. .„ -• A .- ; EMI )ournat. POTTSVILLE, PA; fiLILTIIRDAT, AUGIIST 10,1856. Tat AUBURN asp 4as:frown Ritu.nosn.—We stated but week theiAis road would be 4Q Miles in length. The is a mistake. It is only 3S; miles in extent. To Show ,that this route must become a great thoroughfare to the West and New 'York, and will be one of the beet paying roads 3.11 • the United States, carrying Passengers ! Merchan dise and Coal to its fall capacity, as fast as the rolling machinery issuppliett 4 -becasse the 'trade already wises—it is lot to . be created, But gairy transferred to a shorter and cheaper 'aide, we pledge as much Coal from .- Schuylkill county as, they can carry—and furnish it as fast as they can proeure the rolling stock to carry it. It will offer to the Tiede of New York city, the means of send ing a locked car loaded with goods, direct. from Jersey City, to any ,railroad, point in the" Stites ' of New Jersey,'Penneylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Il linois, Wisconsin, lowa,:and Minnesota. The advantage of sending pedant once from the city - a - 74 ei - Tigcin ci.164 ieci' transhipment or delay; to almoit any point in the weitern country, needs only to be stated to be ap: predated by all business men , and the initiation Tot' this new, system of goods ti:affe, re'quires only the construction of our tinfiriished link- of 30i miles of railroad to bring it into• action in ,two years' . • It'also runs f:trough the richest portion of the. celebrated Iron ore deiosits of ,Lehigh, , County, Pennsylvania, from which at the present moment, twelve anthracite furnaces of the largest class, are • Ifpenetrates, almost centrally, the ricliancipop. 'ulnas counties * of Lehigh and Berke, in the State of Peupsylvtinia,. passes through, or near, fiyi flourishing towns oivillages, and &onects at Once, .the town df Piittsvjlle,the center of the anthracite Coal trade „with the city of Sew York; by a line oily 140 miles long, and-secures from that region, within a five hours' trip, a large and valuable till: vel, which by the existing route, requires eleven hours . In fact, the Allentown Railroad not only pro tni4es to aid greatly in the transmission of goods from and to New York, and to facilitate the west: ern travel of thatoity, but it alio possettes, with in itself, unexampled resources for a heavy local 1448;ners. • Ic furnishes (cm, the only route' by which' the gc•ity of New York can be supplied at 'on Ferzeons of -the year„ with tbkred cp./J.' anthracite coal, so highly approved for doheistic use, and which is only to Le found,in etentity, in the Pottsville Coal region. , - • Finally, it may be rioted, that the combined . , lind opened to the city of New York by :the:Al it:Mown Rvilrond,ll44 ... eh° rierlhant/ti . present traveted . rjriks, as' follows To .Cincintiati;ls6 collet; shorter than ri.q. N. Y. Cen. R. IL St. EaLlillS. IST *• CleveL%nd, 76 •' " Chicago, ' 76 " To Cincinnati. 128 mild:hotter ttuan Erie " St. MOIR, 183 " Cleveland, 72 " " . 64 i. chi6,, go , 72 This route, in fliet,forms the sboitesi Traetica ble railway line to all the leading points - of the tcrfterie country. . , - .- • We annex an estimate of the probable annual bust'. aces, made by Ellwood Morris, Esq., chief Engineer of .theßoad, which we consider a very moderate estimate.' Schuylkill courity'will giVe the road a: million of- tons annually, as soon as the road can carry ll—and as much more as the road will • Pre via° machinery to carry. - • • - ESTIMATE OF REVENUE. Eetiniate of the probable aiwual rerenue to be de rived from the :e . intairn; Port Clinton, and Allen town Railroad, trhqn fully contplettd and pro perily equipped, to wit.: - PASSENGEItS. Through. 200.000 at tyro eta. a tulle. MT 75 eta., -$151.t00 wp.y, at three toile, say 50 eta o 50,i000 LIGHT FREIGHT Througn., 100.000 tons at sa J y $1 50, • NC:q, 10,0(i0 ;oils at say, 7 . 0 eta, HEAVY FREIGHT.* 500.000 tons at o 0 etr.. 4300,900 Lumber. Lime. Slate. ie.. 50.000 tons at 50 et,. 25:000 Iron lire. 21,t1,... 00 tons at 40 eta. 100.000 Mail and Express. 10.060 Annual Tctal. Deduct , 11:.r Expenses. Fay 50 per cent. !Leaves probable revenue :XI per cent. on an In , tectutent of itt.t:ooo.ol,o. the prehable cost when luny equipped. including our pro-rata . .hare of the heavy rnlling stork 'necessary for the ct al trade. 396,5ai• •Tbis bucineas is already elisting. and 5.t may be truly added tlist it ig in fart awaiting tbe etimpeion crt+-Nir line.- Ai •tn suitable coal region connections:a wellbuilt nit r, ad. an ample equipment. a liberal management, and a god co.l port on the deep waters of New York barbur, we cannot be presented from commanding a coal ,trade of 3.000..00 tens per annum. wbeeeeer we aril ready to send our locomotives at er it. The fAlosiing are the present Directors of 410 Read : , J.F. A. Sanf.,rd, N. Y. J. F. 811 terworth. N. Y Thos. E. Davis, " • IF. C. Gehhhrd, John 0. Sargent, " • iViiiiatu S. Wetmore", " • • Saiampl J. Beals, " ;C. Danforth, Paterson, C. .1.3 . 0,411, Jacob Dillenger, o.DeForest Grant," :C:Pretz. r, ' THE , Y4I:NG MEN'S CANDIDATE.—The Hartford t'ouroot . truly remarks that John C. Fremont is emphatically the Young Men's Candidate. They feel it, and are rallying to his lopport with an.en thusinem unprecedented in political contests.— , They are bound to elect him. Old fogies, super annuated politicians, the broken-winded harks of other campaigns, sneer at the energy with which the young enter into this conflict. They sneer, .heeause he was nominated without their assistance and even in opposition to their wishes. Many such men in the country, whi, have hitherto act ed constantly againA;the Democracy, are now de ' ciaring thilir intentions of supporting - Buchanan, svh.o is as )nuch of a fossil as themselves. These desertionviare to be expected from 'worn,out poli tici. and as the men'tire welkknown, they make a great stile on paper.• But eneh of their votes count ai Yank r .ne only. and their places in the tan offreetl:aittl tree labor are sutplied by crogAbt . . of young- f ,raen—young wcrking-men—who lore , the princiipie under which we rfß.j, and who ad mire the than we hare eb,osen a= our leader, as the perfect exponent of cur principle. They count - by scores, mobile the obi fogy destrters count only as units. L ,,John C. Fremont ps..s.MfftE inn that energy, de- I C( 1 1400, fortitude and perseverance that please young men. and that fit him for executive pur po,es. Ile has made his way, through the world by his own exertions—Ws own labors. neaten& then are noble example to the young men of the nation, and they glory in him. iie is a fitting leader in the cause of the nobleness of free laboi„ and- unoer admir;istration'sre shall establish the principle of free labor in Kansas. FREE LABOR—that is our motto. Its dignity— its usefulness—its moral effect on the character and: the destiny—these arenur principles. how noble, how manlike, to rally for such an objectl— liow •far, beyond the mere party demands that hat% hitherto nominated our Presidents and alai . mated their partizans! On what principles and for what objects do the followers of Buchanaw—the.black Democracy— enter this campaign? Ask. them, and they will tell you, 'with, parrotlike-precision, for '.'Democl racy." What is Democracy With them it is but a name that holds together the ignorant dupes they have misled.. It but means the aggrandise ment of•a few—the spoils of office—the share in the seventy millions which government patronage can contra. Itjmeans to-day, the breich of the time-honored compact of. 1820—the ifitrodnetion of slave labor into Kansas--subinission to the • slave oligarchy of the South. Is it any wonder that the young men of the free states—r.the wor.k ing men—those who value free labor and feel :its worth and dignity—though they have once been Deiuocrats,should forsake this false, black Democ racy, and select such a leader as John C.-Fre , moot? lie is the fittest rePiesentative in, the whole nation of 'the principle of free labor, for the support of which we have entered this contest.--, Ho* well, doce,the closing sentence of I:TphaaN Life of Fremont .express this idea—how 'forcibly does it show to young men the nobleness, the. north, the dignity of lice labor! “Thu course of John . Charles . Fremont' in a pat tern; andiiis succ e ss an , encouragement to every noble mind, which despising sloth ana ease; folly nail 'pleasure aspires to an honorable useffilneas, to be achieved 'by ; meritorious exertions. .The self,made man, sustaining himself in .the pursuit of knowledge, by incessant laborsas a humble teacher . of private Masses—the young pioneer penetrating interior forests, climbing snow-clad mountains, enduring every privation and braving _every danger—the patriot soldier, ever ready' to die beneath the gag of his country—the humane eonquerar, by clemency making his victories corn_ .. plete—the gallant commander, just and kind to his taco—the enlightened begislalor, tr , atehlng over the intete.sts and rights of layor and industry—the • icientific scholar, commanding the respect of - the learned Men of his country and the world—sad the fir-reaching antennae, em bracing the continent in his policy, and giving his I;f., i.l n o ,r. 111.1,1 ire or too, mtrer. lag and . peril,jto open Ai channel throagla which the wealth of the other continents may dolt offer its surface; 'are all before the eyes of the young men of America,. in the Character portrayed en thee., pages: May the, •spectacle give splour to every manly virtue, andinitpire all hearts With in dustry% and resolution in self-improvement, with' fidelity and Courage, in the discharge of duty, and with an exalted and comprehensive patriotism." Fremont is the young men's eso•didata—the candidate of the working men of 'the nation.— ' They will elect him. . COL. pszKorra num!. A bETTERPRONLIEITT.OOKRA iIfORD _ OF 21EW Y9RX. , ., • - • ' 'CIYOIUAYI% Townley, Angela 5, 1855 , The follnerftlit letta from Lient Governor yay., =Mid Of New York, on the' SUbjeCt of ' Colonel Fremont's pligitrn, Appears in the Cinder' oti Ga zette, of dila - M=ll3e: . flarlfasig, Tuesday, July ffil, 1856. MT Deal tent:7•Yons favor of the lainst. ought tO 1 have been answered long ago, but'-absence add hullos's' must plead, my exenia- I am not surprised to hear that the rumors ao widely circulated concerning Col. 'Fremont's religion should have the effect of tensing same, who sYmpathirti e thor oughly with his sentiments in regard to the extension of Slavery, to hesitate stout pledging themselves to his support. But so fir as those rumors assert, or imply, that he is a Roman Catholic, they are without the slight est foundation iiitet.. : „ .1 presume that, from proper motives of delicay and self respect, Col. Fremont will not publish anything him self on the subject or take any part pasha,* in , the canvass. But he converses with the-ntmoilt freedom up: on these topic*, as uponallethers; he ha no desire or disposition to pt lice any concealment bf his religions opinions; and !Isere no reason - to suppose that he would desire others to do so on;bie -behalf. Col. Fremont is not now. nor itias be ever:been,l.. Bo iiiir,turiujit--,, - gip father dying when he , was fir, : . yetrgi old; hesiu educated exelniffeie .ffii fitile3tal t -rboola- and at the age of sixteen was confirmed, of his own tncel lion and from sincere conviction, In the Protestant Epli cppal Church, of which he has continued ever since to bee Mender. -Not one of his own children, has ever been sent to a Boman Catholic school, .theush 'II believe • an adopted daughter sittendedfor sehort•time the semi-I nary at Georgetown. of which the pupili generally are largely Protestant, That this ought not to be construed to his, prejudice , even by the-most zealous Protestants. Is' sufficieutly shown by thafiet that Mr. Filimoresent his own daughter to a Roman Catholic sandary at Buffalo for purposes of special hustration; yet no one ever' in-' = ferned from thte circumstance !lest to himself was not a Protestant. - 1. rn Col. FremOnt's interim was celebrated by a Catholic priest;_ but this was in consequence of tbs. difficulty if not Imossibillry ,of procuring any other clergyman•to perform it. The ceremony was in a' private room, was eery short and simple, and WO not imply any' assent on his part or that of his wife to the doctrines of the Ito-; • - ~.:- Miller, - . ... ' - — , 15 ' man Qatholic Church; nor was either ot, them required . , 11. 3. liendler,iini Bareard, and Peter amend, were er requested on that occasion to give •any pledges that their children should be brought up in that faith._ They appointed ,Conferees to meet the Conferees of Northnm„ li ire all been baptized and educated in, the prutesdint Berland county, and v;tra'instructed to vote fir Major Episcopal Chureb. - , , 'Demist for tongress. : .. ? • • ~- . I' The statementi which Alderman Felnier oft hil is said to have authorized, to thieffertthat in Maich.l 12. Charles U. Hippie, Johli Flom; Jr, and' lame Weird he saw GM: Frenniut joining in the religious servie , of., were delegates tosthe ikilocratil: State Con! a Roman Catholic Church at ;Washington, and that in s" vention, which assembles on the 4.th of March'next,wfth. in subsequent conversation with him at dinner at : instriictiOns tio support got ! . F. C. Hughes tor Goternor : • P.own's Hotel,Col. Fi4mont declared himself a Catholic • , iv id a believer in the peculiar doctrines of that Church, ( fhe'conTenthp then adjourned. I sue entirely untrue. - , , ,i-- . 4. , ~, . - ' Col. Fiemonrwas noun the City of Washingtois at all • : ~ during. the year 1852. Helen ,New. York kr`Callfernia : '4 , 4" Pleasant Pie lit.—On e lbeedai itionaing tlast e in March, 1850. He returned in th 'tistealner George Law: ' about one hundred and forty ladieslandgenthtmen,nrint which reached New York on the•fith of March„:lStig; • • • ` ' 1 cipally residents of Tamaqua, left. that Borough In s sec and. , and. remaining in that city four days, he left en thelOth,' I in the steamer Africa, for Europe, and did not return un- i ~ dal train for Cataw Ind, where itity spent the day tztpic. til June, 1843. I understand that Alderman-F-nimer ex‘: • air style. At Catalan the Tamaqua folks were,joined-' hibits a receipt from Brown's • Hotel - dated March is, 18.52. for four days" hoard. This nukes it certain that the b i a l ari r frena Di Vi ne * headed by '4ll44 Da t l e i n o Bra , * Alderman's stay there terminated on the 7th r and that Band, which swelled the sire of the party considerably . the alleged conversations must have taken placeprevioos- , Through the attention, of COL Paxtbu of Catawissii— ly to that date. But as Col. Frgmoot did not reach New wh . o , , hy,the weir, epterta, tiled the party I%ospitahly at his , York from California until the 6th, it - is impossible that he should: have been connected with Them; ettpecially residence, onßa artal-4 plaf,form, 56 byloo feet, had as he remained in New York ' until his departure "for ' . been erected ffir dancing purpor:L4. It „wasplaced under Europe bad did not visit.Washingiqu at all. He has to the spreading limbs of some stately, elm and lits.ch trees, recollection.of having ever ciiied at Brosin:s Hotel until ~this last Winter, since lea, or oflutving ever seen Alder,l which compose a grove on a 'loTtli ° little bland in the , man Fulmer, there or elsewhere. The,-Alderman. I rim _l reesquebannaibelow the bridge - which spans the river at Informed, Is a man who would 'not be likely to make . • • • Catawissa. ilere during the ifterncam and evening, such statements unless he believed them to be true', But : it is very certain that he has fatten into' i very gross ,:: analog was inabiged in="theSubscriher"—well known error somehow—probably by mistaking smoother perram to the Philadelphia press—exhjbiting al,l the terpsichrs• with whilm be may have held, the conversatiei.in gees -' - . . . rent) and conversational graces of his peoliar .style," lion for Col. Fremont. 'He owes it to his own character e'as well as to justice to take.stepi to- confirm-or correct acconip,nied by his i ever, wearyleg "smitti." - , I the accuracy ofhicollections In I'M 4 Trllittlty: ,• - NMI:1111g. transpired during the-day to Mar fhb festivi: ... 'You may rely:lepon the entire, authenticity a the ties, if we may axe'ept a misuMleistanding, which stint statements I tarn thps made.in reply to yourinquiry for the--facts." 'ln tha present state of the public mill, • the excursion train off at An earlier Boor in the evening. . and In view of the earnest and persevering rnisrepret•eft- than was anticipated, thereby leaving a majority of the tations of the truth, yob may think it dtairable that they'' ~e xcursiontitsilo other alternative than to quarter them should be ge'ner.dly known: If so. yen are quite at tiller'ty -to make thOm public, and to add that they are given' selves for thellii'ild atiltawituis. Thrtraih the kindness as the result-of conversations with*Gol.Fronont himself A of Mr. Sharpleas of that place, a; portion were domiciled lam very truly ' , mint , • at his residence, while the remainder sought the bvskae , - HENRY J. rucltmo!..;D: p. D. Mitratan, Esq- Cincinnati. - ; commolatlons that ^aid be procuted: . , , .... • • • - , ,1 -- ; . . ! ' At an early hontion Wednesday morning, the excur ...- - ---. -- - t- - , . returned la a retalartraln to Tamaiiiiit, weariedFREEDOW TB NATIONAL—SLAVERY IS §Ecitels- ' y k, vi - s e; At..---erroic l i of lamination Pun! the 'South.— , with the'prbtmeted trip,. but still folly satisfied that The following paragraph conies from - the *bile '' hey had paakeet plerasint dajs op' the bankirof the (Ala,),Adrertiser. 1., .... I charming Susquehanna, and thaf-th ' e -Union" m'anagers, . "We l night the delegate in the late Black Re-I headed brour l young and estimable friend, 3i r. hens, " I 10 , publicanTCottPentiori; at PhilailelPh had spared no effert.to ina):i the affair agreeable to the ia, Lite that • guests, in every particular.. We congrOulate them on so rapid:Weald-be the Fr prea3 if. Reploblican doe-: trines, item in four years they couldOlith imputii-: their success on She ocrasien "of - the ide:nle of,Tiiesday , ,ty, hold Their Convention in Richt/1'0(1 OF Lee- s i , and trust 'that cm "some future occasion they may be_ in in gton. -(/* he *ad known howmanyplaek li - pn - b- 1 duced to favor . the younifolhs with •a repetition of the iicour the 4 were in this Stdte and community; he, delightfial _ affair. • 2' ~ , . miy i t hare moved to adjourn the' conrentioii to; . • ' . 'flea in 1860 at'Nontgomery. There are MCII . here'" - . . . .. • FOR -THE Is - MRS' J0i.7.04 - L. in Alabama, and in thie,,thunty, :106 arc not 'ashamed to Own a preference-to Rrentant, or ,nny , • ether 'Abolitionist, to 'lWO:lanai:4i HUIVVIII the ~. - aamoeraitle Injustice , . ' The following stntemcnts exhibit the Demo- South ever expect to maintain herself -respect, or' cratic vote in the'saveral election districts in this obtain her just rights„if she l avail 'endives such' Connty_at the Ifx(electron ; as also the injustice persons on her soil, Much leek'permits them. Woe:, and inequality in_the distribution by the late Dem rupy inffuentiffrotitions within her borders?" , ocratic Conventien of the candidates fur the sev- There is some light gleaming from the 5,870,000 ,' oral offices to beielected at the coming election, in 1 • whites in the'South, aiarge part or which are such a glaring fight, that a largo portion of the not much better than slaves; whom' the 347,500 old standing Democrats! above and below the Slave holders have -heretofore ruled with a rod' 48hai1) M ou.ptaqi, and in • eveit the Coal Region, should oicTself*Tatnlne the subject for themselves, of iron,-as well as the .miserable'' dough-faces of ; and if they find, as they - certainly will, that th ... the e North, . ' I figures presented are true, put the pitOper esti ' mate upon the work of their servants in Conven- . Lion, by condemning the same at the ballot' boxes at the election, in repudiating the,ticket from the top to the bottom thereof. . . ' , Districts below the Mountiiin furnishing five. candidates with their Democratic yote : Schuylkill Haven, 144' Pinegrove Borough, 38 LandinEvillo, 6,7 'l -- South Manheim,' 79 ' • ' 318 Districts in th CoalJtegion;4 caudidatei With 'their Democratic - vote: ' :,' . - Pottsville, ' 51811301i3n 70- Miner .sville, ' 255 '' - , , Tamsqua, ' 3(13 , " - 1215 • Districts help* the Mountain to Which' no can e didate was 'even:. ' N , ;rth Manheim, . S3tWest Brunswig, Port Clinton, 57!Orwigsburg, Wesqenti,‘ • r. 249131 t. CarbOn, Wayne, - 1891 Pinegrove Tp.; : 129 i • ' East Brunswig, 144 i . .. Districts out - of - the, .Coal Region and above Pottsville to whom no candidate was given : -Porter, 27 Union, Eldred, •67iRush, Upper 3lahantongo, 59 4 510han0y, IlubLey,- ' 31 - Ilegins, . • 'B6, Burry., - . 471 ,Distritts in the Coal 114 data were given: . ' Palo, Alto, : ' , St. Cliir t Eritiley, Cam $150,000 7,000 $792,000 396,000 • VACANCY FII:LED. - -4Chll Rowe of Franklin County, has been nominated to supply the vacan cy in the Sham Democratic State.iticket, caused by the withdrawal of Timothy Ives, for Surieyor General. it was, hardly worth the trouble to make the nomination; the ticket will be defeated. The masses are united in opposition to the Patent. D e-mocracy, on State issues. EDITOR'S TABLE. ••Coxxrstcesrs" to the Miners' Journal shouhl lava r [ably, attach a rearm alblr name to their farora. Unless eo endorsed. thefean revise no attention at our Mutts • Itat.u.t's'Mwortu.r."—Thla Magazhae,publlshed Sn Ilustcat. IN the cheapest monthly In thelwerld.; It bur ['idled at a dollar per annum. and is filled with choice, t eri giant' matter.. IVo commend it tn the attention br the,rwho &groat the saute time an excellent and zheap liter - ary publication. • Ottanau's AGAZIVE.—The Septeruher number of this popular Magatine Is no our table. The' principal engrra :.i_,,_oc.-z.a rharvaine design and well eeented 7 -6. et.titisd. paughter'' The heatitithl fashion`plate the coining month. shout' that heaps are VIM In vogue among the fashionable fair sex. ••11elin of Tiny', is the title of a finely illustrated listerjeal tal James it67,illllld. is an :Iliniaralvd norei -I,lfr. An illinZtrated poriu entitled "The Doom of Alb: , is a well aril ten atearrlptive :teal.. -Fat e ;)f . t Tartakata,ff." 10110 iliwirated. is RUSSIAII ,rend We have not' apace to enumerate all. - the;,' frond tbinp. in addition. that tirahans iontaiifs. Saffiee it CC say that Messrs. iVatson Cu„, are =menthly putting forth hel-uleanexertions to publish k Magazine unex ceptionsale in every dqparinint. They : effort - 4 4 , ;, are zratifted to state, are el ereastul. Cottle; of the -Septem her nutull , er ran be obtained at Batman's. ' Focal Affairs. pir Population of Baltimore, 230,000. ... j . piy . .-The Yellow fever is at Charfestan. , ' • 1 ' ".Z4Erlrsedoin is•pational; Slavery Sectional: I . par Th'e health of Senator. Sunnier is impro ', •• slog. • • :, •,. . jper - Yellow fever prevails , at Fort Bamilton, . N:-.T. ' . . .. • .. . . : OP -The Philadelphia Navy Yard is to lio en- T O POF O P+. d GeograPhical.' larger]." • 4 : _sari. Kibg, died suildenly'in Newport on Sun . . • . -. ilelitht of Pottsville. (env , • day last. 'ner of !darks? a 2d. streets), Or: A.Pickpocket Detector has been invented :Obese mean tide. r=.97,7 ft.. ()own tast Di<tanee from Philadelphia Air Gov. Gearj , loft Washington on Thursday '95 miles: Latitude, 4 , i ) far Kansas. - I ,ti s ,I?;:ioo.Popt!istion lh in ~. pr ,-. 0 Democrats have tarried Missouri by -' • - ,- - • -------'- ------ -- -'' 7000 Majority.- -. W. alight; partly cloudy.' .: , ; 1 _X-er - Pomeroy , Ohio, was comyletely destroyed rattikr Strong; nearly rinse. '',. , : -,by fire list week. ~ fresh tstintlily. ' ,pD - On Friday Thomas Silver of Germantown, Do:. cloudy; slightralo.. . fresh; rather dandy; Do. " - , • died - of lock-jaw. Do.; nearly clear. r. '' r- The Reading Dragoons—now defunct—is _ strong: morn. clear, aft. partially cloudy. ! to be-resuscitated. . ' ..., __-............_______ . .." Ole Deaths id Philadelphia last week, 405. .- -- - •T he weather ltere has peen remarkably cool and- Of cholera infantum, 82. pliwsatit:daringlt.lf;last week . • • Yesterday was a maga. . Ogrlo the-Senate, the Pacific Railitiad - bill ticent day. , has been laid on the table. , ; . tom`' The farmers say the late rains will. give arrrtotOLOGICAL NOTATIONS Reporthtby Ir. A. Hof?, roarrane Sri. .Atsociation F A CO. i' T fit avzi l • I2LBAL* 7 tiL2O-11AL tJUIstESAT'p.M. -------1 ------, ..—e— .--------------.---- fitheon..l, A! 4i, . , n . .' 21 diys. , ,s : :: I• ',. 1 , ._. . ... 1 --..--...• ....—.!.,—,.--_- , &turd. t. , FS 190 : 2.9.0'd i• 1 1 -' eunca, IO .71 93 • . 29.09 hionday 113 /55: 241.10 Tneigify 12 1 oil S 2 ~ ;no wedw i ri, 7C i S 5 r 29.03 TharNy 14 73 it.Bs it 29.07 1..-. FrldaY ° /511 67 ? l't II 2917 1550, .„ .:_-_---, = 7 -_ 9—Wind' , y t 10—Dd. W. Ira 11—Do: W. e 12—Do. W.l tit . 13—D0.. W. .1‘ 14—Do. W. .. 15—Do. W. • The tr 6120 it day • Oo A irr at' in Mi. AT ST ; 5i 111 '- - them a second grass crop. planet Air 0 c 41 4 1.16 °1 11f Ju p iter—'An eetiP°6 of the fig.?"Wrri. Preece of , Wilkesbaire, died recently Jupiter will take place on Tuesday morning next, 19th ' • from the effeetauf sun stroke. ; '• inst., at 1 : o'clock and 5 minutes. At' 1 o'clock and .59 r A story for boys of the life of Brirment; minutes, the planet wiltreappear: Ehould the weather it ., 1 g written in New York. be clear, an interesting obiervation - will be afforded. as" - rl - Detiths in Baltimore last week, 181. In . -tiviunneil.- - • I New York daring satire,time, 621. - . - OgfrA "fire at Louisville on:Wednesday, tie . Air Fatal Accident on lilt Reading Railroad.—On ' strayed $40,000 worth of property. , Monday evening as the up passengertrain from Philadel- , . 0 101' A new avenue was recently discovered phts.tor Pottsville, was iroundlogi curve below Lim , •-• 'ln the mammoth cave of Kentucky, IlißP•The . mortality amorig children in our prin. erick, Ole engiee struck a young girl. who was enderevor- _ lug to drive a rim from the track.. She was idled 14. cipal cities this' season; is appalling.'' Otf•ln the Sfate of Maine there are about 150 stanLiy: the animal the Vail driving was also killed.-±, Baptist churches destitute of pastors. 'The girl at the time of the occurrence, was *Whin a .P...1-The widow of Nicholas Biddle, the cele* hundred yards of heeown house. , ilex name we learn, heated financier, died on the 11th inst. Was Lochman. When will people realize the danger of, -per The Republicans of Philadelphia tinl . waing bn a railroad treat, under any circumstance • I nominate a county ticket on the 23d Inst. I . All - Miss Davenport the actress, will shortli - ire- Temp-mace in AshlaruL—We hear sad complaints play an engagement at the Boston Theatre.. of the number of unlicensed places which - 'feud liquor Inf`lion. Lewis D. Campbell, Repubirea n, has ! Id Ashland. It Is stated - thatthere are at least twenty' been nominated for re _election to Congress. such places in that town. The amount of misery and: Or- The Delaware County Republican has on. tered the twenty-fourth year of its existence. I disorderly conduct, which grows out of their operational; • ... The new steamer "Kangaroo" arrived •at • ' ran be readily imagined . If the authorities of As h lan : P hiladelphia,_ on Wednesday, from Liverpool. • are po eeriest to cheetttheseopen violations of'the law, or The Chicago Amnia 'States that new wheat. [it remains fat the dawns to prosecute every violator toti Is already becoming abundant in,that market.: , convictitin. These measures should be adopted prorript- OP -Thirty-two hundred dogs have been statigh- 1 .__, 1 ly ' in view of the tact that there is nothing go desoraung , tered in New York since the 25th of June last. ~, in its effects as the alum traffic; nothing which is aj 4 1:41 - The Berko county agricultural fair, hates greater blight upon the prosperity of a community. 1 place at_Reading, October the Ist, 2d, 3d, and 4th: 01` . ' Ea-Prestdent Tyler recently delivered a . gar- Nut Engine for the Mint flu Road.—A loeomo, lecture at Potersburg, Ye., on the dead of hie, Cabinet ---.2- a n . Kant, "- of the Here/lanes the. weighing thirty tons, has Just been completed by 14. Baldwin kro.;of Philadelphia, for thellilne fill arid :• .* Freeman mil-, Magazine, nag been made Master ocArts by Union. Ectruyirilt - thren Blood. The Ledger lays-that the desire' College. of radioed companies to obtain the best. coal-barnlog ~- ..„2gr. 0 n last Thursday week a bail-storm pas enir,ln!„ holudneed Mr. Baldwin to introduce into this' sett over Bath county, Va., killing chickens and engine ieveralreeent improvements, made by Ur. Wild.: • eve m . r a j a. er. chic of which consists in having a fire-raker to the Of - IL A. Perry, a clever actor, is a member of. luraace.sehich is opehited upon.by sci eccentric. under; the stock company of the . street Theatre, the control of the engineer. and ran be used to rake the', Philadelphia. , .. _ . Bre, itha the locomotive 13 running over the T. ad. The; Air Last week n man named P. Jackson scram other improvement consists in leNttilnithe teed water, by i serves Niagara river between . the Foils and -tho the waste steam and the 'pie* from the funucti, before? Suspension Bridge. , _ • it reaches the boiler,thus enabling steam to be genera ,-The isms qn tt Sekly thin by the'skt method so locomotice ja ninth annuatexhibitioii of the Mary te land - Agricultural Society takes 'place, in Haiti a 1., it more from the 2let to the 24th of Octo-Ler stoat. Tie Muse of .Preiriess in pitliyalii Onflittritt ;Prim& Arming/be the Oiorreth-rOirr olitertronarigli;'POrt I . )arisiri; has determined to engage ;irneotlyin th e contest ibr Free Speech, Fiee Laliar, Freemen and =Fremont, now. being waged. Pursuant to public notice, the . friends of Fremott and Dayton-met at the Connell Chamber of the. biro - a& of Port Carbon, on Thursday ennaing,',Aumast ' • The meeting was organized by calling-ADBABAN WEEBNER to the chair, and appointing' AnruA Barron Sez.reiuy. The object of the meeting - a r ea stated ter'be to confer together on the propriety Of funning a Republican Club, foithe advancement of the eatilot;,of lerzbout . end, Dayton, in said borough ; 'after which the meeting was addressed by Drs. Q. w. Drown and Wythe, and nia-nY 'I °their' . gentlemen. On motion,lt war ' Bemired, That the friends Of Fillmoreand Doneison in this borough be Incited to unite with us In electing del • egates to the Cnionpounty Convention, to be held at liaven t on Monday, August 2.5th. - IESB. On motion, it was Reseire That a committee of three -be appointed to draft a Constitution and:By-Laws Ibr the government of the Club, and to report at our raexemeeb-. - firs. Whereupon the chair appointed Dr. Wythe; Dr..o. ' W. Brown and rriah Gana. Oa , motion, Besotted, That' the proceedings of thit meeting be published in' all the papers friendly' to the .e.lllBB. and that an invitation be extended to all persons Diendly to Fremont and Dayton to meet with et on Wed nesday evening nest, the 18th bast, to organics a ChM, to which time and place this meeting stands attiourne& ,Aurns Bruen, Secretary. 0 • - Dessocrgtic ..yominatiap Cbnreation of &hayl kill ;orfaiy' . .—This Consent len, m 1 4, 0 1 401 of 103 treleimies from tbe various borounks and townships of this County; met gibe hapse of PlitUplloyer. in Schnylkpl -Maven, on Monday &at. J. M. WetherM,,..Esq., was selected to preside, and Patrick flood, Diniel 11..514nener and T. R Ebur, wine appbinied Secretaries. . • ' Tbe.following tieket was pviiin?itedt ; AISSOCLITIC JTDOILI. rotes Bernard • - - - - :63 USE=Ii - ... DISTBIC;?, A111;41-11C -- - T4cis. p. Walker, - • • • ';4l.zalstairer. Wm. B. Lebo, • - , - 59 Geo. P. Waggonsellei, • •-, ° 62 1 60 avt. P. &Ter. -4 4 - 'r, - - 49 :••• \Meant. ; ' , 4 T, B. Gale, - • • " - • - •,63 DEPVITIntirLIOR Tobial Krider, _vnacrott 4r Tag POOR. , - Amos Huffxasn, - MEM= 75 17G 71 ,Tremorit, r , 9C 1.11yt1* , ,, . 27. N4,rivtglan; 211• . Three Inlstricts,yean,didater, 'Four Di=tactz., 4 candidates., • • - • 1.533 , . . Thirty Districts, no candidate, -,- 1., 3484 ,votes. Augreer 14, 1856. WEST PENN.. PEN, PASTE AND SCISSO ~ -_ *Ei•The Frostier (Tarts) Patriot, sa wheat! is selling in that (Laminar) county at fill cents! per bushel. - pa-Charles Kunsan; of Farquier coon y, Vs., lost 31 sheep but week by a single stroke of, lightning. .. • 4 pli?'Professor Morse has Contracted With the 1 Russian government to establish lines of te?egraph itidughout the Empire. '' • Pir The. Marriage of Prince Frediiril Liam with the Princess Royal of England for September next year. Or The various bills passed by the Unit" Senata,appropriates, in the aggregate, thi $3.036,333 for the improvement of rivers' hurt 04 - The locomotives in Germany are to be covered with n casing of glass, w permit the toe - steers to survey the whole and at the same time protect them from and cold. . 4 1a"'i• , Bei. Walter E. Franklin; recto' John's Episcopal Chi:trails' York, Pa., f gnat, 1838, to August, 1838, died recent] porte, Indiana. 'ARP. At Yarmouth, • Me., on Mazda boat was sank hy a• whirlwind, and Mrs • I .and two childrin and a daughter of Ada "• I were • ' `At a bop at NeWport, R. 1., a few since, a lady 'from New Orleans, La., w l quet of diamonds, pearls, and preciou l said tcrbo worth $20,000! • • ' - Alfr Charles Sedgewick, the only' orTiving son of the late,Judge Sedgewiek, of theupreme Court of Massachusetts, died on the - 3d i et., aged I S 64. He was a man of ability,, and much i beloved: ;al' The trial of Alfred Iloppell, thaCondue; for of the North Pennsylvania Railroad on the occasion of the recent dreadful disaster !rill com mence at Norristown on Monday next. " 1 pilf - The report of a spiritual marriage 'of. a I young lady at Bordentown, N. J., whip-the corpse' of at young man to whom 'she, had been engaged, Is said to be totally without foundation. 1 • Mr: Heald, the young Euglish gentleman of j fl3itiiii who marriet Ml,ola_ontes'shortly after I. her separation from the King Of iliteariai died at Folketone, England, last month, of consumption:l .-.""At , a late firemen's supper. at Burlington, 'Edward Bradley gave the following toast:—"La., dies of '56, like:atm firemen's bucket, well hooped, 1 and, like firemen, delighting in the exhibition of I their hose." - ' -:---' 4 I . Agr`-The comet of 1856,,, Celled Charles V., end so named from having„ itacording to some hietbri-1 acts, cause'd that monarch ti sibilicater and retire to) the convent of St. Intl, is,eipected to become vis ible this year. • , . INF' More dambing proof of Frem,ont's Cath- Jilicisin is adduced. The masses are all•for him, and like ArChbishop Hughes, he is in the constant ,habit of emitting the streets of New York-. '"Oir , By , ,ilie explosion on'Sattirdity, of a haler i in the iron safe Manufactotibf Wilders j a C0.,C., in • Brooklyn, .ohadiah Walling,. Jr.; Isom? Hicks, • colorid;and Jolin:Heeney, Were killed,„ Several others Were wounded. ,- - :- • • -?.,, • ' --..„ot' j at Honesdale, Pa., on Tuesday, the large ~.Ftorehouse belonging to James Russell., aneoceu pied•by Roger!! t ,Denning, together with the Americant . House and Hawkers', Saloon, wefe de stroyed by fire. Tht,loss. is $20,000, ino,lif cov, ored by insurance. • • .. , - ' '•„ . fiafT• The editor of the unscrupulous, lying, blackguard, Pennsylvanian, of Philadelphia, is Rev. Tbeohilus Fitii; recently pastor "of a church in Utica.' tHe is a disgrace to the editorial profes sion. and•atould be kicked;ont of tho'charch. ..0"•• One of ,the cars on an Eastern road halt al !Alkaline.; for exhibiting to th4vpassengera ,:thej i name of the next station. After leaving each eta-! tiou the brakesman pulls a wire which turns a • wheel and shows the next name, and at, the Ame J time rings a bell-to attract attention to it. - p ; I _ .f . r&277 The mother of six children was tiontkiit.: ted to , prison' in Philadelphia a few days since, for drunkenness. She said to the committing magis trate, "1 wish io God, shat yeti would keep me there, for . drink I mu t t, and will!".. What a vol nine of misery, of degratintion does.that _short re- Ply convey. , .„1/"If Washington were now living, be would bo driven from Virginia, as Mr: Underwood hue been, as an Abolitionist. So would Jefferson, Pat.! rick Henry,-510nroe, George Mason; and Madisoli: , Mr. Fremont stands, in the position they occupied on the question of Slavery extension. 40•7. Ex-President Roberts of 'Liberia left for England in the Persia. His visit to this 'country was on business connected with the estabfi , hraent of a college in Liberia. The 'Memory, - .r ids, $20,000, have been already ratted. . Thesert ices of two-professors hob Veen secured. - Madame Augustine 13., a pretty blonde, ' 21• 0r"22, lately landed at Dover, "near her time," and was phiced'in an arm chair for conveyance to the nearest hotel, A custom-house officer insisted• on finding her n midwife, and she was promptly de • livered of two pelerines, 15.searfs; 17 pieces of lace, IZ - pairs of silk stockings, 38 pieces of cotton,.6 reticules, and 48 lyons handkerchiefs. - • 2',Mr . Ma* Buford sold 'his plantation, for 85000. Moit of, his money he invested in arm ing 300 men to go to Kansas. They each agreed to take up a claim and mortgage it to him to re pay him his advances. But, being a lazy set of scamps, they wouldn't go to work, and the major is left minus his advances, and bas gone _home in diegu-t. It served him right. , .giVr• A compositor in' the Detroit Advertiser went to.tbe office on "Friday' morning, and said he was'ilnfit for work, Being asked what ailed• him, hr said that be dreamed, dining the night, that he saw his Mather in her coffin, and the dream was so vivid, and bad affected him so deeply, that he could not work. ' At four o'clock in the afternoon , be received a telegraphic despateb announcing the death of his mother, which took placer at, Niagara,, C. W., early, in the morning. t - El egion to wbjeti no 'cnniii, Port Carbon, , 89 East Norwegian, O2 Brandi, ; 107 New Castlo,. . 13.1 3e1%1311011, 120 1724 318. votes. 1215 tA , SIGNS OF THE THIES. a liesErs:r. eystoiners'have'the double advan- Tis life of Fremont is to be published in-.Ger 4 - . Lao of purchasing direct fr - om thriim de •andof po r, se, man and - Welsh, ' locting from a very large and beautiful assortment, at' a A correspondent at Jackien; Mich., thinks - thats saving of at least 5 - peiciatt. State will giveTrement tem thousand majority. Peellitir card , in another column, • Tut AmeriOap Council at Scottville, Monroe • Co., N. Y.,r•vcded on the 2,d inst. to support Fre- .17,,e•Commeretal 'Tra*elleritesw.Dr. Ayer's monf an&Dayton and thenAlislolved their lodge. - liminess agents are a, pleasant atinUal to us, coming Good. - _ about as- regularly as, the year. !We can say, of them - A Chicago bookseller advertjsed the lives of w we hat_we_are sorry c a nnot of - call such visitx rs-that `Fremont and Bue rt ,hana at the same time, l ind the. • they are unifOrmlylent/tmen. , They are known to us OF -sales the next two days were:- Fremont 740, Bu- • channel 10.. ' . the press, as,able: and - reliable, accomplished business • , men, of a chameter well worthy the„ benevolent , calling CKLAIS, Vt., the. banner ' town of Democracy, in which they are-engagett, of premuigating the best 're , 250 Democrat,. starts off, with a Fremont Club of toting heretofore, 2:1 Whigs, 30 Free SO, and. of,' -medics for the sleit this age affords. - Success to you gen 100,yoling men. tlemen, and to 3 , eur cause, for both deserve success.— THE Buehaneers .every whore complain • thitt - AarYbrd e1"7 4 ,G1e- • ••• there's no enthusiasm among , their fie : epic. " 31r: Nelson Visb has lately favored us with a call, - does wonder! What sober nian ever could hurrah for motile; credit to our brothers vieWs; and we Commend James Buchanan? • , .' him to We conliatreceptlon of our fraternity—long may Fovn of the men neminated - on !the Fillmore be wive. For sale in, Pottsville by.Joux (L. Brows and ',electoral ticket in Indiana, are Ter ;Col.- Fremont MITS. . r and ore of them writesLdenooneingthe,,Fillaiore movement as a fraud. Tne New ! TOrk Cifmbro-Americas, a large wenk 13-,pa per-in. Welsh and English, the: • orga n of the Welsh in this country, is doing good ser-I vice in the.eause of Freedoto. , Lie /Vette ,Zeit, an .eztellent weekly paper oft. 'New York city, urges its German readers -to give:: their votes to Fremont, us th ‘ a - only representative , of liberty in the pending ei t ufest, LETTERS received from Lancaster state that oanges of 150 votes from, Fillmore Fremont : oceured in 48 hoursafterhe Sinithern elor,tiens: were received, raid prolnibly 1,000 itr the county. It it stated that the German Turner Aslocia 7 - thin' in Wheeling, Virginia, have sworn vengeehee against Buchanan, end will go in muss- 'for Fill inure; If there should he no Frementeticket in that, State. , Tut Meriden ( Conn .) - Tronoeript gives a list of prominent citizens of - that town who hove left toe Buchanan-party and support -Fremont; -among Whom is Charles Parker, a Democratic Electur iu • 1852. 2 • i Tnr. Monroe c.Mich.) Commercial, one of thpt oldest Deinoeratic,papers in tho-State, hauls don-n! the nigger drivees flag; with the names of the I Cincinnati candidates; and runs up Et:emont Dayton. ' . • „ Judge Campbell, of N. Y. who was the Ameri can candidate for •Judge of Court of Appeals - lest fall, is warmly fur 'Fremont, and made an eloquent • and effective speechlo.the Ripublieans of old Os-I pm), his former resi3ence. IN the revolution there wore no better patriots thairthe women; let their ,daughters, show the; same zeal - in the coils° of liberty now. Let theta ) use their influence to secure the election ...of Fre- . : I moot and the Freedom 'of Kansas: , - • I THE Charleston (S. C.) Mercury says- the Dem- , oeratie leaders seem to .be smitten with that mad t I ness,which is the forerunner of destruction.. Nol doubt of it; the madners has been long on them, and the - destruction is close at hand. I , Dr. Franfort, the Connecticut min,eralogist, ways a Democrat, has abandoned Buchanan and! his platforin. accepted the Presidency of the Middletown Fremont Olub, and subscribed for 100 copies of a Fremont camppign paper. TIIERE is not single Fillmere paper in Ver. ) - mont, end it is understood that there will be Del Fillmore ticket in the field -in that State. Oft I the political newspapers in the Mountain, State, I 23 support Fremont and five are for Buchanan.! TIM New Haven Courier says :—?;. correct state ment of the politics and circulation of the polit ical press in -Connecticut is about. as follows: Fre-' moat papers, 15—circulation, 26,000 ; Bilnan papers 9—circulation, 15,000; Fillmore pars, 0 —circulation, 0. Tni Dubuque papers publish' a card from D.I F. Cooley, one of the eiecativecommittee 'of the Buchanan Club in that city, saying, that, though I be can swallow a good many Elkins, ho cannoti get down that Cincinnati Platform. Mr. Cooley I will go for Fremont and Fredom. • I A Washington letter writer has seen a letter 1 from Judge - McLean, in which he Amp that the; 'united German residents!' of the western :see tierce of Pennsylvania will vote almost unani 7 i mouslylor Fremont. De predicts the Stato for Fremont by over 30,000 majority. Tae Charleston Evening News; is sapportingi Buchanari and Breckenridge. That paper has! heretofore been an advocate of Americanism and I its editor, John Cunningham. Esq, was a delegate) to and one of the Vice. Presidents of the first; Philadelphia American Convention. •• . I Rem. ,attended end enthusiastic meetings of: Welsh adopted eitizenti tiara recently been held in Scranton, Pittston; D'ilkesbarre, end other pia- I gen in this State,lo farther the ihecess of the Re publican tickel. Clubs have been formed (net of ' g 'tta percha,) and the work goes on bravely. _'Tut Fremont campaign is comMencing in Ken tacky. On the last County Court day In Logan,l Dr. George Blakey; one of the. Iteput2lican State i Elertors, took a tilt at both the Buchanan and , Filltneye parties. He will address the people of that county more tit length et the . Court-Douse on the 4th Monday in - August. Tug - Republican State Gazette, at Trenton,' says I that "Mr. Fillmore objected to Mr. Fremont that, be wan a sectional - candidate, inasmuch as he would receive no support in the South. It ap• pears by the elections just bed, that Mr. Fill-, moreis in the same predicament." • , Anoxia the officers of the Beaver county. Pa., ri6tuont Club, are Benjamin Wilde,. late Demo. cratie candidate for. Senate; B. Bab Bradford, late' American candidate - for Governor; A. Rub ertscia, Late - Whig Senator ;-Silas Merrick,' former ly a Democrat, -Le, The Fremont taco claim from 1,000 to 1,500 innje - rity in Bearer. WE dad that hi the entire State o‘f Vermont there are tirenty'eight - polcal Dewspiaperi. Of these there ata Papery.- - Cerrniation. ForFremobt, - 133 ' - 35,000 For Buebacan, 5 , 5 , 6,000 - There is no Fillmore paper in the State, nor does , any Fillmore. organization exist. . We clip the fullowinglzom the Louierilie Jour nal :—"Tbe clerk of a gentleman in-this city, who has betting 'pretty extensively in fay.ir of My. Buchanan, returned two or three days ago from a visit to his bume, in Pennsylvania, and begged his ;worthy employer, for tiod'itsake, not to bet a dollar upon Pennsylvania." . * Wit is fixed d Stato Nam of an bar- A-Southern corresp indent of The Boston Tele graph says theta Fremont Electoral ticket will ,soon be nominated in Virginia, and that this dem ,onstration is owing very much to the late. blow 'struck by the slavebreeders at the people's rights in the.expalsion of Mr. Underwood from the Old Dominion for participating in- the - recent delphia Convention: Judge J. Dixon, formerly a leading Deatociet of Putnam County, Ohio, editor of The Patuale . County Citizen, and -for many -years Probate Judge, is going into the light fur, Fremont. with his whole heart and soul.: Elan ig, jr.,' late ed itor of a Democratic sheet. ter the same county, and all his life a,staunch thinocrat, has also Join ed the Republican party. ' -. • . A' MASS Convention of freemen watt' held' at Broomfield, ppon, on Tuesday„ Gin. Pomeroy Was cine„of the speakers. The - Convention adopt ed a series of strong resolutions, and listened to speeches by--the Rev. Mr. McKee , or Kansas. Mr. Jenkins, of Penn. The most enthusiestie dem • onstration was kept until a late-hour, when the 'people dispersed with three dines three for 'Free Kansas, Fremont, and Free Pennsylvania. - Ara mass meeting int.Roek county Wis., seven, thousand freeman were in CC/U=4 proceslion was formed two miles in length. Says a Wision eirt..paper :—"The nomination of Tremont and Dayton has kindled a spirit among the masses that sweeps all before it, end- spreads - with the mpidity bf flames through the dry prairie grass in autumn. Put down Wisconsin for John C. Fro mont by a majority of thousapds. THE news of the nomination. of Fremont and Divton reached Topeka, K. T., on the afternoon of June 22. In the evening a meeting was held at which a number or eloquent Speeches were made and a series of resolutions indorsing the platform anti nominees. The (Topeka) Kansa* . Tribune, says : "The meeting, 'previous to adjourning, gave three.deafening cheers Tor Fremont and Dayton; and three times'three fur tIA,e Free State of Kan ': szie. A. Bonfires were burning in the streets—hotii-. es Were ilrumivated, and a wild joyful enthusiasm seemed to perituie • every breast., While 'passing Aown•Kansas avenue we pasi Ili effigy •of Frank Pierce' lowered in The tante. rind felt the. earth . snake , bcneath,our 'feet, with the stamps and cries that filled-the air.. Every one seented.to be pleas ed with' themselves and 'perfeCtil satisfied with the nomination. • • .reaftes .ich will lountry, ..e wind of St. .m at La- a nail inslow Baker, venings re. a bo stones, Pr" 'AT A Giulia 8.44 ~given to the Empefor Alexander, at. Warsaw, a young - lieatenlint of ilnsears, who had recefitly, tglied. from the thatcd States, danced with the Grand Duchess Olga, and groat attention' by the grace laluess and beauty of his apparel, which'i; on in quiry, proved to have bees , ordered from the, palatial store of Granville Stokes, No. 209 .Ches-, nut street, Thitrlplphia.' • • COPWAY, TIIE. INDIAN, who recently de livered lectures in Philadelphia, and , vvitk- whom many-of oirreaders and familiar; came very near Meeting With a stirieus disaster while travelling out West. ProVidentially, however,ihis person .escaped unscratclied, the only damage Buse , ,to 'his "inexpresslbles," which was .speedily ad. looted by'a new suit Yitilm ° the palatial store of,. •Rockbill Jr, Wilson, 205 .and 201 Chesnut street, Philadelph . L A Tmtir 'PLAcx,—During a thunder storm in the town of Berne, on Wednesday, says the Albany , Knickerbocker, the electric flxid struck an apple tree against. which _ , a young man by the name of Lawrence Was leaning. It split the tree from top to luittom, making a gap suffi ciently large to lot M..r. L. slip in abOut a foot, immediaioly.after which it 'sprung to, and - held . him as light as if ho had been in a steel trap. Ile was extricated with much difficulty, receiving but little bodily injury. He is now recruiting his Wealth in our "mountain City," add' can be see'n almost da'ly, drinking the refreshing Mine.. ml Water, sold at the Drug- Store of Charles W. Epting, S. E., corner of Contra and Norwegian streets, Pottsville 'Pa. .1:a - 11911crwayNs PLUS are of infinite benefit, to perepns suffering from Rervoustremors and general fee bleness. They fenevate the nervous system, and brace the museks, as well as give tone to the stomach., Their purgativeaction Is unaccompanied by pain, and as they have powerful stomachic as well as aperient and purify ing properties, they literally carry on the wori - of Invig orating the digestion, relieving the bowels; and regulat , Ing the secretion's at one and the same time. • This can not be said of any other medicineiin existence.' • " air-The ellt4ease. of Pottsville, and fichn'ilkill eonnty in•gcneral,mill flint it greatly their advantage to purcbsge Chincr,'Gpss l and iSbnimon 'Wares lof 3lessrs. TTNDALE, & IMporterai, 219 Chesnist Street, above Seventh. Philadelphia, mho have a system of dping easiness pectiliar to them/elms. :;hey import their wares direct from the best- manufacturers, and sell them in small quantities to the/at/11er and citiien, just ,0 cheap, as they can be,tkinglit in Large quantities at wholesale by the, country merchant. 4ro - ite adao heis. , ..ffeadaettei.na matter from what cause;.have an unfailing remedy in dlickener's Sugar Coat. d.Vegetable Purgative Pills. The most obstinate net sous headache, or headache arising fiord coldness of the stomach, yield to their operations Ina few hours, and persons who use them :di a general opening medicine and portlier of the blood will , never troubled with the headache at ell. Thu proprietor gives. his warrant of thr., and will return the money paid ter them It thardo not come up to . his recommendations. Nearly every reg ular phYsicinii In New York recommends them for head- Aviles to the iisclusion of ell other remodien, and upwards of thirty of them have given the' proprietor certificates fu this ulTect, ,Clickener's Sugar Coated Vegetable. Pills prodne;' , neither gripe or nausea; and being Footed with sugar are as milli swallowed ns hi? of candy, which. gives them an obvious advautage over allother medicine. Parsons subject to Itradaches sbouni•nerer be without a ts.a of them, far that ii . rm'ed they will have but litho to fear from its 'attacks." For sale by all respectable drug gists and storekeepers throughont . the United States. Le?.w . . 324 t • Plies neglected often prove fatal, leads to core , _sumptiou ; annolet the parts, three times a day whit DALLEY'S PAIN EXTRACTOR. If secretion form in thd rectum then insert tie Syripgi,"_ filled with the Extractor, and gradtially Ascher-go it as the syringe ,is.withdrawn. - . It never falls to cure eases of any - age or virulence, nor to give entire ease Instantly to all, fre quently 'curing by one application. Piles are known by the heat, itching, and pain of the anus. Bleeding pilesare -Caused, sometimes, by thd fall ing of the whole bowels, whiCh then press the Intestinal canal tight against the back bones and keep the' blood froln returning tali the vessels. similar to the blood being - kept at the top Of your finger when a string Is tied tight.couvid it; such is frequent, and for scmfction.s hu mors and ulcers to form therein; then procure a perfect abdominal supporter, and wear a - compress to the rectum, and continue to nse, the salve as above, also rub it well over Lle loins and abdomen for-same time, and the net urdifielts tteitsupport the - ho - iels will be contracted and mule strong, and yOur life will be saved. If properly applied, every ease .111 be cured It never pills. W. JENKINS, Esq 4 Of ~ C olumbus., O bio. Secretary of the Ohio Insurance Company, who was taken to New• York , in extreme debility,' , Wtth Piles, to have an operation performed ty Dr. Mott, as the on'y chance to save his life; acCideptally beard of the. Pain Extractor. states, "For years, his disease defusl' medical skill, and grow worse until life•becdme intolerable; he was speed ily 4ttreil by Dalley'it Pain I;;aractor. • . Yo Pals Ex-mac:reit is genuine unless the box has upon it a Steel Plate Engraved label with the signatures of C. T. CIACE.ENER .4. CO- proprietors, and !TENET DA LL F,Y, manufacturer. Price 26 cents per box. orders shniild be addreased to C. V. - Clickener & Co., 81 Bartley street, New York. • e The Pain Extractor may be had orall drunists and ! storekeepers tbrougbont the United States. . , -A. Remedy for Y eildw Fevea...det us rejoice that science has at length succeeded in discover- ing n remedy that will not only pure, but will prevent at tacks of Yellow Fever, even wlien the pestilence is ra• ging, In its most terrible forms. Yellow Fever can be as easily, safely and 'as successfully treated with Badway's Reedy Relief and Regulators, as any other fevers. orcom mon disease.- Dr, Frederick B. Page, of MDR., a* vett known and popular medical writer and practitioner to the tropics sod Southwestern parts of the United States, cured hundreds of cases, even when the terrible Black - Vomit appeared, and he strongly !rots the Siedical Fac ulty to use the Ready ltlieTas a preventive. By its says the learned Doctor, '-A .multitude of lives will be saved." • I Let then, nurses and all who attend on the sick, pro. vide themselves with these great remedies: Radway's -Ready Relief will protect the human race against Yellow Fever and all other malignant fevers. It will (lire Chol era, Dysentery, Biliousness, Fever and Agee. Tooth Ache, -Headaches, Neuralgia, and all torturing pains, aches and 'lnflrmlttes. Midway's Renovating ltmlvent willfill the veins with a new and healthy stream of tilcsid, and cure quielpy bolls, pimples, sores, had !email skin/eruptions scurry, I bronchitis, lung diseases, ulcers, tubercles, had-toughs, dyspepsia, Lc: Railway's Regulators are to be taken whenever "Itou • do not feel tlght: 6 or that you "feel out of sorts," °rhou too much bilo,costire, *e. One of Railway's Regal:Aims , Ii sufficient tcrcrestcre regularity to the irregular crgins I'.ir -sale in Prntsrille by JIIIN n. EttOISS. R. 1 , - i• *.l-Wset. , Al. Diet/thole?'" flair Dye.... No burning blisterimi t 4 oropound eould ever have attain 'rape universal favor acco rded to this dye, the original, never-tailing fayortte. Nature is not nuore true to her- Self thin the brown or black produced In the mddest i grayest or motet frowzy hair by It. =Made and sold, or ap. plied, at Batehelor'sWlg.Factory, (In ailuertvato roams) "Z•i ift*dvray, New-York. • Wm. A. Batchelor N on the box; of it'll genuine, others are impatiens.. For sale by druggists throughout the I:ulted hates. /Sir A•Oteat Medicine foe lltliadreds otistimniants have been invented and sold,i purporting to be specific in the widens diseases and d'o l rangebrenta to which the delicate forrnpf woman. render, beriubject.—The result of ell these stimulants has beoni to Impart momentary activity to this nervous systern and false vigor to the muscles; hist tilts relief has been aMceacted by 's depression and prostsstion 'grader than beton): and the repeated attempts of ,invalids to build themselves up by these false remediei,haverinally ended in destroying.what little vital organization was reft.—= lint in using “Boerhare's ifloirrind pitters." you will And no such disastrous results. It Isla purely vegetable compound. prepared on strictly scieniifte principfea, after the manner of the celebrated Holland l'irofemr, Boer have. Under its influeikee every nerve and muscle rer eebles new strength and vigor, appetite and sleep return, and finally, perfect health. See advetisement in anoth er column. For sale by . JOHN BRO N. Pottiorille.: • ifiglON STATE ,TIcKET. FOR CANAL coxuissroNEß: THOMAS E. COCIIRAN„Whigj of York coooly FOR AUDITOR GENERAL,: - DARWti PHELPS, Azi., of Aftustrong county FOR scnci4on ORNKRAL . : BARTHOLOMEW LAPORTE, Rep., of BridfoM litligious )nteltigence. THE itev. A. Tagirart a minister of •the Associate Bebe med Church, and long paitor of a church iu West ton, Pa. has become insane. ' • 1 • • itsratiost or tie Blots Ertotarin,—The advocate o a revision cf the prest dt standard edition of the Bible, in- England, have formed themselves into an association call ed the Anglo-Biblical Institute. 1 Tile Free Church of Scotland has' erminated Its long war on its Sustentation Fund, by what. It is hoped. will prove a permanent peace. The pacifition celebim ted in Edinburgh by a large gat ca to hering organise efforts to raise the income of the ministry to £l5O per annum, THE Episcopal diocese of Rhode Island has doubled its year,io t Domestic MIXSIODS[ during the current and in proportion to , the number of its parishes, more been givento th,tsgeneralgnisslons of the Chu rob than by any other diocese except new York and South Carolina. i 1•• METHODISM IN ; CAN&D.V.—The i Methodist Episcopal 'Church in Canada has two Annual Conferences. the Ni agara, and the Bay of Quinte, both of which have recent ly held their meetings. The former number a member , ship of 6.470. aml the latter. +5.887. The total incri%ase during the year ha- been 1,230. and the total Membership is 12,457. ITho Wesleyan have just closed their thir• teenth Annual Conference, and show un increase , in de dominations' efficiency. • 1 NOTICES. ] ,Q3-PRIMITIVE SIETIIODIST ICEITIRCIL corner of Lyon and street. Divine Service every Sabbath at 101 o'clock. A'.11.. and 6 o'clock, P. M. I Air FIRST lIIITTRODIST, EPISCOPAL CliclICIL Sec ond Street. Pottsville, Rev. Wu.t.tim L. GSAt. Pastor.— Divine service every Sabbath at 10 A. M. and at 73.4 P.M. 411. e SECOND • METHODIST EPISCOPAL CIIIRCII, Market Street, Pottsville, Rev. J. Tialsir GR teEt. Pastor, Divine service every Sabbath at 10_A. M. rand 73,4 P. M. I IQ-ASSOCIATE REFORMED RESBY I TN CHURCH. Market, street, EAR. WILLIAM 11. PERIM!, Pastor. t trine service every Sabbath at 103,4 o'clock, A. M., and at IN_ clock, P.M. -1 I Dar ENGLISH LETIIERAN CIIIIRCIR. Market Square Pottsville, Rev. DARLEL Sues, Pastor. t. Divine service in this Church regularly every Sunday. Moining, at 1034 o'clock; evening, at 7 o'clock Tfeekly Prayer Meeting, Thursday evening.' at 7 d'clocl2. IQ-N ELSII COIIIIIREGATIONAL CHURCH, Millers ville mad. Pottsville. Rev. CLIARARS raw. EDWARDS: PAS. ter. Divine savlM Ih this Church every Sabbath.—, Morning at 10 o'clock. evening at 6 olclock. Prayer Meet ing at 9A. M. School for smallchildren, to teach them in the theories and doctrines of the Bible. at 1i.4 o'clock, School for reading the Bible, &c., at 2 o'clock. 'Singing 'School at 4 o'clock: /IQ-TRINITY SERTICF.S.--August, 18550: 17th—Thirteenth Sunday after Trinity 1012' A ,M. lassons, Deut'my Matthews 7,%' P.M. , . do! , do, ix' James V. 21th—Fourteenth Sun - day after Trinity -103.5 A.M. Lesseris,Deut'my xxxill—St: Matthew xxv. . _ . . 7;q . i; m ~.., 31 st—F i ftee nth Stinday after Trinity— • '. 111 , , , ,,' A.NI. LeAsons. Joshua xxiii—St. Wrk Iv-- 73 : i P.M.' dor do xxiv =lst St. Peter IL • Per the sake of convenienee it is desirible that the 3d Sunday be specified for administering the sacrament of baptism, immediately atter the second lesson 0.1 either morning or even hig service. ' D. WASIIIII.7ItN, Rector. MARRIED. . ..' SCIIOENEII I -41RIESEMET—Onihe 14th Instant, by Rev. Joseph MCCOOI. RICHARD J. BORDERER tO CORDELL!, 11 , amnesia, all of this place. _ . _ . , ' DIED; - . 4 ' • HEEBNER—At I. Port Carbon. on Wednesday morning. .August 13th, 183d.11114. daughter. of hear t y It. and Elizabeth Heebner, aged 2 years, 3 months and 18 days. ;• At a special meeting of the Board of 31anagers.of the Female •131151 e Sixiiety of Schuylkill , .Peunty,. 'convened Aug. 13th; at the house of Bir:F. J. Parvin, the followtig , •preamble and resolutions were adopted. • •Witsaszs, It bal.; pleaSed otir Heavenly FAther, in the recent removal'of;_3lrs. Coach. from time tri eternity, to deprive this Beard of one of its members; Therefore. Resdred, That le the death of 'Mrs. Cooch.; the Bible „cause has lost a'sliniTathizing friend, and this Board a respected and useful member. . ; itesolml, -That the death of 3irs. C., together with the action of This Board. in relation thereto, be announced at the next public meeting. 1 . . ... Ausolied,'Tlvit as au expression of our sympathy, we request our Cot. Secretary to address a ncite to 31r, Cooch, embodying theisabove action. 'I. • , . " Rigolred. That these proceedings be, published in the papers of Pottsville. Yours, I tr., • . , D. STECK, th r. Seq. l'ottarille, A ug. 'l4lh, 1356. . ,;„ D SSOLUTIONS. . • . b-- ISSOLIA'ION of Co-Partnership.' ti —The co-partnership heretofore existing; between 31ORT BIER " & CO , engaged in the livery bi.t..qiness, is this day dissolved by, mutual consent. the business' will be continued at the old stand by . - A. F. MORTIMER., A ngutt, 2:'56 - , . 31-3 t ( 1 3 • • 11..'510 AR I NE'HIP..—JAMES 2 M. V)BEATTY, of. the late firm of Beatty & Thomas, , has associated with hint Theodure Garretson and James - 13. Beatty, in the Coal business, under the firtmof Jatnes M. Beatty d: Co:, who will continue the mining and sel ling of Coal as usual, JAS. M. BEATTY, . . - THEODORE GARRETSON, JAS. B. BEATTY. .. Pottsville. June 2S, '56 , • ,DISSOLUTION of Partnership.— JIL/The partnenthip heretofore existing between Charles IV. Clemens and Washington Heisler, trading as CLEMENS & 11E11.;U:it. was dissolved on. the first day of March last. • All ':persons indebted will please make payment, and thoso having clainis will present them to Charles W. Clemens.-who is fully authorised to settle the 'business connectePrlth the late' firm. CIIAS. W. CLI:3IENS. • WASHINGTON' L. HEISLER: ,r 1117; '56 264 it ' Pottsvilti, Ap ThereiISSOLEITION•of CO-PARTNER SIII.P:—.Notiet, is hereby itiven that, the partner s tofore ekisting between ithe undersigned Hi the general store-keeping , business at Middleport, was dis solved this day (August 4, 1856,) by mutual consent.— Said dissolution to take greet from the 141 h day of July, A. D., 1856. , Cieorgelturnbard will settle up the affairs of the old firm. , JCIIN C. .NEVI LLB., II Wit° il BURNHARD. The undersign'ed'w ill carry onj the business. as usual, at the old stand.: GEORGE BURNIIARD: August 9, 'LII . ' - 1 . 32.8 t EIiSIIIP corairtnershipAn the liMtlYber business. heretofore ex sting I . ietneot R. C. 6:4l.lViltkin, scan his day, (Dec. '4,1835,) dissolved by mutual et Osent. R. C. WILSON; • -t WILSON. • The uhilersi (; ned have this 'day; Oct. 1.15,) entered , 'lnto copartnership in` the Imlnher business. at their steam saw mill, Sn the 111ahanoyl uniler‘tbe firm of Wile SON & ROT En. 11. C. WILSON. • LEWIS 110Y.ER. • Orders, fir all kinds of Lumberosill he "received and at! teddaikto by R. C. Wilsom 4 s at the mill, or Lewis Royer,' et Schitylkill Ila*en. • Februiry 74! r, WANTED. • .I . •,'''IGHT .TE AC 111 , 74iS WA N'I'ED-- :Three Male rind fire Few di Te.acherrl9t the,publicl szipois of the borough of St. Clair. Schools to open on Om 19rst Monday of '....zepV•mber. and continle open nine nrOuths. Examination- of 'teachers will take p aceon Friday, August t2d, at 10 o'clock ...3;31. lly order ortire Board. ; . ' TLB.A. IRVIN, Secretary. St. Clair, Aogiut Pi. '56 1 334t _,... __ . Sett 0 OLNINST ER k WANTED. ---- , _lmmo Bu r of the Directors snd County Superinduce dent ill be held at the house ;of Benjamin Weber, in South 31anhelm tOsinship. Schtlylkill county. Pa., on . Saturday. the 13th day of Septmber nest, at 10 o'clock. A.'51.. for the purpose of examining amilleants for the neat term. , Applicants to( teaclk the •English and (ley- Mall languages. By order id - thC Board. .. . , FRANKLIN WEBBER, Preedent. W3i". N. BEICIIERT, literetaiy.- -, 3.3- . , r August 16, bfi ---•- 2000 L A BORERS WANTED,-on the line of the) Unitm . Canal. — Wages, gx 114/ —Apply to ROCK HUPP & CO. 1 - 11....tt tog...ltaly 19,'58 I,AN'lTD.—=Sev,en 'School Teach ers—Three Mate and Four Fenysle—for the Pub 'l lk St. Schools of •POrt Cachou. cols open. September Ist. 1556. lE.canilnatlon of Tearhe's, August L'B, at Unklock, A. M., in Port Carbon School II Luse. pEcI.,EECK, Secretary. ' ':S-7t July 12; settooLmA,s.ry.l;,S A meeting of the DireCtors and County Superinten dent will be held at the New Castle School House. Schuyl kill county. Pa., on Friday, August 29th, at 0 o'clock, A. M., forthe purpose of examining applicants fly the nest . term. .By order of, JAMS 11eMINALD, Seery. August 2 '59 . 3143 ITANTED.. - --'4 Male and aTemale y ; teachers wanted for the borough of Schuylkill - Haven, Examination will talte place on A gust 30,1856. at the School House. at D o'clock, 'A. M. Schools com mence on Monday, September lat Applications nst:eired by 21ANIEL #. STAGED, Sec'y . :. August 9, .HENRY W. POOLE'S rl'opov:lni . '4, rat Map of the Hine Jilli Railroad. inelodr: 'Western half of the Pottsville Coal basin andfti :'t: lan+ltegion. :ere 10 inches ;41uare. colored at : ..r.; ed. Ready for delivery at Itann'ein's and at i:vr-: . -t Boei,Stores. and at Mr:Prol's Ofilee.• . i. , . October El. I h. 55. I° ' ll SALE.-=The subseriber •."';',." • fers for sale. on the most r e aeon..,lA. t,.-...- beautiful corner It, situated on Mabautonzo <r' tainiMt a small dwelling house. a urn of n,., , r ., water} a lar.te stable and several fruit troo.x" l' ' I,ln front hy.:211 back. Address the .iithaoril,,.. r ...., - riIitMAQ,UA, June 26, 1856.—Messrs. ,f , on the,preruhd - 1. , JA‘lEi• l'ia' / E.;1 1 1 . .‘2" . 5 . • ' Pottsville. August '...... ;el lailadelpflia.—Guts:-- - • - . . ' o' ANTED.—Two Male Teachers,' tones of l i t;:lh t ' c nt.t i . It! Is p ' 74 Its i s v h t lh a a ' t t vlt ncteonnttgr,ro.tdedic, sell story I Ti - OUSE TO L Ty, for a term of 9 rnonthi, and one Female Teacher ' te 3v ;:ex n‘ T;gy Thousand tons of Greenwood eked. to be 'AA. story litlek Butidimz. be•abd on Second oj, ET.--'llie dire( L. fora term. cf. 7 monthand take charge - of the public delivered at Port Clinton during the present season.— next dr,Pr to the Ist Methd/4 l'huth. The h 00..: wrliooli to "East Norwegian township. &hada to open That about Eight Thousand ions have been delivered to of the most ditle In the bono.mh. with nil IL , September lst..: Salaries, r 33 and S ') per,niontb. Apply • you Anti that We expect. in good faith, to deliver the bal. I In per Son to the Board of •Piteeturt's at the Belt:flout School once of the amount called for in the eontrart. But we terms and other particulate, apply ta_ .. louse, un raturday, 30th lust, at t &clods . : P. M. = • are not aware tbat We have any other ..4 th N i pent an . well, . „ ern improvements. l'essessi - n eleven iminiedlat.... ~ • I. WOMI I.- l , ' , . tt ille. Jiiir '2r4's l ; - .- .1 "11• M, Y . AG All pt Sce.9. ' Sturtevant A.Co., for the sale of our tri'eenwood or other . & '')-•"- __-__ _._ _— ---Augu i st '9, '56 • 113-4 t . ConTot Phlladoipbis. or ele4where. - - . NIV ANTED—'l'hiiieelYSCllool .We only designed. lu, the circular of Neire - 11, Sturte- I -TO LEASE.--'l'‘to Beds.--4. ::.' Teach- .y:lnt k Co.. to cut MT those 'parti, s at, Ilichusited i ho - i AVhite Ash Coal. upon' the hods cf-ilo . l' t ers—Ten Males attd.three remade's:ler the ptih- were constantly pretending to sell our Greanwvs , rd. 1 i liamsport & Elmira' Railroad t', mrsny: D., lie schools of 131 y -the township. Schools open September allhough.they never bad anything to do with a ton, u , Sunnolt Tunnel, about l'.: mil, , • to. rill' , ,1 ': Ist, 11511, to continue ten months.. Examination of that Coal. You were aware that Newell. titurtevant ,t t l'arnatua. For particulars enquire of M• 7 '' , leachers..August 26th, 1150. at 9 of clock. A. 3 1.' .in the ' e' r . ) . l 'eru u ur Ageutuv 'via our 06 1.1 Agents. for the sale of i oi..,:dst andeiv il lingine'er, hat: , nil, let.. , S Il l• SSchoollllllll.3 nt MidifielpolLl., JAS. MCGAUG I.I4,I % . • `tUeiirriW')°4 Cos Stur tev a" i Co ' w•*r°l P:in.lin , ei , •e. 50.73 tlotah 4th street. and ‘ell.r p •• Pl' dolphin ~ V.ANTED—Two' Male and - Two,. 1 - 2,,w N , Female Teachers—hi sUpp . y e public schooLsirs, this township,l, for the neat sermon. R teachers will be employed from thglifof Septem : until May or June follow lug.- The other two schools will not he opened be fore the middle of, Nov.-tuber. None butjood. teachers need apply. . Good wages will be paid to compet Alt teach. ers. AddrePi I , WM. APPLY, Seey, -- TreSorion, Northumberland co., Aug. 9, '(,ti 31 w . . • President .' aare !lull see had scht you, a, qUantity of the war: lecal. i iinti'4,mlloy;Phllac.. •-- • 110: 7 ....ES 'HINE, Seeretary. : Yours truly, • J. et R. CA It nit:, .t i m-i ! „ , IT. ',Sr, • ... •' liaskawlillant. Auttitst 2, '56 214 t A • ''-' udust 411. '56 22•2 0 -1 • • I OTEANI- ENGINES JA) t .5.11 , 1 . :.; W 4,NTED—.4II rhe luirm)ght of Or- _— uteam Enttines.) with sh am C) I ir,l. r-- , ullblictrg--Ono Male earber; at a. salaiy of not DIPORTANT TO TEA...DRINKERS. Ivin *a u $35 a tallith. ...School - to operr on the )sth day ' r HOAIAS .riloi-As , would respect-1 tt , diameter, o' fret ,tr , lte. with roia•rs..toruo . - ti r l ' : ,, I ameter. and 6 feat stroke. '...' Ilinv. ii.z r•llnth,r, • of September pert . and continue tbr eLtht niontPa• All fully Inform the puhlte that he has revolved another i Blast Fuirnate. Would makoetrtllv‘utir.?,, APPlimuts Lutist route well tqcorlituklded- Notice win' -ild .r thecelebrated English Itrtikfast - Ted. at 50 cents' l ing Engines. One or both will be ....• -: ~„1 , ..,, . be given to all opplicantswhon tlteexamlnatlonWill take p.n. pound . t . Also. so area>rruvnt of extra fitie tl3ll,oreti , ply to • HENRY 1..t1-s,ter,. FA to. place. Apply to b . • J.P. PALM; i (liven and Black Tett*. at 75 rents and f.I per potind. Call ' .• Shornokin I ran llirfl . L....5L . ,2:' 1 OF,(1. W SNIPEr. - 1: , • i Secretar;. of the Board of Rlreetore - next door to the 1 , 1/4 , rei:r, 1,1r.k , •t street , Pottsville.• ,I Or to 01 eii,trburg. July 19 .' 56: I n'tt , August. fl, '56. . , 32,4t 4 • iN•triber 4;, I:- ,51. , ---,-- " % , . . . .. - . =I :ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW S READ TRIO' OLD AND " PROP. WOOD'S MAID 71LESTORATIVES, IV ILL restore gry (lair "'to origintil , Y color permanently: made to grow upon tald heads; remove all dandruff or Itching; destroy all dis eases of the scalp; and If used say once ea twice a wink regtdariy; will prevent the hair from bes'otnirtg gra'', or falling, to any imaginable age. Read the folloilnx tes. timonials, and we defy you to doubt, (says. 77s 11,rteeiy . Success to the genius whose tonics we say, Trims back to its color the Ilan that was gray. 1 Fran the iJoton . . Sontlthing worth Knatting!—By using 'Prof. Wood's !lair Restorative, gray flair can be permanently restored to itseriginai color. The suljolned certificate was re solved from Johnson A. Stone. Gardiner. Me., and is but one of . the many instances that are daily coati tig to on knowledge of Its wonderful effects, It is no 10111 Ker prob lematical, but a self-evident; truth., as hundreds . in our emamianity can testify. " • • Gardiner, Me., June .2d; 1855. - Mr. 1f Dyes-Dew Sir:-1 have used two boltlecof Prof. Wood's !Lair Restorative, and'Call truly say that ,14 is.the greatest discovery of the age for restoring and chancing thellaiii Before using it L was as a man of _seventy. , My hair has now attained its original color.- Yon can recommend it to the world without the least teas, as my ease was one of the worst kind. "'Tours, respectfully, DA: Mt N.. 311;EPRT. Illinois Central Railroad Om,. t . Vandalia, June 21, 15.„54..., .Th-of. Wood-Dear Sir take pleasure in bearing voluntary testimony to the excellence df your Hair Res. torative, Three mouths agar/ay - hair was very gray. It is now a dark brown, (the original trier.) smooth and glossy. The only application I have niAdu Nu been the lair Restorative prepared by you; andzxshich, from the result in my own ease, I can most earniestly recommend to eth e rs. '47 . Respectfully yelurs, RawanD WOIXOr. Hair Re.doratire..-Ip onrcolumnsto-daywillDufound Prof. Wood's advert esculent of the abovaarticle.to which we call attention. What R has done wti have wltneeted upon several of our acquaintances in 'St. Louis. hair once gray, met our slew, black or brown. as the ease might be, being the color of early manhood; and as fine and glossy as silk, and' that. without any other aimlicat tion than the,,,Restorative. if it has 'done this. pon others, will it not do the .saine for any of our readers whose -frosty prows" were once like the -ray, n locks" of Loehiel's warlike chief. it they will try it! We think so.-Jseixon rule goestiltitionitt, Oct. 5, 1053. • ne Greatest Diicorory of tht Ags.-It seldom oeeins that we notice, under any circumstances, pateut medi cines, restoratives, or anything of the kind, for ie have a prejudice against most of them, lint candor compels i us to invite attention to the advertisement of Professor Wood's flair Restorative. We are too juvenile to require anything of the kind. but some instance/sof its use halve count to our knowledge which almost assure ns that it is a sovereign remedy against the hair becoming pr e ., tu rely gray. It is not a "Mir Dye," but upon his up. plication. as directed, the effect is. weduced upon G; skin, whieh brings out the original colored without stiffness, and, gives it a glossy and natural ,ap. pearince. We have seen persons who have use it, and they are muchpleased with it. Examine the advertise meet.-. Missouri 'Republican. Carlyle, 11L, June ,- 10. 1553. '1 have used Prot. Wood's Hair - Restorative, and have admired its wonderful effect. My hair was becoming,es I thought. premsturyly'gray, but Dy the use of his Res- I torative it has resumed Its original color, and 1 have no doubt, permanently so. StMeer Beget, • U. S. Senatur, Er.. (km/tar Demonstration is Proof have doubted the efficacy of Prof. Wood's Flair Restora tive in restoring' enty hair to its natural color, will b, furnished with the address of some of the most respect ableicltizens in this city, who have used it, fully en . domed Dr. Bond's letter published In to-day's American. -1; dtinore American. itixet's Hair Restoratiee.-We have never known any other medicine win as large a share of public confidence in so short a time as this has done.' It has not been mere than a year since we first heard of R. and it now stands at the head of all retnedies of the kind; we have :never used any of It Ourself-having, had nOoecasion.as our "crown of glory" not only as yet retains' Its original color, but gets more so-but , some of our friends have. and we have never knowri it to fail at restoring to Its original rotor; Wu advise such as are becoming perms - turely gray to give She:Restorative a trial. -Chester Her ald, Illinois. Address-O. J. WOOD ‘k CO., 316 Broadway, .1; e w York, and 114 Market Street, St. Louis, Mo.. Proprietors; S. W. DTOTT & SoNs, WhedesslisAgents, Philadelphia; J. C. C. 'lnflux.% Druggist, Agent; Pot - le/Ville: Pa. • March S, 'he jAuguaf 11,'55 32,171 10- - • LtSTRAY COW.—A ''stray SOW, dark brown, with small star in face., hind 10.. s white, part of her tail white. The Bald cow Is now at the 3liddle Creek Farm, this county. The owner is requested to pmve property, pay charges and Mke.her away. Cathe to said farm. AnguSt I. 1856. • ' G. P. oIyEN. Township Clerk. August 14, 334.1 t• xxxvl-Ist Pete . , • '.- • DES RAY. feet OF MULES FOR ~ SALE.—Six large, henry mules, all per , feet y sound and In gtxd - Al mdltion. so, wagon and harness co nplete. either of which will be so d separately. Tertpareasonable. Apply to JOSEI'II FEllItE111:1 - :, St. Clair. August.l6. ,4 sil • - 3:';9t; • QTRAY COW.—Camd to the 444 ** KY preinita* of. the subscriber, on kallroad st.. 411••• Pottsville. a large brindle COW, with a piece° .er rig • t ear; ber tail reaches the ground. The owner will come forward, prove his property and take her away. HENRY PONTEIt. Pottsville. .: l Atigtnit . 32-3 t. NOTICES. TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CON- CEBN.—AII persons are hereby cautioned against taking any assignment of a certain Coal Lease mortgage given by E. W. McGinnis to Wallace & Itothermel. dated the 29th December, 1t. 4 53. for Thirty Thousand Dollars, and recOrdedin Schuylkill, county, in Coal Lense;-Mort gage Book, Nb. 1. page 42, Acc.. as the same'- was duly as signed and delivered to me, in September. ISs4.—*h WI said assignment has been lost, mislaid, or abstracted frrim among the other papers. S.. I'. HANCOCK. Thiladel .111 a. August 7, 'sti : - 2..-' 5t • ?NOTlCE.—Notice is hereby given to .1.._1 iii. persons not to negotiate a certain promissory note. dated August 2d, 1856. drawn by IV illktm and Tho mas Millington, in favor of ,Daniel Heed, as said note was given without consideration and will not be paid by us at any time. WILLIAM MILLINGTON,. •TIIO3IAS 31ILLINOTON. August, l6 ; '5 6L .' . - - 3:141t* J S. A. -.Washington Camp, No. .13, "junior Sons of America" meets every Monday evening, at Mechanic's Hall,tThird story); . corner of Cen tre and Markdt streets, Potpsville Pa. , L., f - GEO.J: KREllg, P. Nov. 10, '55 '4.5-41 . CERRIS-9 TATLOR, IL'S. V ---' - VO'FE-. IC—TheDDelaware and liar i Canal wilefe opened draughti on Fill; AY. the 2Sth inst. No geterru of water than sly feet will be allowed until April' sth. • . . JOHN It. THOMSON, Secretary. March 26, 1856 . 134 y - -- -NoncE.—All persons' having.. road claims 'against Schuylkill 'township. Schuylkill county. l'a..for the year It-45, will please. present the „same tOrdhe undersigned. on or before the first day of September lA..xt. H. HAAS,. 1 _Auditors. . STEPHEN HINOP,R,f ' Schuylkill township, August 9, '56 ....q. 3.2,3 t ~ T vt. T. P.: TRUCKS end ,R. A. ‘ , ll MAINOAY, Mining Engineer, Pstoitees , of." Pro- CUSS of Purifying Mine Water" are nosi at the "Pottsville Houser where they will be happy to sett those operators who are - interisted ler saving the eipenVsr. attendant on the destruction of Boilers by mine wafer - Pottsville, August 9,'56 J 52- "ot I'\7 COLLIERS.—Respo_ - 7 -- 6E IT o n ~, . sable contractors are wanted to mine a/0,000 tons of Owl per annum:froth mines just opened and-in-opera tion, hi -the Lickawinna Talky. Also, a perpetual lease is offered on the Mammoth Coal bed in the Lehigh Ills'. tract, to good parties, on-reasonable terms. Apply a . . I'. w. - SHEAFER, rettssille. 'July 2 f, '56 . 30-it 1 1 I Ni - XECUTOR'S NO ill ICE. , -I'he un u4 dersigned, having been appointed Executor of the estate of Edward Hetherington, deceased, late of the borough of St. Clair, Schuylkill county. I's., notice is hereby.given that all persons Indebted to the said estate Will make immediate payment, and all persons having claims will present them .forpaiment. ` JOHN SEITZINGER, Executor. August 2, '56 .. 314;t0 shblie are hereby cautinne(rdotta...prwittati3 a judgment beind for one rindrirl nu whichdifty dollars are paid. glren:hy larich fici&l to Thomas at Big spring Hotel. f NessCas ..tle township, Si‘hmylk ill county, in March.' 1556, a bond has been stolen'from the siSte.cribei.. together with ninety dollars In money.' A reward of $:3). will t.O paid for the apprehension of theiblef and the recneerd of the money., ' - TIMMAS WELLER. • August 9.'56' • • 32-31.* 0 the Weal 'Trade of. Schuylkill Co. j —Stated meetings of t he operst ors Will be held at the r6uma of the Coal Asrawiation; Id Centre street. over tiarrlgue's Bookstore, every Tuesday and' Priday,,from ll'o'elock, A. M., to To'ciock, P. N. All tho 4 interest ed in the welfare of the Trade are invited to attend these meetings, through which, it is hoped, a permanent es tabliehment of The Vaal Etc/Jaiwe of Schuylkill courtly' may be effected. , S. SI LOIMAN, President Pottsville. April 19AR56 i 16- TOTICE is hereby (riven that an ap . , .plication will 'be made at the nextsession of 041 1 - Legislature of Pennsylvania, for the incorporation of [Bank with the usual privileges; Said Bank to.be called • the "Schuylkill /listen Bank," with a capital of One .hundred Thousand Dollars, and to be located in the Ito -1 tourh of Schuyrkill Haven, Stihnylkill county. 0. . 1' BENJ. DELONO, '., J. D. DEIBERT. i JOSEF 11 - SEIFERT, - , DANIEL SAYLOR, ‘ I GIDEON' BAST. WILLIAM I SAMUEL. 11. SHANNON. GEORGE KAUFMAN. HUNTZINGEII, .` ISe. • hnylkill Haven, July 12, '56 - 26- 2 f[XT - 01 . 1 0 E. —,- At 4'., glpaaral. meeting of il the . st' ockholders of tgi Miners' Bank of Pottsville. in the county of Schuyikiliiheld at the Banking House, on the 10th day of June; /ED- 1850, it Wes resolved to accept the provisions of the supplementary act of Assem bly. approvedtlae 18th day of April, A. D., 1836, and to authorize the Directors to increase the capital stock .of said bank bydding - ,thereto the sutn of Three Hundred l . Thousand ,Do tarn. iti'shares of Filly Dollars each: arid allerwards.o r n the'sanse day, at a special meeting...of the Board of Di 'tors ie. wee resolved tolncrease the capital of the said ba lc thesaid sum in conformity with the provisions of he said aceand the resolution of the stock 'holders Not re IS therefore hereby given that if any of the stockhold •rr: of said Bank do not take the proportion of new stock which - by the act they are authorized to take within the time allowe't therefor, any stock that may not be'striliketv will then be 'dlstiosed of by the Bank by pubillc sale at auction. By order of the Board. - CIR. LOESER, Cashier. 2.4.3 m Pottsville. June 14.'5 TAMAQUA; PA.,-tJUNE 13, 1856. Mesas. Ytwcu.. STOIIIITI.NT It CO.—Ck.ntletn LI) : briderstandlnit that certain parties are offering our Greenwood Coal In the Eastern Markets, we wisL yen to make it distinctly known that you are our sole agents for the sale and shipment of this Coal from Philadelphia. (Philadelphia includes Schuylkill and Port Itichniond.) Yours truly, JOHN d RICIIAIID CLATTER. Schtrytkill Animfy, Jh.: June 13th,1 sz.c. - MeRget,NENCLII4STrate.VANT A CO.—Gentlernen:—l any .informed that certain dishonest persons nee MR ;my ,Coal for Fah, in New England. and thereby deceiving and injuring, purchasers. Now I wish you to make It k n that you are my inle sriltug: agents, and'that the -.lvtins!i Coal can only be Fupplied through you. Yours truly. r WM. 11. JOHNS-. • 2fe."an ne 2S. :(3. COIL Potiox- is cio - Brae: Yard, lira) an,/ l E ., 1: h e c ( . llls; in f El 1 1..1 y lz. 1) iT)la kllei to rvetEro Cual on yardage. and delifor th • rates. •" Slay 17. 11 ND COAL—From j. 1: 11110(14 CO.'S Tunnel Co I h.• od 114ve. in 6,ttnoctiou with tho General Liken the agr.ncy ()Mho abort, coar, and AN, pr , i , ir meat . ° orderer which may bet addrysr, ,, A In 1., rt or 4.11Va1l street, NFw York. ~C.triTNl:ll 4 Autzuat 11. ':%:1 • il has ceased to art ft.rille. - ft , . ntf.,r.t I v the .a;,., Woad Mountain Coal—shipping tram my wharr, s. -- , ritt Richmond. and all orders achiresed hcreatte l :„ . l / , t.. I'l4ll. L. 3IACTIER, :it) Walnut street, Plillad,it , bia., , 4 3fessra.CIIMILLS A. II ECKSCIIER i et).. :S. i•w yi : ‘..',- ti ' Will be punctually attended to. I:. Ir , ;It 4, 1 el Millersville, nay Y4 ,'; , _ ... 34rt ; cc .1 •,. . ' iLLEGHEN VA :AND Cl,ll-' , . A: . ' '. .•:: 11 L , .4 .4 . 111.1tLANDCOAL. by the cargo, ear,'Ln/ 'IN: : 4.44E i p s or bushel—warranted tole e v s. eacellent quality., i-a'ets am; laro. ° sowers supplied at wholesale prices. , Vi ill 1.0 Aelis.. at any pointalong canal or rail:sad. Adfre,.s. , . s ,. ' 19 I to T11 , ,5.-E.:i't 4: IC .: the .1 . ' - ' - 101 yalnut stre,V,i'llll:o.,;:, ''': the dApril 2t3,15:.56 . . 17.1i4 •F ,, ml SIcOPARTN ERSIIIV—C. F. . 1 11 t: 'TtiN and E. V. GLOV'Et...IO.. il the late t , ..,- ad titian, Norton & Co.. hate this day lu''"ia t "/ ' them, W. s. ItIMIARTS. J. W ALTON and J. I. 1. I.4I:SEN, of the firm of Itobarts, 41 nitnn t Co.; ~ol; Liminess will to continued under the trim . r 4 DCS EN, NORTON &co., at N 0.1:5 Walnut street Phi . .' Pier No. 1. Port liichtnotid. . Philadelphia, Feb. 9.'56 . - ', ' C ' OPARTNERBIII P.The tint], , Nf :- hi shrned have this day (January' ..:lat, 1,4, - ,i,.., ~,,, , . .a..t? , i into „p 3r t n ,rahip for the transaction ~..f a I ienera ,• . 41 zS. 1 ., Commission 131.1fitlefil, and also for the purchase amt., , '',`=4- ''' of Coal. under the firm of W. M. ROC. Ella & OP. -.' :,p;Aterib . Offices-20a Bros ihtly. New York ,and in ferti,... ..'.0 1 , 1) oppoitto the American lintel. l'ottsviLe. ' . • , WM. M. ROG lilts. Noi 1 i''.ei"' 1. D. LUTHER, I , ,,itsyir. . 2 ., '-•1(11EN - . i..tr ':,::' New. -.--- ------ --- , Dlaklatoop Cox. & Co., ' :our fl . -, nEALERS in and Shippers of-.ti: . 1 , /u: ~ thracite coal, White and Red Ash. of 5.11,-. •'i'l• yttality. Wharf No. 2. Richmond. Cttnabrriani , ,, - /.:: Coal, from the Franklin Coal Company's mitre •:,; E ded by them at Baltimore. • .. . , • J.Nti. ILAILAKISTON, _ I tiEll. P. NEVIN, AVM. Itatt.lX. Nu. 4 is l e to K . t G3 r,,e 4 t l;a N ln ew ut T s o tr r e k e:t. t' , h . ,..1„.:*1 11 March 15, '54 . , 11-pm ..4- _ February 9, '43 13IN E. FoltEs'r, Black }!oath . aii.Ar,•''' 9: ' . r . .t . Diamond Vein Coal.—Th., subscriber, having n:3l , ..:‘-'l , arrangements for a Nll and regular supply of those s• ''''. known and superior lied an White Ash Coals, is pr. ' Al pared to ship them In good order anti with de ,, p46 . h. ~,, dera addressed tome will be execrated on the ~,„„„.,r,,..1 . able terms. • A. S. IttnivAtT, Jr ;' ln Wharf—Locust street. Schuy% ~,,„ , ' Users—\o. 80 1 4 Walnut streetiPhiladelphia, ant , . . 1 . 20 State street, Boston. . , ONT Philadelphia. April 5,1551% - • LtMe - —— - - - - _ ---4,,., ' , 1;1 ' 'lllli t A It SHLAND'and MAHANOY C0.11. -. dolu. —The undersigned are prepared to receive ,ed„ tiled • e o t to celebrated Ashland Coal from the "Banco t: oneer Colliery." From the extensive alterktlims Lin I gin al proretnents made at the Colliery this winter for trk : Tr,: the Coal. they feel no hesitation In ulTerlng it t, , Club: trade as an article that can have no superior In th," : topic ket, loth as to quality and freedom (rent dirt. s!a! , m en , : .1401er:impurities. They are also prepand to mak LEVY ., ~,,_ tiacts for Lehigh ami Schuylkill Coal from other o iv' 1 -,--- • BANCROFT, LE IS a t .., b uu Walnut street ; 50.19 lt Commercial 11th:. February 0,'a6 :., c.h, :..• 0111 . -.5 . ... jAR'FNERSIIIP NOTICE.--_ , Tc,, firm ut LOUIS J. BELT.ONI & SON L thi., L. •1 a ry 12.. 1850.1 been t.ll , soired by mutual eon.:,•nt. -- 1 The firm , of FARRAH. & ItELLONTha; t hi, ,L, .‘h. 12.14511,1 been dissolved by mutual content. - " - The Coal business heretofore trausacted Dp the named firms bas fhlTt - day I.vert consolidated lid. and will henceforth be carrik•d mr under the nan,. firm of , lIELLONI. FAllltAlt4 CO., at the cad —74 Wooster street; 9th strait, corner Stuyte,ard: street, near Avenue It, arid also at No. 35 Pine to posite ttie Coal Exchange. ROBERT 111.11.0 N%, (mono t: C. FAIII;AI',, CHARLES BELLI - New York, May 31.'56' FißS'r CLASS OOLLIERY to ,1.• —The) truxkvA of tl:wi'ork Farm, djoining rough of Pottgrille,otTer to lease that valuable the - west end of the estat e . which embraces al; out feet of the celebrated Black Mine rein. fled Ash ';.:lllbar gethi.r with the bond. Rabbit-lick, laud and Veins. The west end of this Colliery is at %Testi whero.the Mine 11111 Railroad passes through Ate 1• erty—therdistance to Schuylkill Ilasenisonlyllve • It is therefet among the .nearert pitiienea to Phi'', phia.' The superior quality of this Coal generally cm; minds more than the usual market price for the best , ash Coal. and the quantity Is supposed to bee Iflel, ten supply a first class colliery for a long series of 3 ear. ; Application for further Information and terms rd I. ,to be made to • A. RUSSEI...I2, Avast: corner Second and Mnbantongo street,, Pot, February :; 5-tf, • lEHIGIL COAL, at Elizatietlipp J New Jersey =- - A direct railroad comentinirati;n: . , recently been 'opened from the Lehigh 'Coal ~ 1;,..:: the wafers of New York Bay. at Elizabethpoitpei, .. sey. This Is tho nearest approach which hiti, yet '.. , Jas. l made by railroad from the Coal deposits, of Poookvltt, lira. to the great markets of New York and New Engl4;,,- , 8. A. Formerly. and before the present• Inland rout,. il. . B. Ty opetitd, the dealers in this. city obtained their 1,..1.: ..;_E-11..6 Coal from Bristol, irtinrsylirants, at a distance -i . '.. - four than 230 niiles. and it a freight of about $1 :oil, ' The‘,. I Now, it can be had by-an inland water rommtit,i ! - —.Joisht of 12 miles. and at a freight of about :::i .outs 1,.., • :I.Cleo. I The same relative advantages wilt aso 1 , .. .I..riteil i ''.. 'Jena. the buyers on the North River and in the vid --' Rept 'NeW York, and in all the New England Stat. , N-. , Jai ' the present season the subscribers will 1.1 the ..x 1, 'lliNt..! shippers of the celebrated ..:`•tonth‘and Werty Sprit:: %, t , ;,114pei tain Lehigh Coal, at Elliabethport, and vesceis si • i 4 .0 'be able, at all times, to obtain siargoes Pit bout '.l-:- _l*• Trains of -loaded cars with treslily mined Coal e... ',_!ftlimr received daily. direct from the trines. Conshbra.., , 41bnii. lateness of the season, it-Is very important that -.• ~. t for this celebrated Coal, to lie promptly executed .' `. - .T r ; s be sent without delay to our offices at New. Tor. - 4 -. I , delphia, or Boston. . - .' rs. . r LEWIS AUDENNEn a C 1.: n ~ Nos.llo Broadway, New York; 57 Walbut street, itt ~:_ del ph la ; Sti State street, Boston ~1./u y 26. '56: :, 1 ..._ .-- .\ f 7 -:Litivl - 1 -1 0111; SAIE St TO LEI AL it ..-- , John . IFIESI RA BLE STORE STA N D : , jsh _LIFOR SALE.—The subscriber offers for sale 1.41 : . iftill large and extensive stock of merchandise, otnbralan.: , - ' Stabt ry variety of w Ii F•cle.Cted goods. Also. the 5c.... II , - :.M Is offere d for Sale or to let. T m lonhe business done nu ,', amounts to .{.35"0 or ;hips), and can be eonsideral.“ -. lf ..-, _. ere. creased. The location is very desirable, having a I.,:: : ":‘,llohu tuluing custom. Terms ttre.llllllodat hie Apply 1. , ' - , ; 4•6 . R. IL F. HORTON, 1.).un1 , 1,- , r. -;j3• V / •:.;;;-:;v , it:a. R. sun har oh, inni leor tigtts 16,'36 • - A LL sorts of T from ` 4 2 2 ,c) Ilipoutillt; per yard. on band and for edlehr Dec. :4,1,1 4 ;)5 E. YARI)I.E\ S Sto; I V ' Ca l3 n a E I 11, S . a • P' I „ LD, a t l' o l :n r i „ ‘ r . t t;; d Apply to Elijah Penneliicier. near Cho?. county. : • Augur 2., VIRE BRICKS for oupo' las, put dkr and Blast Furnaces, front the lteadin4 Wort:, 1 , 1 sale low. at the . PIONEER FUltNal'i_i Pottsville, Jan. 19. ISsti - t 1 T ' •••• • 0 OFFICES-- I a sets of roping In the Cleplens` centre . HENRI' W. INstl,l, Pottsvile, May 3. 1556 P-tt r- yOR.SALEA large quantity of qlfimp 1 t, band slope 'Chain for sale, of,,Tarious ,IL..< ;r:it' A , 6 : ii / : inch to lt4 tnehes in diameter. A Dee. S. i 55.5. 49- : E. ttitOLEY a ?.. , 0N 4"' ''' l , N li . ... .. IJIANO FQR SALE—A nearly be , f . " 1 it I I I _l_ F ect . ;rt -it a n k( , 6 ~ , i" ()dare rosewood piano f .r r - aa , cheap. Apply to. ' r 1,1'.131i0101; e , - :i Opposite the American Ilc., h, Pottsville, AuguNt 9;'56 :::::::r • L. 1 ' tic HA.llS.—Extra new sugar-cue bagged lIAMi, 12 1.2 rents per rlund :4311111 N. W.. corner 6th and Vlslestrects, ?hi 1.1. 413 ' PRINTING PAPER.—Book 4.5.; New , ;:." :° 1 Paper, of every size and weight, of superb.r foriale at.3llli prices. E. GI AItEt.JCF , Ll= Centre street. Pour - _ c re FOR SALE—A good seconii-L:. i Ar ne , ArcharUbault Steam Engine. al.mit.lo her, s we with tubular boiler—complete. Apple to A. & P. itottEnTs. the :.;6. 1m • Auzusi 9.'66 July . 26,'56 -, . .. U-STAI.ECEIVED.—A 1 a rae ass.: ',II: .11P P ment of splendid POlrfurnery. Arc.. from :be . 1!..'. :Alm tortes of Jules llama & Co— Harrison and m her .. r . , .. All those who want fine Perfumery. call at . C -.. ....-rotr - LET'S Book And Variety Store. , • ere r.. (. January 21.1854 • . ''''' /*Ten T 0 MECHANICS! , ---Ship - 11), ,- ; . Spirit Level Squares, broad and shinzli,:;' , .. - eta, braces and Bills. Cautking irons and )13:. ,, ..! . • t 'UAW!. and Boring Machines. Planes- •Ilellow s :., ~".• in sets, (rem $2 to SI S. at STICIITEIt &TM A."' Pottsville. August 9.'56 - . ." ~ rrd HOUSEKEEPERS !-- 2 -Cur . ...- Pin 3 and Bands, Table Castors. fin, it 1?, t - i ' . i . 3 , 1! I handle Table Cutlery, Plated Tea and Tel t- '' ' V,,„. era and Saucepans, Preserving kettles and t -..., t. ' ..,,a F ing Ware, at . ST.leliTtat k. TV dell'''` clib ( Pottsville, August 9, 'Zill , " . ...4:•-i -' • 4. Is., ifY-I, .-, -Fr' • 3 ' fro MACHINISTS liici ItYlt.k - 4, I J HEN.—German Silver Gall an 'zed iriltwul ir r-,-.,, n , unrivalled Steel Squares. St fal,:ht ant Ilevel-1 • - ;,,,1'u,„, Straight edges, Kules graduated de. lam I:y tr , in !,.•'• ~ : - 7 1., combined Guage and Calliper , all U. :,..i..d, , 1 y ,; "„, cTICHTEI: et 111,011••••.‘ ~.: .. , •.:. • 1 Sal Pottssille. AugnFt. ft; GOAL MINES FOR RENT.- • ', I IlttUtln;;d^n .t 1;ro.,1 T.3p Enll,ll‘l'el.toral• nnw.ln.rdditinn to their 11line% 31r il , ' in Aporati .44 wore 0p,..nr.1 and roally to , r irrIIIN t t. L. T. WATTSCIN. No. 56 W - al mit ftrt-o. or JAS. BOON, Sprt. _tin U{ ( D. '515 1::::i iiti EMI lIE incur EN
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