The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, October 20, 1855, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    rmo' 7l
Trtigti.'
OF THE MINER'S JOURNAL..
sceoix armee t trios: .
,I) )I.LATIS per annum, 'e to adeartee—s2 / 25,#
pAid within ells erenthe—aa $2 401 r not paid Titbit
ceer
TO CLUBS:
tJ ono mille . oes, In *tine*, 1,5 00
c"
1000
in d,,
0( ions wont be invariably paid In advance.
' 100 ,10 Addrofe.
•
.1 0r.93
r 0 hAnntsits AXD oraicits:
rhe ' %I. %fill be tarnished to Caniersiad otherslit
copies. cash
4'4 vitt S:hwi I'We/on auppllod with the JOVII,
••er ,
at is $1
THE LAW Or NEWgP 4.PEVA.
T clivl ,l Ib. rr
• otslar the discontinuance of their mews
,rtt: the publisher rasY continue to ems th em
until
sro
o t m . r ibenv ue4leet or eefuse.ta tithe their newspa.
froaa the o igms to which they are-directed. they ass
ro p o wlble until they hare settled the blltillrod or
.eaj 0309 dilteolliirtiled.
oher ib er ,,latove to other ',twit without lateral.
pahlisher• and the aewsitaPcntaresout to the for
,ll.,ettou. they are held responsible.
{se courts have decided that refusing - to take 'temps
ftmll she otßee. or removing and leasing them un.l
1. 0 far. is prints (aria evidence of 1 utentirmai fraud.
RATES OF ADVERTISING.
„,.. i utre of 1011E1,4.4,51 cmala for one Insertion-19b
' n ot insertions, 25 cents each. 3 lines, one time, 25
_obsuettt in%Artlons,l2% cents oath. ati . rets
;i iq
mtsuvrr 3 ars. for short porlods, charged tuta aware.
11043•• oar. Two: • TtCRES. SIX. TWILIT.
62% , . 8 7 1 ,4 61 50 $ 1 25 4 , . 3 00
Itrnstines ,
100 150 200 350 600
OVIR rirs LIM COUNT= AO A 8001F.Z OF TINLIne.
125 200 300 500 800
10 .0 w. • 200 . 3.50 spo
.11 00 12.00
qUArts.•3-100 450 8 50 ,10 00' 18 oo
,• , )1., 501 650 800 15 00 ' «400
nn. 990 12'00 16 00 25 00 40 00
11 00 . 23 00 30 OFI 45 00 60 00
Notice's, r each—aceompanted with an
, „ r tisarent, 1,0 cents each.
I,.irerticemonts heforo Marriages and Deaths, 10 cents
for first lusortion--subsequent Insertions, 5 cents
ti t ,. Nine words are counted &la Me in advertising.
,i, r iants and others advertising by tho year with
a standing advertisement not wadi:oiling 2
..3rs of 2.) linos, will be charged, Im:tiding. subscrip
. • $l.O
th, n mount of one quarter columns with
ail&aubszription, • ' $2O oi3
•,,,It.,l3atiges, at the rates dosignated'above. •
1 ,, r ti...-me'nts set to Larger type than usual will he
19 per Tent. advance on these prices. All cuts
re rtiftr,:ed the . same as letter press..
.
T , T il de 'Advertisements received [ t ern Ad eer tw ag
abroad: except at 23 per cent. advance on theft*
unless by special agreement with the publisher. •1
25 cents each. Deathssetompinted with no
tontg. with Out notices no charge. , •
N.mres, :rept them, of a rell,;ious character and
• ;turAtional purposes, will be charged 25 cents ford
of lilies under 10.. Over 10 lines, 4 cents per
.T.hosh
lia or meetings, notof a gonCral orpublic cbar
.chir , •l at coats per UneSor each insertion. •
facilitate calculithms we will state that 31.13 114 es
column—lGl Rues n half column—and 82 lima a
; vier column. 2752 words make a colunan-1476 a ]tilt
~,,l — and 7:is a quarter column. , MI odd lines over
iu‘re. charged at the rate of 4 cents per line.
TArlv a tyttrtigerg must confine _their advertising to
oon business. Agencies for others, sale of Real Ks
... kr.. is not Included In busine4 adverttseu e uic
The Wednesday Dollar Journal
piNished at tho Mee , tif the Miners' Journal at $l .
eII:MUM. Advertisements Insertedat the usual rtes
I,lc:Lt.te of 51.) per cent. is made from, tho Journal
wh,nlyerson!s advertise In both papers.
WIRE SCREENS.'
MINERSVILLE.
KURTZ & HEISLER,
,Late Karts, Beverle &'Co,) ,
• . Manufacturers of
mui Wire Coal Screens. Cool Riddles, Wire
• •••• "
Brooms, Le., Le.. Minersville, Schuylkill,
ijsz
.t Thankful for the liberal patronage they
dr.om the Coal Dealers and others, in the
• v..,11.1 meat respectfully solicit their custom In the
All tt,rk done at our shop will be warranted, so
e m, one need be afraid of getting a had job
Re.tz being ono of the oldest, and the moat cape.
W. r , Jr...Ler in the county. we feel Sure, thatdse
•ut , oat the best. Coil Screens in the Region.
Aers addressed Kurtz, Mincrsville, to W.
Pottsville or' Kurtz Iteisler, Minersville,
oe ecenell)k attended to. Old 4. - recn rrepaircd.
20.
POTTSVILLE.
WIRE SCREEN FACTORY . ...
Change of Proprietor..
•,
lmi,. THE undersigned has
.....as
-vaned the Proprkstorship of the Wire
Sereen Factory in Coal street, lately eon
r."'lMl6 ducted by li. L. Cake, and desires to call
.%ilttenti , •ll Operators and the publiegenerally.
:• I : :‘, , stensire establishment. Arrangements are - made
7..-cutin: the very best of materials, and 'orders for
3 lame`nmeunt will be tilled at the shortest no-
Lid on the most satisfactory terms, ,
suberiber. moreover, haring secured the services
~..111ful and experienced workmen invites the most ri
,,jr33mination or test of his screens. promising them
; to the best turned out in other manufactories.
f 1.55 1-1 f JOILN HARLAN.
IRON WORKS. .
HAII.R.ISBIIIIG.
' NOVELTY IRON WORKS. •
- THE undersigned manufactures Steam
imp, Engines, machinery and castings for blast
• furnaces; rolling mine, grist and saw intHs
ji F" te a , .ffil general machinery. Also, cast iron
l a on. for houses and stores, havingi new
et /ilia: eee variety of patterns and designs—has set
r .eteraliron fronts In Philadelphia, New Orleans. Pitts
and elsewhere, and would be pleased to remise or
which will be promptly attended to.
J. R. JONES—
flurishore. slay 12, 1555 19-6nie
TAMAQ,IIA.
CARTERS & ALLEN'S_IRON WORKS,
Tamaqua, Schuylkill Cqunty, Pa.
gThe Subscribers, proprietors of the
above named extensive establishment, an
- nounee to the citizens of Schuylkill ennu
i' m , ty, and the public generally, their readi
ness to turn out any and all kinds of work
:their line. at the shortest notice, and in the most sat
, ,t,ty Inallner—such as building Steam Engines, man
,fainrin,,T, Itail road and Drift Cars, Pumps, Castings and
!!..binery of all kinds.
.:4 the best workmen are employed, and satisfiketion
therefore be safely guaranteed. Orders from abroad
- aptly filled. CARTERS A ALLEN.
irrivins, January 27, 1655 ' 4-t( -
DEAVER MEADOWS.
BEAVER MEADOW IRON WORKS.
ammo. HUDSON k BROTHER, Iron and Brasil
Ir Founders, respectfully' inforin their pa
. • .. trims, and the public generally, that they
air , fully prepared at' the above establish
ment. to manufacture Steam Engines of
.ry oll'irams. Railroad. and Drift Cara, and every
HiNo. of Iron and Brass Castings suitable for
mi:i4m, or other business, on the most reemonlible
Als, Blowing Cylinders for Blest Furnaces and
work in general.
-repritt , ;.f all kinds done'With neatness and despatch
pri , f7v. All' work furnished by them war.
perf , rtu well. They would golleit the.euidom of
whn may want articles in their line in this vicinity.
i 4len sill meet with immediate and prompt atten
8. W. /JUDSON.
W. It.. lITIDSON.
!lim-11 4, l~isd 9-1 v
MINERS ILLS.
•
DEHAVEN'S IRON WORKS,
Subscriber is prepared to manu
facture STEAM ENGINES of any power,
•A
gam— Pumps of any capacity, and Coal Break rrs
-- of every dearriptlon; as well as every
other kind of machinery used in Stifles,
errs. urtu,s. Roiling Mills. Saw Mills. &e. „
if - 1,1 the faciNtlelelVeciessed for manufacturing, and
.! uxpericnce in the business. work can be turned
...it this •tstablishructit, at the very lowest prices, and
' loipericr quality.
t'srsorts d..strtux of putting up
s machlnery C . .f any kind.
ittsit , sl rail and examine patterns and become sic.
;c:inted with prigs before contracting elsewhere.'
every kind are vullielted. and strict attention'
b e given to iheirlirtanpt execution.
"WILLIAM DI:II.4TEN.
Itut‘litslll. December 9, 1554 484 f
TREDIONT.
TREMONT IRON WORKS,
Tremont, Schuylkil/ County, Penna.
ti
The Subacribere reepectruity invite
mai the attention of the brodneescomraenity
'
. to their New Machine Shop and route.
12ELI f dry, erected in the town of Tremont, and•
- under the superintendence and tri.anago
a,at of 'Messrs. Z. Batdorff and Philip Cmholts. where
.f au. prepared to execute all orders for Machinery of
i-ns and Iron, such ait Steam Engittes of any power,
or any capacity. Coal Breakma or every descrip
' a. all kinds of Gearing for Roiling Mills. Grist and
Mills, Drift Cars, and all kinds of Railroad Castings,
1 , Chairs for Plat and T Mita. Prom". Switches. and
; , inds of Cast and Wrought iron Shafting& Mr. Urn
al!tz being a practical Mechanic. and haring had the con.
• t , a-c and experience for many years in the Cmil Region,
•n as letirnue of putting up
,Marhlnery of any kind,
••••, tarited to ca/tand examineour patterns and superior
Oay F , f work. and become aequainted „with prices at
tv ,, tka. contracting elsewhere. Orders ofe•-
•", kind thaiikfully.rerelved. and strict attention will be
p-n to their, prompt execution, haring severallt h 20,
and fit horse Engines on hand. • '
lan. 1.R:15 I.ly C. A... & A. 31. BELTZIER.
, DONALDSON.
EW FOUNDRY '& MACHINE SHOP:
Donaldsori, tehttylkill Co., Pa.
the aubscribera respectfully invite •
't • ap..nt inn of the business e , lntuunity CrM
• Jr nov Foundry and :Slachine'snop,
.11--tri in ,the loam of Donalesoo..4. , irrr
county. Under the' uinazt. "
Ebn tintbirsigned all of whom aro practical
, roem three different branch e s or
".1 , 1 4 1.r, machinist and ear builder. They are now ready
all orders for marlitiery. sorb' as steam en
pump!. - rnal breakers: all,kinda of gearing fur
v , st sad raw mills. and drift cars; all kinds of railroad
ench a,:'% chairs, frog*, snitches, *chute plalea
' hrl“:•a<thlgx nvido to orde.r. Also apple mitts,
hail. and en. , king staves,gratesnf fire differentsizea,
tweire up to twenty-four inches in length. Mack.
rt4lbing, in Its rations branc4es, executed at short taco
W. flatter ourselves that Alf work done at, the; Donald
', Fplandry will give suet, entire satisfaction, as to se%
Autos - custom of their patrons. Our motto it
and let live." , Orders thankfully received sad
:tit' , l et the shlrteat notim, and on'reasonable terms.
ALFRED JONES,
ROBERT YDLTNO.
LElvis MILLER,
PETER COX.
ttly 2,5, 'Z.:, 30.17
PORT CARBON.
FOUNDRY AND MACHINE SHOP,
Port Carbon, Schuylkill Co., Pa.
T. IL WINTERSTEEN annnune
" es his readiness from the complete outfit
atilt/above natnedeststeshntent, toady
itzf, zuz ply ail orders in his Hne of brisinesa—
,uch as fat Steam Engines, Railroad and
art Carl, Pump!, CAM Breakers. Castings and 'Whine.
'? erwy pat tarn lie warrants his work to rive sails
and accordingly solicits patronage at home sod
om i d
Jan 27.1866 41y
FRANKLIN IRON WORKS.
E THE Sttlecribers announce to the Pub.
e that they are the Propristons of the
.7" tie that
Work,' Port Carbon, lately cu
31Lic= riod on by S. Sillyman, whore they con
tinue to manufacture to order, at the
4°ll txraollee, Steam Engines, Pumps, Coal Breakers and
" 4 . 6
Utilluary almost any /des or deserlotkat, for. mining
e. , anrirek.s. Alan, RAllr-eut aid Drift Cars, Iron or
Ict cutinga et any elm or pattern. Orders are inepret
r r)ll•Sted. • GEO. B. FIMLER A Bla
Prank Hit Shovel Iffoirke.•
,:rha'totoeribera none to famish the Coltleis and
or !Whoyikill County, with Moeda of all kinds,
`° l lowest Philadeliela inhos. Attention is puttee ,
wit telkd to their 09a) ' Shawels. Onion he Shovels of
" 11 4 or Platten pnwaptly attended to.rs;
two. Ix VISSLER i'SSO.
Pfvt cirtrn, ALI:tI94 .7.1.1F52. 34-tf
• f '
•
IEI
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING, BY BENJAMIN' BAIsTNAN, POTTSVILLE; SCHUYLItILL COUNTYI PENNSYLVANIA.
VOL. XXXI.
IRON WORKS.
POTTSVILLE IRON .WORKS.
Foundry and Iliaohlne Business.
NOTICE. - The Subscribers hare this
o tini day termed a co.partnehhip, under the
IhM of POMROY. SMITH POMROT.
..tE s ,c ium or the tratmaction of a goner itandrx
. 1 • - " Mine Dasiaus, at the old.estals
Imbed - Pottsville Iron Works," career of Noweghta and
Coal street*. D. F. pomirdi t ,
WM. SMITH.
Marth Z. 181,4 12.tt CLIFFORD vonEtoir.:
POTTSVILLE IRON WORKS.
GEORGE MASON & CO., respectfully
LI ...ou.ce to the public that they have
r.,.. 1 6 ,1 gRR taken the P.stabilatunent known as tiM
2 7131 Pottsville Iron Works, on Norwegian it.,
where they are prepared tohuild all kinds
of steam itnigines, manufacture Railroad Cars, and Ma.
chinery of almost , *rem deseriptkon, at the shortest no.
tire, and on the mdst reasoned* terms.- Persons from
Mooed, In want of Steam Engines, will dud It 'to their
advantage to give thim a call, telbre engaging elsewhere:
'Pottsville, nay II • 194 f
iALO ALTO ROLLING MILL.
gt i
THE Subsrxibers beg leave to an.
flounce to their friends and the public.
that their new Rolling Mill at Palo Alto
~..
„ z . a zig is now complete, and in full operation,
and that they are prepared to supply a
superior article of T Rails of rations sizes, for the use of
Collieries and lateral roads.
Orders for rails are respectfully solicited, and will meet
with prompt attention if left at the Rolling Mill, the
ti
Hardware ti of Bright k Lerch. Centre street, Potts.
villa, or addre by letter to LEE. BRUM? A CO.,
22. IS.S. 28-tf • At/stifle, P. 0., Pa.
. _ _ __ _____
_ Sept. FOUNDRY AND MACHINE SH O P,
Steam Car Vomitory. 'kr. .
:erMMitten—The business of the late firm
„,,.., SNYDER A MILNE.% Will be contin•
s! ' 4 'cuSti by the subscriber in all Its various
..I . r En ..:•;. agk, branches of Steam Engine building, Iron
Founder, manufacturer of all kinds of
Machinery, for Rolling Mita, Blast Furnaces, 'Railroad
ems, Ac.. &c. tie will also continue the business of MM.;
lug and Selling the celebrated Pine Fbreet White Ash mail
Lois and ,Sloan Veins Red Ash Coals, being sole proprie•l
for of these Collieries.' ; GEORGE W. SNYDER.
January 21,1824 • s4f
TO COAL OPERATORS I MINERS.
Pioneer Boller Works.
!Afitim The subscribers respectfully invite the
„,,„ *Gentled of the business community to
"7" 1 . their Boiler Works, on Railroad street, be
:dim low the Passenger Depot, Pottsville, Pa n
where they are prepared to manufacture
nova ltd OF EVERY
Smoke Stacks, Air Stacks. Blast Pipes, Gasometers, Drift
Cars, &c.. Boilers on hand.
Being practical mechanics, and having fist years deieted
themselves entirely to this branch of business. they flat
ter themselves that work done at their establishment will
give satisfaction to all who may favor them with a ea.--
Individuals and Companies will find it greatly to their ad•
vantage to examine their work before engaging elsewhere.
May 5, 1t453 194 f JOHN• & JAMES !Contr..
--
POTTSVILLE ROLLING MILL.
TILE SUBSCRIBERS respectfully an
...„ flounce to the public that their.new 11011-
1% ing Mill is now completed and in full ope.
1 - tir".. 4 " dliag ration. and that they are prepared to sup.
ply all kinds of liar Iron of rations sizes,
which they will warrant to be superior in quality to any
obtained from abroad, at the same priers'.
They also manufacture T Bails, for the uso of the Col
lieries and Lateral Roads, weighing from 21 to 10 lbs. per
yard, made of the best Iron, and which will be found
much cheaper than the imported article.
Being practical mechanics, and having had considerable
experience in the Iron business, they flatter themselves
that they ran give entire satisfaction to purchasers. and
also make it their interest to patronize home =aurae.
tures. JOHN BURNISH t CO.
December 6,1851
WASHINGTON IRON WORKS.
Pottsville, Pa.,
! .1. Wren 4 Bros. A Co. respectfully invite
the attention of the business community
Y.---, to their Now Machine Shop and Foundry
- i •rnvi.i . " . • La id erected between Coal and Itallrneul streets,
and fronting on .Norwegian street, where
they are prepared to execute all orders for machinery of
• Brass and Iron, such as Stwm Engines, all kinds of Gear
ing for Rolling Mills, Grist and Saw Mills; Single and
Double acting Pumps, Coal Breakers, Drift Cgrs, all kinds
of Railroad Castings, such as Chairs for Flat:and T Rail;
Frogs, Switches, he.; all kinds of oast and wrought Iron
Shafting. Being practical mechanics, and haying made
the demands of •the Coal Region their study for years,
also all kinds of Machinery in their line of business, they
flatter themselves that work done at their establishment
will give satisfaction to all who may honor them with a
call. All. orders thankfully received and promptly exe
cuted, on the most reaionable terms.
JOHN Y. WREN, THOMAS WREN,,
JAMES WREN, JOHN mows,.
Octobar 2. 15.52 4A-tf
REAL ESTATE SALES.
PRIVATE SALE.
TIE Subscriber intending to move to
the West, offers at .Privato Sale a desirable Store
seand Lot of Ground, situate in the village of New
England, one mile south of Tamaqua. The dwelling is
three stories high, new and substantially built. with a
Kitchen in the near. The lot is 150 feet front, and ''Ai
feet deep. There is a never-failing spring of water on
the centre of the lot near the dwelling. The dwelling is
conveniently located for a person whose business it in
the Mines. Possession will he given Immediately. For
information apply to JOSIAH BOUGUEY. on the pre
mises., or to ' WitED'K LAUDEEBRUN, -
Oct. 6, '55 3t. Tamaqua.
ORPHANS' COURT SALE..
p • URSVANT to an order of the Op.' -
phaim . Court of the county of Schuylkill, in. the
Annunonwonith of Pennsylvania, the subscriber, Admin
istrator of ttEBUCCA FISIIER, late of the borough•of
Orwigsburg, in the county of Schuylkill. deceased. will
expose to sale by public vendue. on SATURDAY, the 27 th
day of October next, at ten o'clock in. the fnarinoon, eta,'
public house of George D. Royer, in the borough of'Orn•
wigsburu, in the county of Schuylkill aforesaid.—All
that certain 1% story frame dwelling house and let , of
ground, situate in the borough. of Orsigsbrarg. In the
county of Schuylkill and State of Pennsylvania. to'wit:
•Bounded by Washingto n
. greet in 'front - and extendfng
in depth to an alley . i4Joining lot of Washington Gross
on the south and lot of I.A.te Gross on the north; with
the appurtenances. late the Mate of said 4k-wed:—
Terms and conditions made known at the time and place
of sate, by JOHN FISHER, -administrator.
By order of the Orphans' Court,
•
Joanne BOYER, Clerk.
October 6,'55 404 t.
PUBLIC BALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE.
rrHE subscriber, executor of the last
Will and Testament of SLIMUEL K. K 1 PNER. de
euaNed. will expose to puLlie SAC. on Saturday. the third'
day of November, 185.1, at t o.cioek. P. 111„at Keptiendile,
in West Penn township, 841mylitill county, the following
real estate, to wit:
,
Net. 1. All that taluablelind well known property cell
ed "Kepnerville,' situate partly in West Penn and partly
'n East Branswig *townships, Schuylkill county. 4 mike
from Ringgold and the little Schuylkill Railroad,. con.
4
Mining about 330 acres, strict titexsure.— tr a
• The improvements consist of a 'largo and
convenient two story dwelling house an
, -.... kitchen, occupied and known as the West l'iMn
lintel. A tarps two story stone buil Ingecechst express
ly. for a store and lately occupied es such: two- tenant
houses; a large and convonieot bank barn; log stable;
wagon, house; stone sheds: carriage house; smith shop;
distillery, and a number of other outhuildings running
fountains at the house; barn and distillery supplied by .
never-failing springs of water. •There are three thriving
apple orchards and other fruit an the premises. About
130 acres aro cleared, and Well fenced into convenient
fields. The balance being excellent timber land. The
'above is an excellent stand for a tavern and, store, itud
may, without• feat of contradiction, be called the most
splendid farm in Schuylkill county.
No. Y. A tract of timber land situate about one Mile'
from ltiopnerville, containing 413 acres, 70 perches and al
lowance. Crt,,nditions made known on the dab' of wile; by
.September lb, 'fi:i . 3 :
-lit JAC011.0A)131E1L„ I
ORPHANS''COURT SALE.
PURS.UANT to .a decree of the Or
phane Court of Schuylkill county. Pennsylvania:
made on the Vit day of September, 1855, the under
signed. GEOBJC. 13.E1FSNYDk6„ Gun rho's of Abraham
Burgett. John F. Burgett/and Sarah F. Burgett, minor
children cf 'John Burgett, late of the town of St. Clair.
In said Schuylkill eounty, deceased. will expose to sale,
by public vendue, and will sell. on . Wednesday, the see.
code day or November next, at two o'clock in the after
noon, at the house . of Jonathan Johnson, Innkeeper to
the town of St. Clair,Schuylkill county aforsaid, the
undivided interest o f said three minors. (being three
undivided sixteenth parts, more or leas ) ) in three certain
or pieces of ground, situate in the town of St. Pair
ab revaid; one of them. marked in the general plan of
weld town; No. 31, containing in front, on Second street,
six ty feet. and extending back two hundred feet, to Third
stroet, bounded, northerly, by lot No. 30, and southward
ly, by lot N 0.32; one other of them.' marked in the gen
eral plan of said town, N 0.30, beginning at the southeast
corner of Third and liancock streets; thence extending
westwardly to Second street, two , hundred feet, thence,'
southwsrdly, along said Second street, sixty, teet. to lots;
No. 31, on said plan, thence, westwardly, along the line
of said lot, to ihird street, aforesaid, and thence, ndrth
wa rdly, along said Third street, sixty feet, to the plate of
beginning; and the other of them, marked in the gear.
nil planet said Town, N0.•,13, beginning at the Patittactud I
(weber of . fiec;ead and Hancock streets. thetice extending 1
tastwardly, two hundred feet, to Front street thence,
southerardly, along said Front street sixty feet, to lot Nn.
at, on said plan, thence w estwardly,along the line of paid
lot, two hundred feet, to: Second street, aforesaid, and
thence northward!, along said Second street, sixty feet,
to the place of beginning. The sale to be for the best
Price that can be had for the same, and wpm terms that
wUI be made known at the tine of the.ule.
ort)moit BEIFSNYDER;OIuirdian. •
41,3 t
Oet. 13,'55
.. PRIVATE SALE
Of Sobglkill County Coal g l a d
Property, Lai%
roa and Town Pra:l,
THE subscribers intend moving to the
West, and offer the following property for solo.
f. 3) acres of Coal land, veins opened adjoining Tm e•
wont.'- ; (lied Mountain tract.)
1 573 arms Coal lands. on the barberry ttailroad:—
Two veins in operation. with breaker and other outside
improvements. (Phonter Head tract.) '
3 53 acres Coal land. one large vein opened, situated
on the Roush Creek. '(lteberting Warrantee.)
4.' 126 anal of Coal land, situated on the Swatsra.—
(Warrantee, Win. Orme)
5. 75 acres of Coal land. vein opened. and outside ho•
provement,on the linatara'Reliroad. (Warrantee, Sam.
ull D. Franks.) •
MS
6. 255 urns farm and Timber land, on t h e
Lwarnra stream, near Pi seams. with Orbit
and Ela n and • new brick Licosa and
and good water power. One bait of
The land his been limed, and one half is timber land.—
The price asked con boenade out of th e timber ibr
n 7. WO nem Vann and Timber land tinder MO : tiviatinn , and one - half is that rat* Tim
ber land. adjoining the borongb of Plne-
Ye, with a fine trick Mansion and key ,
Barn.
R. A - Rouse with throe lota in the borough of flrisr
nre.A ROW* and Lot In Jackson Row, In the borough
of Ploeurove. '
10. Hone. Lot and Stable, near he Union Canal Bs.
shills said borough.
11. on•e and tour acres of land, an Logan WU. near
the Canal Basin.
12, Two lots near Canal bona iula Dauphin atillkor
gee:mu Meted. • - .
18. Four lots In Soneelta Adeltke. - •
14. MI the Wharves - and Lainllnp tlir, etre Id the
Colon Canal Basin, at Plnegnrro. . • •
LT It OCORGE;
Sirltor farther Ingartaatten Inqatre of,D. tlivrtunralt,
at Piterrere, or J. George. at Lebanon. • • • '
ptenaber 15. 1P:55 z 7.
- ------....„
:=- ,-; '4 :• . f. "4" :',.',. f ,...f„ . _• ' ' '., .
1 :: i.' ~-,,,,..- .1:. , ,:t rfAi',.:k....!^: . ,:,; 1',!. ~..13..."0S lt i, •; ... 4 t:,:-----.'*4 , il.--,--.- ---i.P. , i.: , ;:,"% - a'' ,, " ! - : - . " t f r f- , }..." 14f-Asl3r , - .:"! , : l r'•' i'v.-5.1 9-0 4 :t , t , 4ci.re-: 4 / 1 - - -17-0 ,, .k.:- 4 f'- re - - -•' ,,f 4 1,, ,5-4 4, ...$ - I -
',-. x C.' \-- f ; , ' r •
. ,
„1-11
f ' • ':4 ..., .'' . - ' 9 . .... - ..lii,r. ~ 1
.... , . _
,
.1
." - - - --1 ~
Jv,
N
~.... ,
..
kl,.
... __
...
!,
j . .
,
. _
r ; , •
, .71' - •;t• ~ - ,
. . • ' ' r ' ' - I
. • ,
e r •."J_ ...- •
...iv 8 ••• ,
• .
•-....
- ,a, .
. ..
.DER
i, _ ,
AND , POTTSV -r -- ' • '-: I .
...„. _
.
. .
•
~:,, ~. . •
I WiLl• TBACB YOB iTt - / PIM - THE BOWELS OF TBE EaIITII i,:wo Immo OUT 'Roil Taf, c,Lviipgs OF ifousTAnu *Ems wHIcH WILL oipi amnion' TO OUR HANDS AND amour ALL NiTIME TO On USE SEDPLESMULT—Dr..robisors.
POT
HOTELS., 'i - i ;_.
WASHINGTONHOUSE
New Castle, liehaylkill Countr;Petuaa.
E. PHILLIPS, PILOPELETOE,
July 14,'5S
- -"THE UNION," •. • , •
Arch Street, between 3d & 4th, Pktlade
raoraiErotis----EvANS eitEwetalEA;
;.
FORMERLY WEBB.k REMCOIIEtt.
Hours 9f Jkabir .
Itartarawr--6%
11 734t0 10 Do 2 Fit---Gent'sOrd'i,lto3
fi to Who!' " 2
• Philadelphia, February 24,1E55 S-110 (
TREMONTI HOUSE,
Tremont, elebuyilittn Commit*, Pn.
13HIVIP KOONS, formerly
L keeper In Plnegrose would respeetfullittilbrin
his forraer patrons, and thelpublie generally, that be
taken the “TILEMONT 110USN,'," in Tremont, and is pre
pared to receive and aeirommbdate in the hest Manner,
all guests who may favor him with a cell. i s
AM-Ile would also bring tu.the notiee'of, the people
residing in the Cities, that Treinont Is a treitutiful spot
In a mountainous country, blessed With rabibritius alr,
not quite tour miles distant from the lbeantlful "Sentare
Falls," making It altogether a desirable plats of Summer
resort. , April 14. 1& 5 / 1 15-tf
NEW YORK.
NW SINGING BOOK 'POE 1104.
One Tlisertzsand Tames and Anthems.
j 8.. WOODBURY'S Nre.ii Woik
j•TIUE, MIURA. For sale by boOksellers and
music dealers generally. The Publisher will; on receipt
of ,Si sty cents twastage stamps; mall single copies to teach.
era examination, and pre-pay the postage thereon.
F. J.IIU>NTINUTON, , PubILeber,
23 Park Row, Ntw; York City.
41430
Oetotte 13, lb
. .
PHRENOLOGICAL CABINET. •
FOWLERS, WELLS di CO., Miro
, z 4 . Dolor', sts and Publisher*, MT Arch street,
of' below Seventh, Philadelphia', •furnish ell
1:` %work* on Phrenology, Phyrdolegy, Water
Cure, Magnetism and Phonography, whole.
sale and retail, at New York price's, Pro.
./
. tee tonal , examinations, with Charts, and
full written descriptions of enaracter, day
-... •
, ,-,• and evening. Cabinet free. '
Philadelphia, February 24,1&45°
CRATES! ' !' :
rust Published, a New Discovery in Medicine!
A FEW WORDS on the ratronal,treide
./ I si• tnentovithont Medicine, Of Sperms forth 03
:le. or Local Weakness , Nervous Debility, Low
MP o'..
Spirits. Lassitude. Weakness 9 r the Limbs
and Back, indisposition and Incapacity for ,Study and
Labor, Dullness of Apprehension. Loss of .lietuoty..Aver
sion to Society. Love of Solitude, Timitlity.'Selrhistrttst.„
Dizziness, Head-Ache, Involuntary Discharges. Paine in
the Side. Affection of the Eyes, Pimples On the= Face,
Sez 11l and other Infirmities in Man. ,'
' ' prom the French of Dr. B. De Daly*.
1 The important fact that thesealarming compialnts nosy
easily be removed without Mellicine Is in this. Mall tract
clearly demonstrated: and the entirely new and highly
The
treatment- as adopted by the author, fully ex
plained, by means of which every one is evuOled to tiny*
' himself perfccUy, and at: the kart possibkooft, avoiding
I
1 thereby all thendvertised nostrums of the:day.
Sent to any address gratis, and post free In a sealed en-" y 1
I . velope, by remitting (post paid) tvvrt postage ststupS to
D/1. B. Dr:LANEY,
. Sept. 1'2,'5,] 17-6 me 17 Lispenard Si., New York, ;
iten : Dela A n
• AVII3E'S
el HEAP Watch andJew
\jelly Store, N0..72 North Second
street, (opposite the Mt. Vernon
Ifouge). Philadelphia..
Gold Lever Watches. foU Jeweled. 18 11 wee, $2B; Sil
ver Lever, full Jeweled, $l2; Silver Leplue;p::Quartier,
$5 to $7; Gold Spectacles. $4 50 to $10; Silver Spectacles
$1 50; Silver Table Spoons, per set, $l4 to $18; Silver Des,
Ken Spoons, $0 to $11; Silver Tea Spoons $4 75 te, bo.
Gold Pens nod Gold eases.s3 :&) to $5; Gold Pens and
Silver eases, $1; together with a variety of flue Gold Jew
elry, Gold Curb. Guard and Fob chains. All goods war
rented to be as represented. Watches and' Jewelry re
paired in the best manner. Also, Masonla'Marks; Pine,
&e. made to order.
N. ft—All orders sent by mall or othertfise, will be
punctually at-ended to. . I
Sept. 22,'55 35. i j
STAUFFER & HARLO
- . CHEAP WITCIIES & JEW ELltY—, 14holesa/e
and retail—at the *Phi/adelphial IVateh and
Jewelry Sion," No. 011 North Setuput
.street, cor
ner of Quarry, Phi adelphia. ' i ' ,
Gad Ler#2 . Watehes. full Jeweled. 18 ovret.VAnc, $2B.
Gold Lepine Watches, 18 tii $2,4.1 i •
Silver Lever.fulljewelled,sl2 Gold Spectacles, .$7 00
'Silver Lepine,JeweLf, 9 Firm Silver 'Jo; _ . 150
Superior Quarners, ~ 7 Ladies' Gold Vermin", 100
Gold Bracelets, _ 3 Silver Tealtons. set, 100
• Gold Pent;, with Pencil, end Silver H4lders. $l.
Gold Finger-ringi, 37!.4 cents to $80; Watch (Gasses.
plain, 12J.4 cents; patent, 18% cents; Luna ! 2 centre
other articles in proportion. All goods warranted to lm
what they are sold for.. . STAUFFER .11ARLEY,
On howl—some Gold - and Slicer Leven; and Lepines
still lower than thee...we-prices. • '
Sept. 119..!..85 :1.9.10tn
:WATCHES.,i z 1 i '
(t r i j ir
Jose, RECEIVED, en extensile reaortimant of
Watches, MI Milos's: F - _."
Fine Gold Magic Hunting and', Huntiog Case
Patent Bever, from $6O to SIXIO. i• • • •
Gold Anchor Lever and Lepino, from $2:2 tri 850..
giterr Watcher—llunting and Open Fero from $510840.
. Jewelry—Also a very eaten/ire assortmentof Fine Jew
elry. t I '
x
• Plated ',Puri:L.-Jana, received, ir variety of the
latest patterns and best quality, by the act or sin
gle piece. • t •
. . ...
eery Goodv—ii every variety , %Orb . its Fine
China Retiree, Flower Vim*, Inkstands, Ornament*. Re.
Musical Inotruatetelx--Saperfar Reline, diiitars, A coot ,
drone, Flutes. As., do.
All of which are offered at the lowest market pikes.—
Can and see fee yourselves, at :: i• i
MAX LRIMMERB, ((Laic Z. Fisher.) .
Centre street, 3 doors above Mahantango.
Pottsville. Dec. 16. ISM Niue. 20.341 ;SW
HARDWARE.
BACON'S PATENT WATER FUSE,
I I IOR Blasting in wet ground: and un
der water — superior trianytblng now, In uso, patnit
ed 514 gtb,1855. Also, all other kinds et :Fuse, of the
best q,sifity, manufactured, by PHILIP BACON & CO.,
Simsbury, Omit, . June 21 , 186 6 :25-6t&
PATENT COLD LARD LAMPS.
THE subscribers . being appointed sole
Agents for the sale of Stonesifer k lkalth'i; . Patent
it Lard Lamps, in Schuylkill county, have a large as
sortment for sale, aldetoire highly reCoMmended for
economy and convenience. • BRIGHT* Lanten.
Pottsville, April 1.1,18:5 • !
IRON COMMISSION WARE NOUSE,
(IENTRE STREET,
The subscribers are prepared. to tortabih the Trade
31achinists and Operators at Philadelphiapriees,Vrelght
added) wholesale tr retail, best American ; liar Iron, man
ufactured at Vetter ille, and warranted of smierior quality.
Also. tight T rails-.sultable for mimes, and pable Chains
furnished at abort mike direct from the importer.
E. 1-AnN ,inc 80:F.•
York store, soy. 22, 1513 . 474
COLEMAN CUTLERY' STORE..
No. 91 North Third Street. 1
IONSTANTLY on hand t : ' large as
k) sortment of Pen and Pocket linlena, 'Sebes:RN and
Itators. Table .frinlves and Forks, iu Ivory, stag,' buffalo,
bone and wood handles; Carrera and forks, ATMs, 18:ode
Knives; &C.
ALSO—a very extensive assortment of Walters, Tea
Trays, 4.e.
Fine Lngllsh Ouna, holt'a Pistols, Ahen's Revolters.
and Single and Double barrelled Platobi, With a general
stock of Fancy hardware, constantly on band.
JOHN M. COLEMAN, liapmfer.
Philadelphia, Dee. 30,1834 [Dee. $,'b4.6:1 5141
HARDWARE AND IRON-DEPOT.
* THE SUBSCRIBER, haiiing no* *mar
ed his goods at his new .phkek of badness
and with a new determination oflurnish,
lug all such goods as the Matinees of the
Coal Itegion may require, at their lowest, market Talne,
solicits the luspection of the Public. I idgill be always
on hand and hare on hand a full stock of
Bar Imn, . Chopping ASen,
rue Iron, Coal Shovels,
Cast Steel, , Trace Milne,
Slit Iron, , Nails and Spikes,
Hope,. Tackle Blocks,
-
Bellows, A:nrill and Vices, Le.,
Hardware and iron Depot, Crates Bratty, three doors
abase Market, East side. CLANK' Pen t
July 15, 1&,! . . 2114 f •
CLEMENS &
ark i IIATIDWARN
Street, a few
ade) hare ...
went el -
Smith's Tools,
Banding Materials,
Shoemaker's Tools,
Files and Rasps,
Nails. Spikes and Brads,
Cminterand Platform Scales,
liar and ItOiled Iron, ,
fano and Shoot .4
Cant, Shear and Buster Steel,
Tin, Plate and Shoat *sir,
Bar, Conner and Sheet limps,
Pig and liar Lead,
Castings *fail deseriptkos,
Mill, X-ent and QrenhurSaws
Butcher's Chtipiiers, Clearers
and Knives, •
Anvils and Vim^
Blocks and Dickies,
Chain Pampa,
Iron. Copper and Brigs Wire,
Coach Trimmings,
She subtaibers would
of thopubtic generally, to
hardware, too numinous to
mined to Poll aa tow as any
August 21, '
BRIGHT S• Ltii4T,Va
ligilifif lIARDWABB STORE TWO doors In
low Mats' 'totelmuil nottyty oppowitotholn•
nen' Zink , PottlYukt, where wlll be tbozni
an Ogaden t suwortmonst, at Hasinwitiz:
Springy , . • itlimantiA ~ - t •
Saddlery, t „ Britap la Ware, ;
Stnnunikeeo Took/. • AiwortmOniot Ono tali, '
Cattgotter's Tools; • TOM Mabry: ' • ,
(thulium] Pabst, -+ Arket-ankm ' ' •
Btu Iron of all aline, •.. Table Spun, ; ; . , s„
gone 4 " " I
‘, . Anvils nod VW',
Ifalis Mut flpikai;•' t : ' gawnignewit or Wise din* -
Railroad Iron end Nina,: • - Sheet In* thwilblem; . • r
Ilinilitlowtn. _ _ : I - Wlis4 Tin 11144$ •, .., ,:. : •
I
Bulklate , Bran linttkw,, ~
Cast atwoJ, ' 1 - ' & Ili Donut ' • "
Rost Mak , • ' ': : - ' Posit sad !Mini*. • '.. ~ •
11111.1 4 4w06 , , . lialliolut loi Tnielic • , '.• ~
Crossut Butrs. ' , ". -' ' Powdii , - Shot' "'"
ginonspenirv„, , ,,, ... - p, , , , t.. , •: , ... 1 4 , 4 c f - °v - . ~-,
- GAretileLlalliabiliki Sag* Pt* Plato Plttegtilii,
num witeagod to Mtn Is bto ttuthrldust eirpiieltr.a Dopes
the new one. by nu quility et It' goolisistrlet Woo;
Ann 16 lbenktint.'sat anuniglitestink ir relt gilldamtr re
and command Mid, wontintubS 4 • i . ,-. '
, 11100T.t 'Lltlglr,''
• •'' ' i'; bettkrtillfwidintintilid IfOly Clottrtgenon4
potigrius,Januory 6, ISM- , i l,4f
_SATURDAV MORNING, OCTOBER 2,0, :
__lBos.
lig
MU=:l
AND IRON /MORA Centre
doors • abate' Market (Rat
• ally on Naiad It Rill assort-
(Axles and; Springs„ . •
Table Cutlery, .
Pocket Cutlery,
Carpetater'e Tools;
Britania 'Wee. •
Aileda Iterelvers, •
Rifle Dwelt!,
Table and %s Spoons,
Brans ant Enameled Rot.
Pans, flatfeet d Tea Kettle*
Ilearyltallroad Traces,
Railroad Iron and Spikes,
Double and Single Guns,
Reddened Single Pistols,
Shot and Game Bags,
Powder -
Powder Ind ghat.
Waterape Mot. Pesonssioi
C,. • ,
Ride Motistingi,
• tfully Invite the attention
shore stud:other Nikita of
coition, as they are deter.
• out OfPh i Iphia."
•;•r .
MOROCCO FACTORY.
I ?I s ore ,
RO CC 0 IEATHEIrand SHOE,
t, !_r 4 " iwbvimaa ‘
The undaialgned ra4aelfall imams the customers of
the above well known estate nt , that he will matt*.
to the manufacture 0411 kinds of
111(OROCCO,1 ,
Bush u Straits, Trench Mereeep, Shoe, Hat and Book
tugs, illad Pink Unites, he., he.; land will constantly
oaud a Unites ,
of all kinds of LEATH.
BR, melt or elk Tanned and Red Sole Leather, Slaughter
Sipa. Pouch and Citytaiffikins.
Miners tipper Leather, and a variety of Shoe 'tidings.
Itatit TbseadltNallai Pep, Chaps, he t dr-4 all of irhkh
win be sold at the lowelt cash priests.. , f
'JOHN L
/Gra Nadi of Skim, nab sui Sheath Goat. Lbw, he.
and also Stunae, taken In axe-huge for Leather, at the
highest inarkept pilass.2br paid fbr eunt.
Maple, 04.10,146214--
mat - soz - zone.
- • -• • • •41/LADANWS
tunnelikg orshartingperated
Usti, hers" t una power. &Wad ton or
e mieblner **haul tBO poululheata be operated •by
one man, and strikesr 130 Mows per tninute: The blow
ia °MOW,' the ononPretekes elan India Rubber Spring
-which; eityandhig, throws the Drill 'with mil three. la
;amebae/do yashmaks** tendril' a bob 1% lobo In
dieneter, 8 inebee In depth, per boor —in woesuy. wad
stone, 2to 3 feet bOur. It thills equally well at any
%MOW *Mtn% Chid I* 11. twos( theta staeldnee
Asp he nett* ?liar* of eh *rhino ran 111 Er?:
at'ltliet t eirthlnation' port Nihon iv:l44l4*re' It Wu ba
ttling& f , loll6lnestei.iibb tundsbed of therseeed power
lletdaylkllraoil otherldrautiad la
Apply Mr a • • • --
,46 e • - 34!1%4nt
Oditillllit,
lilli*ltuttenp4tei
Anna le, an.4
•
EDUCATIONAL.
PEMITILVAELCZNILALE cousez.
At Perkimaen Bricipri ;,,Voritipoisutry Crowds, Ibsen.
Institteiciti offers facilities for
the edutalkin of yoring ladles, in all the karate"
o useful learnlealind the polite aceomplishments, not
to be found. It la lielloved4.ln any other Pelmato Seminary
In the Coiled &atm
• The Hoard of %strewth* is made up exclusively of
person* edneatoii who bring to their deities fde.
tinguished abilities and lints espe ence. The College II
amply provided with a • librarles, Le., and the
domestic accommodationiare superior. and the expeinme
very moderate for a firstelass InsUtutlim.
Parents and seanilausrbiling daughters or wards to
educate will do well to mike themselves acquaintrd with
the merits of this schooLL •
Circulars cantabiles
M. filipartieniars May belted on ad.
dressing the Principal. J. Sunderked, as above,
Information may also bahad of Mr. Beery Ertel, Esq.,
of Tremont, and Dr. Lev& Royer, of fklinyikill Raven,
who hnireduarhters at the:school
fa' Passengers by thei!Pottsville & Needing Railroad
should stop at Royer'a Fred station, on the Reading *
Philadelphia Road, where Pitt ate conveyaum may be bad
to the College, distant five 'mita. M, RALDEMAN,
, .key of the Beard of Amstar.
Sept...T4 • 38.8 t
* CRITTENDEWS
iilatalptta.lll, onimtrtial
B. ODOLLEOE,,.
E. Car. 7th and Cheszsas Streets.
THIS InStitutio4 which was first es:
tat:dished in Sept.. - 4
5414, and numbers among Its
graduates hundreds or this:business men In this and oth
er titles. was on June MbilS..6s . Chorrteied and establish
ed as a Mktg, in acendstan with Act of Legislature. -
The turn of Instrudiqrtg is of • thoroughly practical
etotracter and cantatas those branches necessary ter
use In business: besides:which the pupils have the pri
vilege of aitea3dance upon's' course of LECTURES UPON
COMMERCIAL 'LAW, delivered Sr thelrespedal use by
eminent practitioners.
Porthe present sewn, the lion. lodge Shornsocers ser
vices are engaged In this department i• •
carrraNDEN,
So-Cataiogues will bisent to any address, on applies.
Mon by letter. Also, Crittnefess's Mak-Keeping, on re.
eelpt, per mail, of the pride, Al 60. . Kay toaame, 60 eta.
Philadelphia, Oct. s, too 40-6 m
ARCADIAN. INSTITUTE.
THIS. FLOURISHING Institution,
located at Orwigibuii, Pa., has entered upon the
second year of Its existence. The fine scenery. of the
surrounding country, the :healthy. quiet and retired loca
tion of the village are not eurpassed by nny in the State.
It Is easy of access, beltnettlthln two miles of • the
&Aphis And Heading haileMd, to and from whidh a stage
runs twice every day. - •
The males and femahul ate taught and boarded in sap•
mate departments.
The Philosophical sppare tus comprlses instruments of
the finest and most improtted style. Each student shota
hare several aultaof clothing of'a plain style, a Bible, a
few, towels, napkins.
.anlumbrelia, a pair of-slippers,
blacking and shoehrusbea: and very Ilttle sPendlng
money. • • -
The scholastic year Is gilded Into twitons. The'
first session of the year cionameness on the 166th of April,
and continues 22 weeks;. the second opens on the 15th of
October, and continues 21P. weeks. There is a Vacation of
4 weeks at the end of eath session. .
Pupils can enter at aorfirne.
'fermi English and Mathetantical -
lAnirnages with the Eng. 4, Math
T - I
Inatruction on the Pianoorte, extra
Ilse of Instrument - - - .
Boarding.. (f. 2 50 per ireet.) - •
Sir Payment in be foseye Quarldsr,
For Bather intonpation addrona
BU IS Faint
Oryrksburg, Jane 16, '515 • ,
• • .•
- &CARD.- i• '
.
HE subseribe4.respectfOly
anmitin-
T
cell 4o the public, that she his been Induced to alter
her plan regarding the legation' f her hoarding and day
school for young ladles, from Orwigsburg, Pa., to the city
of 'Reading, Pa.; which: Mk account of its superior religi
ous and literary privileges, is considered far, the most
gible situation for establithing a immanent female So
nary. Therefore. the Stitt session will open on Tn• • 3.,
Sept. 4th, in the buildiog pleasantly situated in ' rank
lin St., 2nd door from the Odd fellow's Hall, where sib
branches of a superior.Tngllst education will be• ttio
roughly taught. together : with musicieroosl ;wad instrte
mins& ti .) Penciling. Painting in • Oils. Ann, Trench, lc.
I oryjtport will be made to exalt' the mind, manners..
and hkarts of the pupili entrusted to her charge. Her
testimonials are unquestionable, and she is happy in re
tarring the Parents andifluardiana of young ladles to the
following gentlemen: •
=2!3
_ .
Hon. HENRY Kum, Allentown. Pa.
Rev.lticitaan Vrat.cra; • 1.
• Hon. F. S. Henn!. OrWhreburg, Pa. •
E. F. FatLe, Esq., 181 Prant St- N.
PAUL SPOFFORD, KM, Sfi ;Broadway, N.Y.
Elm= Foorz, PrintiPal . Chrift,Cburch 'School,
Newark: N. J.
Rev. O. S. Woormet.t., 14. Homy SL, N. Y.
Rev. 0. Sr. Jon% Maahattautille, 24, Y.
Circular', with requialla particular'', may be procured
by addressing Mrs. E. diehapdler, Orwigstrorg, Pa.. un
til Sept. lat. when she will remote porManently to Read-
Mg, Barks Co., Pa.
- ' MRS. R. 6: CHANDLER.
,zorwlgsburg, Aug. lA, I 39-tf
MANUFACTURES.
PORT CARBON SHOVEL FACTORY.
Charles Sitith. Proprietor.
All kinds of coal sh spades,. coal riddles, &a.
The patronage of the Pnblle fa resp ectfully solicited..
duly 28, '55, 30..!y
• EXTENSIVC;NIARBLE YARD;
Malilintitnitp St.,PottsvUle. ,;.,
lriHE Subscriber is prepared, at his old
. .. Stand, to furnish iti.itinda of materials in bia Line,
otilldingpurposes—Pain and on=terital. 4 Ile invitee
particular attentibn to the Tbmb Stones and Moms
. acute of his matittfacture. ,Tbey can be had in ev
ery variety of etyfe, and will compare 'favorably In
beauty and finistioritb any obtained elsewhere;
and are offered at cheaptir rates. . I • '' .
Jan, 13,1811 2-17. 0 ; :JOHN T. LANG.
___....._....L.
BLINDS AND SHADES,
() F every variety',-on hand and made
1.,
to order, by_
.4 _,. , • , • • I''
• A. 11. BaIITTON dip CO.,
• - No. 40 North Third street, I"l4itadelphin.
Manntacturcia of Gold orders and I painted Sbadea, of
beautiful designs, with Vivery description Of Blinds and
Shades, trimmings. 4 1, 441 1 . IV, wholesale and retail, at
prices that will glee asqvfaction. • • ,
October 13,'Stt r , l': • • 1 41Am
VENETIAN 'BLIND, MANUFACTORY.
Bth Bt., bet. liorliegian fic• Iltahatatenge.
-
M. ZERltE . annoutieest l e the eit-
Y• izens of 14301111 e and vicinity, that be is pro•
pared to manttlicture reaction minds of Teary size, color
and styln, at short notice and at the lowest rates. He
feels • confident that a. trial alonots auflitient to be eon.
slimed of the advantatotpf purchasing his Blinds. •
• A fine assortment ofilllnds constantly on band. He
Is also preowned to repair, paint, and trim old blinds In
such a manner as to reOderthewl aimed. equal, iq 'Wear
anCe,to new, Jan. Z'.18.55 44y
THOM 8 JACKSON , , '
U ..
LAT and Round RopelMaker, Read
ing, Pa. White, TTarrt4l, and Manilla , Pope of any
illawnsfcms. t.
• Flat Ropes, far ?dining: or other purposes, Towing lime
and Canal cordage of all kinds. ]
Bertilopeli, Wash-11130y, gash-cord, ie. Superb), /ink ,
fag fhe Steam Enginei.. Also, 'patent prepared Hemp
Packing. a very superief 'article. saturated with a comp").
'Mien which fully 'doubles its capability to stand friction,
and insures Its preferenks, wherever it has been tried. Or
dens thankfully received and promptly. executed.
November 11, 1854 - I 44.1 y
• BUSHNEL & TULL.
No. 64 Dock Street, Plilladelphia,
1
/ \I ,0"
I.
/ I
Ap. ca N ni t.lFA o C l 1111aR na S , ;o u f eb, Ch v il ioe dr i en::
LI tiles, Wheel•barrowt4alnisee7 Swings, Rocking 11: d rans,
Cats, Invalid Chaim; tn, he.. whole= e and retail.
Beptenkber 22, ItlE4 ; 35.:17
.POtTI3VILLIE
Saddle and Berries. Menutsetery.
.
The Sidiseriber would • '
4 .2 . p.1
again most itstreetrully invite the
ttention of the citizens of Pella- •
villa and th e Coal Region' In general, to Ms are an
well selected stock of EADDLERY: lilt kinds of .
. : Carriage Mad Taman/wawa/4
Collars of all descriptions, Drift Harness, ac. He' de
sires all who fluty need - anyihlngin the above Hoe to call
and Nee his goods before purciuutios elsewhere, et them
can be nothing lost.• I.i.
Orders for ILtrness s Or., Prompt!), tilled on rownemble
terms. • .
._,. LEFEVER! WOMELSDORFF.
- Oppotile '
EtitripalMyth, *mere street, Portans7/e.
Muth 3, UM •:-., play 18, 'Hi • 94 _
KM
,♦MISCELLANEOUS.
I; • SLATES! SLATES!! .2
'On RECEIVED, 4 Cases Slates,
4marted stun—tar ante cheap, wbalaude .
dept.,l/1 mune street. itaii.ok
‘
BOUNTY LAND BLANKS.
FULL Set of Bounty, Land Blinks
for all ittnds of Applicants, far sale st •
?dint nt 31.1855 ' Blank and Donk amp
FRESH TIMOTSy SEED. . :;
- r UST received a lot of fresh Timothy
VJ !tseos-4 beautiful article; For
36 Centre Street..
Sept 8 , '56
JUST RECEIVED, -
* Ao FULL supply. of School Batiks,
• rik also, a larre annatment of misoellanecras works
fronethe recent Trade Sale.' GAILRIGUES'
• ',Book and Stationery Store, Centre street. Pottg:tille.
00hsber 13,14
FRUIT 4 ORNAMENTAL TREES:
)r
HE subscriber ' s now receiving
4411 orders for Fruit and Ornamental Shade
roes of all kinds, This Is the sown for plant- _ •
log trees. • U. • SAMNA. 4
LEONARD & MINTZER.
,ilttakers Deitlesi ratottangeil •
•
TAMAQUA, PA. • •
pOLLECTIONS ATTENDED 0
Vinnd drafts fin sale on all theprincipal cities the
I.lnititt. Also, drafts for sale on , England, Indand,licot
and isod Wales.
011ober 13, '55
SELF-SEALING CANS, 3 '
4
For Preserving
HE Subscriber has just received; at
this Store, a lot of Self Reeling Cos, he Preotvins
Wadi of Fruits—Pint, Quart, and Half-Gallon sizes,
rill& trill be sold at City prices, by the dozen. llnnse
keepb. rs, call and see them. They are just the article for
the Mason. Also, a mall pamphlet giving directions
how ; to preserve the different kinds of fruits.
A trust 1, 18.545 H HAIVNAN.
SCHOOLBOOKS! SCHOOL 800118 S
,-; Saadeek Readers, dce. - . '' i
lIr?AVING made arrangements with : ,the,
Publishers, the subscriber o ff ers for Wes fulls:li •
ply' Sander's 'leaders. /cc., at publishers' prim. Aim
constantly on hand all the School Books used in thilise.-
tlon,Cot the Slate, For sale at the lowest prices,'Wholitsala
and retail, by '. . ' ' B. BANNA,N,
i Centre street, opposite the 'Episcopal ChUrch ,
hnild 25. '55 3 i - ~
; TO CONSUMERS OF COAL.
•
9 - 11 E subscriber . herebY inforrn's ahe
_l2citisens of iiottsviLle that he has taken his fistier's
Usuris for delivering Coal in the borough of. Pottsville
and:;vieinity, and will deliver the beet kinds of Coal of all
sizes, and at the lowest rates. and solicits the onhWs of
thebublie. Orders catihe left as Usual at David Smith's
Clothing Store, Centre street, at Mortimer's hotel, or
with the subscriber, Mineniville Hoed." ORO. CLARK.
Pottsville, October 1:1,.'55 41.4 t
~
1 NEW EmauttrepiTion • -
or
D'ELL'S ELICRIENTAIIIt GEOLOOT.
• ,L -' .117 NT ISSUED,
'A MANU A L of , Elementary _Gol=
ogy; or, the ancient Changes ' of the -Earth and its
fobs 'tants, as itinstneed br Geological nionstmen by
Sir Charles Lyell, M. A., F. it. S. Fifth English ed ition,
greatly enlarged, and illustrated with' 750 wood tuts, In
maul., sTo. Cloth.sl 75. . , . !,
li ALSO, . f . t:
PLR Bf2PtioN.
..$l6 00
- 20 00
- 20 00
- 400
• 55 00
cutratice.:lsE4l
ER, Principal
• 21.4 y
Theirs Prim.(plea of Geology; or, the modern ettangea
of the Earth and ita initabitanta,,Etuth and remised edl
lloq, (none Vol; stro: . Cloth, $2 25. For sale at
* - R. BANIIAN'S
A Sept - 44. '55 35• ' Book and Statkniary More
NE
-- - -
%%Tv ILL be sold, on reasonable temil,
Tv two houses and•lots of ground in Tunactus..—
Do `' dad on the west by West street, by a fi fty feet Street
on he south. and a thirty feet street on the gut. Thou
lota are well fenced and are'numbered 296 •and are
each 30x170 feet. The houses are good and comfoitable
dwellings, with a well of water on the premises.: The
'irigleas are furnished with fruit trees, such as peac h and
cherry. also, et:manta, both black and rod. A very desi
rable property. either to retain In its present state or for
erecting additional houses, which could be readily and
pofitably rented. Inquiries will be answered. and fun
the* inibintation given by either of the undersigned.
•
;r. . W. S. WPdGIITMAN, Mount Carbon,
' 0. H. 31cCABE, Tamaqua.
_tu: num, 0et.13, 41-3 W
New.Editlea.
FIEREATiSE on the Criminal Law of
the United States, by Francis Wharton . 3d edition
rton on the Law or Homicide—host pnbilsheil. • '
Dino"' Justine, ror Magistrate's Gaily Oompanion;sizth
edition, edited by Brightley.
Utlidon's Digest—last edition. .
reenicaf on Evidence. 3 vols. , •
Whardon's Digest, 2 vols.
Tr4ohat & lialy's Practice. 2 vols.: •,
Dunlop's Oraydon's and Gets's Books of Forms.
Bouvier's Law Dictionary, 2 vols.
- And other Standard Law Books, on hand and farnhbed
to order/glowed prces, at ; B. BAN'EAN'S
March 17,1855 Beak and Stationery Store
•
CLOTHING PALACE-CARDS
CLIT/ITIND OP A 811PE1111/11 11VAUTT. AT
• THOMAS P. DILL dit. CO.'S
GREATCHESNUT STREET' CLOTHING' PALACE,
vO. 165, .one door: below sth, fiord*
y( ; Bide, in the new Iron building. - •
Perchante who want to purchase a finer article 'of re*
Orme& clothing than has ever.before boon offered, and
geotiemen who would please thin: wives in any garment
fee their wardrobes, or in suits or their 110001, Antll4 go
to this establishment, so admirably in keeping through
out, with the Great Street of Feebler,, on which it is In.
(*lied. and purchase the best, which can alone uglily a
ierieet taste. butts or single garments made to order at
the shortest notice. A full assortment. of fine Varnish ,
iott Goode also offered. Everything in the latest style of
Fashion, and ticket-marked with the lowest faith price in
plain figures. -;"
philutlra,October 13,155 • '.. • . 41-6ni •
MONK'S
Now Map of North Amertea,_ ;
Agibitinsr 'Antra/ America. heading the. Wed' India
• • releertde,
-"UST I SSUED , UST by Jacob Monk, the
IP, well knoiin Map Publipher. a few specimen eoples of
witieb, hare been received by the. Arent, POlb•
TRW (who resides in Schuylkill Haven.) and which we
\have had the pleasure of examining. We must say. he
hitieicelled ail his former Maps. We considetwa his
%(/liner Map, publiPhed- two or three years MOM, superior
tofall.others: bntthe swesent New Map is a peat ire.
ement over that one. It Is much lamas and more
;m l Atly executed, having all the new inipptnients and
all the late surveys, i •
IA copy of this elegant Map can be seen at
't • B. HANNAN'S linekifere.
!ifletober 10, _ • 214,
• CIMP YAPS OP rumartwanat.
it ß a NE ndai S' ohiMthaAstsPier„OrnmPEli NNvS'i ery I,VpA7
'Animas' map of the United States, on rollers. ditto.
Ranney'e new map of the United States and Territorks.
tiUlde Book through the United States, with deseriptions
Filt the States. cities Ac., with large map. i
Mitchell's, William's It . Phelp's new. TravelerePuldas
ahrough the United States. '
The Western Tourist's and liadgranra Guido. .! •
Traveler's and Tourist's Route - Book through the united
hates.
New itadiroad map of the United States and tb4 Cans.
''cdfus, compiled from the latest surreps. .
Mudge & Thayer's Guide through the Woetern Sides.
Hailroad and Township map of Ohio.
Shaeffer's new ntap of Schuylkill eounty,ln pocket tbrto
.FLon rollers or framed. ,
Cotton's new !erten of maps of the separate States . . :
:Persons going west, and tutieler's generally, are WI.
tad to eali and examine these new and useful maps and
gnide books, at ti. HANNAN'S '
,
• - - - • —Book and aatinsety Bfore
iirino 9. '45
2:14
I - . .
..
:;.• PURE WINES' & LIQUORS'.
THE undersigned, legally licensed
doter In Winer and Liquors. offers : the following
vine attalogue.ennu setae in whieli,is guaranteed
jiyre and unadulterated. _
W I/J.l 8. •
poi --Grape Joke. °Porto and nargl2ll47.
,t; Madeira—Eat India, ORM
sherryr-lioyal. Amontillado.
Cheree—St. Estepbe. SR ]nllen.
Whitt Wittet—Fiant Santana. Busts. 'E
Na/ago—Lisbon. de., , •
Rhenish IClnes—llnehheimer, Meeenselneri
• helmet. Traminerr, £c.•
Chaimpagno-ranind Mousseans, Ac.
tiQuons.
4 Brandy-4MA, Castillion Co. Colmar. .
Mard Martell, Marntt, Cognacs.
? • . Wild Cherry.
1 : Miami Gina—firan. Bohlen.
f • •
Schiedam Schnapps.
Rnst--Jamalea - Spirits. New England.
waishit—laley Malt ScrArb, Old• Monongsliehe,
irLh and Pcnosylvania Rye. •
EXTRACTS.
Cameos, LavenTi. Abrynthe. Kirsiteconatier.
87SDRIES.
Swiss and Llintqtri* Chem, Sardines. Holland RM.
Om French MicilardrOlissOU, French Chocolate, to
i. MOSES STROME,
+, • ' •. . 1):1,1mr OfCentre A. RIO Mints,
Potv
Oct. 13,1838. ' i l k
, • L 100 001 coma um__—!:
WililOva OltisAT STEAM OAT WoaK
ILL be ready :on or a bo u t the 24th
of October. • ' • ' '. j • ' '
*hid soplieniinii of.ftenat. 74l:l4
Life of John Yiteb—lngniving of his find hold+ '
Life, of Bohai, Fulton—Enparing of his hest Annwiean
fr, Boat'on the /Judson hives:
;lobed Fulton and Litittodon's Oft Ohio Atudb Doat-.
correct likenem-dull particulars. , . . ;,,
tattobe's first Boat. : 1
rst liteubmriße Boat . , 4 . ' :
*list
tnes Minh:aim on the Western *Men; Irons' a., Bye.
wis. - '
. i . • - 'I. , h
fans of the Welders Wotan two* attialarl aamasess
putlaid down corrertly.
' 1 r• ;
of Steamboat Bapladwas shies 1811:"Sistia of ,
~__= Killed and Wounded:. list of Steamboat, noWaStatt.
Amet 'hors of Pittston, Wheellna, Cinelonaß, Lad*
i:, . will , St, latitutmd New Orleans •ht -If4; Ilpstett at
; _awls plaa_realsitka s laudras,lta. Aka -. 1 ~..• .
Ina time o fßoats on the Ohio and Iftai mi rivent., '
,1114 at ettasgaboat Meant as Ae Wimotera;Walaiiv • • , L
~t he New Steamboat iaw—with sinnounti-4.11h
tdsisters on the — Takie-risanis of loit,liMed' Irons
*he 10 Water in I‘lo.'_ ',ISA*. ? 1
.Ort'Of Plantatietufort illivpi pH*, - 1 ' - ''l ~
, a tt e d!vr u A l ms esiptimai.oolatAtinaolast Dr
'
Three innalred pagay with'atia barbed eakeitsthia;
mina* Wu& By liadithog 'Art IDidar., , -000 1 4-,
pap, :oro w i 14 wm ania• a or Shasta» wora. •
law tbatrid• • makarmataatitait tar I
.iavery town arid MI to camas soasisurad4 ; 64.0.11: 1
, ...
_,_ ALT.
, L ~ - ..-i ~ Plat 011iatiPaeltaga, = ll>'
......-- -
ciiinv
4441
WoLvr 3, 'tit
.Centre St. opposite the upo. l ChurOgi
PRIVATE SALE.
1041 , 411
ENE
Elwin' poeto. I
from the Enlduirbocker.
TO THE WABASH.
wr mow 'A. [L ACE f
Tut , geutle,hour of twiliht gathers dowy
Aud softer radiance Bagels on the aky ;.; •
The clouds LW westward in a inotdm Orr,
To robe the couch on which the atm motet lie:
And In! in full and ronnited,glory, COMM' • , 1
The haritot moon adore the dlupold wokeis,
While Nature, tuneful in bar twenty. battle ,.
A yesper-bytuu from all heriolltudes. i
The first faint tinge of autumn's bright decay
Robes the far prairie In rieb, varied hues,
And desks each leaf and bough In such stray
As spring along her pathway never stress,
Till plain and wood seem gardens of delight,
Filled with a !dant race of gorgeous Boleti,
More lovely in thole stamp of eerie blight •
Than In the beauty of their btuldieg Wines.
w .
Bolike, I thought. Is this great lovelhals s
To her we laid to rest *month ago:
nee chc•A's fair flush—s' banner of distr*4—
The beldame' of the eye, the lip's full glow,
The mammal:a cadence of ber voice of song:
All. all like autumn's frail and painted leaf,
Signals we couldnot do Our lore the wrong .
To reed. until our love awoke to grief.
Beside the 'Wabash thoughtfully I stray:'i •
And as I watch its mists and gentle breast,
The men and deeds who geared its earlier day,
Seem thronging"mid the shadows of the: Weak i
And minor-like, within thy face, fair stream, -
The wilibwood.warrior and his Season fol!,
In tenant joined—t hyeelf the guercion—esem
Indeed realities of long, ago..
Historic tame is thine—a name In story: i
lialfeonschms art than, In thy calm rep*,
Of thine own heritage of deathless glory, I
With him who heed 'L'w torn. of Ari foo, o
Whom daring soul bad never known defeat,
Whose deeds havedeepon every bead Intinetuted,
Where Western hearts in Western boysrut beat,
The name of Clerk—the watch-word elfin, West t
•
MTN
I wander on still farther op thy shore: i •
Hem. underneath this old and glorious !shade,
A mention stand" builttin the days of yore:
A hero's home, whose name stn never fide,
While gleams the Wabash In the morning. snu
Whileprablea blootn.and woods grow oldiandireth
Here, Harrison. thy name is loved, as one ':. • .
foremost In battle—lottlest In the State..
. . ,
Beneath this very tree. now gnarled and torn, . ..
Wasting its mighty life with many yeara,
Teencuseh—noblest of the red race born—i
Gathered his braves. his prophets, and his seers,
Here stood In treaty with his bated the: ! .
ills people, thronging tioni their eaves and dent, ',:
Blending their warehonts,swellirg high and low '
With theeWeet evening bells of old 'Vincennes. ''.,
3fethinits I see the savage hero form.
-'Mlajeetic in the evening's Mewing gloom;
Erect. like some bravetak amid the storm;-
Detying tate,yet knowing still his doors:4' 0
Fearless and proud,tais dark eye roams albng, -
Takes in. the beauty et the stream and shore, t
With prophet ken beholds the coming throng ,
Mse the loved land his race shall know ~ ito more.
Alt! earth has had ber homes In ell ages, i •
Conquest. ambit ion, pOwer. or love their Oat,
But thou: almost unknown on glory's pages. 1
- Excelled the most in thy, sublimei sonl.l, e
irtis a proud thing to Still 'fight on, and ever, I
•Though hope had fled from thee and all thy race, I.
Belie, country, people 14C—returning miter!.
Place; herons, with you! fur Teeuxusets,iplacei
- 3
s •
But night grows dim--elond-like the Mists advance;
Veiling the moon, the Pialrie and the stream,
While the faint stars gaze dov n with trembilug glance,
, Voices are stilled and mute. earth seems to dream:
To - dream as I do now, of sad. soft eyes,
= Which wait forms with drollest looks of hems,
While the young prattler of our Paradise.
Asks the,fklr mother, Till he ever rouser'- '
Vincemses,- eve, 1855. . ' • 1
.anb
• From the Xining itairuifie.l
• SCIENCE nurze ME!. •
•
, BY: HERBERT HACKWORTH;
The want ,of popular information on the
subject of mining, may " Science in
the Mines" to be looked upon, by many as in
volving more..-difficulties and mysteries than
the other subjects to; be found in the pro
gramme of educational leitures. By the aid
of a little science; to explain and to illustxste,
these difficulties -will'disappear • the empiri
dams of the practical man' will be; found to
belong to general ,rules, and -the art of min
ing will be•shown in each step of hi-develop
ment to be. indebted 'to the labors'. of ',Eorttc
tical: men of science.: To prOve.thits close re
lation, it might almost suffice to recall die
names of those who have led the way to_ the
way to the improvemeAt of the art ; i of Smeit;
ton, Watt, Stephenson, Davy, Buddle, Wood, '
and" Taylor in our own land, and of Werner,
Humboldt, `and Combes on the Continent.,
But to convince a miner (than no ote adheres '
more stoutly to that muCh abused title, "' i a
practical man") of the full , scope and power
of his auxiliary, a close investigation is ne
cessary.
Experience is the foundatir of seenceoiel
skill. Reasoning on the results of: previctiis
labors, in order to overcome a difficult' o'f.a
new or a greater kind, is identicali with the
inductive process of the man of science.
.If
it were possible to find a man in noway in
debted to science, even the most iiitlinientary
such as the practical man asrunicahimself
to be, he could copy ,or re.produce,• but not
better thh_n many machines, and would
be infinitely surpassed by them! in econ
omy and, power. The instances,i are un
fortunately, very numerous where the practi
cal Man affects to desPise the experience of
others oethe aid of science : he Li ignorant
because be restricts himself to his Own limit=
ed experience; he occasionaly indulges in the
wildest speculation, because he will not un
derstand the reason of what be doeliand sees;
and certainly the mistakes which , have been
committed bVilie abuse of science are not
to be laid hithe balance with they enormous
sums of money which are day by day squan
dered in this country by intrusting the charge
of- works, often involving novelty and im
provement, to the hands of ignorant or un
educated men. 1 am not miderating the value
of practical experiment and knowledge ;.it is
the foundation of science, as science is of the
advances of practice. There are three ways
-in which we have drawn from the exhaustless
stores of science to supply our wants and en
large our resources. - We have Made some
progress by those brilliant though rare ills
coveries, the results it may Ibe of accident or
imagination, but which arc linked 41 the use
ful and the known' by the laws science.
slip more is due to application of ithese laws
to correct our 4ndgment or performancea, and
to modify and ;improve rdir plans; but it is in
ita thinfremaining province that;', science is
Wihservient to mankind 4large ; it explains,
it generalizes, it becomes our guide and
spreads among men that knowledge by which
the powerof the head is- added to! and ;skills
that of the hand.. Nothing is s in simple or
too common to be beneath its sphere ;; from
the food we eat to the latest success ofi agri
cultural chemistry ; from the shaping of n pen
to the- machine. which prints-8,000 copies in
an hour, and from 'the excavation Ofa quarry
to .the winning of a deep mine; ire find, on
examination, thatwhatever we at present call
perfection we owe to the laborers: : of applied
science.
Gls the mines haie been the binh-place of
oar railways and of the locomoti!e, stinithe
nurseries of the highest engineeriOg talent, it
may be supposed with truth that they *sent
extraordinary difficulties, and therefore, that
under the pressure of necessity they; &tee
into activity the highest order of skill for their
improvement. In fact, a NewcaStle colliery
presents the 'most remarkable Mlustritton
which this or any other country can boast Of,
the successful applicationofTscience and ex.
geriment for successive lift, to overcome tle
ifficulties of practice. litany mining:districts
might be mentioned Which , am halts century
behind the North of -,, England -in,econotnictil
improvements; and as exhibiting-the want
of information amongst even the managers of "
mines in.-these districts, it :may almost be
taken as rule,, that wherever minerals are
abundant near the surface, and eaaily
bie r there the most primitive, western; "lid
espensive'metheds are retained foi extracting
them.",' The entire cost of extfacting and
landing' ton. of 'coat on the melee amounts
to 3r6i; whether it be - extracted ; in Blafibil
shire froni -the 10 yird •seami from-the NeW-
Wide MUDS 'of 4 .tog feet in thickness, Or
from the thin and extremely dii6Calt seams of
Jlelginss,„26 inches only in
; thiclumui.- 2 &Ma Stafferlshire:the,lisimers,
ore* said : tbei'fatlts hire !),P,fl
- line areas, rat's eonae•
qoistly *owned Out Jby *tiler; Wilda this,
the Itylitthitbf skitidnt ito , iihintigal 'daft Otte
half the entire seam is destroyettan6 , kit an
:derground. ;mss - which- contains 40,000 -
,tonatteoalipatimperficial .Itre Six* yields .
.20,060. i whereas ia , the eame
11 11 Irlit44Atelt. ultostthi,,
of .441Pil tons. -In other countries' . tre - lessee
1;1
is compelled. fit'ring out the whole of the
coal, and this indeed is the ground and aim
of the interference of foreign governments
with, witting education. The result of the
Staffordshire systeni is a scarcity of minerals,
now pressing severely 'on the mannfactufers
of that district; but it is gratifying to find that
the recent labors of the Geological Survey are
bringing to light the existence of beds of coal
and ironstone, which will happily compensate
for the dearth caused by practical ignorance
and error. The introductiori of permanent
competent competition in the trade will tend,
tut it always ' does, to the employment of sci
ence, and the result may be safely predicted
in the shape of larger profits to the proprietor
and 'increased safety to the workmen. 1 - i
A large mine is a very complicated machine.
To understand thoroughly _ its kworking t in
volves a study of boring, sinkin g , pUmping,
winding, hauling, getting, , andventillation.
The most popular and correct account is 0
be found in Longman's shilling series; entitled
":Our Coal and our Coal-pits," and a similar
'work by the same author on the Cornith
Mines, which are the most important inetalie
Minns, is issuing front 'the press. Some coal
mines cover an area oftwo square miles, coil;
Mining upwards of 160 . miles of galleries, and
40 miles of underground railway. The shafts
very*tri 4 to 20 feet in diameter, and de
seendto depths: of 600. yards in England, tis
Monks-earn:math ; and to (T5O yards belt*
the surface in Belgium. The month or eye
or the shaft is covered by a lofty pyramid of
timber,( coal . Screens, engine houses, and
pimping and winding machinery. - A direct
acting 'engine brings 2. tons of coal to the stir
face every minute, at a velocity of 20 miles
per houri whilst an underground engine',
working an endless;rope, draws trains of 50
wagons at a time from the extremity of work
ing, twin miles distant from the .sliaft, at the
rate of 10 or 15 miles per hour., Upiards of
1,000 men and 50 horses are employed in.
driving, exploring galleries, in maintaining
the roof, the roads, the ventilation, arid regu
lar working of every part,' in extracting the
coal, and keeping the trains and eng ines
fully supplied; -The largest metallic mines
.",require the labor of 1,200 but they are:selddro
W.orked by the aid of horses or underground
engineS. They may contain 40 miles of .
horiotital galleriel and 12 miles or shafts.
They katend to delhhs, in Cornwallyi of I'so
r .• •
yardspeneath the surface, or belovf.ctratts,"
• (
i as it;s termed.' . . ' 1
i W require the aid of inineralOgy and geol
; ogy to ascertain, the nature and , value of -a
I mineral, its true positiorisin,the earth'e crust,
its probable tabundanee!in 'particular strata,
-and whether it exists, in threads, bunches,
.veins •or lOdes.. On each of these point's l de
i peed the, outlay of capital, which it :may be
1 necesitarpor desirableto' make. 'By the same
1 mettlati we ascertain. the,best position to sink
our shafts, so as to avoid water and faults,
and to reach the lowest part of the mirk, that
- the excavation may proceed upwards, [and all
Water and 'minerals descend to the shaft
'Without mechanics it is impoatrible - to select
the 'most economical means and" arrange
ments of transport, either in the miri
e or in
the shaft; and to ascertain the relatNe econ•
way of &line% and other machines, as well
as to place the machinery in suelt i manner
and positions as „will obtain the greatest
amount of useful work with the least expen
diture of fuel. Pneumatics are essential to
the ,knOWledge of ventilation ' an °which . the
amount of 'manual labor, and the health and
=
-.safety of the, workmen, depend; whilst to
chemistry chiefly belongs the analysis and,
preparation of the oro, and the choice of ve
nous processes for, extracting metal of the
most suitable quality. Can we hesitate to
'recommend a course of instruction in these
sciences as eminently practical in its, nature?
;'Can we have too many facilities for distin
,,guishing the different strata' in their minera
logical relations, for' ascertaining the direc
tion and contents of the included veins, the
nature of the prodace r and the most efficient
mode of 'exploring, them? The drainage,
whether by -steam or by water-power, inclu
ding the dimensions and: placing of the en
gine,
the economy of fuel; the preservation
of the boilers, and the arrangement of the, pit
work, to be accomplished with, certainty, must
be founded on sound• mathematical and me
chanical, and I mayadd, chemical piinciplei,
And when the strength of materials shall have
been correctly calculated ; and the sinking of
shafts in the right places, the blastin g ,
ing and ventilation of the mine, and thede
Scent and-ascent of the miners kierfected, and
the ores are at length "at grass,'' can we yet
decide 'on the best mode of dressing them ?-
-Can no , improvements be matte in crushing,
stamping, or calcining? Can we from prat
tice, or from any analytical skill at hand, at
once determine whiit ores are sufficiently rich
in iron, manganese, 'silver, arsenic, cobalt,
chrome, zinc, or sulphur, to warrant our pur
imit or sefection.of them ? The beat mode of
separating many, of those substances, to say
nothing of the smelting of our inferior copper
bres,is still to be'learned." Has not Pattniori,
by his!scientifiC skill, added more than 20,--
0001 per annum to the value of the lead ores
Of England, and reduced the expenses of
traeting the ,silver by two-thirds? I assert,
without fear of contradiction, that however
desirithle the division of labor, and however
conversant the mine agent may be with a few
or more of his pursuits, circumstances' con
stantly arise in which 'his experience ; alone
will not guide him. I gladly admitthar many
'of our engines and' mining works, partly_ the
result of ,the strong necessity, and the enor
mous expenditure and the scale in which in
numerable trials were imade, are Models for
imitation, and that we possess •many men of
geniis and,iiidustry, who, after having labori
ously groped their way for yeais, have given
to their' undertakings' the touches of a mas
ter's hand. But in the interval how much
,has been lost to the country in , the relinquish
ment of deep mines? and if we conld analyze
long mental process, it would be seen how
largely these men had imbibed from time to
;time the impottantAriiths developed by etlu
, ca,ted minds of deep. thought. It must not
:be forgotten that' this experience has often
been obtained at a great expenditure of life,
;time. and money. If in the healing art the
'uneducated at length' attain considerable pro
ficiency, still the veil must be drawn over the
death and anffering which marked his pro
greas; so in mining, the apprenticeship has
often cost the lords theabandonment of valu
able veins, and the adventurers sums varying
from 100!. to 5,000 E, and 'without the - henefit
to be derived from . communicating ,generally.
the causes of failure or ultimate sateen.
How often - do we find the expense of boring
or sinking shafts incurred before the geology,
cal •nature' of the country is ascertained.
Large sums have, in_, this way, been squander
ed.in searching for coal. About 40 years ago,
at Wincanton.tind Oxford, borings were corn
rneheed in the Oxford clay, and continued
down to the oolite. The coal measures, if
they exist beneath, being probably two-thirds
r of a mile deeper still. Borings, equally
successful, were undertaken at. Chard, in the
lies of Bomersetshire, without a previous ex
amination of the 30 miles of coup t 7 interve
ning between this and the nearest point of the
Somersetshire coal field. In 1836 a sum of
30,0001., was expended in sinking at . King* .
thorpe. near Nortbampten, with the expecta
tion of finding coal. 'The shaft passed through
the Jim and the °Ate." and reached the new
red sandstone at a depth of 320 pulls, being
stopPed by the influx of• the 'saline waters of
th e latter series of beds. There is nothing
within twenty miles of the spot to mark the
dip or even the existence ot carbonifetpus
rocks, the depth of which below the surface
ought not to be estimated at 'leas than 700
yards.' Several hundred yards in the coal
• strata may be penetrated without reaching a ,
workable seam. • Notwithstanding these prac
tical objections, .
_a .company ,is now being
(formed to .prosecute t e enterprise. The
.oversight of the projectors in ,ead2 of -these
cases 6,s , been imam:ming dark clays,nrfer
roginous, waters, or B ents - of lrfte,
indications of coal in where Science has
shown that it does not' exist
_antin faffingto
examine, geologically, the '4 aid the thick
nem of ,overlaymg state Agra; 9te 20:Oti:30
miles which separate,. them hrom the nean:±l4
:workings of cod. •, Itt4rete wise to commence
at a short distance, antan maple field is open
tecbtiscovery.in England , With far More
`reasonabletiiiiiinecteofinceess' - aillitClieshire,
`SOmersetshire, or on- tbelineti ' ortieveret bunt
dred miles in extent, where the aid ineasiirki
BA:NNA.NS
STEAM PRDITING OFFICE
=MS
nosing procurso Uwe Prunes, Ire an !urn prepared to
execute JOB and BOOK PRIN'ZINO of every Mew kr,
at the OW of, Tki Afinscri .fourisal, cheater !has It an
be don at any otherentabiblummt fa the rounty,stirit tp
in*s,-Penaphiefe, Masi Ziading,
Large Poelera, 4 Vottle,
Hand Paper Bank,
24 " - 4k4
Bal mods, Order &pis, ec.;
At the very shorted natio. Our stork of JOB I
more entered* than that of any Othirefitee in e<
tiara if the Mate, and we keep hands employed lames
blur Jobbtog. Being a practical Printer'ouraelf, we will
guarantee our 4rork to be u neap. as any that can • •
tart:umlaut to the cities. PRINTING IN', cow r..s di re
at the shortest notice. • : 1 - •
[I
Books touted to ofd variety of stills. 1 Blank Ikttri o
omen , tteoeftption txtanufittturitl,t)ound iind ruled to of
dor st short nonce. ' •
NO. 42.
lon the flanks of the central rise of Eng Land .
descend underneath, and are concealed by the
latter. inconftirmabie rocks. In' these situa
tions the deep,boring system of 4ind and De
poussee, practised on the continent, might he
applied with suices.s, and bring into the mar
ket a vast amount of additional Mineral pro
perty. Numerous other instancy', of fruitless
adventures for coal are to be found in the mill
stone
grits of Devon and York hire, and in
the Silurian shales of Carmarthen and. Merio.:
netb; where a superficial •Irivledie of geolo gy
would, have shown that no coal .f could exust.
Since the demonstration, by William Smith,
in 1816, of the regular sequence of fbasilifer
oas rocks there have always been found per- '
soma still blindly incurring the heaviest, penal
ties for the want of geological knew - ledge.
The first sinking of the Ilasirell Colliery
was abandoned after an outlay of 60,0001., is
- endeavoring to pass through a b'ed of quick
sand. Geology, in acquainting the projectors
with the nature of the rocks, might havi
warned them of this , and of thel necessity of
boring. The present shafts, sunk at a short,•
distance from the fort fre the
difficulties of passing the quicksand. The: -,
Monkwearmouth shaft was nearly abandoned,
in consequence of a difference of 1001 yards
in the , calculation of the depth '`lo be sunk;
; this was aftenrards found to arise from no al
lowance having been made for the denudation
of the coal rocks, which-were overlaid , by the
1
magnesian lirriestone. , , ,
.1n the absence of an actinaintance with
mineralogy, blende has been
.Mistaken for r,
lead ore, and in another instance large (loan-
tities were thrown away undeeithe name of
spar. An iron-master, supplied ;calamine, in
lieu of iron ore, to his blast furnaces, until he
lo
found out his mistake by its CA* ' rating up
the chimney . ; Many thousand pi) nds worth
of the sulphide : and black oxi4 of copper
have been thrown into the sea d lthe shores
of Cornwall. ; On the other hand, the experi
ments of hot Plattner, in Silesia, have re.
suited in the remunerative extraction of one
part of gold' in 223,000, i lid in siheria, with
low-priced labor, one part of gold in( half a
millson.parts bf -sand will pay for separation.
As an example of the successful . application
of science - and perseverance, verifying the
predictions of the philosopher, the discovery
of gold in Auitralia is familiar to all.
1 . ,
- Vi r ILIT WASIIINOTtiN ItIVINGI SAY. ABOUT •
THE r DSOS itareit.—.l thank God I Was born
on its Banks. I think it an inva tiabl4 advan
take to lie boriand biought up,l
in the neigh
-borhood of a, .grand and noble objecit in na
ture=--a river a. lake or a m:twain. We
make a friendship with it; we ,n a manner
ally ourselves:to it for life. It remaini an ob
ject of our pride and affection, a tallyifig-point
to call us home again alter all Our waidenngs.
"The things Which we have learned ' our
qiildhood," says an old writer, 'tgrowlup with
our soul, and I unite themselves to it." So it
i s with the scenes among which We have pass
ed cur early days ; they Milt:led:co the whole
course of our thoughts and f4lingi, and I
fancy I can 4ce much of wlanti is good and
pleasant in my own heterogencins-coinpound '
to my early companionship withithis glorious
river. -In the -warmth of my youthful eritlieli-'
ism I used to clothe it with motel attributes,
and almost to give- it a soul. I admired its
frank; bold, hOnest character; its hobleiserenity
and perfect
,truth. , . Here was i• no specious,
smiling surfasie covering the dangermis sand
liar or perfidious rock, but a cream deep as it ~
was. broad, and bearing with hOnorable faith
the bark that trusted to its waves. I gloried '
in its simple; (Diet, majestic, epic flow, ever
straightforward. - Once, indeed,it turns aside
for a moment, 'forced from its course be oppo
sing.
i mountains, but it struggles les : bravely
through them,-laud immediately resettles its.
straightforward march. Behold, thOught I,
an emblem Of a good man's cPurse, through
life, ever simple, open, and direo ; or if, over
powered by adverse circumstanees, he deviate
in;o error, it is but roc/mental., ; he!soon re
covers his onward and li4noratile career, and
continues, it to the end of his pit:vintage. The
Hudson ii, in a manner, my first] and last love;
and after all , my my wanderings amid seeming in- `
fidelities, I return to with a heartfelt prefer
enc6 over all the other rivers iithe world.
ISLE OF Wutv.—We clip thi following hit
I . of description froth a fugitive gavelling epis
tle as giving the most correct picture of this
"Garden of ; England" we have ever,thet with.
-It is no wonder that the• Queen's home palace;
."Osbort*situated there
"The cross the island IS as beautiful
as you ca iagine, enough in itself to cure
,;
a man of ordinary ills. The; rich English?:
farms and madows, like so many gardens;
stretching'on either side, bordred with trim
hedges of hawthorn, now just; bursting into
blossom ; the green lanes throngh which we
drove, lined with graceful elm's, arched over
our heads; the thatched cottages of the peas
antry, 'and the 'turreted castlei of ;'thy Lord,'
mantled with thick covering3of ivy, whiCh
seems here most luxuriant, all presented a
scene of quiet beauty, and richness, that to ray
eye, which had been resting on London tiles
for two weeks, was most gratefid.
"1 doubt if anything more beautiful than
this country life in England atlhe tithe of the
hawthorn blossom, can be found in any coun
try. This island is called the 'Oarden of Eng.
land,' and. these little invalid
. r
esorta upon i ts
southern coast are its drapes' patierres.
They are the most romantic; little hamlets
built in among the cliffs, sheltered'w hich
high
bills from the north and met winds, are
such a curse to Englandna ex posed only
on the South. The so mild that
shrubs and flowers flourish fiere in the great
est luxuriance. The magnplia, the fig-tree,
and even the fuchsia, grow Ito great size
and:hardihood. The houses, Which are'most
ly fancy cottage's and villas, ari,e perched hero
and there in retired nooks, with winding paths
that reach them from the neighboring cliffs.
Everything seems done with alt eye to the pic
turesque - and the attempt has been most
successful. A scene •of wilder beauty can
hardly be imagined than is to ihe found along
the coast from' Bonchurch to Ventnor, both
communities of invalids, dnring the winter
months more especially. I
RE7IIII4IiVE OLD AGE.-B6w low the head,
boy do reverence to the old Man. The vi
cissitudes of life haze chvged the round,
merry face , to The worn visage before You.
_Once that heart beat with asinrations, crushed
gby disappoititment, as' yours +ire perhaps dee;
!tined to be; once that form stalked proudly
through the gay scenes of pltasure, the beau
ideal of grace • now the hand of Time has
warped' that fi gure, and destroyed the noble
carriage. has , b the•&-mm very near
through ; the tune awake is at hand, yet
his eye kindles at old deeds of daring, and the
hand takes a firm grasp at !the staff. Bow
low the head, as you would hi your old age be
reverenced; -
lizsniirtn. THOIIGHT.-- When I gaze
into-the stars; - they look ilowi upon me with
pity, from their serene and silent spaces, like
eyes glistening with tears over thelittle lot of
man. Theosands of generations, all as nobly
as our c. wai, have been swallowed by time, and
ther. remains, no record o9bern any more ;
yet Arcturias and Orion, Sines and the Pleia.
deli, are still shining in their (tonnes, clear and
young as when the Shepherct first noted them
from the plain of Shiner! shadows we
are, and what shadows we pursue."
SWEDISH PIN/11.1;IES maintostressiess.--.
In Sweden, when; a mamhasi: been drunk four
times, he isdeprived of his rote at elections,
and as alio on the Sunday niter the commas.
aloe of the. fourth offence, publicly exposed
in the chtirch yard. If - the former portion
of this prMishinent bad, been inAiczed. an this
town at , .tti last election, 'are. wonder how
many votes the ticket of 00 - Lickno.f testUb
would haVicOMStd.
' AttIINDA3rLIC - OP CORN - ON ruse
-Aletter,from Viettra says; that' the 81seas
,Ntesigittion Ccappttoy . ot the Outitba .ytsead
i%: the , towtaitYeer!ehi 4 , P ol itto the
,prosioces of the oiver*Danidmi,"but
will not be safil tient to triatile the hap qua's
'tides of core collected genie' to
_lie sent otr,
that , .even •floy nuottittlr of ,ow-boats
would he tilde to obtain Ift:eights .at bith
Pliees•
II
BOOK lIINDERTi
~iscetiaa~r
19