,unded by lands Purveyed in nib names of•Johu Lesher and Peter Bright on the east and Philip De Ilaas on the west, and also lc ing upon the branches of Lorberry creek and Fivhiog creek, containing 01 arres,Do perches and allowance. he ing the same tract of land which John C. Klamroth and rife. by Indeutunv dated the 12th day of April. 1552, re corded in rschuyikill county; In Peed Book So. 37. pag e 6:4l;kianted and conveyed to Jacob Loose. in fe.o. with the,npptutetnuaces. consfrting of 2 two storlo log Dwell ing !looses. An the property of JACOB LOOSE. 4nA. ALSO. All that certain hit or piece of ground sit 'll: ate In the borough of Pottsville, lzchnylitill MITI y, bounded in frunt by Centre street, on the rear by other • Prverty of Richard 'Owens, on the north by property of Benjamin Cook, anti on the south by lot of Silas Stroustu-containlna In width 14 fest. and In depth 100 feet, win? the appurtenances, consisting of,n two sto ry frame Dwelling House, with a two storied stone imset tnent, and a ne,:erfailing spring of - good water. 4. 74 4,,, A LSO, All that certain lot or piece of ground sit ii;l:tA rude in the borough of Puttsrille. Schuylkill coun ty, ...- tpundett northward!) , by lot of IlenlaminCook, `. ea.stwardly.b,- Railroad street. southwardly by lot'of Si.. las Strome; and westwardly by ether ground of Richard Owens. containing 14 feet itiwidth and 100 feet la depth, with the appurtenances. consisting of a three story frame Dwelling House, with a two story frame Kitchen attach ed. Aslhe property of RICHARD OWENS. . ' ' 7 - „ 'ALSO. All that certain tnessusge, tenement and 1,: , "•,.&-trect ef laud situate in' the township of Fast limns irk, county. of Schuylkill, and State of Pennsyl vania, hounded and. IlnOteti as follows, to .wit: Begin ning at a corner of •the west bank of the Little Schuylkill river, thence up said river, north thirty-one ‘34.', , •Trres. east sixteen perches to a buttonwood tree, north seven arid a half degrees, east twenty-four perches to a stone. thence crossing said river and by land of E. Ham mer & Co., Rath eighty-five dort.4,, east eight perches to a stone, south seven' and . a bait degrees west twelve perches to a 'spruce tree, south eighty-five degrees east twenty-nine and six-tenths perches to a post in the paid ' die of the grading of the Little *Schuylkill Itallrcadi thence down the Middle of the grading of said' road, south sixteen and a half degrees elst eight perches, south twentyAhree degrees east one hundred and forty-eight perches; South twentysix and a half defirecs cast thirty eight perches and dye-tenths to a post, thence by land of 'Daniel 'weaver north fifty-eight degrees west twenty-nine porches toe stone. recrossing said river south thiry-eight degrees west seventeen perches to a shine, thence by land Maw or late of Samuel K. M. Kepner, north sixty-two de grees west forty-eight perchts ton birch tree, south tyren ty-nino degrees west thirty-eight perches to a stone, south eighty anti a Ml' degrees west ninety-one perches to a chesnut-eak tree, north seventy-twosnd alkali de grees west ten perches to a chesnutoak stp,;south eighty , csix and a half degrees west nine_ty-six perches t t , a stone, thence resets by find of Isaac )fuser and partly . by land ofßengintln .Bonslnger north twelve di-grecs west ninety:twoloexclitett to a stone. thence by land of Jahn Teter north estrenty-se, Yen and a half degrees e seventy-eight perehes to a Peat. northelovendegreeswest one hundred and twenty-feur perches to a stone, thence partly by land 'Of Elljah , DeLong and partly by Lind of Samuel Hockey, north seventy-six degrees mud seventy three and seven-tenthii nettles to a stone, north fifty de• greets east , seventeen perches to a stone, thence byland of Samuel' Leiser south. fprty-seven and a ball degrees east forty-three perches to a stone, south eleven degrees y west twenty-nine perches to a stone; south sixty-two and a half degrees wet twentyitwo perches to the plice of ba ginning; containing terohtnadred and eighty-seven acres and one hundred and fedi-six perches, strict ines.sunt. it being the Same premises w.hlch Jonas Rork and Sarah 1118 wife, by their Deal Waring date the Ist.day of April. A. IL. 1851, grantedand conveyed to Samuel K. If. Itepner, with the Improvements, &insisting of ; a two story frame dwelling house, With a mass, story frame kitchen attached, a two story le; i dwellinK he'uset, et eno-and-a-half story frame dwelling house. anise story frame dwelling house. a one-and-is-half Story log i'dwelling house, a bank barn with Wagon shah; attached.. two frame stables, one black 4. snalth shep, a one story atone spring borne, a, *a t e rpower saw milt, two apple orchards , a .bridge across Little Schuylkill river.lime kilns and lime _ .sUrne quarries. Al the- property of sAntra., K. M. KRPNEP., with whew; AQ . the tarn: tenants, Michaci Kdtzer and &all L. Wm.; - ' . , -. ' • Sein.4, taken In eseenti4n, and will be sold by , ' , . • , . . 1 JAMS NAG LT;Sherty. PhCrifr* (Mee, Pot tlyille,l ' Anttrt il„1 , 5::. • i' fottst Utms. - - - - • a , .....- By Telegraph and Yestarilay's:Nails. .....1.11.1111111111111M4111111111117~/1111111111111.11MMIMP111111111111111M1111111116111M11.1111 - - . . THE MARKETS: 1 • le Wheat 0094 bbl,: 9611 80001260 .. 8 126 9,7 *Rye ".. " • 700 650(4 8 50 ' 7 w Corn meal " 460 4 0204 57 4 1004 76 Wheat, red, bash, ' 190. , 150 ! • 180 95187 " white . • 205 . - 212 I 90t5 1 • Rye, " i 125 -.. 130 11. Com, white, " • . VT ' 112 ' . . 113 6io • yellow . "_' 91 . '95 - 90 Oats, - , , ,- 49 to gs E.Ol 80 g z... Cheese, per fa, • 0 3 / I ,s 11 1 0 10 ee 1 'f t - Care • " 11 10", ( . 0 14 'lo}4 itta [lsms, ••• • 13,1 i i iy, (4. 0 96 4/ Mess pork, " -- 19 Se 19 62 lasi 19 - 68 - 19 • Butter, dairy, . 14 - 0 11 • 12344 19 Sugar, • " - 9 6' 25 1 5/,‘ 1 ' Ora @ 7'3% Molasses, per g 5.1,- Oki - • - :bo . '' Oil tr opens, 210 1 * : .. . whale, " ::77 73 . • • linseed, " , 3 .93 ' : '94 7 . . BM PIIILA. N. ED2 Anthra'te F'ndry,No.l, ton N 0.2. N 0.3, Charcoal Fo'ndry,NO.l, Scotch Kg, No.ll Railroad Ram, - English Refined. American Bar. Hammered, •• Rolled, Ma'am, • Cast uge, . ton Boller 113tes,Nol, 100 IN. 44 44 No 6. Axtes,Amilami7red, . ton " Rolled, It. R. Spikes. I= American English, Spring, COPPZIR Sheathing, tt xlik, Old, LEAD. Pig Gal ! nui, Ch..,ter County - , Virrints,. " Forel .ru, Bar, X. . 1, = CORRECTED WEEKL Y FOR rim Wheat Flour.. bbl., ill 0()I "Dried Pesch Rye Flour.- Mil., 7 W do do {Pleat, bushel,- 190(1) 200 Dried Appl "ye, ' do 125 Eg ;41. dozen CAsrn, 'do ,I 10 Rutter. per lints. ' do . fs. Shoulders, 1'0uk+. , .....c. do .'.7 Ham!, Ttutothy:4red, Clover Seed. (Retail Prices.) • Flour is still on the decline. $l,l 00 bbl. is now asked for good family flour, and $l2 00 for extra Ohio' brandi. The article is held rather Srmer this week in the New . York and Philadelphia markets than lest. Great stress is laid upon the injury sustained by the wheat crop of, New York State and elsewhere, in consequence of the late heavy rains, by those whose interest it is to sustain high prices; but the general impression is, that the damage sustained from this cause is fully . made up by the superabundant yield, in other: sections of the country. Oats are still going down, and are now sell at 50 cts. furl new, and 60 for 'old crop.— Potatoes are becoming more plentiful, and are in the market by farmers from the rountry, at from 62 to 75 cents per bushel. : ' Produce of all kinds is plentiful. Apples are selling from 75 ets. to .$1 00 per bushel— peaches $I 50 per bushel. - - Butter 20 cts. 7 0 lb., and pggs 14 ets.,ll doz. Good butter and , eggs are Scarce.: : • Groceries, provisions - and oils; are about the same as our last gtiotations, though sugar and coffee are slightly ,advancing.; POTTSNILLE'LUMBER MARKET. . (Retail Prices.) Hemlock, common, $l5 02 $201 4 . m. , Pine, $l6 C. $4O. Poplar, $l6 (4. $2O; OA, .$29 $25. Cherry, $lO ,$5O. !Maple, 's2o ((i $3O 1 , ! • i Sash, 54 cts4 to $1 02 7 . 4 doi. - Panel doors, $2 25 @, $5 00.. Plastering laths, $3 00 q; $350. Shingles, $7 50 $16:00: Floor ing boards. $2B 00 $35 Oa "Fm. Mortality in New Orlens. The deaths in New Orleans la - week were 33G, including 22° from. feyer. • • Goveruor Reeder.!' Gov.. Reeder 16. s .Ivritten to his New York that he will return hoeue via New Ea Gen. Sam Houston has written! a letter fully endorsing the 'views of the Know Noth- CM Baltimore Cattle Market Beer Cattle sell at from .$3 to -1 75 on the hoof. Sales of Hogs at $7.50.0; 850 per 10.0. 11):. Sheep. are in goon request at $2 20 (M $3 per head as in qu.lity. CHESTER Coca Tfi--The Whigs deem it inexpedient to nominate a tieket ; whilq a the Americans are favorable to a fusion! of the friends of triTdom, to oppose the spread of slavery, and secure possible, the restoration of _the Missouri Compromise. .! Republican State Convention. , • A. Convention of the citizens of Pennsyl vania, opposed to the further spread of slavery and the increase of the slave •power,.imill as semble on the sth proximo, in Pittsburg, to organize a Republican party in this State. The call 'for the Convention is signed by many prominent names of thPI State. • • • Ohto Lo tt!er. A Couvention.of the opriot)entfrof lion. S. P. Chase, fur Goveru4 assembled at Columbus on Thursday. The movement will result in a'fizzle, however, as there islit tle doubt that Mr. Chase will be elected by an overwhelmitig majority. He i$ imMensely popular, and the principles he advocates will insure his triumphant election. The itecent,Eleetions. With the exception of some suc . Cesses omthe part of the Americans, the Democrats have carried North Carolina and Tennessee. In relation to 'the Kentucky election; we have re. turns from 52 counties in the State, in which Morehead, (American,) for ,Governor, gains upwards of 6,000 over the vote:for Scott in 1852. Six 'American Congressmen jare elected, and two Democrats. Two others are in doubt. Both branches of the Legisla!gre are large ly Ameri.can. Att`Turnips may still be sown in the middle 01' 4 this month, and produce a good crop, )eford winter Late turnips are often the; best: NEW ADVERT'MENTS SUPER PHOSPHATE OF LIME. DEBU - RO'S Original and Genuine, 1/warranted of superior quality, the cheapeat manure in the world: Fanners and dealers supplied at low prices. EXTRA QUALITY LAND PLASTER:. . " - '5.000 barrels Extra Quality Land Miter, selected for ita fertilizing quality.; 10,1.90 bushels of same in bulk. ' 1,000 barrels Calcined Plastir. . . 1,000 •+ Casting " • • 500 Dentist " ; ' 5,000 " Hydraulic Cement. '1 1,000 - True Roirutn irfICVLAN (WAND. ; This article we offer in confidence to oar customers, as equal to any-imported , and far superior! to most In the market. 5,000 bags of this superior Guano, for sale, at tho 'Dir est market rates. ' Also. -• POUDRETTE, .. . . . PATAGONIAN GUANO. GROUND cIIaECOAL dc-, ke. • C. Flit:NCl' A co Atthe Stearn Plaster Mills, junction Of York Avenue and Canautili street, illiladelphia. August 11, '55 T lIEREAS . the. Hon. Charles W. Regius, President of the Court of Common Kees of Schuylkill County: in Pennsylvania.; and-. mike of the sevens! Courts of Quarter Sessions of the Peace. Oyer and:Terminer and General Gaol Delivery in said County, the Hun. V. S. Hubley and Solomon Foster, Judgesp.!the Court of Quarter Sessions of the P. acc, Oyer and Terali er, and General Gel Delivery, for the trial of all'. capital and other offences in the said County Of SchurlkilL bv their precepts to me directed. have entered a Court oe Oyer and Ter miner and General Gaol Delivery and Quar ter Sessions of the Peace, to be holden"lri Pottsville, on MONDAY. the 3d day of SEPTEMBER next, at'lo o'clock, to teatime two weeks. Notice is therefore hereby given to the C.Nnaddr, the Justices of tho Peace, and Colotables of the said ,County of Schuylkill, that they are, by the said prtcerr,4l corn unanthid to be then and thereat 10 o'clecl. In tin: forenoon of the tall day; with their rolls records, inquititions. ex aminations and al rot her mmetnbrances, to do those things which, in their several ofbess. appertain' to be done: and all those that are bound by recognisances; to preset-tate against the prisoners that are or then shall be In the gaol of said County of Schuylkill, are to be then arid there to prosecute them as shall be just. • 1. •, • God sate the Cornixotiwaith,!., • . JAMES N'AGLE,i . Sheriff's Office, Pottsville, t August 11.1835:1 •-• • , N. li.—TheAnd Jurors wlj•+arc iummoroNt to attfrud &lid Court tireruluiro4 to attetof In ma:. of agniittenctanee, law, to Putt olsi;s , loads qnd ppcorldo.' skin b. enfrOect. • Thli toilet is publi4pq by ordor of the Court rzrt .1r;, -.4 . 1.11i3;z1y.. • . EBB M METAL ARKET. =I El= 13.2 000 34 00 t^60.44 39 00 --0 4- -- LV ' 31 00 000 60 oo 14 00(4 G 7 60 . o , MOOO 00 00 0 60100 00 40 000, 76 00 `!-- :5 000 2.G.0L :24 006; 25 (10 '2:l 006 ".3 54; 2 5 IX - 30 004 at 55 00116 58 01 55 00(4 CO 65 00(4 90 OC $0 00(i 85 45 00(4 75 00 4 0001 55 0( —Cu 500 4 00. 85 000 90 00 5000 550, 4 .7:.@ 6 60 9 0 , 0 14 09 5u6, 760 4 6661, 6 Of. 6 (kv(itli C.e 100 !Mc 100 Ltd . 00;14 60 —Or 24 oil 1,3 WV, txr -1i.%0 18. 80 - ; — ge I . _ 12( 6 60 4, WOO@ 6 12 6 31(5) 614 G 6 67 --(d, 611 1 - 371 2.l(it-- !Ea j 0 ['R A NA L par'd. $4 76 nnpar'd, 200 , paw 280 12 •:land, lit do 8 (di 9 do .11 14 :22 00 fz 00 5 00 hay. per to Plaster, do 4 73 7 '25 Gen. Sam Houston:, '--- 1,000 TONS, NO. 1 PROCLAMATION. 33L'ial
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers